Tag: Haven of Peace Academy Page 15 of 23

East and More East

Way back in 2001, when Gil and I first moved to Tanzania, I was teaching at HOPAC full-time, but Gil was helping with an Indian church plant.  In Tanzania

There are actually tens of thousands of Indians in Dar es Salaam, let alone the hundreds of thousands throughout east Africa.  Almost all are Muslim or Hindu.  And they have lived here for generations, so they are Tanzanian citizens.  But still very Indian in culture. 

(2002)

Many of these families send their kids to HOPAC. 

So in order to help the HOPAC teachers better understand Indian culture (and because I just love it myself!), on Saturday I took a bunch of teachers downtown to teach them a little about it.  We visited the mosques and Hindu temples.  We listened to some friends who are working in these communities.  We had great Indian food.  And of course, we went shopping for Indian clothes! 

After Africa, India is my favorite culture.  So I get the best of both worlds.  🙂

Growing Leaders

A weekend at the beach investing in student leaders….who could ask for more???

I love that I can be a full-time mom and yet still do things like this.

I love that Dar es Salaam has so many great beaches.

I love that these six are from six different countries:  Tanzania, Madagascar, Italy, South Africa, Switzerland, and U.S.A.

I love that HOPAC supports these kind of events. 

We spent many hours planning events and talking about leadership, but there was also lots of time for fun.  My favorite part of the weekend?  Three hours on the beach with three beautiful girls, talking about college, guys, dating, adoption, dreams, and standing firm for Christ. 

Getting Into the Season

I love African rain.  There’s really nothing that beats that amazing smell in the air.

And I love the tropical sun when I’m on a speed boat in the middle of the Indian Ocean.

But other than that, I really miss having seasons.

It’s probably one of the things I miss the most while living in Tanzania.  And it always hits me the hardest at Christmastime. 

I really, really wish I could embrace this tropical Christmas thing.  And of course, the celebration of the Incarnation has nothing to do with the weather.  But that marvelous feel of Christmas?  Just doesn’t exist here.

The temperature these days is near 100 degrees.  With 96% humidity.  And it doesn’t get much better at night.  My entire body feels sticky.  The last thing I want anyone to do is to touch me. 

Kind of makes that Christmasy, blankets-and-hot-cocoa, cozy feeling a little impossible. 

I love Christmas music like the next person, but with all their talk of sleigh bells and winter wonderlands and open fires, it doesn’t really help my mood.  This really is the time of year I get most homesick.  Grandchildren separated from grandparents doesn’t help either.

But we try.  To feel Christmasy, that is.  And sometimes, you just have to laugh.

Last week, the secondary school held their annual Christmas program on a Thursday night.  The music was beautiful.  The music teachers outdid themselves. 

Paper snowflakes hung delicately over the stage.  And when they turned the overhead lights on, the flying termites came out in swarms.  It almost looked like snow.  Almost. 

Sweat dripped down our backs.  The power went out during one of the skits, and they had to just continue by yelling their lines really loud until someone could get the generator on. 

The students were told to wear white and black.  And since you can’t just head out to Walmart to pick up a white blouse, that meant that some of the “white and black” attire was rather interesting.

But they did all their own accompaniments.  I was so proud of them. 

And they all sang, really loud.  Even the 8th grade boys.  Which is kind of a Christmas miracle.

And everyone brought food, clothes, and toys that night, which was all then presented to the manager of a local orphanage by my friend Lauren.  That’s HOPAC’s true Christmas spirit.

The nice thing is, that all of this makes no difference to my kids.  And I know that’s true, because some of my best Christmas memories are the ones my family spent in Liberia when I was a kid.  So this week, we are having a family water balloon fight since we can’t have a snow ball fight.  And taking a bath with green and red ice cubes.  We’ll have a sleepover in the living room.  We’re having a Christmas Eve BBQ with our church.  I did try super hard to find a true “Tanzanian” Christmas tree this year, but the only “natural” one I found that was big enough cost $200.  I decided our plastic tree wasn’t so bad after all.

We can’t light candles because the fans will blow them out.  We don’t have a fireplace for our stockings.  We certainly won’t be getting cozy.  But we’re creating memories just the same.

And now I’m off to bake gingerbread, since tomorrow we have friends coming over for a gingerbread house party.  Except the molasses was too expensive, so I used date syrup instead.  So we’ll have a kind of middle-eastern flavored gingerbread.

Seems appropriate, don’t you think?

He Gives and Takes Away

Criscilla and Victor (HOPAC’s excellent and quite popular history teacher from Zimbabwe)

and sweet baby Christian….who fought for so long, was doing so well, but God ordained that today would be his last day.

Pray for Victor and Criscilla, and pray for the HOPAC community.  Every single student’s Facebook status shows their grief.  And in this generation, that’s how they mourn. 

Oh, To Be Back In High School

My wonderful team of Student Council members (still need a picture of them!) did a fantastic job organizing Spirit Week last week. So proud of their hard work and loved how much “spirit” at HOPAC they encouraged! 

They were told “a girl” would give them a kiss and they had to guess which one….

….and it was their moms.  (The only “girls” who should be kissing them right now anyway!)

Tesfaye (Vice President) and Randra (Treasurer)….on 70’s day

Our Tinkerbell Sam.  And No, that’s not my husband wearing Josiah’s Buzz costume.  You just think it is. 

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