Living and serving with Healing 2 the Nations International in Yirimadio, Bamako, Mali. Join us as we experience and learn to know this wonderful culture and people.
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Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Up & Gardening at 5:00 am
Up and Gardening by 5AM!
This week has been interesting, to say the least.
On the third try at getting someone to train as gardener and general all-around worker here, we have a young man who is working well.. Adama is a former street boy who knows what it is like on the street and seems to understand that a paying job requires a full day's work-- tho in truth, I don't think we have done a full 8 hours any day yet. Part of that is the reality that the rain interrupts, or the ground is too wet to work, or we don't have the supplies that are needed to do more fencing, or..... whatever. Partly it is because, at this point, either Ray or I have had to be with him to assign a task and then work with him to show him how we want that task to be completed. He has been a willing learner and we are working on getting a list of the repetitive jobs that he can do each day when we are not available. He understands little English and so we communicate slowly, using hand motions and a mixture of Bambara and English, but that is improving as well.
We also have a group of almost-young-men who are full of energy and fueled by testosterone. These guys need useful work to do that will allow them to show their strength and expend some of that energy. I had talked with them about helping to plant some more sweet corn in the upper area of the base, where weeds and grasses coexisted with a bumper crop of rocks. We began the process of clearing the ground one evening but had to quit at dark. Flexing their muscles and flapping their shirts over bare chests, they announced that they would get up at 6am (remember that they usually have to be called to get up at 7) to complete the work the following day. So I agreed to get up also and have the tools available. Because of many little hands that are used to taking whatever knife or tool they see and using it to dig in the ground, or cut a piece of wood they have picked up, or chop against the rocks that litter the area, we have kept the gardening tools in our apartment so that they don't walk off on the little feet attached to those little hands. We are also working on the concept of respect for property, and proper use of things. That is not a cultural issue so much as it is an issue of lack of training. I dare say you have had to do similar training with your little ones. It just happened at a younger age with yours, perhaps.
Crawling out of bed at 6am (I am NOT an early riser myself, and my bed is still a mattress on the floor) we got the tools out to be available for these 3 teenage boys. I glanced out the kitchen window and wondered if I just hadn't noticed how huge the weed pile was last night. And had we made that big of a wall of rocks along th edge? The area looked much better by morning light. Maybe there was hope for a garden there after all!
In just a few minutes Ray came back and announced that they had already finished the job!! Turns out that the 3 of them had gotten up at 4:30, washed and dressed, and were attacking the garden plot before 5 o'clock.
What good bragging rights they had that day! Surprising Mimi and Yakou, showing off that they were strong and macho workers, and gaining attention for completing a job well ahead of expectations. We soon hoed and raked an area and planted three 50foot long rows of corn, and in front, a row of green beans. Now to get some more “misi-bo” to boost the rocky ground's nutrient level and we should have a good stand of vegetables for this summer and fall.
Thanks again to our MOST TEAM for sending the seeds to us. God reminded us of the principle that a provision of more than enough means He has supplied some to share with others when we asked Anco and Ewein (Dutch missionaries who were putting in the solar panels for us) if they could use some. Anco received it with gratitude, commenting that they had actually been looking for some. God reminded me that He supplies for all of us, His children. What a neat thing to be a part of that chain of provision.
So today, look around at your “more-than-enough”s and see whose need God may be intending to supply thru you.
I know you are richly blessed! Be a blessing as well!
Mim in Mali
Monday, July 18, 2011
Adding solar panels to Children's home
(Still learning how to post- with apologies to commenters. I don't know how to reply. So Sorry!!--also, here is a late post--this was in drafts and I just realized it hadn't been posted.:(()............Earlier this month a Dutch missionary couple came and completed the installation of additional solar panels for our system here. While Ray worked with Anco and his assistant on the installation, Anco's wife, Ewein, and I took a walk up to the top of the little ridge behind us and did some photo shoots. (Her camera makes me a little jealous, I have to tell you.;)) We again met a man named Ibraheim who lives up there with his family. (picture in front of his house with his children
Anco & Ewein have been working in W Africa for severl years, and like Brendon Shank in Liberia, have been working to see the promise of solar power brought to various applications. We are thankful to be on the receiving end of their expertise. Here is a link to the video Ewein shot to chronicle this installation process.
I have posted a few photos on FB and will try to copy them here for you, as well.
....Thankfully, we have now had 24/7 electricity for several days. That means that we have fans and lights at any time of the day or night, and our little refrigerator now keeps food at below 60*-- there is even a little skim of ice on the frezer section at times!! YIPPEEE! (24/ 7 electricity is another blessing that we have so long taken for granted, is it not?)....
We are indeed blessed at the hand of a loving God. But we are also blessed to be a blessing-- not to spend it all on ourselves.....**
Hoping that you will find new ways to acknowledge your blessings and to be a blessing today.
Mim in Mali
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Julie's version of the Carwarshed Restaurant
Thought that you would enjoy this version as well. And she had a picture on her camera!
July 11, 2011 - Carwashed Restaurant
by Julie Heisey on Friday, July 15, 2011 at 3:44pm
Yesterday (Sunday) has kinda become our day off. We're getting involved with the Christian Fellowship circle that meets every Sunday evening for a 6:00 service, and we make it a day by going to the American Club for the afternoon. This time I swam in the pool for a while, got a little exercise, and then layed in the sun for a while too (: Anyways, we were planning to get a little something to eat at the small restaurant there, but it closed when we thought it opened lol. Soo... we decided to be a little adventurous and try a Malian restaurant we'd passed on our way there. We pulled up, and walked into what we were pretty sure was the restaurant... but it had not chairs or tables. Before we could walk out and leave, the owner came running from across the street and was talking to us in Bambara, and the only word we could understand was 'sandwich'. We couldn't just walk in and walk out, so we agreed to get a sandwich, and a minute later, he had his helpers bringing chairs and a table from across the street. We were thinking, why in the world were the chairs and table across the street? Not till we left and took a look, did we see that across the street was the local carwash. Of course!!! Take the furniture over to the carwash to get a sunday cleaning! lol. We tried to ask for a menu when we sat down, but couldn't communicate (which is still as frustrating as ever!). We managed to get drinks, Fanta for mom , Coke for dad, and a Sprite for me (I really wanted to take my cool glass bottle home, but they charge you more if you take the bottle, oh well) Because there wasn't much else we could do, we agreed to just try the only thing we could communicate to the guy, a sandwich. When he brought it in to us, it actually wasn't that bad. It had meat, sliced veggies, and mayo on it. We're pretty sure the meat was ground beef, and it has some good seasoning in it. It was warm, and the veggies were cold from being in the fridge, but we still prayed that God would protect us from anything harmful. Soooo, interesting experience, but I think we'll go to a familiar restaurant next time lol.
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