Sunday, July 30, 2006


I wrote these next two blog entry's in my travels and have been meanin to post them. Slight change of plans--it is me after all--I leave this Wed for the states. I land at 8:10pm or something. You just come to that point when you know you are finished for now. I felt that. I have all the mixed emotions of sadness and excitement you could expect. But mostly peace in leaving (for now) The work I have yet to do over here needs a lot of energy stateside. I hope to write my final, I'm leaving blog, (sniffle) soon. Can't wait to see your faces!

July 18
Every once in a while you have to risk something, do something that scares the be-jesus out of you so you know you’re alive, so you know you can. The more fears I face in this life the more I realize that not a lot scares me. And that is a feeling I like, one that drives me, one that offers me a lot of freedom to do anything, anywhere for any cause I deem worthy. People ask me if I’m afraid to go up to Gulu alone or to travel by myself at night and I sort of want to say yes so they won’t just think I’m naïve or stupid, but the reality is—I’m not. It’s funny how many physical fears we can face with ease, but how cautious we are with our hearts.

These days I wake up and go to sleep alone, unafraid. And my own skin is a comfort, not a terror. I almost prefer eating dinner by myself now, something I used to want to master. I used to hate the thought of going to a nice restaurant and trying to read a book, all the while wishing I had someone to share it with or another person to justify spending the money. Now, I welcome it. God is funny. It’s all about stretching us. Some people need to learn to stop being such a loner, for me, I needed to learn how to enjoy my experiences just as much without sharing them, because I by nature love to share moments.

Somehow in my travels, I ended up in Mbale. It sounds like a reggaeton song my girls in YoungLives might listen to. Mbale is at the base of Mt. Elgon. Which just sounds cool. Elgon. Rah. It was perfect. The kind of secret you want to keep for fear of the place getting overrun. It was wild, and raw, and quiet. As I approached the mountains on yet another dirty, rainy bus-ride, I felt my soul get excited. I’ve tried to be diplomatic and say I love the beach just as much as the mountains, but it’s just not true. I mean, Jesus went up to the MOUNTAN to pray. He didn’t go to the river people. Or the ocean. Or the tabernacle. And like Him, I always feel closer to God up there or staring out at a stair-case that could lead me. Mbale is something of a paradise. And it has its hold on me. I went there to pray. I went there to learn to pray. And I went there to meet with God when I am two weeks away from going back to the USA and a life that is penniless and unsure.

I went ab-sailing in Mbale, Uganda. It was sort of my way to end my little retreat, my way of closing the deal. The entire time I was up at Sipi Falls I felt as though God was asking me the question—“Am I enough?” If I lost it all—the dream, the boy, the pictures of my time here (ok God you’re pushing it) would he still be enough.
The answer is unequivocally, that would suck, but yeah.

Now you’re probably thinking what is ab-sailing exactly? I wasn’t too sure either. Let me put it into context for you. Turns out it’s a lot like repelling only with less control. Nothing to do with abs. Nothing to do with sailing. In fact the entire word is misleading. Now I know what you’re thinking—cool—ROTC flashbacks of jumping off Eagle Hall etc. Hooah. It’s a little different doing extreme sports in Africa. Different as in stupid. They don’t exactly give instructions. Their version of instructions is, “here watch me…” Simple right? One little African fellow goes over the edge like he’s climbing into a bathtub. And away he goes. “Ok now you. You come. Put feet here.” I look at him dubiously. So is it the same as repelling? Arm behind to front action? “Yes, yes, it hard at first but then become easy.” Hmm, sounds vague. Deep breath. Ok here we go. The hardest part as in most things in life is the moment right before, the moment as you just begin with your feet unsteady, holding onto an African man who could use a shower, for dear life because your life is in this skinny man’s hands. Put on some weight fella. Ok I know it has nothing to do with weight. Not sure of the physics of it all, but even a girl like me can belay someone down a mountain. There is no “on belay,” “off belay” though this time. Just stick your foot over the edge and lean back. Where? Right there, oh yeah sorry I missed the crack in the rock face. My bad. Eventually I realize he’s not going to tell me any more. I’m on my own. Right. Lean back, feel the weight of you tied to this rope on a sheer rockface of a mountain next to a gigantic, ferocious waterfall. At that point on the edge hanging with no where to go but down you’re wondering, “Why am I doing this?” Really do I have a death wish of some kind? I can only answer yes and be ok with it. Ever since I was a little girl I’ve wanted to do things that make me feel alive. Today was about proving that to myself again—taking a step of trust, of faith. Yes I can. I made it down the mountain kind of half-jolting. I could let go of the rope through my fingers and realize I was letting my life slip away, but I was not the one holding me. The guy on top, he was the one doing all the work. He was the one holding me and yeah you can make all kinds of faith correlations there but I just wanted to get down the mountain. Even if it did look like it came straight out of Lord of the Rings. But here’s the spectacular thing—as you’re passing down the side of the waterfall you get the spray and in that spray, a curved rainbow, a complete one that you can’t see anywhere else but from that side suspended above the earth, on a cliff in Africa. It is truly gorgeous. So gorgeous that I want to hang there forever between heaven and earth dissolving into the colors being washed anew by water and light.

But it ends.
I land awkwardly, well before I land I have to let go of the rope I’ve been feeding through the karabiner. I realize its too short to reach the ground and there is still about a ten foot drop, but the guy below says, “let go” so I do it, sort of gritting my teeth in resistance at the same time. It whips around and then slips through and I think I will drop to the ground and crush this man. Amazingly I don’t plummet to my death. There was another rope. A red one I had forgotten about that holds me as I spiral down into the waiting arms of another Ugandan who is skinnier than I am. And feel incredibly grateful. To him, to the universe, to God to the almost lime green mountains, my last of the Mohicans waterfall. (Just stay alive. I will find you!) What’s funny is after you land you have to hike in mud over treacherously slippery rocks, over the waterfall basin where at one point you have to straddle spread eagle between one rock to another holding onto the side of a boulder, and then climb up a mud-slide all the while trying to get one last glimpse of the rainbow, one last mist upon your face. This part is almost worse than going over the edge. I hike back out of the forest which is kind of like the Heart of Darkness and am filled with overwhelming exuberance and joy. So much so that I keep making my guide stop to look and enjoy our view of the valley between two mountains bathed in afternoon light so bright that it almost looks misty like the emerald Irish countryside (I’ll make it there Seamus) the horizon darkening with a summer storm. Poor guide, I’m blabbing on about how its so easy to feel closer to God up here and how he needs to enjoy this view every day and never take it for granted (crazy mzungu) when it starts to rain. Now most Africans are afraid of rain. They think it gives them malaria. I love standing outside in the rain apart from the fact that most people would think I’m an absolute freak, I would do it all the time. For me, I feel like my day is complete—a nice gentle rain, God is smiling upon me, showering his blessing. I feel like screaming into the wild some kind of banshee noise. I feel so full. My heart seems to almost expand as if I could contain more thankfulness, more love, more love. And no fear. A friend once told me that we act out of one of two base emotions: either love or fear. Everything dwindles down to those two things. And if we can leave behind all the fear—what we have left is love. I feel like God is speaking, I feel like the rain is his answer, his whispering a language only I can understand. That was until it started storming so hard I thought God had sent a hurricane in the middle of Africa. My clothes were soaked through in minutes and it started dripping off my nose when we still had fifteen minutes to go and no warmth to go back to. But my faithful guide—he kept on trudging and when I asked if he feared the rain, he said, “No. I have strong blood.” Yeah, me too.

July 27
I spent my last full week in Gulu interviewing child mothers--girls who were abducted by the LRA and were impregnated through rape. Nearly all of them have been rejected by their communities and their children are called "killers" because they were born to commanders and are thought to carry that evil spirit in them. Stigmatized and segregated the girls live a life of a lone-dweller, a lost soul riding the edge of depression and demand with their only saving grace being the acceptance of other child mothers. I still have to write up some of their stories and post what I learned. But here's something I wrote while I was there.



Women work the land, babies on their hips or tied to their backs in colors grown dull by sun. Somehow they still manage to wield a machete in their palms as they dig out roots or carve a line for planting. As is the nature of most societies women are the movers and the shakers, the catalyst sparking movement forward. Perhaps it is our nature—to inspire, to drive and to get less sleep than the rest of the population. Not that I fit into that category, but I remember my mother reading us to sleep at night and waking early to pack my dad’s lunch in his blue Coleman. Somehow she managed to do it all—even come home and cook dinner after a full day’s work, sit down after us, and be up before us washing the dishes before we could take our last swallow. I still don’t know how she eats that fast.

Here they are always in fields of maize or fields of tea, a shade of green brighter than fresh cut grass. Once I saw one managing to hold her baby while hacking into a tree stump. “Where are all the men?” Not to get all feminist, ahem, but I will. When you ask them they simply say they are back at the camp or in the village. Hmm…doing what I wonder. Drinking is my guess. Not just my guess, but a known fact. Here in Uganda the men drink their dignity away since it has already been stolen from them. Unable to provide for their families in the way their warrior, farmer culture has always done, they resort to forgetting. I know quite a few good men, and realize I am one of the lucky ones, but where are the few good men in Uganda? Farther and farther apart. Who is teaching them it isn’t ok?

Thankfully, my life has been filled with amazing men and I think it was a God-thing so I could do the kind of work I do without being bitter towards their entire gender. To see women who have been raped, or smacked across the mouth, or left to fend for themselves with two children, one still nursing, while he goes off and sleeps with someone else and be able to look them in the eyes and say “You don’t deserve this” and “God has someone better for you,” and mean it. It takes having some kind of hope. Hope that springs from the knowledge of someone different. Isn’t that what hope is after all? The possibility.

I am as pro-woman as it gets without wearing an “I hate men” T-shirt and not shaving my legs. Sorry, that was stereotypical. But I’m seeing that if we only empower women then what happens when they get liberated and go home and get beaten for their new-found freedom? What happens when we spend all this time teaching her how to run her own business and he comes and takes the money? Of course, we need to empower women, but we have to take it a step further or we’re only kidding ourselves. In their culture, they rely upon men to provide. Like I did with my sweet friend Jennifer in Lira, you can give her beans and rice but she’ll somehow end up cooking for him when he finally comes home. Liberation is a mentality that takes a long time. And aloneness is not something every woman wants to sign up for. More than ever we need male role models into today’s age. Not that I’m into the whole Promise Keepers thing, but they got one thing right—we need men to stand in the gap, because there is a gap and it is rapidly increasing. We need women too, but for some reason, in this kind of field, they are easier to come by. Because in the end, women can be free, but we exist for relationship and will always long for it. We can leave them, especially the bad ones, but we don’t always want to. We just want them to change. And we think we can change them. Right.

I want to pour my life into girls and women. I want to see them become. I love their strength. I love their ability to overcome. But we are not on this earth by ourselves and as much as we might hate it sometimes, we love ‘em.

There’s this guy Jackson Katz I heard about in Colorado when I was doing DV training who runs workshops for men and has a film called Tough Guise all about dismantling the idea that our society has drilled into men that they have to be like Rambo or never cry. He is one of the few I can think of who are doing work towards men directed at ending violence against women. And I think it’s brilliant. We need more like him.

It begins here with me, a movement, a tiny revolution where instead of picking up my sword, I lay it down. Instead of trying to change the world on my own, I recognize my need for help. It’s not a surrender, it’s more like a truce.

Thursday, July 13, 2006



(Me and the Kids, out for dinner and looking over the city...)

(boats dropping anchor for fishing in Jinja. Matt and I went out on
an adorable little one...felt like we were in Venice or something)
















(kids chasing me in (in a non-threatening way ;) Awer IDP camp)




Dusk with its clouded stillness, its bare cool edging away from the heat of day like air evaporating on skin, its graceful slipping into slumber, has always been my favorite time of day. More so now as I brave mosquitoes on a porch in Uganda, a land that has become a kind of home. A land that could be my home. I feel more focused and more convinced that Uganda is a part of my future. And that the rest of my time here needs to be spent in research rather than in short-term assignments so that I can come back and have an understanding so I can do even bigger things. Well, maybe not bigger things...just do whatever I do, better. :)

I feel like a world of opportunity has opened up to me. What I once saw as my only cause-- to perhaps save a few girls off the street or provide a kind of family for someone without one, has become even larger in my mind. In many ways I love that kind of life—the offering of home, a kind of family for a lost soul. But the things my course here is moving towards seem to be encompassing even more than just that aspect.

The past two weeks have been a whirlwind from:
Hysterically crying with glee when my boyfriend Matt got off the plane (ok—when you haven’t seen a single person you love in 4 months, it’s ok to have a mini-emotional breakdown in the airport with pretty much every African watching the crazy mzungus attached to each other like monkeys) to meeting up with all these important people I never would have met without Matt’s connections, to taking the kids out to dinner at a restaurant that overlooks the city on the Fourth of July.

I can’t really describe the feeling of rightness in the world that comes from having someone you care about buy into and really support your dreams. It always feels like dreams come at odds with relationships, that there is always the sacrificing of being with loved ones to accomplish something to which you are inexplicably driven. I live with that sad reality. But for once, I felt as though maybe I don’t have to give up one thing for another, that maybe sometimes the world is gracious enough to offer you a gift of both/and, togetherness, harmony.

It was really fun to work together with him. I was so amazed by the way God just opened up doors with influential people who if we work with in the future can really make things happen!


HIGHLIGHT:
Watching my little orphan’s faces as I unloaded the huge suitcase full of clothes, and shoes, books, soccer balls and games my mom sent from the US at my pleading. And watching Matt play soccer with them later as I filmed the girls dancing around and performing for me saying things like, “To be with Sarita forever,” in answer to the question: “what is your life dream?” They’re only like 9 so they don’t have very lofty goals just yet. ;)

FAVORITE WORD I LEARNED THIS WEEK:
Puff-holder
It’s the Ugandan version of a woman’s hair-tie, or what we might call scruncii, or hair bands. Crazy huh? Someone asked me for one, and I was like er?



So quick funny story:

BUT before I go on further, GREAT NEWS:
Matt and I had the most surreal experience as we were grabbing pizza to bring back to the kids on Saturday night—ps—Mary has a little-girl crush on Matt which is adorable and at the same time annoying because she’s supposed to like me more! --and saw the Sunday New Vision (local newspaper) which basically said that
Museveni offered Kony amnesty, which is very unlike him to do, and it is rumored that Otti (Kony’s right hand-man) has accepted on behalf of Kony, although peace talks are going to start soon in Juba, Sudan. As UgandaCAN put it, this is the most significant movement towards peace that has happened in over a decade—www.ugandacan.org for more)

This could be the ending of the war and I feel so blessed to be over here at this point, or if I play the cynic like many people over here, it could be another tactic by the LRA to gain time while they re-group. I prefer to think the war is ending. :)

Back to the funny story:

So we were up in Gulu for a week calling our list of contacts and couldn’t get any meetings set up for that day, so we’re a little frustrated, but drinking Fanta (never knew I liked orange soda so much) so that made us feel a little better, when we notice a brochure on Acholi Leaders and their working together for peace, etc. We’re like let’s call this guy up—Ker somebody. So we call and are told we can have a meeting so we get there and wait in the office, which has a secretary, so we realize this guy is no small potato. Then two other gentleman come out and escort us to another room where we are asked why we are there to see “His Highness” Literally, that was his name. I’m sort of in shock thinking, “who are we trying to meet here, the King of Uganda? Do they even have kings here? I mean, I thought they only had a President? Do I have to bow? ” I was seriously confused as to who this guy could be, but knew he must be the man around here. I mean his deputy’s or vice-people were really nice, but they interrogated us nonetheless. Matt realizes we’re getting the run-a-around because we are obviously not important enough to talk to this guy. Rightly so. I mean his title is “His Highness.” I can’t really compete with that. My business card says Aid worker/Researcher. Not very convincing.

But Matt pulls out the DC card and drops some names and before you know it they are answering every question we have. Sadly we didn’t actually get to meet “His Highness” face to face but found out he is the head of all the tribal leaders for Gulu. We got some great info on the way the Acholi tribal leaders are viewing the conflict, the government and decongestion & resettlement.

I know that doesn’t sound very exciting but the reason it’s so important is because the tribal leaders hold the power with the community and knowing them means being able to connect with and mobilize the community. The reason the whole issue of “decongestion” is important is because when this war ends, and cross our fingers hope to die, that will be very soon, over a million people will start moving back to their original land which has turned to “bush” because no one has been there. They will need every kind of infrastructure imaginable from clean water, to schools, to re-building their homes. Pretty much the current situation with Southern Sudan. A lot of work with communication and coordination needs to be done to make these moves between IDP camps back to parishes (town centers), back to homes, successful. Which is where community empowerment and committed individuals serving as a liaison between the Gov’t and the people, can really be beneficial.

(a view inside an IDP camp. The conditions are very poor - this is a restroom - the camp is grossly overpopulated and a 20'x20' schoolroom is forced to hold 350 children.)








We also met up with some former Members of Parliament who directed us to a Colonel who then carted us around to a community farming project the gov’t is working on to help former abductees who have not been able to adjust or have not been accepted back into their societies as well as others. It was good to see the gov’t doing something I’ve become so cynical against the powers that be, that I needed to see something hopeful. I learned a ton about decongestion (a stepping-stone between the IDP camp and people returning to their homes) and after I told like 3 people Matt reminded me it’s classified and I should probably keep my mouth shut until it goes public. For me it just made sense for people to be allowed to return directly to their land, but then I realized they are going back to nothing and would starve to death.

My hope is to develop a relationship with an IDP camp and in some way be a part of that process going from IDP camp back into a thriving village and working with the community on a holistic level, empowering them economically, spiritually, and emotionally. I’m still praying through all this, but I now see the girls, women, child mothers, and children, I really want to help as a part of a larger whole. Eventually I’d love to do the one-on-one counseling/discipleship stuff with them, but I think in order to get there, their entire situations, and those of their families, have to change. Or else they will just end up being responsible for everyone else in their family. I’m learning our concept of “orphanages” or “homes” don’t necessarily always work here and do not always have a favorable impression. To them it means disconnection and dividing someone out of the rest of the family/community. Of course there are extreme cases when a person has no relatives, or is an outcast of their community, and then of course there need to be places of shelter.

I had this inspirational moment while talking with my mom. She was telling me how there is this elderly woman she just adores who comes to her at work. Mom was telling her how she might have to bring Abby (my grandmother) to live with her soon and this woman broke out in tears. Turns out her own daughter, her only daughter, is unwilling to take her in and she might have to go into a home. Mom told her that she would take her in when she builds a bigger house and she meant it. But it made me think about the family systems. The difference between here in Africa and the United States. Here, like in many older cultures, like in Native American culture, and in Hispanic culture, the cycle of life is a harmonious balance, one in which what has been taken while we are young, is given back when our parents grow old. In the United States we have become so selfish and concerned with our careers, and our own happiness that we have left an entire generation to fend for itself, staring at blank walls. Here, as we’ve seen, if one person in the family makes it, the whole family benefits. They are so tied together that economic empowerment of one leads to the caring for many. This is just a thought—one I mainly owe to my mom, but what if the family structure could eradicate poverty?

In many ways I think that is what we are talking about when we speak of community empowerment. Because here a community is a nucleus, a cell, a tiny explosion that can change the world. The family has been, is, and will continue to be the most important structure in our society. If we help one in the family make it, won’t they then turn and care for the others? But then they will be responsible for all the others in the family. What if we help one family, will they then start transforming their community? Will decongestion work if people share land and share labor? If my family is thriving won’t I then be able to take in the orphan in the parish who has no home? Not that I’m talking communism here, but even in the Bible, the new “family” the adoption of individuals into the brotherhood of believers shared all their belongings. It says in Acts 4:

"Now the full number of those who believed were of one heart and one soul, and no one said that any of the things that belonged to him were his own, but they had everything in common. And with great power the apostles were giving their testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and the great grace was upon them all. There was not a needy person among them for as many as were owners of lands or houses sold them and brought the proceeds of what was sold and laid it at the apostles feet and it was distributed to each as had any need."

In my mind that is not the same thing as communism, it is not saying one person without determination, cannot succeed, but rather in success, there is sharing.

I don’t know why I’m writing like a thesis paper here:) I’m just thinking. What if?


I spoke with a Ugandan Rev. named Alex yesterday who really inspired me as well. He told me to think BIG, dream BIG and go beyond the cultural norms. He said sometimes as Westerners we are so concerned with being sensitive that we don’t push people to grow and change. He is a revolutionary thinker within his society. He believes some of the old traditions must be left behind for progress. The funniest thing he told me was to go buy a TRACTOR. Now that sounds kind of funny, but he said if I give a man a hoe or five hoes, he’ll only marry five wives and they will become his tractor, instead of instigating transformation by introducing new ideas like the concept of being able to clear three or four times as much land with less effort. He sends kids to boarding schools where they are fed, clothed, and given quality education and is transforming a little HIV/AIDS ridden community in Nansana, just outside of Kampala. And he does it all through his own self-sustaining pineapple farm.

I like it.
John Deere. Who knew?


Looks like I will be heading home (referring to the US) a little earlier than expected. Turns out August 12th is the only time we can go on a “family vacation” and you know I can’t miss out on Hartz Family Fun. I leave August 7th. It's pretty sad. But I see a little Water Country USA and Scrabble in my future. So I’m in a rush to finish up research---going to talk to some more people on decongestion and also some psychologists on methods of trauma therapy being effective in the North. I have to postpone my travels to Kenya and Capetown until next time—God just kind of narrowed me down to here—but I think that was a good thing, and it’s amazing how understanding ministries can be when you tell them that God called you to stay put. Plus I’m totally out of money, so that kind of lit a fire under my butt. Besides the OBVIOUS that I miss all you people back home and can’t stay away for too long.








Pray for the peace talks. Pray for guidance for me. And always, dream big.