Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Prayer Request Update #2

We just received an update about our friend Aaron...
I went to the surgeon today and we have a plan. The surgery will be next Thursday at 7:30 am. They are going to go in through a 9 inch incision that will be made in my back between my ribs, separate to of my ribs and start to work on my right lung. They are going to need to surgically remove a section of my main bronchial tube and my middle lobe and possibly the lower lobe. The bronchial tube will be reatattched using a muscle that will be taken from my back to help it heal quickly. I am expecting to be in the hospital for 5 days. The surgeon classified this as a pretty major surgery so I would definitely appreciate your continued prayers especially on next Thursday. I haven't been in the hospital for more than 10 years so this is all new to me. I am fully confident that my God knows where I am and will work all these things together for my good and His glory.

Again, so many people from all over the world have told me that they are praying for me. I would imagine that thousands of disciples of Christ know about this tumor and are praying. That is a huge source of strength for me. Pray for John Miller, the surgeon who will perform the surgery and for a quick recovery so we can return to North Africa. It looks like I will be able to be in North Africa for the last couple weeks that our summer interns will be there so I am excited about that. Keep praying!

Monday, April 28, 2008

Carey and Ella

As much as I love being a missionary, I love being a mom more! Let's just say that there is never a dull moment with these two!

They found the markers the other day, but at least they used markers that matched their outfits!

Carey decided to dress up like a hippie...how does she even know what that is!?!

An Ashanti Funeral

The more we go out visiting here, the more we see the need!
As a new missionary facing culture shock, it was very easy to want to hide out in my house instead of interacting with people I didn't understand and I didn't like. I'm sure that is shocking to hear, but every missionary will feel that way at some time or another. John and I quickly learned that when those feelings hit, the best thing to do was exactly the opposite of what we wanted to do... we had to get out of our house and be with the people.
Now that we have the awesome opportunity to start a church here, we are out visiting almost every day of the week. And, the more time we spend outside our home, the more we are reminded of the need for laborers here in Ghana! We started visitng in the area of Gyinyase/Ahinsan in January. We go room to room and shop to shop talking to people about the gospel and trying to set up salvation Bible studies with them. In the last four months we've finished one street! That is not because we are not going out often - we are visiting in that area four days a week! It is simply because laborers are needed! Of course, we want to train people here to reach people, but they cannot give witness of the gospel until they have accepted Christ themselves.
Please pray for Eunice and Kofi to grow in Christ. Please continue to pray for Linda (Kofi's wife), Julianna, and Samuel. All of them are doing salvation Bible studies with us right now, but Satan does not let go of people easily! Pray for them to be convicted by the Holy Spirit and accept Christ!
We had another reminder of the need for laborers this week: a funeral. Now here in Ghana a funeral is very different from a funeral in the States. It is usually a three day event. Usually a funeral is not conducted until a person has been dead for at least a month. Once a person dies, posters are put up everywhere, so that people know the person has died. The family will repair and repaint the house (this is about the only time people here will repaint a house!). The Friday of the funeral they will put up huge tents and bring in lots of plastic chairs, drums, crates of minerals (soda pop) and beer, and the biggest speakers you've NEVER seen. (I promise you've never seen speakers like we use here!) On Friday afternoon people will start showing up to view the body, drink, and listen to really loud music. This will go on til about 9 pm (if we're lucky), then people will either go home or go to sleep (on mats provided by the deceased person's family). The wake-keeping will start about 4 am, loud music and all. This will continue until about 10 am when everybody leaves for the burial. At about 2 pm, everybody will come back to the house, sit, dance, eat, dance, drink, dance, give money, dance, listen to loud music, dance... I think you get the idea! This will usually go on until about 9 pm again on Saturday. On Sunday morning everyone will go to the church the person attended and "give thanks" (for their life or death, I'm not sure which one!), and then everybody will come back to the house to do the same thing until it gets dark.
The sad thing is that I've had to go to a few funerals since moving here, and I've never seen anybody cry or talk about what happens to a person after death. It just seems to be a good reason to get together to drink and dance. Believe it or not, it is a really popular way for singles to meet guys and girls! Lots of people in their twenties just dress in black and go looking for funerals every weekend! (I'm sure that makes a great story to tell the grandkids!)
The funeral we saw this weekend was across the street from us so I got to snap a few pictures.




Not your normal American funeral, I can tell you that!

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Prayer Request Update

For those of you who have been praying for our friend Aaron, we have some good news!
"I just got back from the lung specialist (Pulmonologist) and have some news. The tumor that I have in my right lung is called a Carcinoid Tumor and it is benign. That's great news. So I won't be dying from this problem, but we are going to have to take care of it. The Pulmonologist has been treating lungs for 25 years and has only seen this on two other occasions. The tumor has been growing in my right bronchial tube over the last year. It has caused my right lung to fill up with blood. They have removed some of the blood and are going to have to wait for the rest of the blood to be absorbed into the lung before they can remove the tumor with a laser. That is what we are hoping, anyway. I will hear back from the doctor tomorrow. She has told me that I won't be able to travel back to North Africa for a couple months until they can get this tumor removed. So I am praying for the quickest possible solution. So we can praise the Lord that it is nothing malignant."
(taken from his blog, www.ProjectNorthAfrica.blogspot.com)
I know he appreciates the prayers. Please keep praying!

Monday, April 21, 2008

West Africa

We are missionaries in West Africa. As I've said before, this is an area, not a country. Living in West Africa we have a great opportunity to reach into North Africa. In fact, it is very important that West Africa is saturated with the true gospel before it is saturated with Islam. Many countries in West Africa are already considered "muslim countries": Senegal, Burkina Faso, Mali, Mauritania. And, many countries in West Africa have large Muslim populations: Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo. If people here are not reached with the gospel first, they will be reached with Islam. Here is a very sad, but true article about what Islam does for its people...

AP IMPACT: Islamic schools lure African boys into begging
By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI, Associated Press Writer

DAKAR, Senegal - On the day he decided to run away, 9-year-old Coli awoke on a filthy mat.
Like a pup, he lay curled against the cold, pressed between dozens of other children sleeping head-to-toe on the concrete floor. His T-shirt was damp with the dew that seeped through the thin walls. The older boys had yanked away the square of cloth he used to protect himself from the draft. He shivered.

It was still dark as he set out for the mouth of a freeway with the other boys, a tribe of 7-, 8- and 9-year-old beggars.

Coli padded barefoot between the stopped cars, his head reaching only halfway up the windows. His scrawny body disappeared under a ragged T-shirt that grazed his knees. He held up an empty tomato paste can as his begging bowl.

There are 1.2 million Colis in the world today, children trafficked to work for the benefit of others. Those who lure them into servitude make $15 billion annually, according to the International Labor Organization.

It's big business in Senegal. In the capital of Dakar alone, at least 7,600 child beggars work the streets, according to a study released in February by the ILO, the United Nations Children's Fund and the World Bank. The children collect an average of 300 African francs a day, just 72 cents, reaping their keepers $2 million a year.

Most of the boys — 90 percent, the study found — are sent out to beg under the cover of Islam, placing the problem at the complicated intersection of greed and tradition. For among the cruelest facts of Coli's life is that he was not stolen from his family. He was brought to Dakar with their blessing to learn Islam's holy book.

In the name of religion, Coli spent two hours a day memorizing verses from the Quran and over nine hours begging to pad the pockets of the man he called his teacher.

It was getting dark. Coli had less than half the 72 cents he was told to bring back. He was afraid. He knew what happened to children who failed to meet their daily quotas.

They were stripped and doused in cold water. The older boys picked them up like hammocks by their ankles and wrists. Then the teacher whipped them with an electrical cord until the cord ate their skin.

Coli's head hurt with hunger. He could already feel the slice of the wire on his back.

He slipped away, losing himself in a tide of honking cars. He had 20 cents in his tomato can.

___

Three years ago, a man wearing a skullcap came to Coli's village in the neighboring country of Guinea-Bissau and asked for him.

Coli's parents immediately addressed the man as "Serigne," a term of respect for Muslim leaders on Africa's western coast. Many poor villagers believe that giving a Muslim holy man a child to educate will gain an entire family entrance to paradise.

Since the 11th century, families have sent their sons to study at the Quranic schools that flourished on Africa's western seaboard with the rise of Islam. It is forbidden to charge for an Islamic education, so the students, known as talibe, studied for free with their marabouts, or spiritual teachers. In return, the children worked in the marabout's fields.

The droughts of the late 1970s and '80s forced many schools to move to cities, where their income began to revolve around begging. Today, children continue to flock to the cities, as food and work in villages run short.

Not all Quranic boarding schools force their students to beg. But for the most part, what was once an esteemed form of education has degenerated into child trafficking. Nowadays, Quranic instructors net as many children as they can to increase their daily take.

"If you do the math, you'll find that these people are earning more than a government functionary," said Souleymane Bachir Diagne, an Islamic scholar at Columbia University. "It's why the phenomenon is so hard to eradicate."

Middle men trawl for children as far afield as the dunes of Mauritania and the grass-covered huts of Mali. It's become a booming, regional trade that ensnares children as young as 2, who don't know the name of their village or how to return home.

One of the largest clusters of Quranic schools lies in the poor, sand-enveloped neighborhoods on either side of the freeway leading into Dakar.

This is where Coli's marabout squats in a half-finished house whose floor stirs with flies. Amadu Buwaro sleeps on a mattress covered in white linens. The 30 children in his care sleep in another room with dirty blankets on the floor. It smells rotten and wet, like a soaked rag.

Buwaro is a thin man in his 30s who wears a pressed olive robe and digital watch. The children wear T-shirts black with filth. He expects them to beg to pay the rent, because there are no fields here to till.

But their earnings far exceed his rent of $50. If the boys meet their quotas, they bring in around $650 a month in a nation where the average person earns $150.

Buwaro expects the children to suffer to learn the Quran, just as he did at the hands of his teacher.

So when Coli failed to return, Buwaro was furious. He flipped open his flashy silver cell phone and called another marabout who kept a blue planner with names of runaway boys. The list stretched down the page. He added Coli's name.

___

His tomato can tucked under one arm, Coli jumped on the back of a bus, holding on to the swinging rear door. He was hundreds of miles from the village where he grew up speaking Peuhl, a language not commonly heard in Dakar.

He could not ask the Senegalese for help. So he got directions in Peuhl from other child beggars, who like him were trafficked here from the zone of green savannah just outside Senegal.

Coli made his way to a neighborhood where he had heard of a place that gave free food to children like him.

"Do you know where you come from?" asked the kind-faced woman at Empire des Enfants. The shelter's capacity is 30 children, but it usually houses at least 50.

Coli knew the name of his mother, but not how to reach her. He knew the name of the region where he was born, but not his village. "My mother is black," he said. "I'm sure I'll recognize her."

The shelter worker told Coli what to do if his marabout came. We will protect you, she said. If he tries to grab you, scream.

Days went by. Maybe weeks.

Then Coli's marabout arrived.

In 2005, Senegal made it a crime punishable by five years in prison to force a child to beg. But the same law makes an exception for children begging for religious reasons. Few dare to cross marabouts for fear of supernatural retaliation.

Coli's marabout entered the shelter flanked by a column of religious leaders in cascading robes that tumbled onto the ground. One of them stabbed his finger at the clouds and yelled out, "The sky will fall down on you if you don't hand over our children."

The shelter is used to such threats. But this time the marabouts had discovered the center's legal paperwork was not complete. They threatened to close the shelter if it did not hand over 11 boys.

To save more than 40 others, the shelter handed over the 11. Coli was on the list.

Back at the school, they beat the 9-year-old until he thought he was going to faint. At night, they dragged him off the floor, doused him in water and beat him again.

Three days later, he ran away again. When he arrived at the shelter, he said: "I want to go home to my mom."

___

To find Coli's mother, aid workers broadcast his name on the radio in Guinea-Bissau. The names of over a dozen children also from Guinea-Bissau played in a continuous loop, like sonic homing pigeons trying to find their target.

No response. Some boys worried their parents might be dead.

"I'm sure my mother is still alive," Coli reasoned. "When I left her she was well, so why wouldn't she be well now?" Underneath his bright eyes is another worry. Will she be angry that he disobeyed his teacher?

Over the past two years, the International Organization for Migration has returned over 600 child beggars to their homes. Several had been hit by cars. Some had scars on their backs. One 10-year-old was so hungry he ate out of the trash. Soon after he returned home, he vomited worms and died.

Almost all the boys had begged on behalf of Quranic instructors in Senegal.

"Cultural habits have been manipulated for the sake of exploitation," said the IOM's Laurent de Boeck, deputy regional representative for West and Central Africa.

Two months went by before a shelter worker pulled Coli aside. His parents were alive.

___

The 13 boys from Guinea-Bissau pile into a bus. Coli screams with glee as it takes off for the airport.

"Is this Guinea-Bissau?" one of them asks as they descend onto the cracked runway and enter the small airport of the nation's capital. "Senegal looks better," says another.

Though Senegal is among the world's poorest nations, it's visibly more developed than Guinea-Bissau, listed 160th out of 177 countries on the U.N.'s human development index. The capital they left had streets clogged with taxis and flashy 4-by-4s. The buildings were tall. The capital they returned to has squat, low buildings and crumbling colonial villas.

"I'm not sure I like it," Coli confides.

As the bus leaves the capital, they pass villages of cone-shaped huts and fields where boys herd bulls. They sing songs, clapping their hands. As they pull into the shelter where their parents were told to expect them, the boys fall silent.

Timidly, they file off the bus. A few of the 12- and 13-year-olds recognize their families. They approach them respectfully, shaking hands.

Coli's mother is not there.

___

A judge tells the parents they will be jailed if they send their children away to beg again. They have to sign a statement promising to protect their boys from traffickers. Most are illiterate, so they leave a thumbprint in blue ink next to their names.

"You sent your kids to hell," the judge says. "You can't say that because you are poor you're going to allow your kids to be abused."

His booming voice ricochets off the cracked walls of the building. The parents stare straight ahead.

But the conditions that made these families send their children to hell still persist.

Many of the villages do not have enough food. Few have schools. In one, the schoolhouse is a bamboo enclosure that doubles as an animal corral. "We haven't had classes here in over a year," an elderly man says as he ducks into the classroom and skirts a pile of bull manure.

The aid group pays for school fees and supplies. But the stipend cannot cover the economic worth of a child. Some of the children returned in previous months now work as bricklayers and goatherds. Others have already been sent back to the marabouts by their parents. The idea of child trafficking as a crime is so new in the region that no African language has a word for it, experts say.

With each passing day, more parents and relatives come, but not Coli's.

On the third day, the shelter pays for another radio address.

By the fourth, half the 13 children are gone.

The others become increasingly agitated. Maybe the radio is broken, Coli muses. His wet eyes fill with the invisible color of worry.

___

Early on the fifth morning, a woman in a pressed peach robe walks up to the shelter.

Coli rushes outside. He stands a few feet away as tears topple down his cheeks. She covers her face with her veil and weeps.

The two sit side-by-side in plastic chairs. Coli's mother looks at her feet. Her family is poor, she says, and she wanted Coli to get an education. It took her several days to reach the shelter because she didn't have $2 for the bus fare.

For more than an hour, Coli cries. Tears run down either side of his cheeks, forming two watery garlands. They meet at his chin and plop down on his collar bone, pooling above his shirt.

She stands up and wipes his chin. They leave, crossing the dusty boulevard.

Her arm reaches around his shoulder and the long sleeve of her robe falls around the little boy. It hides him from the remaining children, who silently watch Coli go home.

___

EPILOGUE:

Soon after Coli left, his marabout traveled to Guinea-Bissau. He angrily demanded to know why Coli had run away.

Ashamed, Coli's father promised to make up for the boy's bad behavior.

He is sending the marabout two more sons.


Please pray for the peoples of West Africa. Pray that they will be reached with the Gospel! Pray for people like Coli and his parents who do not know there is another answer for their hopelessness. Pray for laborers for the fields.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Urgent Prayer Request for Friend

Please pray for our friend and fellow missionary, Aaron. He and his young family are missionaries in a country in North Africa. I cannot give any more details because of security reasons. He has been having trouble with his lungs for about a year now, but kept on working despite the problem. As I understand it, he recently started coughing up blood so he and his family flew to the States. As soon as he arrived home the doctors started running a battery of tests. They found a growth in his right lung. There is a 50% chance that it is cancerous. He should be receiving the results on Monday. Please pray for this dedicated young family at this difficult time. His family picture is posted at the Andrew's Family blog (listed under Family & Favorites in the margin). Please pass this prayer request along to your churches, too.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Praying God's Word for the Unsaved

I just ran across a great article on Evangelist Will Galkin's website. It is quite powerful! I will write the basic thoughts here, but for the entire article, please look up Evangelist Will Galkin in the Friends & Favorites list (in the margin) and click on the article with the same name as this one.
1. Pray for open doors. (Col. 4:3)
2. Pray for the Word to work swiftly. (2 Thess. 3:1)
3. Pray for the Word to break hard hearts.
(Jer. 23:29)
4. Pray for the Word to discern the real issues.
(Heb. 4:12)
5. Pray that the written and living Word would
dispel darkness. (Ps. 119:105; Jn. 8:12).
6. Pray for the Spirit's conviction. (Jn. 16:7-11)
7. Pray that God's desire would be realized in the lives of the lost. (2 Pt. 3:9)
8. Pray for God-sent laborers. (Lk. 10:2)

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Africa Facts, Part I

Being a missionary in Africa leads to all kinds of strange questions. While in the States on furlough last year, I was continually surprised at the things people could ask me about my field with a straight face - in fact, many times I had a hard time keeping a straight face myself! Now, I'm not making fun of anybody, it is just easy to forget that most people don't know much about the great place I get to live. So for any of you out there that are Africa-illiterate, here are 10 interesting facts for you!
1. Africa is a continent, not a country. In fact it is a very large continent with 56 different countries and over 737 million people. So, no, I probably will never see your friend in Kenya or South Africa. Those places are very far away from where I live!

2. We live in the country of Ghana. It is in West Africa, an area, not a country, in the western part of Africa. There are roughly 20 million people in Ghana. From the searching we've done, we think there are about 30 Baptist missionary families in our country. That's a pretty big ratio!

3. We live in Ghana, not Guinea (in Africa, too), and not Guyana (in South America). We've been introduced as missionaries from all those countries! (see prayer card on right side of screen :))
4. No, we do not live in a grass hut. I know, everyone in Africa lives in a hut, right?!? Actually, and I know this isn't as exciting, we live in a concrete apartment building! In fact, the majority of people in Ghana live in concrete buildings. Even in the villages, most people make their houses out of mud bricks and then overlay them with concrete. It makes them much stronger!

5. Yes, we have big cities here in Ghana. We live in the city of Kumasi which has between 2 and 3 million people. The largest city is the capital, Accra, which has about 5 million people.

6. Almost the only place we can see wild animals is at the zoo. No, we do not have giraffes, lions, monkeys, or wildebeasts running around. There are some elephants and antelope on game reserves, but that is the only place you will see them in the wild. If you go into the deep forest, you can see monkeys, but most of the time we only see them here when someone has one for a pet! And sadly, there are no lions or giraffes in West Africa. They were poached out a long time ago.

7. Many people ask me if I'm afraid of the snakes, spiders, and crocodiles here. Actually, I don't see them here too often. The only difference between here and the States is that if I see a snake or a spider here, I kill first and ask questions later, since almost all of the species here are poisonous. Not common, but poisonous.

8. No, we do not eat monkey brains, or any other really wierd things like that! Yes, that is a real question that someone asked me! We eat the local food, and I also do what I like to call African-American cooking. I take ingredients I can get here and try to make it into something familiar. Sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn't! For example, I make a version of taco salad here, but I substitute plantain chips for tortilla chips, since we don't have tortilla chips here, and then I make my own salsa. Delicious!

9. Yes, people here wear clothes. Most people here wear clothes just like we wear in the States. In fact, most of the clothes people wear here are things that have been donated to places like Goodwill, Red Cross, and other charity organizations. The things that are donated are sold here (yes, sold), and that is the clothing that most people wear here on a daily basis. Most people also wear what we call "local clothes", meaning clothing of a traditional style and print. There are seamstresses and tailors on every corner, so anything you can think up, you can have sewn!

10. Witch doctors, voodoo, juju - yes it is here, but it is not common to see traditional fetish priests, idols, or sacrifices on a regular basis. These things are here, and they are powerful, too, but they are not as blatant as in some places. Most people here are deathly afraid of the fetish priests, spirits, and curses, but they will not take part in it unless they feel like they have no recourse. If a family member gets sick or dies, or they really need money, many people will go to the priests in secret for help. The fear is what really binds them!

So there you have it! Your first ten facts towards being Africa-literate. Now go out and surprise somebody with how much you know about Ghana. And, don't forget to pray for the salvation of the people of Ghana, too!

Friday, April 4, 2008

New Family Pics

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A Good Start

Last night was our first meeting towards forming a new church here in Kumasi, Ghana. We have been doing preliminary work in an area called Ahinsan since January in preparation for this church plant. John and I, with some help from John Dogby and Gifty Anaane-Tabeah, have been doing salvation Bible studies with some people in this area. We have seen some people saved, and we have now started a Thursday night meeting to bring them all together. We are trying to lay a strong foundation for this future church. Last night, with the help of Evans Twum, John taught on baptism. We had eleven people there, besides our family, and we are excited to see what the Lord has in store for our little group in the future!






What's the Point?

Well, what is the point of this blog? I decided if I was going to be a blogger, I should have some reason for doing so! This blog will be a collection of several things: news of the family, news of the ministry, views on life in Africa, views of a missionary in a third world country, and views of a missionary wife. Hopefully these things will be both interesting and helpful not only for friends and family, but also for those who want to know better how to pray for missionaries and even missionaries (especially wives) seeking encouragement!