Meet the people
Before we travel, let me introduce you to some of the people you’ll meet along the way. Above is a photo of the literacy/Scripture engagement team from five years ago. The people you see worked in eleven different language areas, some of them were (and still are) based in the Mbeya office, but the majority lived and worked in their home area. A year or so after the New Testament translations were completed in nine of these languages, the employment of the workers in those areas ceased (for most of them this was at the end of September 2021). However, we still partner with them as they continue to serve their language communities through local Community Based Organisations.
For our trip around the Nyakyusa language area (a.k.a. Unyakyusa), Frank (from the Mbeya office) and I would first be accompanied by David Mwangunga, who lives in the northern part of Unyakyusa (closest to Mbeya), and then by Andrew Mwangosi, who lives in the southern part. Finally, Frank and Andrew would be joined by another Andrew (not on the picture), who was one of the Nyakyusa translators, for the final leg of the journey into Malawi (while I returned to Mbeya). You can see our journey on the map below – 2 stops in the north, 2 in the south and 2 more for my colleagues in Malawi.
Wednesday
Frank and I left the office at 2pm, arriving in the small
town of Kandete less than 3 hours later. The journey was uneventful, our
project Land Cruiser behaved itself, and I enjoyed leaving behind the brown,
dusty landscape of Mbeya (currently in the middle of our long dry season) for
the much greener, lusher landscape of Unyakyusa. Unyakyusa is made up of both a
hilly region that gets rain almost all year round and a low, hot, tropical
region that also reaches into Malawi. Kandete is at an altitude of about 1590
metres / 5200 feet, making it fractionally lower than Mbeya, and isn’t far from
Kitulo National Park (a plateau about 2500 metres / 8500 feet above sea level,
and known for its rare orchids). It was colder than I anticipated! So after
getting a somewhat disappointing dinner (lukewarm, slightly greasy rice isn’t very
appetising) at a rather funky looking café, Frank, David and
I headed to the
market to find coats! It was David in particular that needed one, but I saw a long
black coat that was a reasonable fit on me, costing less than £3. Okay, so it
was second-hand, with some marks on it and a couple of tiny holes where the
filling kept spilling out despite my best efforts to sew it up, but it would do
to tide me over until we dropped down to warmer climes later in the trip.
Once it got dark, I set up our speakers and projector to
show the Nyakyusa translation of the Jesus
film on the outside wall of the Lutheran church. I left my colleagues to
supervise the equipment and endure the chilly, damp evening air, while I
retreated to our guest house until it was time to pack up. It was one of the
nicest guest houses I’ve stayed in for a long time. Everything felt new and
even toilet paper was provided (an unusual luxury), as well as soap, a
toothbrush and toothpaste and a little pot of scented petroleum jelly (which
Tanzanians use as a moisturiser).
Thursday
I didn’t want to get out from under the blanket! But telling myself I’d feel better for a brisk walk in the cold morning air, I forced myself to get up and head out. The clouds hung low over the mountains and by the time I got back there was a faint drizzle in the air – I was thankful for my new coat! We had come to the Nyakyusa language area with the primary goal of listening to people’s stories of the impact of the work we have done there, including making the New Testament available in the Nyakyusa language in both print and audio forms. This method of research is known as Outcome Harvesting, and would later involve analysing the short stories we have collected, to look for patterns in the data to see what we can learn from it for future work.
In Kandete we hoped to meet with ten people, starting at
9am. We eventually started about 2.5 hours later with seven people, in a room
belonging to the Lutheran church. Frank and I were disappointed with the small
number of stories we were able to gather. On the plus side, they were very
happy that we had visited, we had a good Bible study time at the beginning, we
sold a few Nyakyusa books and were able to leave three audio devices behind for
them to use to listen to the Nyakyusa audio Scriptures.
After a very late lunch (as disappointing as the previous
day’s dinner) we set off for our next location, Mbambo. I drove slowly over the
rough road, trying to avoid the worst of the bumps, and enjoying the beautiful
scenery all around, from the rolling hills to the green fields of potato plants,
and from rows of tea bushes to big, leafy banana trees. At a seemingly random
spot, the dirt road suddenly became tarmac, and the rest of the journey was an
almost constant descent on a lovely smooth road.
Being at a lower altitude, Mbambo was much warmer, so I was
finally able to shed my coat and cardigan. The guest house wasn’t anywhere near
as nice as the previous place, but then again, it was also half the price (at
about £3.30). The worst problem was the loud music emanating from the bar next
door and the drunk people talking too loudly just a few metres away from my bedroom
window. David and I went to visit the pastor of the church where we’d be
holding our meeting the next day, and were invited to stay for dinner (the kind
of invitation that you can’t refuse). What I really wanted to do was go back to
my room and have some time alone, and I felt guilty for feeling like that in
the face of such kind hospitality. When we did return to the guest house, it
was to find that the music seemed even louder, so it was nothing short of a
miracle that I managed to fall asleep.
Friday
And then we were on the road again, to the village of Itete,
where the plan was to hold a seminar on the book of Ephesians for local
churches (especially church leaders), beginning Friday evening and continuing
throughout Saturday. Only four people were there at the time we were supposed
to start, so I played the audio version of Ephesians in Nyakyusa for them to
listen to while we waited for others to come. By the end, there were still only
four people! For some reason they’d omitted to tell me that most churches have
a service on a Friday evening, so they couldn’t participate at that time. So,
quick change of plan – I used the time instead to do a Bible overview (a quick
revision of a Bible seminar I taught there last year) and to have a Nyakyusa
literacy lesson (taught by David).
After teaching, I wanted to rest but David and Frank needed
food, so I drove them to the village centre and waited in the car while they
got something to eat, which took longer than expected. I was hungry, thirsty
and tired and desperate to get back to the house when they finally emerged from
the café an hour or so later. Driving at night in a rural village is a
disorientating experience – the dark feels so very dark, and I lost all sense
of direction and had problems turning the car as I couldn’t see what was behind
me (an issue exacerbated by the tinted rear windows).
Saturday
I enjoyed a short but beautiful early morning walk to a crater lake, with fantastic views in all directions, to Lake Nyasa in the south and mountains in the north. Then it was off to the grass-roofed church for the seminar. This time there was a good turnout, from a range of church denominations, and we enjoyed studying Ephesians together. One of the main challenges I found was getting them to give thought-through answers that related specifically to the Bible passage in question – instead their answers were often just based on their general Bible knowledge. While the answers weren’t necessarily bad or wrong, it just meant that they weren’t ever getting beyond the basic truths we are all familiar with to discover the breadth and depth of what is revealed in God’s Word.
As soon as we had finished we were off again, saying goodbye
to David en-route and hello to Andrew as we arrived at our next sleeping place
less than an hour later. But no time to rest, we needed to be off again to show
the Jesus film at an evangelistic
meeting outside a little Baptist church, where a piece of tarpaulin had been
stretched across some bamboo poles to create a big screen. Being a warm
location and having been well advertised at the evangelistic meeting in the
preceding days, as well as drawing in people passing by on the road less than a
stone’s throw from where the screen had been erected, there was a big turnout
of both children and adults. Although it was hard to tell in the dark, I reckon
over 150 people had gathered, with even the children staying to the end,
despite the late hour.
Sunday
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| Singing and dancing as part of the evangelistic meeting. In the back, left-hand corner you can see the little church. |
After lunch at the pastor’s home, the ubiquitous rice,
greens and meat and a soda, we headed back to the guest house where I was able
to have a couple of hours of respite, while Frank went off to find a barber to
shave his short beard and hair off as it was getting itchy! And then it was off
again, for yet another showing of the Jesus
film outside the church where we’d hold the next day’s meeting. I was amazed to
discover the church was carpeted inside – I felt like I was back in a church in
England! Why they would carpet their church located in a hot, tropical village,
where I doubt anyone has even heard of such a thing as a vacuum cleaner, beats
me! A cement or tiled floor is much cooler and easier to keep clean, which is
what you will find in most churches and people’s homes.
Showing the Jesus film (we'd taped white sheets up over the window to create a screen)
Monday
Same again, another meeting, in the warm, carpeted church,
with a fan whirring furiously overhead. Then it was back on the road to the
district town of Kyela, and back to the same guest house and room I had slept in
a couple of months previously when we’d gone to meet with the Nyakyusa team to
talk about the research and plan the trip we were now in the middle of.
Tuesday
Our fourth (and my final) meeting location was half an hour outside of Kyela, very close to the border of Malawi. It was hot. We met in a Moravian church, and I was very confused when participants introduced themselves and I discovered that there were two Moravian churches in the village, with slightly different names. Sadly there had been a big split in the Moravian church some time previously, leading to a family being burned in their home and a break-off of the original church being started. No wonder Jesus prayed for believers to have unity (John 17), for he knew just how hopeless we are at maintaining it in our own strength.
A late lunch was followed by a siesta and then sitting
outside in the shade to work together on writing up the stories we’d heard,
while mosquitoes enjoyed a sumptuous dinner at my expense. Thirsty, I crossed
the main road to a little shop boasting a fridge, to buy a bottle of cold
water. Shelves lined the walls, bearing pot after pot of local herb mixes
claiming to help with all kinds of ailments. I told the ownders of the shop about
our work of Bible translation and the Nyakyusa Bible app that you can download
from Google Play Store – to my delight, they immediately downloaded it onto
their phone.
There was just time to go for a short walk before it got
dark. Well, I would have been back before dark if my stomach hadn’t decided it
was time to complain about something or other I must have eaten that I
shouldn’t have. I begged a woman, who was sitting outside her home cooking
plantain, for use of their toilet, rushed to their little brick outhouse,
grabbing some leaves off a tree en-route (I had made the fatal mistake of not
carrying toilet paper) and ducked under the curtain that served as a door.
Being dusk, I turned on my phone’s torch so I could see where the hole was and
let my body do what it needed to do. I thanked the lady profusely and weakly
walked the rest of the way back to my room, looking forward to having a shower.
But my shower had to wait as less than five minutes after arriving I was
plunged into darkness as my bedroom bulb blew. As they had no spare bulbs and
no ladder to reach up and replace it anyhow, I had to move all my stuff to
another room. Bed number six of a trip of just seven nights. Paint was peeling
on the walls and loud music emanated from the bar across the road, but once
again, God calmed my spirit and I was able to relax and fall asleep, even as
the music continued.
Wednesday
After a final bit of work together, I dropped my colleagues
off at the border to continue their journey into Malawi by public transport,
and began my drive back to Mbeya, climbing back up into the hills and leaving
the tropical heat behind. I was surprised to pass by a total of three white (or
more precisely, sun-bronzed) men cycling along on bikes heavily laden with
panniers, each some miles distant from the other, each persuing their own crazy
goal of cycling from who-knows-where to some distant destination.
(Incidentally, these were the first white faces I had seen since leaving Mbeya
eight days earlier.) One sported a ‘Cross Africa’ sign across the back of his
bike, and I marvelled at how different the idea of ‘a fun way to spend the
summer’ could be from one person to another. While some people might think my
life is exotic and adventorous, the reality is that it’s generally quite calm
and ordered! It also helps that I can speak the language and any of my more
adventorous trips are usually in the company of someone who knows their way
around. When I do have to face uncomfortable situations I have a strong
motivation to persevere because Christ’s love compels me. How does someone find
‘fun’ the idea of cycling alone day after day, up and down steep hills under a
hot African sun, unable to communicate easily, not knowing whether you’ll be
able to get a decent shower at the end of another dusty, sweaty day on the bike
or any hope of good coffee and a bowl of porridge to get you going the next
morning? We are truly uniquely and wonderfully made!
After a couple of hours of driving I stopped off briefly for
one of my favourite Tanzanian lunches, chipsi mayai (chip omelette), before
entering a windy and dusty Mbeya mid-afternoon. I’d driven a total of 399km
(248 miles), along some interesting roads and through some beautiful
countryside and remarkably diverse climates; what a privilege to work in a
place like this. But it was so good to be home.
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| Back in Mbeya |
A few of the forty plus stories we gathered, both the
uplifting and the disheartening:
A certain retired teacher has always liked to use Nyakyusa.
If he was given a chance to teach in church, he'd read in Swahili and then
begin to translate it. Since getting the Nyakyusa NT he has used it when given
a chance to preach in church. Now he doesn’t have to translate from Swahili as
the Nyakyusa NT can be understood straight away.
One church member said, “After attending the literacy/Bible
study workshop in 2017, I haven’t known where to get Nyakyusa books. I didn’t
know the NT was available here in Mbambo. And I’ve stopped teaching people to
read Nyakyusa.”
A particular pastor uses the Nyakyusa audio Scriptures when
he is preparing to preach. He listens to the Scriptures until he finds a
passage he wants to use, and then he listens to it carefully so he can prepare
his sermon. He also uses the audio Scriptures when there is a power cut and
can’t see to read his Bible.
One day, a couple of years ago, this same pastor visited a
lady who was unwell. He sang her a song from the Nyakyusa Christian songbook*.
The lady sat up and began to sing and felt a lot better!
*The songbook has
existed for some time, but a few years ago we updated the orthography (spelling
system) and republished it, much to everyone’s delight. The new orthography
that we developed and used in all our Nyakyusa publications is much easier to
read than the old one, because it looks more like the Swahili alphabet. The new
songbook quickly sold out, and although we haven’t been able to reprint it, we
have been able to make it available as an app for anyone who has a smart phone.
Last year, a pastor read John 3:16 from his Nyakyusa NT to
some neighbours who had visited his home. One of them came to faith!









