Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Gotta get it OUT!
Gotta Get It OUT!
There is a frustration that builds in a volunteer in Africa. Sometimes it just has to come out.
It may not be the rational response; it may not indicate time for a change but it is raw emotion - so here it is.
Gotta Get it Out!
By Nobody who is Somebody like Anybody else and who happens to be from USA.
I need to write but don't know the beginning. Maybe there is no beginning or maybe the beginning is too far away.
Why am I here? The simple answer, Because God told me to and until He tells me differently, I stay. But have I already overstayed? Am I too cold and hurt and jaded to stay?
Four thousand Kenya Shillings, 4,000/=, to do the job you are paid to do. " Madam, it is your skin color". To be a member of the race that caused hurt and pain to many; the race that held the power for so long, carries with it a discrimination of its own. Deep hurts long carried and ingrained in culture.
I am bringing food to YOUR orphans, yet you cannot provide a vehicle, security, or accommodation, three things that cost you very little in terms of funds. I did not colonize you- no one living today did. I did not take your land or water or cows and goats. You hold your hand out to me but it is your own people who enslave you - stealing money from you and squandering it on themselves while I carry food to your orphans. It is my pleasure. No one told me to - no one even asked me to. So why should I have expectations? So why does it bother me that you do not help? Why does it hurt so much?
Does hurting me because of my skin color make up for the centuries of hurt by others? Can we not join hands to make a difference? Why is the only time the hand is out is to obtain personal gain?
My passionate hurt of last night is spent. One more cut to the human heart. One more peek into the heart of others.
It is good to see into the heart and soul of others; to be vulnerable enough for them to see mine. How else will we overcome the collective hurts to heal the cavernous scars of history? - To rise above - The other option is to retain the pain, to harden to the call of God who seeks us to love one another and move beyond to even love our enemies.
The trigger of anger; "where there is anger look for the hurt". Where I read that I don't remember but it sank deep into my soul. As the anger rises and bubbles out, I seek the hurt.
Am I obligated to give to you? Is there never to be a partnership or a gratitude to those who gave, those who have never been here, those who do not know you but still give so you might have. A partnership, not servitude meant to lift one above another but sincerity, a genuine appreciation of effort. Will color always be a barrier? Is trust an impossibility?
Should I go home and give up? Even some of the boys to whom I have poured my energy here have no heart for giving back.
There it is, the point of hurt. I knew I found it when the tears fell. It is not a thank you I seek. It is the creation of hearts to carry on. The hope of nurturing hearts that love that are tender to suffering, that respond to the loving image of God within them and not the cursed greed and selfishness of the fallen man. In that, I have failed.
My energies as useless as used tissue paper; simply useless to create change, useless to touch hearts, useless to join hands. My life wasted according to me.
My heart fights the hardness and mistrust with every handshake. My heart fights the emotional distance that comes when my mind seeks motives. The anger that rises when the hand is out to be filled with money as if that is the only thing God created me for. It is not a hand of fellowship but a hand of entitlement; occasionally a hand of hope but usually one of demand.
According to me, at times I have rejected and neglected my own family for people with no gratitude, no desire but to fill their own selfish wishes with an attitude of entitlement. To find the sincere is as seeking the rare blue butterfly. And yet, THEY ARE THERE - Those who care, who give, who create and give love - THEY ARE THERE. I have met them. I have hired them. The one coin lost is sought and found.
If my life in Africa is to touch just ONE; if the entire purpose of my life, my effort, my calling is to never be seen by me, - Am I content to do my job?
Lord, may it be so.
Labels:
AFrica,
corruption,
donor fatigue,
emotion,
frustration,
healing,
kenya,
orphans,
reaction,
volunteer
Friday, December 18, 2009
I will be in Maine for most of the month of January before I head back to Kenya. If your school, church, or civic organization would like me to come speak about the projects in Kenya and it is within a reasonable driving distance of Brooks, Maine. Send an email to info@expandingopportunities.org, I will be happy to come until the schedule is full. Thanks, Bev Stone
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Monday, November 30, 2009
The update from our CARDPARTNER program revealed the benefits to Expanding Opportunities are enough this year to pay for one term of High School Boarding fees for a student! To learn about this program visit http://ping.fm/JvX8m or www.exop.org right side bar
National AIDS Day is December 1. Here at the Joseph Waweru Home School in Mangu, Kenya we have a young man named Job. He is one of "our boys". He is bright, quiet, and polite. He can speak honestly, openly and with a great deal of insight for his age. He plays soccer and studies hard. He has aging loving grandparents and several uncles and aunts that keep in touch. We are blessed to have him in our Home. By the way he just so happens to be HIV+ from birth. Praise for him. Praise for Antiretrovirals, with self care he can live a full life. Let us pray for the cure!
Visit us at www.exop.org and join our FRIENDS at www.facebook.com
Invite someone to come speak to your church, school or civic group, email info@expandingopportunities.org
Visit us at www.exop.org and join our FRIENDS at www.facebook.com
Invite someone to come speak to your church, school or civic group, email info@expandingopportunities.org
Friday, November 27, 2009
Forgotten People
Northern Kenya is a land of vast expanses of dry acacia bush, and dusty clay, with a rugged, mountainous rocky backdrop. Hidden in its seemingly deserted and wild immensity lie many small villages, a thousand or so people in each living in small mud houses; living close to the land; in harmony and agony with the forces of nature. They are pastoralists, no longer roaming the length and breath of Africa but confined to smaller and drier spaces. In many cases they are a forgotten people. The road to their land is a crumbling hint at days long gone when there was a tar road. Now there is a small twisted and pitted path of tar in the middle of the road, more treacherous to traverse than the dirt trucking trails along the sides but beware of the deep erosion that can catapult you down the side of the mountain to be found in pieces at the bottom of the ravine.
But let us return to the people. In most areas of Kenya, you see signs of development. Buildings being built or repaired, roads being repaired and constructed, houses, people, vehicles. But in some areas, the people gather in the main building of the village, the church. Dressed in a mix of western second hand clothes or more traditional kanga and blanket, they laugh and sing and chat and cry. They are drawn close for protection, drawn close for support. The effects of global warming have reached those whose lives for centuries have been close to the land and in harmony with it. Now they suffer.
Most seek hope in their young people, in education. But where are the school? These forgotten people have little or no access to education. They are proud of the school the Red Cross came to build and struggle to find the funds to send their child to school.
“Madam, this boy would like to speak to you”. He is 13 and in Class 5. His English is perfect. Please help me, my mother is going to take me from school to help with the younger children. Top in his class and performing better than many in more developed schools, he desires education.
Primary children walk at least 6 kilometers one way to go to school each day! Lucky to make it through Class 8, your hope
dies. After Class 8 there is nowhere to go. The closest high school is 23 kilometers away! The cows and goats need to be grazed for survival. The cost of transportation and boarding school fees is beyond the means of most. The economy is in goats.
In some areas, the government Community Development Funds are active. Schools, dispensaries, and roads are being constructed and large signboards announcing the construction through CDF Funds and the constituency. In other areas live the forgotten people. Many of those who have traveled beyond their village, return to state, “We do not live in Kenya”.
The reasons for forgotten people are many: sensitive, political and remote but a key to the solution lies in education. A literate population is an empowered population. As global warming, country boundaries, governmental regulations, and even tourism have forced them to enter the larger world, so they need the tools to defend, protect and control their village. Education will allow their lifestyle choices to be theirs.
If you would like more information or to help contact us.
www.expandingopportunities.org -- info@expandingopportunities.org
Labels:
education,
forgotten people,
high school,
illiteracy,
kenya,
orphans,
pastoralists,
poverty,
rural
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Thursday, November 12, 2009
YEAH! Today is the last day of exams for our Standard Eight students. This exam means a lot - Samwel, Maina and Mbogwa all completed their exams today and all three felt good about their performance. They are now free. At the end of December, we find out the results and see which High Schools will take the boys next year. YEAH!! congratulations to them and all the other Standard Eight examinees!
Heading to Isiolo this weekend for a meeting with the chief and other leaders to garner their support for the Kulea Girl's Rescue Home. Will be out of touch for a while. If you are interested in helping rescue girls from FGM and early marriage and encouraging the education of the girl child send an email to info@expandingopportunities.org for more information.
Monday, November 9, 2009
Time to plan for the perfect CABIN FEVER RELIEVER Volunteering vacation. Take a look at http://ping.fm/8n1W7 Join us in Kenya!
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Saturday, October 31, 2009
We are planning a trip to NorthWestern Kenya to bring relief food to orphans. Transportation is the greater expense, but we will do it. If you want to help, go to http://ping.fm/ryF9V and help us out. Thanks, Bev
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Here are some words of isdom by someone shared with me by Gideon.
No one can go back and make a brand new start. Anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending.
God didn't promise days without pain, laughter without sorrow, sun without rain, but He did promise strength for the day, comfort for the tears, and light for the way.
No one can go back and make a brand new start. Anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending.
God didn't promise days without pain, laughter without sorrow, sun without rain, but He did promise strength for the day, comfort for the tears, and light for the way.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Friday, October 23, 2009
Peter will Blog
Yeah! I have assigned the blog and updating all the fun stuff like FaceBook and My Space to Peter. Now maybe there will be something to read!! I will still update when I can but I can stop feeling guilty about the whole thing.
so expect to see Peter's updates soon.
We will also sign our updates so you will know whose is whose.
Bev Stone
so expect to see Peter's updates soon.
We will also sign our updates so you will know whose is whose.
Bev Stone
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Practice in Patience
Oh, I wonder when I will learn patience. I guess I am in training. Today, I decided to spend about 2 hours finishing the Service Journey pages of the website before traveling to Kenya. It is so much harder to work on the website from there. Slow connections, lots of interruptions-- things to try your patience -- etc. So I complete several pages -- Oh that feels so good. -- But gosh that side bar is way too thin. I need to widen that side bar and shrink the middle table. -- Now you need to understand that I know just about enough HTML to be terribly dangerous. I copy well from other people and have absolutely no clue what I am really doing. So-- heady with the beauty of completion, I crash forward into the source. -- After all how hard can it be to shrink one table and increase the other? Well, in less than 2 seconds i destroyed my entire days work. Then try to fix it.,,,,Hmm -- further destruction. Call in the calvary!! -- Oh well - salvaged but still not correct-- and the calvary is intelligent enough to go to bed. Well let me get back to it and see how badly I can mess it up before I go to Kenya. Sorry all you who are trying to get information from the Service Journey Pages -- When I mess up I don't fool around.
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Off to Kenya
On the way to Kenya!! Greetings, I m actually blogging and again I will dare to say that I will try to blog more faithfully this time. Maybe one of these days it will take. It certainly seems an easier way to let anyone who is interested know what is going on.
This trip - I have the pleasure of meeting and taking a young lady to her volunteer post in Rabondo, Kenya. It is one of the results of close collaboration with a Community Based organization. Expanding Opportunities has partnered with the Rabondo Community Project to bring Distance Learning and a Community Learning Center to this remote community. Timon, the director, called to ask if I could play a role to bring their volunteer safely to Rabondo. My pleasure. --- That will be the first order of business in Kenya, September 19th.
Then back to one of the more pleasant tasks - building in Mangu. Our children's home, the Joseph Waweru Home school will have a new cistern attached to the kitchen, thanks to WATER FOR HUMANITY! That will greatly increase the amount of water available to the Home by harvesting the rain water falling on the roof of the commons building! Maybe we will make an entire year without buying water!!
Watch the blog and I will try to post more often.
Saturday, September 5, 2009
Testing FACEBOOK BADGES
Well -- Guess I am still very neophyte. I was testing FACEBOOK BADGES and ended up posting the Celebrate 60 image ... Wasn't quite what I wanted to do but there it is. Now when I have time I will change it
Thursday, May 21, 2009
World's Worst Blogger
Good grief I am the world's worst BLOGGER. I told m yself I would blog while I was in Kenya. do you see any? Sorry-- I will try to improve.
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