We got word that the Little Rock family
had left Rafiki. Our tickets were such that we could change our destination
right up to the last moment, if we wished.
We started thinking that we could hop over
to Tanzania, right next door. No fighting there yet. We changed our destination
to Tanzania. We notified their director.
We then realized we would still have an
overnight layover in war-torn Kenya, and we would be on our own. Tanzania
Rafiki was very new, and it was unclear if they would have many children yet.
There was talk of a power sharing
agreement between the two tribes, and it was still awhile before the plane flew
out. Maybe things would settle down by then.
We changed our destination back to Kenya,
and prayed for peace.
I talked to missionaries on the ground in
Nairobi two days out. They told me, "If you fly into Nairobi this weekend,
you will be met by a collective sigh of relief, or Gunfire. This is not a good
time. Don't come."
The morning of the day we were to fly out,
the big news of the day on TV was, a power sharing agreement has been signed in
Kenya. I called the missionaries in Nairobi. "Well, in view of this, now
may be a good time to come." We took this as God's sign to us .We went
We had an overnight layover at London
Heathrow, and looked for a place to lie down. Although information desks will
tell you there is none, we knew that if you go into the very depths of
Heathrow, there is a place with lots of long couches.
I must have picked up some sort of bug
from that couch, because the next morning I was a total zombie. It didn't worry
me at all when the pilot notified us, once airborne, that we were being
diverted to Uganda. Just gave no reason, other than something about needing to
pick up some tires, which sounded pretty thin. We would eventually reach
Nairobi, but be two hours late. I was still a zombie when we landed in Uganda,
and I did not even feel like looking out. Barbara was afraid I was had picked
up some strange sickness, leaving her on her own, not a good thing to be in
Africa. When we, at long last, landed at Jomo Kenyatta Airport in Nairobi,
Barbara was excited, and I was just there.
Rafiki headquarters in Florida had sent
us a very large bag of books for us to carry through for them, along with the
appropriate paperwork. We also had a huge suitcase of toys they requested us to
buy and bring for the children. The customs agent told us we couldn't do that,
then waited to see if the customary bribe was forthcoming, maybe in the form of
a supply of toys for his grand children. Barbara just kept smiling at him,
telling him "The toys are for the orphans." He gave us some more
reasons why we just couldn't do that, but Barbara just kept smiling. "The
toys are for the orphans." Finally, he just gave up and waved us on
through.
Our driver, hired by Rafiki, had patiently
been waiting three hours now. We kept this same driver throughout our stay, and
he was always competent and patient. He had a little sign that said,"Patt
and Barbra". Whatever the spelling, we were overjoyed to see him, we're
here, and we'll take it.
It was a 45 minute drive to Rafiki, and the
route was directly through the staging ground for the violence. The last mini
missionaries picked up, right at the start of the violence, had to pass through
road blocks for both sides, and the car had been shaken around pretty good.
Yeen-Lan, the director, was in that car. She kept saying, "Just keep
smiling. Whatever happens, just keep smiling."
Well, the warriors, and the roadblocks
were gone now, and we were happy. When we entered the gates at Rafiki, we were
treated like rock stars. To the children, we were the first mini-missionaries
to arive since the violence, and we must have represented the end of that
horrible time for them.
Getting out of the car at our guest house,
a woman screamed, "It IS you! It IS you!"
We saw our friend Emily running from the guest
house to hug us.
We had assumed the area we had come
through near Rafiki was a slum, but no, they said. Upper middle class.
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.
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