Our
rock star treatment continued for a couple of days. My strange illness slowly
went away. By then, all 80 of the children knew everything
there was to know about both of us. The children just loved to stroke the long,
thick hair on my forearm. "Uncle Pat is like Esau!" The children
always had a neat way of asking a question."Where are you going" woud
always be asked, "And you are going where?"
The
oldest of the children were now in the fourth grade. Six native Africans were
the "mamas,"
full time care givers. Each mama had 10 or so
children, and the goal was, to give continuity, each child would have the same
mother until they were grown. But things didn't seem to always work out that
way.
There were 16 junior secondary students who walked in to school every
day at Rafiki. Some walked two hours through very dangerous streets. Their
uniforms were left at Rafiki. They had been recommended by a pastor, because
they had very high potential, yet too poor to even buy a uniform to go to
public school. One of those students told us her brother was a shoe salesman,
and he provides food for the entire family. I asked, "Does he have a
store?" "No," she said. "He carries them, tied over his
shoulder, while he sells on the street."
I had
never seen such movitated students before, except for one student I once had at
Arkadelphia, Ket. She was from Bankok, and was learning a new language at the
same time. We still stay in touch.
Nairobi is located on the equator, at 5000 feet elevation. Cool nights,
warm days. Every day. Almost no mosquitoes. We only took Malaria medicine
because we would be going into lower areas, such as on Safari and to Tanzenia.
The Rainy season was due to begin just before we would leave.
Many
of the secondary students stayed, on their own, after school, to help the kids.
You could pass their classroom, almost any time, and think it was empty, it was
so quiet. Open the door, and 16 students were working hard. They looked upon
this as their only chance in this world to better themselves. If one talked to
them about their ambitions, they would all seem to be, what probably was,
impossibly high. Brain surgeon, scientist, astronaut, on and on.
Carolyn Koepke, from the US, was the Children's Director, and being a
nurse by profession, she had been elevated to Everyone's Doctor, once here. If
we broke a leg, or had a major illness, we would be flown to the US. Carolyn
and Doug had been here for many years. He had been a Mechanic in the US. They
just walked away from it one day, and never looked back.
Doug ran the physical plant, all the repairs, woodworking, and metal
working. And he taught those things to the
boys. Their children grew up here, with a 2 week trip back to the US
each year. They raised their own financing, through mailouts and visits to
churches when back in the States.
Barbara worked under Carolyn, in a number of capacities. They knew she
was a photographer, but never knew how good she was until she got there. The
missionaries all were thrilled, as someone said, "She's a professional,
and her work looks like it!" She was quickly given the job of
photographing every child, for their permanent records, and furnishing the
seven permanent missionaries with photos for their fund raising speeches and
mailouts.
Doug
kept the cars going, the water supply good, the electricity flowing. I worked
with him, mostly. There was no hardware store to go to with a need. If it was
not brought from America on Doug's yearly trip home, we made it. I spent the
whole day once, cutting rubber gaskets for the water supply system from and
inner tube. I also taught basketball to all the kids, and an occasional science
class.
Barbara and I both read to children (after lunch) that had been so badly
damaged in their early life that they seldom, or never, talked, or smiled. When
a breakthrough with one of these kids came, and Barbara had several, it was an
indescribable experience, one to be treasured a lifetime.
Barbara read daily to Moses. He could talk but rarely would although he
was now six. Moses was still in some trauma over the conditions he lived in
before coming to Rafiki. Soon, he would be eagerly awaiting Barbara at the
reading bench, smiling with book in hand, and would nestle up close as she
read. In spite of her best efforts to
get him to talk, he just wouldn't, week after week.
One day, as Barbara walked him back to his
house, he stopped, looked into her eyes, and said, "At night I pray for you."
Barbara has just never gotten over that event, and cannot tell about it to this
day without tears. And she often does.
Yeen
Lan Lam is the village director, nearing middle age, and very much in charge.
She ran the place with a firm hand, but could be gentle when the occasion
called for it. She was extremely protective of Barbara and me. She knew the
many dangers of Africa, we did not. She worked very hard to make our stay
perfect, complete with a trip each weekend, either free to us or at a greatly
reduced price. She always provided us with a car and driver. Our four day
Safari was about one third the usual cost. She had a lot of influence around
Nairobi, and could always just get things done.
Once
her driver ran over a goat and killed it in Nairobi. An angry crowd gathered.
The driver was crying, "They're going to kill me." Vigalante justice
ruled the African streets, and this was a widow's goat.
Yeen
Lan got out of the car, and said to the crowd, "Bring the owner of the
goat to me." The widow soon appeared. "What is the value of the
goat?" The owner told her, and she immediately paid it. Seeing a Rafiki
worker in the crowd, she asked, "John, do you want this goat?" John
jumped right on that. Meat was rare. The widow shouted, "No! That's my
goat." Yeen Lan explained,
"You told me the value, and I bought it from you. It then became my
goat, to do with as I please."
CONTINUED NEXT WEEKEND Thanks for reading!
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