Day 1
It was dark and quiet when I got up at 5am. Fifteen minutes
later I was leaving the house to walk to the bus stand, accompanied by one of
the night guards on our compound. My colleague, Stanslaus, was already there
waiting for me. Our journey would require two buses, as the bus that goes all
the way to our destination doesn’t run every day, and today was one of those
days when it wouldn’t, so we had tickets for a bus that would take us to Njombe,
a regional town about a 4.5 hour ride away, where we would then change to
continue the journey to Ludewa, which takes about another 4.5 hours.
Things did not bode well when I found myself sitting next to
a man who’s breath seemed to smell slightly of alcohol, who exclaimed over
sitting next to a ‘white’ (as he described me) and who had a very loud voice.
Thankfully he slept for some of the journey and later he disappeared (when I
was dozing) and was replaced by a young lady with a cute one-year-old. In
contrast to the situation inside the bus (which also included very unwholesome
music videos), the environment outside the bus was beautiful, with the morning
mist lying low over the fields like a soft fleecy blanket. As the sun rose
everything took on a warm golden edge. Despite the early hour, children were
already walking to school (this would be from about 6.30am onwards). When I was
visiting friends over the weekend, the husband said that he leaves as early as
5.30am each day with his daughter, accompanying her along the road until she meets
other students and they can continue the rest of the 1.5 hour walk to secondary
school together.
Another feature of bus travel is sales merchants. So it was
no surprise when someone got on the bus, stood in the aisle and gave his sales
pitch, touting his wares of soap, toothpaste and various other items that are apparently
able to cure all kinds of ailments, as we continued to motor along.
Our second bus set off at an alarming rate, slowing down
fractionally when passengers complained. It turned out that the lights on the
bus didn’t work and he wanted to make sure he arrived at the bus’s final
destination before dark. We were thankful to arrive safely in Ludewa, stretch
our legs with a short walk to the market (I wanted some bananas), buy 12 six-packs
of bottled water ready for the three-day workshop ahead of us, and get into the
car that was waiting for us for the last stage of the journey. This is a 32km
(20 mile) drive down a steep mountain road, which takes about 1¼ hours – the slow
pace being not so much due to the quality of the road (which has been widened
and improved since my last trip, though it’s still a dirt road) but due to the
steep descent and tight corners.
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| My room at the guest house |
From my room I can hear the sound of the TV in the little
shop next door, run by the guest house owner, the voices of people talking outside
and children playing (despite being 9.30pm), the sound of a motorbike (the main
form of transport here), the classic African night-sound of the cicadas and
occasionally I can also hear the sound of a wave breaking on the beach beyond
some of the village buildings. I’ve had a quiet evening in my room, after going
for a short swim. I had been directed to the section of beach where the women
bathe and as I swam I watched the red ball of sun drop below the horizon,
behind the blue mountains of Malawi, leaving the sky a picture of pink-orange
and turquoise and all shades in between that I can’t begin to describe, with a
thin sliver of silver moon hanging above it all. How awesome are the works of
God’s hands, how incredible this world that he spoke into being.
Day 2
I slept pretty well, protected from the mosquitos by a
capacious net. We headed up to the Catholic church buildings that we would use
for the workshop, arriving to find a lady we had met the previous evening in
Ludewa already busy sweeping. She had been at a meeting until 1am in Ludewa the
night before! Due to the nature of travel here, with people travelling by a
passenger boat from the lakeside villages, I learned that the church arrange
their leadership meetings to take place in the evening, after the boat will
have arrived and people can get up the mountain to the town, and go on into the
night so that they can finish in time for people to catch the next morning’s
boat to return home, all helping to keep costs down.
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| Planning pictures of key biblical events |
When it looked like no-one else would be coming, we
officially started the workshop. After introductions, we did a Bible study on
Luke 24:13-27, talked about the benefits of a Bible study and then got stuck
into learning to read the Kisi language. Tomorrow we’ll continue with how to
prepare and lead simple Bible studies, using both the Kisi and Swahili
Scriptures. At one o’clock the church bell began to ring, and I was startled as
nearly the whole group stood and began to pray! They were obviously praying a
set prayer for the time of day – it felt like being in a monastery, with set
times of prayer. In fact, this place has something of the feel of an old
European monastery – I believe it was founded by a padre from Europe and most
of the buildings are red brick with tiled roofs.
By lunchtime there were nine participants, all bar one from the
same denomination, and only two had arrived with Bibles. Disappointing. I’m sure there are many reasons,
but I think one of them may be a lack of unity and acceptance between denominations
and another may be communication. The latter isn’t easy here! As far as phone
calls are concerned, networks don’t work until the sun has risen high enough to
reach into the shadow of the mountains and charge up the solar-powered phone
towers. And even then, only certain networks work and in certain places.
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| Lupingu beach |
While eating my tea in my room, I heard a scuttling around
the water bottles. A large cockroach emerged. It did not live long – flip-flops
are a great weapon against all unwanted crawling bugs! I hardly ever see such
large cockroaches in Mbeya – it seems that the warmer the environment the
bigger the bugs, and Mbeya is generally not very hot, unlike this area by Lake
Nyasa, though at this time of year it’s cool even here. A sharp headache has
just started – did I breathe in too much of the bug spray I used to try and
conquer the ant invasion?!
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| Breakfast supplies - the yellow bucket is full of potatoes and the flasks full of tea. |
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| Signposts have recently popped up all over Tanzania, such that even in this rural village the road now has it's own signpost. |
Thankfully there was still time to go for a swim and by the
time I had changed the children had gone. The sun had already set, and the
remaining golden light in the sky reflected off the water such that I felt as
if I was swimming in a sea of liquid gold. I stayed until the sky had changed
colour and started to fade and the shore was becoming harder to see, before
slowly walking back along the shore and returning to the guesthouse.
Day 4
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| Stanslaus demonstrates teaching someone to read their language. |
As I said goodbye to the guesthouse owner, he was asking how
I had trained for the job I was doing. I told him about my Masters in Bible and
Mission, and he said his son had a Masters in Education but no employment is
available so he lives there in the village and drives a motorbike (for carrying
passengers). How sad that this young man should have achieved that level of
education, probably at great cost to his father, but not be able to use his
training. I have heard this kind of story before. Education is highly valued,
parents will do their utmost to get their children through school and even
university, but professional jobs are few and far between and many of these
students end up doing something like that young man.
The same car that drove us down the mountain was ready and
waiting to take us back up the mountain, and I could feel the air getting
cooler the higher we got. We went first to the bus station to get our tickets
for the next day and then to a guesthouse, which was deserted. A piece of paper
stuck on the door gave the phone number of the receptionist, so we called and a
few minutes later she turned up and we got our rooms – spacious and pleasant
with a shower and, I discovered, a light that at night was blue (but white
during the daytime), presumably so as not to wake one up too much!
Day 5
The bus set off promptly at 6am. The bumpy dirt road shook
us around like lottery balls and every bit of the bus rattled, which coupled
with the occasional person talking very loudly on their phones, did not make
for a quiet ride! There was occasional reprieve from the rattles though, as the
road is being worked on and some sections already have a concrete surface. At
one point we passed them putting digger loads of cement into a shallow iron
framework that covered the road and being smoothed down by people with shovels.
It was cold, and didn’t get any warmer as the skies were
heavy with clouds and it rained lightly until we arrived in Njombe. I got a bag
of hot chips at the Njombe bus stand, delivered through the bus window, before
we set off again. With various other stops and slow traffic on a hill due to an
accident, we arrived late in Mbeya. I was glad to stretch my legs on the short
walk home after fourteen hours on the bus. Much as I enjoy these teaching
trips, it’s always good to get home. And this time was especially exciting, as
in my absence a new toilet had been put into my bathroom and the big cracks in
my wall had been filled in. I thank God for his protection, for the privilege
of serving here and for the blessing of a comfy home to return to and a fab
housemate to share it with.
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