Our last week was a busy one. We
went to visit a Satellite Village, which was just finished, and ready
to be turned over to the Africans to run. The babies were due
shortly. There still seemed to be some reservations about whether
they could hack it or not, but high hopes. We shook hands until we
were tired.
We helped the children make cards
to mail to their sponsors. Sponsors normally contribute about $25
each month to the child's welfare. We later decided to sponsor two
children, and we get these cards and letters from them regularly. We
picked a boy and a girl who had impressed us with much potential, but
had few sponsors.
Barbara was helping a little boy
color a picture in an American coloring book we had brought. It was a
picture of a mailbox, and Barbara told him to color the flag red.
While he was coloring it, he stopped, looked at Barbara, and asked,
"what IS this?" There are no mailboxes in Africa.
We visited a Masai Market in
Nairobi one day. There were many, many Masai there, all decked out in
bright clothes, and lots to sell. But there were no tourists. Barbara
and I, and one or two more, were about it. While we looked at one
seller's wares, others would gather round, trying to get our
attention and steal us away. I finally said, "Look, unless you
allow us to look at everyone's stuff, we won't buy from anybody."
They eased up a little, and we did find some really special things.
Barbara bought a necklace from a man for $12. He held it in her hand,
held her eye for a moment, and said, "You have no idea what
selling this to you means to us." The violence had dried up
their income.
A few really old, old women were
allowed to come in and pick up a very large bundle of twigs, to sell
for fire building. We let them look at themselves in a mirror, and
they went wild laughing. They seemed to look for twigs an awful lot
around the garden, and I suspect there was a cucumber, or a squash
maybe, somewhere in the middle of that bundle when they left.
We met each morning, right after
breakfast, with the native workers and a few others , for bible
study, led by Yeen Lan. Listening to those Africans sing all the old
hymn in Swahili was one of the most beautiful sounds I have ever
heard. That gave us a good startoff to the day. Yeen Lan, in our
opinion, seemed to be pushing the Africans very hard toward
Christianity, and since she litterally held their lives in her hand,
with these jobs, we wondered how many of them were as sincere about
what they said as they sounded. But what they said, they said very
well. Most Africans speak Swahili, the universal African language,
their tribal language, and a British sounding English.
The last Sunday, Barbara and I
didn't go to church. Barbara wanted to get a photo of the Rafiki
gate. All the Rafikis have the same, beautifully designed, steel
gate. We got a guard to let us out, and we walked out to the edge of
the road. It was a very wide road, with several lanes of reckless
traffic, all trying to zag here and there to avoid the many potholes.
A man with a child on his shoulders, dressed in his Sunday best, a
bible in his hand, worked his way across all that traffic to get to
us. He said, "I just want to thank you for coming so far to do
what you are doing here. God bless you." It was the first time
we had been outside that compound without a car and driver.
Africa has few opportunities for
employment. We had met many Africans who had a college degree, very
bright young people, working as a maid. Or a waiter. Or looking for a
job.
Whites are expected to hire many
Africans, and are looked down upon if they do not. Thus, everyone had
a driver. One young man asked us that last week, "Do you know
anyone in America who wants a driver?" He really didn't
understand when we told him, we just don't know many Americans who
employ a driver.
A maid, or a cook, may be keeping
many Africans alive with the wages they make. There was a good reason
that we had a maid, a person who washes and irons our clothes, and a
driver. Rafiki employs 50 nationals, and I am sure, if we knew how
many ate each day because of that, the number would be staggering.
Possibly the only thing we ever
said to Yeen Lan that could be considered negative, was said at our
departure interview. Barbara mentioned to her that she seemed to be
pushing too hard in trying to convert the workers. Yeen Lan started
her reply with, "Well, I'm sorry if I frightened you -"
Barbara just had to interrupt her there, and tell her, "No, you
did not frighten me." Nobody frightens Barbara, and she just
wanted that clear on the front end. Yeen Lan continued, "This is
the only chance those people will have at Christianity. I have to
make the most of it."
I want to give to you the contents
of Barbara's last e-mail to America before we left, in her words.
"Let me close by telling you
once again how precious these kids are. I have always had a theory
that prejudice is taught. They have confirmed that. They could not
love us more! They enjoy every tiny thing about us, and don't miss
anything. I was sitting by one little girl one day in the dining
hall, when Pat walked in. She looked at him across the room and so
casually said, "Uncle Pat has new glasses!" He had changed
his glasses, and the difference was minor.
We had our meeting with the
director about our stay here, and she wanted to know all the good and
the bad and ways they could improve. I told her that one thing we
have seen first hand, that could never be faked, is how happy these
children are. The light is back in their eyes that was not there when
they came in. She loved that!
Our flight leaves at 11:30 PM on
Monday night so in typical Nairobi fashion, we will leave here at
6:00 PM to get there on time in case the traffic is snarled. We are
dying to see our family and friends! Our love to all of you,
Barbara."
We came to Nairobi right after the President signed a power-sharing document. While we were preparing to leave, the opposition seemed to be beginning to think he didn't really mean it. Perhaps we came at a good time, and perhaps now is a good time to go home. But Africa has a way of making one want to return. Most likely, we will never see our wonderful kids again. But one never knows. Perhaps we will. Either way, they will be in our hearts forever.
We came to Nairobi right after the President signed a power-sharing document. While we were preparing to leave, the opposition seemed to be beginning to think he didn't really mean it. Perhaps we came at a good time, and perhaps now is a good time to go home. But Africa has a way of making one want to return. Most likely, we will never see our wonderful kids again. But one never knows. Perhaps we will. Either way, they will be in our hearts forever.
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