Sanibonani!
Yebo.
Ninjani?
Ngiyaphila. Ninjani?
Ngiyaphila!
I see you!
Yes.
How are you?
I'm fine. How are you?
I'm fine.
The last two days
have been the same, but also completely different. Yesterday we did two
more home visits in the morning. We were able to be the hands and feet of Jesus by bringing food to an
elderly man and his family that a group had met the day before. They
were very grateful and we were able to pray for them as well. And take
pictures with them of course.
The second place was a bigger house just
around the corner from our Bhobokazi Care Point. There were three women
here who thankfully all spoke English. It was great to be able to have a
full conversation with them without needing to go through a translator.
We were able to share scripture back and forth with these women and
praise God for the work he is doing in Swaziland. You can really
feel
the presence of God in some of these homes unlike anything I've ever
felt before in Canada. Even when you simply stand near some of these
beautiful Swazi Gogo's (grandmothers) you can feel the presence of God
around you. It's powerful and something that is not common back home.
The afternoon we prepared for our VBS lesson and waited for the
children to arrive from school. It was neat to see familiar faces,
especially when they light up when they see yours. We taught the
children some new songs, did a lesson/skit on Moses and prayed with
them. We were also taught a few Swazi games that the children loved.
Our debrief times at night as a group are quite powerful and people
are amazingly transparent and vulnerable. It is really encouraging to
see how a group of Christian brothers and sisters can trust and love
each other so easily after just getting to know one another.
Today, August 8th, was a little different. Myself and two others
went to a woman's homestead to help with a house addition. She has sadly
lost her husband and was left with ten children. She also lives in a
tiny one-room house with them. But today was also a little different because the
Swazi builders seemed to have everything under control with the cement
blocks so didn't really have much for us to do.
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| Lindewe |
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| One room house with two half-built rooms being added |
It was rather humorous actually when a truck with a large load of
sand came for us to unload so I was happy to have something to do, and
about five minutes in a Swazi boy came over and asked if I was tired and
took my shovel. I looked at him and said 'no' and got Joseph to hand
me another shovel :).
Thankfully after lunch we were able to start
digging out the floor so cement could be poured smoothly. It was tough
work with very hard ground, two shovels, a pick ax with no handle, and a
large piece of re-bar. But, we're making progress and there is a giant
pile of dirt to show what all we've done. A little more physically
challenging and a little less mentally exhausting - a welcome change. I
think we'll be going back to the construction site tomorrow again.

It's difficult to see children in such poverty. Many in only one
pair of clothes. Almost all without shoes. Most with just the one or
two meals they receive at the care point, often having to share the one
plate of food amongst three people just using their hands to eat. We
have SO much in our western culture and are often SO disgustingly
ungrateful. How do you help? What do you do? What can you say?
Thankfully our heavenly Father is in this land and is working. As was
stated nicely at debrief tonight by our project leader, Scott: "You have
to see it as God was here working with these children before you
arrived here on Friday and asked you if you could watch out for that
little child for a week. And to love on them. And at the end of the week
you have to have the faith that you can hand that child back to the
Father and know that He will continue to watch over them."
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| God making his presence known in Swaziland |
There's not a lot we can DO for these children in this week - though
on a side note if you are interesting in supporting a child or want to sponsor a
child so that he or she can go to school or eat regular meals etc.
please contact me and I will be more than happy to hook you up with the Children's Hopechest. There is an understandable statistic between the
percentage if Swazi girls who are educated and the age they become
sexually active. And in a country with such a high HIV rate, education
is so important.
It's very late here and I already know I'm going to be physically hurting in the morning so I have to bring today to a close.
"Whoever helps the least of these, helps me." Jesus