Thursday, October 24, 2013

Teachable Moments and a Birthday


The Renaissance Man?  Teaching 4 and 5 year olds how to bouree.



Ladies night out was the occasion I had to start this entry this week, but I unfortunately fell asleep with the kids while putting them to bed and find myself writing this at a particularly uninteresting forum I am taking in part in this morning. 

 For some reason the many little stresses we face in our work and home life here seemed to add up to making this a particularly straining week emotionally.  It is hard to explain why the many small things can come together in this way but because they are relatively independent of each other they can sometimes gather into the same space of time.  Discipline issues with children and their routines, a series of unexpected requests, preparations for upcoming events, necessity to use our free time for work, and also some physical limitations (an injury), all conspired to make this a particularly challenging week.  I think what makes these things particularly stressful is that they can interfere with Rebecca and I to having time together to talk and coordinate.  We end up having to play ‘zone defense’ to deal with all the problems and have no opportunity to support each other.  We talked yesterday about the need to try to simplify and prioritize, especially when we think about turning this program over to another set of reps.  We want to leave something that is manageable! 

Picking up from last week’s post, I was returning from a trip to Kigali (the third in the last 6 weeks).  On the way home, I went through Burasira, where there is a nice Catholic Seminary and guesthouse where I spent the night before continuing on to Gitega.  It was practically deserted when I got there and I was the only one staying in the guest house.  It felt a bit like a spiritual retreat in its solitude, although one of the nuns, Soeur Anise, did sit with me at dinner and we chatted for quite a whie.  I have known her from visits to the Seminary over several years, but it was nice to have a one-on-one conversation of substance.  I asked her about how she decided to enter “la vie religieuse” as they call it here and she talked about making a decision to enter the order at the age of 17, against the wishes of her family.  Burundian girls deciding to become nuns is still not an unusual choice here, and may even be the best of other less appealing alternatives, including a bad marriage and life of poverty. 

 I told her that very few young women in my culture would make such a decision at that age.  She said she knew as she had spent time in Switzerland where all the nuns were very old women who had decided to enter that vocation late in life, and lamented the fact that our culture does not encourage this more.  She does, in my opinion, reflect the love of Christ in the hospitality she shows, and always asks after Rebecca and the children.

Michael teaching at GLPI
 I continued on early the next morning to Gitega to visit the GLPI seminar.  (Great Lakes Peacebuilding Institute).  This is a one month training seminar for peacebuilders partially supported by MCC.  Melody Musser, our service worker is seconded to our partner MiPAREC who organizes it.  I went while Michael Sharp, an MCC Congo service worker was doing a one week module on conflict theory.  Patrick, the other MCC Congo service worker was also in attendance.  I stayed for the morning session to lend moral support then continued on to Bujumbura.  I arrived on Thursday afternoon.  (I indulged in a swim at the pool before coming back to the house because I felt so physically worn-out from all the driving.)

 
Melody
We had Travis and his daughter Divine over for dinner that night.  They are in the final stages of waiting for her visa to allow them to join the rest of their family back in the US.  It has been a long hard wait, but the light at the end of the tunnel is now in view.

 Friday was ballet and I did ask Rebecca to bring the camera to make a few pictures.  I have quite a few kids in two classes I teach, a beginner group, followed by a more advanced group.  Oren and David had a holiday from school that day but I taught anyway.  October is the month when there a lot of national holidays because of several assassinations of Presidents in the month of October.  There is a morbid joke about October being a bad month to be President of Burundi.

 The weekend was fairly typical as far as yoga on Saturday, Rebecca did have to go to a Saturday meeting midmorning while I stayed with the kids, but we did have a movie night on Saturday together.  Patrick and Michael had returned from their sojourn in Gitega on Saturday and spent the weekend with us at our house.

Joel Miller 
 Sunday was a bit of a departure from the norm as Rebecca asked me to do a short drama in the Sunday school class and tell the story of Isaac and Rebecca from the perspective of Eliazar, Abraham’s servant.  I dressed up in a middle Eastern-ish costume with complete with beard made out of a plastic bag, and sunglasses, and came in and told the story as a kind of grouchy old Arab.  The kids thought it was pretty funny and I had no trouble keeping their attention for the duration of the story.

Ben Carlson
We decided to go again to the standing ultimate Frisbee game on Sunday’s at the park here.  We do have several ex-pat friends who go, as well as some Burundians who had learned Frisbee from the grandfather of ultimate Frisbee in Burundi—Doug Hiebert, our predecessor.  (He taught a group of boys in Gitega ultimate about a decade ago and many continue to play.)  Patrick came with me as well as Rebecca and the kids.  Patrick and I were the only ones who played, until I pulled my calf muscle toward the end of the 2 hour session.  (This game does have its share of injuries with people breaking ribs, hurting eyes, feet, etc.)  I do have to say it is a lot of fun and another opportunity to get together with friends.

We hobbled on to small group directly from ultimate.  I have talked about the group often in the past, and it continues to be a place of real support in our lives.  We were struck during prayer time though that by this time next year there will only be one family left here in Bujumbura.  All the rest of us will be leaving for other assignments.  (JJ and Courtney will still be here.)  It came as a bit of shock to me just how much turnover there is from year to  year.


Monday was another school holiday.  We had a special plan for this day, which was an early Birthday party for David.  He turns 5 on Oct 29th, but we realized we would be in Rwanda for regional meetings and a team retreat that whole week, and a Birthday cake with adults is just not the same thing to a 5 year old as a party with friends.  We kept it very modest and invite over 3 families with kids his age—Isabel and her parents Tim and Jeanette, the Guilbaud’s and the Ivaska’s with their 2 girls Harper and Zadie.  It was a pirate party and although we pulled it together toward the last minute we had many pirate-themed items and activities.


I had made a pirate ship piniata, and Rebecca made a very cool pirate ship shaped cake made out of secret ingredient chocolate cake.  (the secret ingredient is beets! But you would never know it.)  I had also constructed an elaborate obstacle course in the living room from the furniture and other items in which they could run a sort of circular relay race with the two teams going in opposite directions.  It made for quite a bit of chaos.  We also had a kind of balloon soccer and some games involving the parachute we have that can be lifted and lowered as a group.  Because the number of kids was reasonable, it meant as well, that the parents could talk a bit as well, I was glad that JJ and Simon (2 dads) came as well which gave us a chance to chat a bit.

The kids returned back to school after a 4 day weekend for the first time on Tuesday.  It was a relief to get a few days of regular routine in.  Much of it was used to prepare for the upcoming 10 days in Rwanda.  We will be hosting regional meetings followed by a team retreat.  It will probably be a bit hairy and I may not post again before that is over.



This evening we had one surprise visitor.  It was Nina with her two kids Jonah and Milo!  She is German and used to be here with GIZ, with her kids and husband Bila.  They were regulars at yoga and fellow parents at the Ecole Belge.  It was great to see them and reminded us of all those we have known who have left.  Fortunately it is a small world and I have no doubt we will see them again sometime, somewhere.

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

A Hodgepodge of Highlights

Kita the chimp, one of the featured attractions at Musee Vivante. 


A hodgepodge of highlights to share from the past two weeks:
Rebecca contributed last week on her participation in a prayer retreat at Buta a week ago Friday.  I was home with the kids those days, but now I find myself alone again, back in Kigali where I am working on various things, but primarily the very slow and challenging task of registering an International NGO in Rwanda.  I won't go into detail here as it is really not interesting to talk about.

As a short aside, I may not have mentioned often enough that my interest in cross-cultural work is probably rooted in my own experience as a cross cultural kid.  My father is a doctor in the public health/infectious disease sector, who like his father before him, spent many years working overseas when I was young.  I grew up in South Asia, and spent many years of my youth feeling a bit out of place in my own culture.

I bring this up because my father is celebrating his 80th Birthday this week.  And, I skyped him last week while he was on a trip to AFGHANISTAN to help ministry of health officials understand how to define health care priorities for their country.  For anyone who feels like they can never live up to their parent's standards, you can imagine how I feel.  Will I have the heart to continue to do this work into my 80s in places like Afghanistan?  I guess time will tell.  Anyway, I want to say Happy 80th Birthday Dr. W.H. Mosley/ Dad, I am very proud of you and the example you have given to me of what it means to live out your faith as a Christian, and a Scientist.  

Most of the highlights this week were on the weekends.  We went fishing about a week ago, Saturday, and found that our fishing peer was surrounded by hippos.  We moved down about 20 meters away from them, as they were hanging out in a marina called Cercle Nautique, minding their own business, and we fished for quite a while.  We did not catch anything but did lose about a dozen worms as the fish would easily nibble them off the hook.  Finally a local fisherman came up to me and told me the secret to success was to use a very tiny #12 hook which was small enough to snag them.  Sure enough, when I tried one I was able to catch one of the small fish that were eating our worms.  The locals love to eat them, but it seemed really small to me and I threw it back.

Jeanette brought her daughter Isabel to the place as well and Isabel and David played near the water while Oren and I walked around for a better look at some of the hippos who had moved a bit further away by then.  They were quite frisky and active in the water and I got some good pictures of them.  Here is one with his jaw fully unhinged.  It certainly does remind me of how terrifying these animals can be and why they are the #1 killers of humans in the animal kingdom.

Hope school boys playing after school.  
The kids did well in school during the week and I only had one trip out of town last week to visit the Hope School.  The occasion was to attend the official opening of the library up there.  I have posted some pictures in the past, but the building is done, the books are in, and Dr. Robin Wilde, the head of the Foundation for Hope in Africa was able to be there for several hours for an official opening ceremony.  

I did feel a bit like a proud parent because The Foundation who supported the construction of the library was a connection I had made through this blog.  I cautiously recommended work with our partner and this is the third building project they have done at the school.  So often construction projects go way over budget and are never realized.  This was just the opposite.  The partner was able to do so much more with the project funds than expected.  The building looks fabulous and includes a library, a small room for a science lab, another small classroom potentially for computer training, and a small office.  The building made a very good impression on Pastor Wilde and two colleagues from a neighboring church who came to evaluate the project.  I think that there will be future support for work at the school, and I remain very dedicated to the work that our partner is doing there.

It was a one day trip, coming and going on a Thursday so although it was a long day, I was happy to have a week where I was not out of town overnight for  7 straight days!

I also taught a lot of ballet the past 2 weeks.  I share the course with another teacher, she teaches Wednesdays and I teach Fridays.  Last week I taught both classes because of several Fridays I will have to miss this month.  I am actually quite pleased by the large groups in the first and second levels.  The kids seem really excited to be doing dance, and were quite well behaved despite the fact that I had close to 20 in the younger kids class.  A lot of new faces in both groups, I do not know if I will continue to teach ballet once I leave Burundi, so I am really going to try to make this last year something special.

Friday's are actually a really fun day to teach because there is are a lot of other activities going on at the school outside the studio.  Oren plays soccer, David hangs out with Isabel while Jeanette, Rebecca, and many other mom's chat and hang out as well.  It is kind of like a big social hour for everyone.

This past Friday after ballet I had some special bonding time with Oren at a french movie that was being shown at the school.  We did this last year once as well, so for Oren it is ritual.  The movie was called EPIC and was dubbed into French.  It was pretty good and I downloaded it later on iTunes so we could see it in English, its original language.  

Oren loved the idea of going to a movie that was not on a TV or a computer screen.  It was projected on a yellow wall and the sounds system stunk, and the power went out 3 times, and it started late, but, truth be told, it was a really fun evening with Oren.  Rebecca and David went out to a movie at a friend's house as well that evening.  Sometimes it is good to do things separately with the kids because when they are together Sibling Rivalry is the only game in town.  

One thing the kids do do together during the week is take tennis lessons on Monday and Wednesday after school.  Oren has shown far more aptitude at this than karate!  David likes it too.  Burundi actually has an excellent women's tennis team and coaches here are very competent, good teachers.  Keeping the kids active during the after school hours is important and since they spend most of the day behind the walls of our house, organized sports seems to be the best outlet here.  Rebecca can also enjoy some time with other mom's when they are at practice.  The Guillebaud's (long time missionaries from UK) bring their kids as well, so Rebecca and Lizzie are often there together.

Saturday was also a highlight with another what has now become a monthly visit to the zoo (Musee Vivante).  Oren brought his buddy Sam Miller with him and they spent over 2 hours looking at the animals.  The zoo does not have much, but what it does have are extremely carnivorous.  Crocodiles, a leopard, many deadly (local snakes) --boomschlangs, mambas, cobras, gaboon vipers.  David did hold a green banana tree snake, the only non-venomous one of the lot.  The kids did get a guinea pig to feed to a crocodile, but the carnage was even worst as we apparently arrived at feeding time and all the snake cages had 4 or 5 small birds in them.  We saw a half dozen get swallowed whole in a matter of 10 minutes.  Oren, David and Sam seemed to enjoy that and tried to talk me into getting another guinea pig to feed the leopard.  I am really not into this "Circle of Life" stuff as much as them and declined.

David scheming to outsmart Kita and grab the bottle.
The most amusing part for me was watching them play around the cage of Kita the chimp.  We had brought her some mangoes that she really liked and some peanuts as well that she really likes you to put directly into her mouth.  She loves little kids and plays a kind of keep-away game with them.  She dangles a bottle just outside the cage and waits for someone to grab it, then flips it a foot or so to the right or left, or pulls it back in the cage.  She had Oren, David, and Sam trying to grab it for about half an hour.  I said at one point to Oren "You'll never get it, she is a chimpanzee, she is at least twice as smart as you."  Oren took up the challenge and tried twice as hard for another 10 minutes, to no avail.  (I was kidding him when I said it, but in the end I realize I might have been right.)

I do have to say, that she is such a clever chimp, it is a bit scary that she is in a cage.  She seems almost like a person in her personality.  I am sad for her, and I don't think animals belong in cages, but it is fascinating to see our kids interacting with her in a way they never could in a setting where laws and regulations don't allow such casual human--animal interaction.  I will miss our little zoo when we leave.

I should not neglect to mention the past two Sundays.  The first one was special because the Ethiopian family in our small group invited our group over to their house for a traditional Ethiopian meal.  If you have never had Ethiopian food you do not know what you are missing.  It is so good, and they made it even better than I have had at any restaurant, complete with coffee ceremony at the end where they roasted and ground their own beans.  I tried the coffee in the very traditional way which is like an espresso with a bit of melted butter and salt in it.  Very unusual but not bad after a rich meal.

our 'not so' small group about to enjoy an Ethiopian feast.
This past Sunday was unusual as well because Rebecca and I were asked to share a sermon to give some testimonial about our work with MCC.  Our church has been doing a series of sermons based on a study of the letter of James.  Following from his admonition that "Faith without works is dead." there have been different people sharing about their work and how it is oriented by their faith.  The week before we had a member of the church sharing his experience of being a refugee and then starting an organization that assists refugees.  

Rebecca and I shared about our work at MCC.  I began with a reflection on what it is like to be an administrator and evaluate the impact of our work.  I used the passage John 9:1-25, the healing of a man born blind from birth, because it is one of the only instances of a good follow-up after a miraculous healing.  I pointed out that there seems to be no one who is happy about the event from the confused disciples, the skeptical neighbors, the enraged pharisees, and the embarrassed parents.  He is ultimately excommunicated from his church and community-- yet seeks Jesus out in gratitude for his transformation.  I talked about the ways in which we meet a surprising amount of opposition and obstacles in development work by those who are actually beneficiaries of the status-quo as it is.  Fighting poverty always becomes, eventually, a justice issue.

I ended by pointing out that we can infer at least one anonymous group present that is supporting Jesus' healing work, and those are the people who must have led and accompanied the man to the pool of Siloam to wash his eyes, since Jesus did not go with him there.  These people, who I described as having a 'pool ministry'- a ministry of quietly assisting and accompanying those in the process of transformation are always present, but rarely known by name.

I described MCC's role in our country as an organization with such a 'pool ministry'.  We don't lead, but we follow and support local partners in the work they are doing.

Rebecca followed with several testimonials, most notably her personal work at bringing together church leaders in Protestant and Catholic churches to sit together and talk about issues of transitional justice and the formation of the Truth and Reconcilliation Commission--issues where there would be no doctrinal division.  (She joked that it is far easier to get tutsis and hutus to sit together in Burundi than Catholics and Protestants.)  "Our work" she said, "is not to lead, or make policy.  I am just bringing all the different leaders to the pool (the meeting room) where they can wash their eyes and be able to see, exchange ideas. and heal the country."

The sermon was well received, although asking both Rebecca and I to speak meant that the service went quite long.  (We are both pretty long winded).

I am leaving Rwanda today and heading back to Bujumbura via Gitega where I will check in with the Great Lakes Peacebuilding Institute, a one month workshop we support.  Michael Sharp, an MCCer from Bukavu in DRC is teaching this week, and Melody our service worker is there as well as the logistical coordinator.  Patrick, the new guy in Bukavu is attending also.  I will spend the night there tonight then back to Buja on Thursday.  I will be glad to be back home again.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Praying with the Martyrs of Buta


Rebecca sharing some reflections on the past week:

As Paul wrote in last week's blog, I have been involved intensely in the past few weeks in an effort to convene influential Protestant leaders to discuss transitional justice. It has taken a lot of energy to support a local partner in leading this effort, but it has also been intensely rewarding to be part of seeing people come together and really discuss and engage with the right questions. I have appreciated the opportunity to reflect myself on the biblical way to handle crimes, how we care pastorally for both victims and offenders, and yet also ask for justice for wrongdoing. The biblical tension between justice and mercy is very hard for us human beings to grapple with. Truly, it is as tall and as wide as the cross. And that is the only place where all the questions can be resolved. We need a lot of prayer here, especially as it becomes clear that even bishops and leaders of churches are not angels; if a Truth and Reconciliation Commission started work tomorrow, many of these same pastors would be called to defend themselves for past crimes.

And so, on Friday, a group of us went to pray. This time, we were not top church leaders, but rather a gathering of Christian leaders working on reconciliation through non-governmental organizations. We all have met at the GLI (in Uganda) and worked together, for years, discussed and shared practical experiences of grassroots peace building. But this is the first time in recent memory that this group of people gathered to simply pray together. The sixteen of us, from different corners of the country, converged on the tiny Catholic center of Buta, arriving in the early evening.

Tombs of the martyrs at Buta


We were met by Father Zacharie Bukuru, the Abbe Rector of the Benedictine Monastery established at Buta. Father Zacharie has been at Buta in ministry for more than thirty years. He was ordained there, he taught as a secondary school teacher in the Petit Seminaire (Catholic secondary school), and eventually became the Rector of the School in the late 80's. When the civil war broke out in Burundi in 1993, Father Zacharie realized that his older students were truly torn and ravaged by distrust and ethnic hatred for one another. Many wanted to leave school and return home where they could live in the safety of people of their own ethnicity. But Father Zacharie recognized that those impulses were a sign of woundedness and bondage. He worked very hard with those older students over a period of three years, praying together with them, discipling them, teaching them how to love and accept one another, even across ethnicity, as a sign of their identity in Christ. They remained one of the only ethnically integrated schools in the country during the civil war.

One early morning in April 1997, the seminary was attacked by a huge group of Hutu rebel soldiers. The faculty was cut off from the students and was miraculously saved from harm. But the rebels were able to easily enter the dormitory of the older students. They rounded up the young men, most of them around age 20, and ordered them to separate ethnically, Hutus here, Tutsis there. The students refused. Instead, they joined hands and they clung to one another. Enraged, the woman commander of the rebel unit opened fire on the students with a machine gun. Her soldiers followed her example, and the dormitory became a place of horror and death. Forty of 85 students were killed, and another forty were gravely wounded and needed years to recover. Only 3 escaped unscathed.

The forty young men who were killed that day lie at rest today in two lines of clean, white-tiled tombs, at the sanctuary of the Martyrs of Brotherhood. Next to it, inside the sanctuary, a huge fresco depicts Jesus standing over and blessing the young men, each painted individually and skillfully from their own photos from the records of the seminary. Each young man looks out at the praying visitors, some serious, some with a twinkle in their eyes, as if to say, yes, I was really flesh and blood, I was really capable of choosing to die for the truth of who I am in Christ. I was young, and yet I knew what was important.
Inside the sanctuary, in front of the cloud of witnesses.

Father Zachary led us to the tombs for silent reflection and then inside the sanctuary to contemplate the meaning of the deaths of those young men. And then he led us in singing “In the sweet by and by” in Kirundi. Singing longingly. Those were his boys. Those were his spiritual children, whom he had discipled and coached and prepared to face the death that he himself had not known was coming. He sang as if he truly missed them and was longing for the day when they might be reunited.

Shortly after the massacre of his students, Fr. Zacharie moved to France where he spent three years praying in a Benedictine monastery. At first, it seems that he never wanted to return home. But after some time he realized he was called to plant the first monastery in Burundi – exactly at the site of the horror he had experienced. Part of the redemptive power of Buta lies in the fact that it is now a permanent house of prayer. Nine monks and novices pray together six times a day, and invite guests to join them in prayer. They live the rest of their lives mostly in silence, listening for God’s voice, praying for those who cannot pray, lifting up the cries of the people and waiting for them to be transformed. As Fr. Zacharie explained, a society has doctors to heal the body, lawyers to protect justice, politicians to govern; a monk’s calling is to pray.

We followed Fr. Zacharie to the small, bright chapel at the monastery and prayed the vespers prayers together with them. The monks chant the psalms and other passages of scripture, much like they have been chanted in Europe for hundreds of years. Most of our group was Protestant, and even the Catholics among us were not accustomed to this kind of prayer, but we were all very moved. It became clear that these monks chant ALL the psalms at one time or another, even the ones about being destroyed by an enemy. Those psalms of grief and anger leapt off the page with a new freshness when they were sung in this context.

Later we gathered to share together signs we have seen of God at work among us, signs of reconciliation. One man remembered meeting in a Catholic house in 1995 and hearing a sermon about reconciliation, when it seemed like a ridiculous fantasy. Another observed, that here we were, with reasons to be divided but choosing to meet together. Others noted that along the shore of Lake Tanganyika, people were building beautiful houses in what had once been a rebel no man’s land. Fr. Zacharie offered that in the past 6 months he has seen pilgrims coming to pray at the sanctuary of the martyrs, not in little groups of 2 or 3 as before, but in busloads of hundreds of people, among them young people who are really touched by the example of other young men their age.

In the morning, I took the opportunity to wake up at 5 am and pray the vigil with the monks. Later on, some of us also participated in the 7 am lauds and mass. I was so thankful for the time of silent reflection, though the world was not at all silent. There was an absolute riot of birdsong outside the chapel and in the forest all morning. It was truly glorious. I found myself reflecting on the preparation of those 40 young martyrs. What would it look like to prepare my Sunday school children, my own two sons, to believe in their faith so whole-heartedly? So that when a test came, they would rather die than abandon their identity in Christ? It’s not that I want anyone I love to have to face that choice, but I have a deep suspicion that the kind of life they would choose to live would be far more joyful and purposeful.

Even since the shootings in Nairobi, I have been together with friends who have worried about our children in an international school. I think the school administration is thinking the same thing, because last week Oren reported that they had their first-ever anti-terrorism drill. What if terrorists attacked our little ones? How could I teach my children to trust God in any circumstance? I think we must not shelter them from pain and injustice – we need to be forthright about the evil in the world, but help them think through what is wrong and right. And I want to teach them songs and scriptures that they can store up in their hearts in case of a time of need, especially if I cannot be there to help them.

Our entire group then took some time to worship and pray together in a style more familiar to Protestants. We reflected on a wonderful letter in the New Testament, Philemon. It is a story about a victim and an offender, reconciled by Paul as a mediator. Onesimus the slave of wealthy Philemon stole from him and ran away from Colossae to Rome. But there he crossed paths with Paul, Philemon’s old friend, and there Onesimus found a new life in Christ. Onesimus had become truly free in his heart, and so Paul sent him back to Philemon to set things right, to be reconciled to his old master. “I know you’ll do the right thing,” says Paul to Philemon, “and I’ll be sure to cover any money Onesimus owes you – but don’t forget you owe me your very life!” It seems like a clear case where Philemon is a victim, reconciled with the offender, Onesimus…until we considered that Onesimus was also a life-long victim of slavery and injustice, and Philemon was an offender in that systemic crime. Paul himself had actually acted criminally against Christians in the past, so he knew what it was like to be restored by grace to the community he had harmed. It was a wonderful case study for exploring the complexities of victim-offender identity, so much a part of the story of violence in Burundi where yesterday’s victims become todays’ offenders.

Before we left, we took some time for listening prayer. We practiced silence together, asking God to show us what the role of the church might be to bring reconciliation into such a mess of hurt and injustice as this country has experienced. It was a unique experience for me to practice this with Burundian Christians, and it was a very rich experience to hear what the Holy Spirit was speaking to different ones of us. I feel like we have something to offer to top church leaders who are trying to find a single voice on restorative justice. 

We worshiped once more with the priests and then walked down to visit the martyr’s tombs for the last time. It was incredibly meaningful for me to sing our GLI theme song there, and think about the passion of those young men who died, in hope of reconciliation.   
                       We your people sing your praises, as together we are sent
To reveal the new creation in the shadows of lament.
Give us courage for the journey, 
Shepherd Jesus, be our guide
                        Help us lead with hope and passion, ‘til all things are reconciled.



Our return journey was a bit more eventful than we had hoped. We discovered a flat tire just as we were pulling out of the monastery guesthouse, but at least we were with friends who could help us sort it out. In the process of changing the tire, though, two of the bolts broke off. We prayed hard that there wouldn’t be further problems. Our group of 7 stopped in a little town nearby to get the tire repaired – I would never have identified that hole in the wall as a tire repair place, but my Burundian colleagues figured out how to be sure we were traveling with a good spare. Anything can happen! As we drove back down the steep road towards the lake, I enjoyed a few gifts along the way.
-       The coffee bushes frosted by blossoms like a coating of snow
-       Children living on top of a mountain, who had managed to level out a soccer field for themselves. Yes, it bent around like an L, but there was a goal post on either end!
-       The lively conversation in Kirundi of my colleagues and their ability to mix in enough French for me to follow some of it.

I was glad to rejoin my family by 7 pm that evening and we had a fairly quiet Sunday and a normal week until now. I’ll let Paul add more blog entry for his visit to the Hope School on Friday.