Thursday, June 05, 2008
The New York Times has a great article today (here) on Nothing But Nets, the coalition between many organizations, including the United Methodist Church, the NBA and the United Nations Foundation, that gets insecticide treated bed nets into the hands of people in malaria-affected areas. $10 buys a net and trains a family to use it. It can literally save a life, particularly of a child under 5, who are at the highest risk. The UM Bishop who is mentioned, Tom Bickerton, is the bishop of our Western Pennsylvania Conference.
If you would like to give nets to Mozambique in particular, you can do that through the Missouri Conference of the UMC. You can make your contribution (payable to "Missouri Conference UMC") and send it to Missouri Conference Treasurer's Office, 3601 Amron Court, Columbia, MO 65202, marked "#7390 Nothing But Nets."
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Well, in a few short hours Pastor Steve and I will be heading to Mozambique. We are going to be there for a week exploring opportunities for our church to partner in the country to help reach the goals Mozambicans are striving for. This trip is one of learning and exploration: we want to talk with key people (in the church, government, and secular world) to find out what areas they are trying to improve, what triumphs and obstacles they have faced, and how we might be able to help them meet those goals.
It has been 7 years since I was last in the country. I lived there for a year and a half and got engaged there --the best thing I've ever done on a beach! Since Katherine and I have been married, we have tried several times to go back, but it has never worked out. If things go the way we think the Spirit is leading us now, this will not be my last trip there. Crossroads will build lasting relationships with Mozambicans through a steady stream of work trips tailored to meet the needs in Mozambique and the gifts of the people in our congregation. Exciting stuff!
I am very pleased to be able to meet with the people we will be talking with, including the United Methodist Bishop of the South Mozambique Conference (a personal hero of mine because of the key role he played in bringing the warring parties to the negotiating table during the Civil War in the 1980s and 90s), leaders in the government areas of education, health, and religion, and many pastors. I am very excited to get to re-connect with some of the young men whom I ministered alongside in my earlier time there. Several of them are now pastors and/or church planters seeing many people come to Christ while meeting the needs of their communities.
Here is a rough outline of where we will be and when, if you would join us in praying. My main request for this trip is that we will have "the right conversations with the right people." All in His timing:
Wed - Thurs.: flying: overnight in Johannesburg South Africa.
Friday morning: flight into Maputo, MZ; meet with United Methodist officials.
Saturday: a.m. meet with MZ church officials about their “Village Church Planting” model (which is rapidly growing in the north)
p.m. Meet with Christian Micro-Enterprise Development program leaders
Sunday: worshipping at MZ churches: I preach (in Portuguese!)
Monday: meeting with MZ pastor, and later with the MZ national governement Director of Relgious Affairs
Tuesday- Wed.: Chicuque (Methodist) Rural Hospital; follow up with any connections we discovered since arriving
Thursday - flying…. home Friday. If all the connections work, Steve will be preaching the next day at Crossroads.
It has been so encouraging to hear from so many people that they are praying for us. I really feel this can be a key point in the life of our congregation.
Well, so much for getting to bed early the night before the trip!
Wednesday, April 02, 2008
Well, it looks like Mugabe's party has lost control of the Parliament, which was always a stronghold. The race for the presidency is close. There were three candidates, and if no one gets more than 50% of the vote, it will go to a runoff with the top two vote-getters. The leading opposition candidate's party has said their count of the tally gives their man, Tsvangirai, 50.3%. The government has not released the official results. Word was that yesterday there were official conversations about Mugabe stepping down, but they haven't gone any farther. Keep praying. For more info, here's the NY Times article.
Friday, March 28, 2008
I want to ask your prayers for the elections in Zimbabwe. They are Sat (3/29). Zimbabwe is 7 hours ahead of us, but even if you don’t get this email until Monday or Tuesday, still pray. The results can take a long time to get tabulated. You might know that the Zimbabwe economy has crashed over the last 5 or 6 years (“crashed” doesn’t even begin to explain the inflation and unemployment levels). This is largely due
to the corruption of President Robert Mugabe and his party. Mugabe came to power after the white regime was thrown out in the 1980’s, but he has not proven to be the answer Zimbabwe was looking for.Quick geography lesson. Zimbabwe borders the western part of Mozambique, and Mozambique has received many economic refugees. This is a reversal of the situation during Mozambique’s Civil War where many Mozambicans found refuge in a relatively stable Zimbabwe.
Thanks for your prayers.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
During Maundy Thursday and Good Friday we take time to remember the suffering that Jesus endured before he died on the cross (For a good clarification between suffering and punishment in the Easter story, read here). Jesus' suffering is something that I cling to when I read so many stories of pain in the world. One area that has caught the attention of my family is the situation in Sudan. Have you wondered exactly what the situation is there? Some of my wife's friends asked her that, and she wrote up a short history of the issue. Here's her "Crash Course in Sudan." Warning, there are some very disturbing descriptions below.
A major aspect of understanding conflict in
The second civil war "was" 1983 to 2005. (I put was in quotation marks because the government has failed to follow through with the Comprehensive Peace Agreement of 2005.) The second civil war started when the government (dominated by the north) went against the peace agreement that had ended the first civil war. From Wikipedia: "The Sudan People's Liberation Army(SPLA), based in southern
In 2003, conflict in
Also, here is the Human Rights Watch summary from May 2004 (Yeah, it's that old, yet not much progress has been made, even with the "Comprehensive Peace Agreement" of 2005.):
http://hrw.org/reports/2004/sudan0504/2.htm#_Toc71531687.
"On
I have read multiple accounts from women who escaped Janjaweed attacks on different villages at different times. All include murder of every present village male (including children), rape and brutalization of women, and burning of all village structures. Most also include bombs dropped from government military planes and contamination of wells. From an article in Time, this is one woman's account of a Janjaweed (Arab militia/ raiders) attack on a
The first sound Zahara Abdulkarim heard when she woke that last morning in her village was the drone of warplanes circling overhead. Then came gunshots and screams and the sickening crash of bombs ripping through her neighbors' mud-and-thatch huts, gouging craters into the dry earth. When Abdulkarim, 25, ran outside, she was confronted by two men in military uniform, one wielding a knife, the other a whip. They were members, she says, of the Arab militia known as the Janjaweed, which over the past 18 months has slaughtered tens of thousands of black Africans like Abdulkarim across the western Sudanese region of
As for the rest of the article, the statistics are watered down (ex. It says "hundreds of women have been raped." In reality, thousands of women have been raped.). But here's the link if you're interested: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101041004-702074,00.html.
Here is one of the first articles that got my attention about
The link to "More Images from
Although the
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F06E5D8163BF937A25757C0A9629C8B63.
By the way, refugee means you have fled to another country. Displaced means you are in your home country but have fled from your home.
You asked why all those people are still in refugee and displacement camps if the conflict is over. For one thing, the conflict is not over (see the next paragraph). Also, the villages are obliterated, and the wells are contaminated. Besides, would you want to return to a place of such horrific memories? The woman whose story you read said she will never go back.
The genocide started in
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/28/opinion/28kristof.html?_r=1&ref=opinion&oref=slogin.
This struck me: "Only 1 percent of girls here finish elementary school, meaning that a young woman is more likely to die in pregnancy or childbirth than to become literate." Also, here's more from the NY Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/02/opinion/02kristof.html.
Add to the painful
If you want to keep up with this, I suggest Eric Reeves' blog, especially his "news" section with links to the best coverage. Pretty much every website on the
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6788320.