Tag: Life in Tanzania Page 6 of 26

That Time It Rained in Zanzibar….But There Was Bacon

Back in December, Gil and I won a raffle prize at HOPAC’s Christmas Family Fun Day.  We won two free nights at the Doubletree Hilton on Zanzibar Island.

Score.

Then I found airline tickets on sale, and spent $56 total for the two of us to fly to Zanzibar and back.  

Double score.  

The hotel voucher was only good for the month of April.  Quite certainly, this is because April is Zanzibar’s rainiest month of the year so the hotel would have lots of empty rooms.

But hey, we didn’t care.  We farmed out our kids and packed our bags and enjoyed three days and two nights on Zanzibar.  Sure, we didn’t get to swim with dolphins or sea turtles or go snorkeling, because….African Rain.  But we enjoyed the limitless supply of air conditioning and hot water and all-you-can-eat bacon for breakfast.  

And guess what?  Zanzibar is beautiful even in the rain.  

Something Pretty Cool You Probably Didn’t Know About

This is the Logos Hope.

photo courtesy of the Logos Hope

The Logos Hope is a ship that travels all over the world.  It is home to 400 individuals from all over the world–over 60 countries.  The Logos Hope makes stops in port cities, and offers aid, relief work, and ministry assistance in Jesus’ name.  But the best part–as far as I’m concerned–is the large bookstore on board.  The store carries thousands of titles in dozens of genres.  Now that we have Kindles, we are not as starved for books as we used to be, but this bookstore offers more and better books at far cheaper prices than any other store in Dar es Salaam.

During our first term in Tanzania–about 14 years ago–we had our first introduction to this ship’s predecessor.  So we were really excited to discover that it was coming again.

We went to the port to visit the ship on Sunday afternoon, trying to avoid weekday traffic, but as a result, about half of Dar es Salaam had the same idea.  The bookstore and cafe were crammed with shoulder-to-shoulder people, which would bring out the claustrophobia in anyone.  But it was also really cool to see so many people from so many backgrounds and religions enjoying the bookstore.

If you are at a point in life where you can take off a year or two, consider the awesome opportunity of joining the Logos Hope.  If you are the parent of an older teen, there are also two-month programsavailable.  Sail to dozens of countries and do ministry?  Live on a ship with 400 Christians from around the world?  Sounds pretty amazing to me.

bookstore

cafe

Once Again, Life is Not Fair.

The thunder woke us up last night.  Shortly after, the power went out.  The noise and the sweating kept us all up for a long while.

For us, big storms are just inconvenient.  The roads are flooded, we can’t get our laundry to dry, and we deal with no electricity.  But as I lay there last night, inconvenienced, I couldn’t help but think about the many in this city–just a few miles from me–who are genuinely suffering because of the rain.

There are tens of thousands of people in this city who live on flood plains.  Every time we get a big storm–and this is the tropics, so that happens often–five feet of sewage fills their homes.  Every year, dozens of people die from flooding.

In just the past few weeks, the government has been trying to get a handle on the flood problem by clearing the flood plains.  Bulldozers are coming in and knocking down thousands of homes.  Most of these people did not own the land, but some have title deeds, sold to them by unscrupulous men who should never have sold it.  Thousands of people are now homeless.  Some have committed suicide.  Some have put up shacks in the places where their homes once stood.

photo source BBC news, here

It would be easy to sit back from a distance and objectively say, “Well, they’ve got to solve the flooding problem somehow.”  But I have a good friend who lives in one of these areas.  She and her family bought their land legitimately, and they have papers to show for it.  They built their house with their own blood, sweat, and tears.  They knew the were in a flood zone, so they elevated the house and built canals for the water.  The area floods, but their house does not.

They’ve created a good life for themselves, as both she and her husband are extremely hard workers.  Just a few weeks ago, they had scrimped and saved enough money to get electricity installed.  They were so proud.

Then, last weekend, some officials came by and painted a bright red X on their house.  Their house has been chosen for demolition.

I’m not casting blame in this situation, either on the government or anyone else.  I don’t fully understand the intricacies of the system, so I don’t know what justice should look like.  My friend tells me that the government has promised to relocate the people who have genuine title deeds.

I’m just sitting here, on my laptop computer, listening to the rain in my watertight house, wondering how I’m going to get my laundry to dry.  I’m thinking about the unfairness of life because I’m not worried about bulldozers suddenly appearing and knocking down my house.  I’m not even worried about my house flooding.

It’s true that disaster strikes the rich and the poor alike, but the poor suffer so much more.  There just does not seem to be any good answers.  I’m conflicted, and sad, and tired.

When Life Feels Like Drudgery

Some days, it’s hard to get going in the morning when I am not looking forward to anything I have to do that day.  Drudgery, I think to myself.  

Maybe it’s the weather these days.  I feel like a sticky, slimy slug most of the time.  Whoever invented the word sluggish must have lived in Dar es Salaam in January.

Maybe it’s because the particular set of tasks assigned to me right now are not really my first choice in life.  I am in currently in charge of slogging through the paperwork to process our mission personnel’s visas.  On our ministry team, I am responsible for accounting and marketing.  Both of which are not my strengths, and almost not even my weaknesses.

Of course, just trying to live in a developing country doesn’t help.  It can take half a day to find the right-size light bulb.  The electricity doesn’t always work.  The roads don’t always work.  The water doesn’t always work.  All my best laid plans for productivity often go to waste.

Some days, I just feel so tired.  I give up.  You win, World.  Congratulations.  Just let me lie on the floor in peace.

But I do get up.

This I call to mind:  Faithfulness in drudgery is what faithfulness is all about.  Most of life is drudgery, isn’t it?  The messes, the commute, the weeds that keep growing, the bellies that need feeding, the clothes that need washing.

But the messes and the crying children and the electricity problems are just the individual puzzle pieces.  Alone, they seem endless and pointless.  But when I step back and give myself perspective, I remind myself that the visa applications and the search for working copy machines are part of a wider, much more glorious picture of what God is using us to do in Tanzania.  When I step back, I see that the cooking and the homework and the messes are part of the much more glorious picture of what God is doing in our family.

Every trudging step has meaning.

There will be an end, and there always is a point.

Wherever you are, be all there.  Live to the hilt every situation you believe to be the will of God. (Jim Elliot)

This life is the will of God for me right now.  So here’s to living to the hilt.

Oh the Weather Outside is Frightful, but the Air Conditioner is So Delightful

Medina Christmas Season, 2015

The best part of this Christmas season, hands down, was having my parents here with us.  In a distant second was the air conditioner, since the week before Christmas is the only time of the year we let ourselves run it during the day.  

4th Graders being silly
HOPAC’s Annual Christmas production:  The only year we’ve had grandparents here to watch it!
Our annual Christmas celebration at Water World with co-workers and friends.
Johnny and his buddy Aaron

Johnny’s first time ever decorating a gingerbread house. Didn’t take him long to get into it.

At Dar es Salaam’s only revolving restaurant.  Except that it wasn’t revolving that day.  We really weren’t that surprised….
We hosted a party for our mission team.
Johnny had just received the photo book I made him of all his pictures, past and present.  He got it out and showed it to just about everybody at the party that day.  “Yook!  John Jeremiah Medina!” he would say, pointing at the cover.
Daddy’s homemade racetrack keeps Johnny busy for hours.

Skyping with people we love:  a Christmas tradition.  

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