Living With (But Not In) Poverty


What would it be like if your next door neighbor lived in a tin shack with no running water or electricity, and rarely had enough food to go around?

This is my tension.

Dar es Salaam is a city of 4 million people. It is growing economically in leaps and bounds. The fancy hotels are overflowing with visitors here on business. New banks seem to be opening every week, with lines that go out the door. Our school, HOPAC, which costs $4000 per year for tuition, is bursting at the seams with a waiting list a mile long. The only other high quality international school in the city, IST, which costs more than $12,000 per year, is also bursting at the seams. There are many wealthy people in this city.

However, the vast majority are not. Thankfully, we don’t see starving people in Dar es Salaam the way we did when I lived in Ethiopia as a teenager. There are people starving in Tanzania, and I’m sure even in the city, but it’s not the norm. But that doesn’t mean that the majority are very far above it.

Earlier this week, my house worker, Esta, asked me for an advance on her monthly pay. I asked her what she needed it for and she said that her husband still hasn’t found work and they are out of food. Since she had received her salary less than two weeks ago, the fact that she is asking for an advance for food is not a good thing.

I gave her the advance, and some food, but inside I felt sick. Esta has worked for us for two years and is such a dear woman. She is about my age, been married for two years, and has a baby girl who she brings to work with her. She is a believer and is full of joy. But her life is hard. She and her husband rent two small rooms. Not a two bedroom house—two rooms. One for sitting and one for sleeping. She cooks outside and uses an outhouse. They have electricity but rarely use it. They do not have running water. Esta’s husband has been out of work now for over a year. There is a 40% unemployment rate in this city.

We pay Esta about $80 per month, and this is her only job. In addition, we pay for almost all of their rent and cover all of the medical expenses for her and her baby. If she is still working for us when her daughter goes to school, we will help with school fees too. We pay over the going rate. Yet….we’re talking only $80 a month to live on, folks.

Then there’s our life. We live in a four bedroom house that is (sort of) similar to an American house, though rent is about 4 times cheaper here. We have all the amenities, except for a dryer or dish washer, but I have Esta. We own one ten-year-old car. My pantry is always full of food.

We are not living extravagantly by American standards. When we moved here, we carefully thought through our standard of living. We have been purposeful about the location and size of our house—we chose all the details for very specific ministry-related reasons. We live at or below the standard of living compared to the other HOPAC families. In fact, most of the Tanzanian kids at HOPAC live far above us.

Yet I live with constant tension between our lifestyle and that of so many of the people around us—even those about 100 yards from our house. The truth is, even if we lived at a lower standard, as some of the missionaries in the villages do, we would still have more than most Tanzanians. We never have to worry about having enough to eat. We never have to worry about money for a sick child. We are allowed plane trips to the States every couple of years. Our children are guaranteed an excellent education and all the opportunity they will ever desire.

When Gil and I go out to dinner, I think about how that one dinner was a week’s wage for many people in the city. If we go to a hotel for our anniversary for a night, we could easily spend a month’s wage of an average Tanzanian. I think about it when I buy dog food. Or Pringles. Or books. Or anything that goes beyond basic living expenses.

Sometimes I just want to run away from it all. It’s just too hard. When Esta asked me for the advance for food, I just wanted to leave Tanzania and go back to America. I often just want to pretend that poverty isn’t really there. Of course, living in the States doesn’t make poverty go away. But in America, surrounded by people who live in luxury, it’s easier to live in denial.

Of course, not everyone is rich in America. But even the poorest have electricity, running water (that won’t make you sick if you drink it), shoes, free education for their children, food stamps, presents at Christmas, a TV, and often even a car and a computer. More importantly, people in America have opportunity to get ahead. Most of the rest of the world does not.

But there are no easy answers. How do we remain generous while staying within economic and cultural norms in Africa? What is the balance between generosity and fostering unhealthy dependence? How many “creature comforts” of western life can still glorify God? How do we really distinguish between “needs” and “wants” (which are very much defined by our culture)? Why do my kids get to experience Disneyland, bubble baths, dress-up clothes, swimming pools, and university, and the kids around the corner do not? Why has God allowed us to have so much and so many to have so little? And what is our responsibility in the midst of that?

Think on poverty, my friends. Though I want to run away from it, God never desires us to put our heads in the sand. When not confronted with it head-on, it’s easy to pretend it doesn’t exist. In the end, I’m thankful I live with this tension. Heaven forbid I start pretending that this life really is heaven, and that I “deserve” comfort—as I am often so tempted.

When my struggle ceases, I will be either in sin, or in Heaven.

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11 Comments

  1. Melodie Monberg

    Thank you again for prompting questions. Matt and I struggle on a daily basis with the poverty we confront right here in our little town of Colorado Springs. Working with America’s Family (an agency for the working poor) I hear people’s stories and grieve because of the pain life has brought them…and the guilt I feel because, like you, I live only a few feet/miles from these people….rambling here but thank you…I’m praying and thinking of what specifically we can do right now!

  2. Anonymous

    Amy, you have given me pause this morning. This truly exposes my lack of gratefulness for God’s provision and abundance. Steph B.

  3. Jen

    So when are you going to start writing YOUR book? I see a writer in our midst…one that writes with conviction and love, about things that tug at the depth of who we are as Christians. I’ve often discussed this cultural poverty issue with other missionary friends of mine and I can assure you, you aren’t alone. It’s an incredibly difficult issue that there don’t seem to be any clear answers to. Move as you feel led by the Spirit to move…that’s all I ever can come up with. Thanks for the reminder of our wealth and how it hinders us. Blessings on your weekend.
    Much love in Christ!
    The Things We Do

  4. da halls

    Thanks for this post. It is something I think about. Living where we do we most certainly do not see what you do. Nor do we have the daily tension. But I still struggle with it. The times we are doing the “extra things” in life I battle with guilt knowing that the amount of money we are spending (even though it may not be very much) could be used somewhere else and meet a need.

    Being mindful of how luxurious we are living compared to others in the world also helps me to choose to be content with our house which is quickly beginning to look like a stereo-typical rental. We are not in a position to do anything about it in this season of our life BUT it is still so much better than what others have.

    Thanks for the food for thought.

    80)
    mb

  5. Amy Medina

    Thank you, friends.

    One of the things that I love about living here is that I rarely ever struggle with material discontentment (now, other forms of discontentment, that’s a different story!). Instead, I am always convicted to be so grateful for what I have. Whereas in America, you live in a country that deliberately and intentionally fosters material discontentment. It’s very, very hard to fight it!

  6. DellaRose

    thank you…i need to remember…i have been to places and seen so much but it is easy to forget so fast…thankyou!
    ~fr

  7. Anonymous

    Dear Amy,
    As I write from “disneyland” I am reminded of the time we were invited to eat with Artha’s family off the ELWA compound. They were going to serve ALL they had….frogs that they had collected from the lagoon. And then I saw how they lived with no beds, only newspaper to cover them at night. It is a memory impossible to forget or erase.
    Babu

  8. Evelyn

    Hi Amy, Oh how I’d love to meet you and your beautiful family! I just sent you a message on facebook – hope to connect there. I know you through many people actually, McBrides, Janelle Wonders… many HOPACers! Somehow every time I’m in Tanzania I seem to miss you guys! I stayed with Janelle in your place last summer, just before my wedding in July! Asante sana! Janelle will be with my husband and I here in South Korea in a week! We can’t wait to have Aunt ‘Nelle! Thanks for your thoughts and total honesty here on your blog. Many many of the things you’ve written have often been on my heart and mind and in my prayers! I hope we can connect via email one day and /or on Facebook. Congrats on being a mommy of two! Josiah is adorable – We have prayed for your family! Please be in touch! Keep abiding in Him – Evelyn and Stephen Mwakasitu

  9. saraheden

    “When my struggle ceases, I will be either in sin, or in Heaven”

    Beautifully said, Amy. You have articulated beautifully the internal, usually silent struggle I have felt for much of my life.

    2 books that I read in college and dramatically changed my view from apathy to knowledge to action….

    “the Upside Down Kingdom” (Ronald Kraybill)

    and “Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger” (Ron Sider)–WARNING: read only if you want to be challenged, and recognize that you are accountable to what you have learned!

    Just typing these old familiar titles has instilled in me the desire to read them again. 🙂

  10. Amy Medina

    And you are influencing your college students to think the way you are, Sarah. We saw evidence of that this summer. So thankful for you!

  11. Anonymous

    This is from Carley’s mom, Bryan’s wife… Amy, thanks for expressing a struggle I have faced as well. I have so mny “things” over here in the US. Giving things away as the Lord leads always makes me feel better. It’s all temporary!!! Congradulations on the children!

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