Monday, October 17, 2016

The Long Weekend



My weekend began at 4:00am Saturday morning. A fellow missionary here in Yurimaguas has started a Bible institute that meets every other Saturday.  The institute is located in a town called Santiago De Borja. The town is accessible by road but the travel is complicated. We left early to go to the taxi company on the other side of town. We then caught a taxi to Pongo, a town an hour and half away. From there we waited by the side of the road for a pickup carrying cargo to Santiago De Borja, basically it is hitch hiking. We had to go early because the road is under construction and closes at 7:00 am. It then is open for an hour at a time at 10:30, 12:30, and 2:30. We climbed into the back of a pickup and headed down the jungle road for another hour, through the early morning mist. It was a cold ride, but beautiful passing rivers and mountains and through fields and towns. 

We arrived in town about 7:30 and ate breakfast at a local restaurant (tables in front of someone’s house). The house next door had this cow looking for breakfast.

The institute started around 9:00 and went till 1:30. Twenty eager believers gathered together to study about prayer. 

My companion is a gifted teacher and maintained their attention the whole time. At 1:30 we left to return to Yurimaguas with a donation of plantains. The road wasn’t open and we had to wait for a while to pass through. Once through we again attempted to hitch a ride from Pongo back to Yurimaguas, but none were available. After an hour and half in the hot sun we finally found a pick up with seats in the cab, a gift from God. We returned to Yurimaguas about 5:30. After a shower and supper we were back in a local church by 7:30 to preach. I preached about the great commission and how we are all called to be missionaries. After service we talked with fellow believers and finally I returned home by 10:30, exhausted. 

But at 6:00am Sunday I was back up, loading the family in the furgon. This week there is a pastor’s conference here in Yurimaguas. Shawi pastors come to town for the week to study the word of God and they need to eat. At the farm we had some goats but they don’t like our fences and when we planted the yuca they enjoyed eating it. As a result, we hauled them to a Shawi village called Nueva Yurimaguas. The goal Sunday was to head to the village to get a goat and butcher it for the pastor’s conference. But God had other plans. First we went to the farm to pick up one of the workers, Devincen and his family. Then we drove another hour down bumpy rutted dirt roads to Nueva Yurimaguas in time for church at 9:00am. To get to the village we had to cross the Aramanyacu river. 
The kids loved the little raft which was nothing more than four logs tied together. After greeting everyone we sat down on wood benches on the dirt floor. The church has no walls but it does have a roof to keep the sun and rain off. 

When it came time for the message the pastor got up and in front of the whole church asked if I would preach. Luckily I was ready from the night before and preached a similar message. After church we enjoyed the fellowship at the pastor's house.
 Maggie enjoyed talking on her watermelon phone.
A woman approached Jennifer with a new born baby. The baby was only four days old and not eating. As Jennifer held the baby he went into convulsions and we knew this was an urgent situation. We talked them into coming with us to Yurimaguas and to the hospital.  The problem is the mother is mute so the grandma was coming to talk for her, but the grandma only speaks Shawi. I don’t know how it happened but soon we were headed back to Yurimaguas with fifteen people in the furgon, our family, Devincen and his family, three Shawi woman, three Shawi babies, and no goat.

Our intent was only to get a goat but God had other plans, we were able to share His word and save a baby’s life! He can change my plans anytime. But this was only the beginning for Jennifer. After returning to the Hogar we sent Jesusa, the woman on duty at the Hogar, to the hospital with the Shawi women because she speaks Shawi. That left us alone at the Hogar. Jennifer cooked supper for 15+ people, bathed the kids, cleaned, dispersed meds and more. When Jesusa returned from the hospital they still had not admitted the baby so Jennifer went to the hospital. The health care here is rough even if you speak Spanish and worse for minorities like the Shawi. The hospital wanted to take the babies temperature but that requires a thermometer and of course they don’t supply that. So Jennifer had to go to the hospital pharmacy to buy a thermometer, but they were out of thermometers. So she asked the guard where to buy one and he said, “it is Sunday night, there are no pharmacies open, but there is one on the other side of town where the owners live beside the store and if you bang on their door they can open up and help you.” That is healthcare in Yurimaguas.

The poor Shawi women were in culture shock. Jennifer had to teach them how to turn on a faucet because they had never seen one. And to translate she called Jesusa and handed the phone to them, but they had no idea what to do with a cellphone. 

The baby had bruises on his belly and through translation we found out that they had taken the baby to a local witch doctor. The witch doctor said the baby was cursed and had a bad spirit. He tried to remove it by sucking it out his stomach, hence the bruises. 

The baby does not have a government ID to receive free health care so Jennifer had to pay for him, it cost $2.50.  Finally, they admitted the baby and Jennifer returned home around 11:00pm. And that was our weekend. We had trouble getting out of bed Monday morning, but there still is a goat to butcher and he is two hours away and across a river. 

Please pray today for this baby in the hospital and for the Shawi people. Please pray for the pastor’s conference this week. These men are being trained to bring light and truth to the dark corners of the jungle. They are workers being sent out into the harvest.

Jesus went through all the towns and villages, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and healing every disease and sickness. When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest fields.”
Matthew 9:35-38

Sunday, October 9, 2016

Yurimaguas life


Just a quick update on life in Yurimguas for the Hires.  A couple of weeks ago a Darin Schrock came from the states to visit. What a blessing he was to us. He spent a week with us and it was so encouraging to spend time with an old friend. We welcomed him by taking him to the market his first day to try some local cuisine. Here is a picture of him eating grilled suri, a large grub and local delicacy.




Then we went upriver to visit a Shawi community. To get to the community we had to travel two hours in a leaking boat with a dog and walk two hours through the steaming jungle. We went with another missionary to determine how to meet the need for fresh water in the community during the dry season as well as to give some bibles to new believers.



Maggie turned one and we had a nice party here at the Hogar. With all the mothers and children as well as other missionaries from here in town we had over 30 people at the party.  She really enjoyed her cake and some gifts from back home that Darin brought with him.



Our new furgon has been a great family vehicle. We have used it to haul many different things including people. Here we are hauling 12 people with room to spare.



We added a roof to protect us from the rain and sun and it has been a nice addition. One day last week we were told at 6:30 in the morning to leave the Hogar for fumigation. Sometimes the government fumigates the whole town house by house to get rid of the mosquitoes and stop the spread of diseases associated with the mosquitoes. The fumigation is terribly toxic and we have to leave the house for an hour and a half. It wasn't a great way to start the day but we tried to make the most of it. We bought breakfast and drove out to the bridge on the Paranapura river to eat. Thanks to the roof we were protected from the sun while we enjoyed the view. 



We are working hard to move into our own place. We are going to live in the upstairs of a house owned by the mission and located here at the Hogar. It has plenty of space but lacks a kitchen. As a result we have built a temporary kitchen sink to create a kitchen in the laundry area. It is not ideal but we are excited to finally have our own space to unpack after 9 weeks of living out of our suitcases.



Maggie has even found her own space in the new place.



Yesterday we took a break from moving to celebrate Lucy's birthday. We found a fancy hotel here in town that has a movie theater in the basement and a swimming pool. We rented the whole theater and invited some friends to watch Frozen with us. We tried to watch it but it was a bad copy and skipped and froze. Then we switched to the new jungle book movie. It took us 20 minutes to get the theater operator to switch the movie and then the movie started in the middle. We asked to started in from the beginning so he restarted it and somehow it started in the middle again so he just rewound the whole movie on slow, second by second we watch the movie in reverse. Finally the movie started from the beginning but it was so quiet we couldn't hear and had to find him again to turn it up. I was frustrated but Jennifer just laughed and said "welcome to the movies in Yurimaguas." After the movie we went swimming but after an hour we were kicked out because they were fumigating the hotel. The movie and swimming for 7 people and 18 bags of popcorn cost us $28 so I guess I can't complain.
Overall we are doing well. We are struggling to set up a house in a foreign country and find a routine for our family as well as meeting the ministry needs here. But each day is a walk of faith and we can only rely on God. We desperately need him everyday to not only survive but to thrive here in the jungle.



Saturday, September 17, 2016

The hardest thing I have ever done



Just thought I would take a minute to describe some of my work this week. Part of our mission is a farm about 45 minutes from Yurimaguas. The goal of the farm is three fold, support the Shawi with agriculture development, support the Hogar with food, and disciple and train men of God in the process. This week the focus was on food for the Hogar. At the Hogar we eat a lot of yuca. For those of you not familiar with yuca (just like me a week ago) it is a miracle food in the jungle. Grows well in heat, can take a lot of rain or drought, can store in the ground for three to six months, pest resistant and high in calories. It might be the perfect food for the jungle (God's kind of amazing like that). So we decided to grow yuca at the farm.
We began by clearing an area for the yuca and then we needed to plant some yuca. To do that we had to make a trip to a Shawi community to get some yuca starts. On Tuesday morning two of the workers at the farm and I loaded up in the new furgon and headed out to a village called Segunda Jerusalem.
About an hour and half from Yurimaguas we stopped along the side of the road took off on a foot path through the jungle. I realized that my companions were wearing sandals and thought it strange to wear sandals in the jungle until we had walked about 200 yards and came to a river. 


There was a dugout canoe tied up on the bank but as it is the dry season now it became obvious that it was easier to walk across the knee deep water, hence the sandals. They had to wait for me to take off my boots and socks and then wait some more for me to put them back on on the other side of the river. I felt I really didn’t have a clue what I was doing but that was only the beginning.

We walked past some houses through a papaya field and a pasture and back into the jungle for a while till we came to a little clearing. 
There in the clearing was a small elevated house. One of my companions said, “there are dogs,” as he reached for a large stick. The other ran for a tree and prepared to climb. I decided it would be smart to follow suit and ran to a tree as well. We yelled at the house but no one answered. So my companion just held the dogs at bay with the large stick while I was trying to decide how to climb the tree. After a few minutes a Shawi woman appeared from the jungle with a large basket of produce. She called off the dogs and went directly into the house. She didn’t speak much Spanish but one of the guys I was with spoke Shawi. They talked for a few minutes and he apparently explained that we had spoke with her husband the day before and he said we could have some yuca starts. Her husband was away at the moment but would return later she said. She invited us up into her house where we sat on the floor while she served us a large bowl of chapu one by one because she only had one bowl and she waited till one person finished until taking the bowl and refilling it. It is custom for the Shawi to always serve a drink when a guest comes and it is never water. Chapu is a drink usually made of over ripe plantains and it is thick and sweet so I was looking forward to my turn. But I was surprised when she handed me a large bowl full to the top of red juice with white stuff floating in it. It was not what I had anticipated and it smelled terrible. But at this point I had no choice. Culturally the worst thing I could do was decline the drink. They only offer you their best stuff and to turn it down is very offensive. It could end a relationship and they might never talk to me again. So I tipped up the bowl and took a drink and it was as terrible as I thought. The first sip hit my stomach like a ton of bricks and I had an instant stomach ache. Despite my desire to gag I tipped the bowl again while everyone watched and downed the whole thing. It might have been one of the hardest things I’ve ever done.
After the drink we all grabbed machetes and followed her out into the jungle. 
We walked for quite a while through corn fields and plantain fields and patches of jungle till we came to her yuca field. Yuca grows like a tall skinny tree about nine-foot-high and what we needed was the trunk, called yuca poles. We cut the trunk off at the ground and trimmed the branches until we had a pile of nice straight poles. While we were doing this the woman cut some plantains from a nearby field and piled them beside our poles.  It was explained to me that this family was Christian and as they don’t have much money they often tithe in food. The plantains were her tithe to us to use at the Hogar to feed the woman and children. What a blessing!
After we had collected the poles it was time to harvest the yuca. Yuca grows in tubers underground and can be as much as two feet long. In this field there were old trees still growing so we had to harvest the yuca by carefully cutting out from among the roots of the trees. It was painstakingly slow and difficult. As the hours wore on and the jungle sun baked us I realized this might have been one of the hardest things I have ever done. 

Finally, we finished and had three piles; plantains, poles and yuca. I asked what are we doing with the yuca, hauling it to her house? “Oh no,” the guys replied, “she is giving us the yuca too.” It was then I realized we were at least a mile walk from the road and we had to cross a river with many heavy loads. My day was only beginning.
On the first load out the lady stopped me at her house and offered me another drink of chapu. At this point I was so hot and thirst that it actually did not taste that bad, I only gagged slightly. Trip after trip we carried poles, then plantains, then yuca. Finally, on one of the trips we passed the man returning home. He insisted we stop at the house for more chapu and a chat. By the third bowl I think I was growing accustom to the taste. Then he served us lunch. A steaming bowl of fish soup, made with dried piranha with a side of yuca and plantains. Luckily I sat at the edge of the house so I could sneak bites to the dog sitting below me. I think now I am his best friend. Also they had pet parakeets that ate the yuca off my plate, I didn’t stop them. 


After lunch the man offered to help us carry the rest. He easily carried twice what I could, barefoot, and twice as fast. On our last trip out we stopped by another neighbor’s house where of course we had to drink some more stuff. This time it was yuca based but just as terrible. When we arrived back at the furgon we found lemons and more plantains donated by other Christian neighbors. It is amazing to see people with so little give so much. We had about 500 pounds of yuca, 200 pounds of plantains, yuca poles, and a bag of lemons. There is no way we could use all this food at the Hogar but we donated much of it to some families in Yurimaguas who lost all they owned in a house fire. Bouncing back down the dusty dirt road to the farm, reflecting on the day, it was then I decided that it was the hardest thing I had ever done.

Continued:  The next day we cut the yuca poles into one foot sections and stuck them in the ground where they will sprout and grow. We planted the yuca only to find out we didn’t have enough poles. So we returned to the same village on Thursday where a different neighbor offered us starts. The only problem was that it was much farther from the road, at least an hours walk, and the food was worse. Also it had rained and the river was four feet higher. I ended the day much more tired, with a touch of heat stroke and a lot of food poisoning. Not to use the term flippantly but that was for sure the hardest thing I have ever done. 



Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Pray for Esther . . .

Santa Gema Hospital in Yurimaguas, Peru




 Josh said it was my turn to write a blog post and he thought I should share about the healthcare system here in Yurimaguas.  I said I'd have trouble writing that post through unbiased lenses.  We learned in training that most things are not right or wrong, just different.  I'm having a hard time with that when it comes to healthcare though.  It just feels wrong to me to see bugs crawling around in the newborns bassinet.  It seems wrong to see cockroaches on the hospital floor.  It seems wrong for personnel not to wash hands between patients - and they usually don't wear gloves or have hand soap at sink if they did wash their hands.  

There are other things I view as just different.  The suggested packing list for a mom in labor in the US is quite different than the required packing list here.  Here, the patient provides their own everything.   If you want even just one pillow (which is super helpful in positioning and nursing) you bring it.  You also provide your own toilet paper, pads, diapers, gowns, blankets - just about everything.  They only provide you with the bed.  The attention they give you once you're in that bed is minimal as well.  I recently spent the night at the hospital in a broken white plastic chair with a mom who had delivered and had no one to help her.  When she needed to use the bathroom, the staff gave me a bed pan and said I should help her.  The expectation is that your family cares for you while you're in the hospital. 

That is a brief summary of some of my observations at the hospital - some things are just different, and some things feel wrong to me which reflects a bit of the culture shock we experience daily.  
Those differences and stress however pale in comparison to the stories of the women we're working with here.

Esther came to us about a month ago.  She was brought by a woman from the street market close to the home.  The woman said that she was looking for work but brought her here as she was pregnant and thought we could help her.  Over time, we have learned more of her story and I'll share with you today what we understand to this point.  She is Shawi, from a distant village up river that is 30 minute walk from the river.  She has never attended school and speaks limited Spanish.  She is a brave woman.  She left her community and everything she's ever known to save her son's life.  He was born a week ago via c-section here in Yurimaguas.  

You see, he is not Esther's first son.  She gave birth to another son not long before he was conceived.  Sadly, her family did not want her to have the baby, so when she went into labor, she was taken up into the mountains by her grandmother.  She returned with no baby.  You see, here, in the Shawi community, if the child is not wanted, it is killed when it is born.  As we understand it, these babies are most often buried alive or tossed into the river.  

Esther had already suffered the loss of one child, and she did not want to suffer the loss of another.  She is brave indeed to run away from the family, community, and language she knows to an unknown future to save his life.

She also ran away from much pain.  You see, her own father died when she was young and her mother remarried and abandoned her.  She was left to be raised by her aunt and uncle.  At a certain age, that family returned her to the community where her mother was from so she could get to know the family there.  Her sons were then conceived from her uncle, thus leading to her grandmother's disapproval and the death of her son.

I am lost for words.  She is but a child and knows more pain than I will likely ever know.  Her father died, her mother abandoned her, her grandmother killed her son, and now she's here. 

She has found life on her own here in Yurimaguas a struggle as well.  About a week after arriving at the home here she left to find work.  We later learned she had found work at a bar.  Most of the work offered to young girls at a bar you can imagine is bad news.  The woman who employed her brought her to the hospital when she was in labor and the hospital contacted us.  

I went to see her the evening her son was born with the director of our home.  For the first time, she was vulnerable.  I asked her if she was scared and her eyes filled with tears as did mine as she said yes.  Through the help of an interpreter I learned she did not feel safe with her employer and did not want to return there.  I promised she was safe with us and we'd help her.  From that connection and my brief previous experience at the hospital, I knew I could not leave her alone there all night.  Imagine, 14, new mom, major surgery, and no one to help, alone, and scared.  So, Josh got a phone call - I couldn't leave her, I had to stay the night. 

When she first came she had indicated that she would give the baby up for adoption after he was born.   However, once she had delivered, she decided to keep him, and she loves him.  When I asked if she wanted to hold him, she said yes and she smiled at him and caressed him.  It was the first time I'd seen her smile since I met her.  She sacrificed everything (even if her life wasn't that great) for him and he's all she has.

As if her life weren't hard enough, she's now struggling to recover from the c-section (which was likely unnecessary but they tend to like to do them here).  The incision has become infected and she is now hospitalized again.  This is complicated by her lack of good nutrition as wounds don't heal and scar as well when one is malnourished.  I was with her this morning as they cleaned and packed the wound without any anesthetic.  She is a strong woman.

When she left the home the first time I felt convicted that I hadn't reached out to her as much as I had wanted to.  I wanted to tell her how brave I thought she was and encourage her - even if she didn't understand everything I said.  I thought I had more time with her.  When she left, I realized we often don't know how long we have with our guests here and here might be the only chance they have in their life to hear about Christ.  I'm thankful she is back.  I trust the Lord brought her here for a purpose.  I pray that we can reach her heart with the love of Jesus Christ and that He can restore her soul.  Please join us in praying for physical, spiritual, and emotional healing for Esther and for her son to grow and thrive.

Naturally, I want to bring this 14 year old and her baby home with me and love on them.  I said to Josh, surely they're not all like this, we can help her.  Today, I learned the story of a 16 year old mom we have staying with us because she's been severely abused by her husband and her mom has refused for her to return home knowing that if she returns to her husband she may be killed.  Of course, I want to take her in too!  We knew I'd want to bring home a lot of babies when we moved here, we didn't expect to want to bring home so many teenagers!  

I don't understand how families can do this to each other.  But I'm encouraged tonight by John 16:33 "I have told you these things so that in me you may have peace.  In this world you will have trouble!  But take heart!  I have overcome the world."  Our desire is that these woman may know Him who overcame the world.

                                                                                                                            ~ Jennifer

Sunday, September 4, 2016

Struggling to build the kingdom



 
One month. We have been here one month. As the picture above shows, life is a struggle here. We are struggling to learn new things and to understand. Struggling with the heat. Struggling to find a routine. I (Josh) am struggling to communicate. But the most important struggle is to build the kingdom of God. That is why we are here.
As I think back on the month I also can't help but praise God for his protection. We have been perfectly healthy. No sickness. It is a blessing from God and for that we give Him praise.
The first month has been extreme culture shock. Everyday we see something that gives us pause. Everyday we learn something new. Everyday we ask dumb questions. It is a lot like being in eighth grade all over again. Everything is awkward. We don’t know how to act or what to say or what to do in many situations. It is stressful.
We are also sharing new experiences with people here. Just this morning I prepared pancakes for the entire Hogar. Normally there are two women on duty during the day to cook and clean and watch and bathe the children, but on Sundays there is only one. So we are trying to help fill in the gap on Sundays. So yesterday Lucy and I wandered the markets looking for flour, milk, and baking powder. It was a lot harder than I thought it would be, but we were successful. This morning I got up early and made a huge batch of pancakes for the 23 people here right now. Sister Daisy was working this morning, and she told me she had never tried pancakes. I was shocked but then I realized that the majority of the people I was feeding had never tried pancakes. In fact, one of the new Shawi mothers looked unsure of how to use a faucet so I am certain it was her first time eating pancakes. I only wish I had some real maple syrup to share with them.

Above is a photo of Brother Devincen who has worked at the farm for five years. Two weeks ago his ten-month old son, Jose, got very ill. He had a high fever and a intestinal infection. He spent a week in the hospital here in Yurimaguas. Jose almost had to go to Lima for better health care but the day they were leaving his fever broke. Praise God he is 100% recovered now. But for a week I had to go to the farm every other day to check on things. One of the first mornings I pulled into the driveway to find four cows staring at me. Now this may seem obvious but cows don’t belong in driveways, they belong in fences, so this means the cows were out. As I got out of the truck I could hear more cows out in the jungle away from the pastures. Now I have chased cows around the corn fields of Indiana but the jungles of Peru is a different story. So I picked up the machete and off I went. After 20 minutes of hacking a path through the bush I found some cows. I told them “I don’t know if you understand English but I need you to follow me.” And sure enough they did!  Soon I had all the cows out in the open and after some thinking, some herding and some sweating I finally had them back in the fence. It was then I realized that I didn’t know how many cows we have at the farm. I had seen them and checked them before but never counted. Also somehow they had escaped. So I picked up the machete again and off I went to look for cows and a problem with the fence. A couple of hours later I found in the back of the farm where a neighbor had left the gate open. We have neighbors that own farms behind our farm and the only access for them is straight through our pasture. So we have gates for them to pass through but evidently they don’t always close the gates. As a result this past week the guys worked on building wood gates that close automatically.  I eventually confirmed with Devincen that I had recovered all the cows.
I am not the only one dealing with these new difficulties, so is my wife. My brave, brave wife. The other day at the hogar there was a huge spider on the wall. Now I want to be careful not to over exaggerate so I will under exaggerate by saying that this spider was the size of my whole hand, including the legs of course.  It was big. One of the workers told Jennifer that we need to get rid of the spider as it was dangerous. She called me over but I was busy so she took matters into her own hands. Grabbing a broom, she swept it off the wall and pinned it to the ground.  I arrived to see the final smash. After disposing I said to the worker, “so that spider is dangerous?” and she responded, “yes, sometimes when it bites people they die.” That is a strong statement. I feel like saying that the spider is dangerous is not sufficient. I feel she should have warned us that the spider can kill. But the whole thing seemed pretty casual to her. And Jennifer has since killed another. I am so proud.

But more importantly, we have been doing what we came here to do, share Christ. Last Saturday I was able to preach in a local church here in town. It went terribly but I can only pray that God’s message was received despite my poor Spanish. I am preaching again this weekend so pray for me. I have also been able to have spiritual conversations with some of the workers here and I do much better one on one. Jennifer has been working with the children and mothers here at the hogar. After putting the kids to bed the other night she went downstairs to talk with two teenage girls that were here by order of the court. She listened to their situation and talked with them about Christ. More and more it looks like she will be playing the role of counselor here. Pray for us as we continue to adjust. We are asking God for boldness as we share his truth, goodness, and mercy.
 Henry checking out cows at the farm.
Lucy and the horses at the farm.
Maggie helping pick lemons at the farm.


Sunday, August 21, 2016

Plumbing, Plantains, and Police



Well, despite a brush with the police and a brush with a snake we have survived week two here in Yurimaguas.  We are still living here at the Hogar which has been a blessing. We have been able to spend more time working with the kids and mothers here and working to finish and move into the new building. We moved the administrator’s office into the new building and out of the conference room, and we took over the conference room. Which means we now have an indoor living room! It is a great space for home school and to sit in the evening and not get attacked by ants or mosquitos, but I miss watching the bats.

A new baby was brought to the Hogar this week. Elixson is 8 months old and was born with a cleft pallet. When he was 15 days old his mother dropped him off at the Hogar. He had surgery to repair his pallet and the staff had to feed him with special bottles. He recovered well and about 6 weeks ago he went back to his village. This week his mother brought him back because she is struggling to take care of him and returned to her village. He is due for another surgery in November in another city and one of the staff will accompany him. Please pray for Elixson and his mother.

On Thursday I was invited to help with a construction project here in town. A local church is adding classrooms behind their current building. The problem is the current building is built into a hill so a lot of dirt needed removed. I showed up along with another missionary and most of the church. Many of the church members took the day off to join the work day. This is a big sacrifice to loose a day income but they are willing to sacrifice for the Lord’s work. We spent the day hauling dirt. I would shovel dirt into a wheel barrow, wheel it through the church, and dump it on the street, then repeat. It was grueling and difficult work in the heat but everyone worked hard. Men worked with pick axes to dig. Woman would fill buckets and carry out buckets. Other woman cooked food and prepared refrescos (juice). I don’t think I have ever sweat so much in my life. For lunch some of the ladies served boiled fish, rice, plantains and yucca along with a toasted barley drink. It is a traditional meal here but I think I would rather go hungry.

Friday we decided to take a trip to see the farm. The kids had not been there and Henry wanted to see the jungle. Now I currently do not have a Peruvian drivers license but plan to get one. I was going to get one in Arequipa but was advised to wait and get it here. In Arequipa there is an optional bribe to pay. Optional because you can choose not to pay the bribe but you are guaranteed to fail. Susan has a truck just sitting here needing used and the road to the farm is 8 miles of rutted dirt road with almost no traffic on it so we decided to give a go. Lucy prayed for our trip before we left.  She prayed that only one tire would go flat because we only had one spare, that our water wouldn't run out, and that we wouldn't get pulled over by the police.  So there I was driving in Peru for the first time and there at the edge of town was a police checkpoint.  At first a stern man walked up and asked to see our paperwork.  I didn’t think it was possible to sweat anymore than I already was but I did.  We explained it wasn’t our truck and that we were borrowing it from a fellow missionary. Thank goodness I had brought the insurance paperwork with us because they checked to make sure our insurance was current and told us to continue. They didn’t ask for license or visas or anything else.
After 45 minutes of bumping along the road we made it to the farm. We talked to the workers, saw the cows, chased the chickens, and petted the horses. Then we went on a hike. About half of the farm is cleared for pasture and half of the farm is jungle. We hiked along a jungle path and stopped and had a picnic in the shade. After our picnic Lucy saw a trail of ants on the path ahead. She started to run toward it when she realized it was not ants, but a black snake crossing the path. The path was about 5 feet wide and the snake covered the whole path so we don’t know how long it was exactly, but it was long. At least it didn’t appear to be very thick like a boa, and when we asked the farm workers later they said that the snake was not dangerous.

All in all, it was a good day capped off with dinner cooked by other missionaries here in town. They are from Alabama so they love good barbeque and even have a smoker. We ate enchiladas, smoked peppers wrapped in bacon, chocolate chip cookies and sweat tea. It was a welcomed change from rice, fish, plantains, and yucca. Most of all we have made another good friendship with people that have a passion to serve the Lord. The kids already call them aunt and uncle.  

Saturday I learned how to be a plumber in South America. I had some plumbing that needed work here at the Hogar so I went to the local hardware store looking for some fittings. When I asked for a union they just looked at me and said “no hay” or there isn’t any. I was somewhat confused and trying to figure out how to work without a union when I found out here they make there own. There was a fire already at the Hogar as the staff was cooking fish for lunch so I stuck the end of the pipe in the fire for a minute until it was soft and the shoved another inside of it and next thing you know I had a union. I am enjoying learning new things and even had an indigenous woman teach me how to sharpen a machete with a rock and some water. 

The kids are enjoying new adventures as well such as playing at the only playground we've found so far, playing in the rain, or playing with the toilet paper.  Lucy and Henry are enjoying doing school each day and we often include a girl from the home here who is struggling in math so we have a class of at least 3!  Maggie is loved by all and often carried off by one of the teenagers here at the home.







Sunday, August 14, 2016

Week one update



Well, we have lived in Yurimaguas a little over a week, and what a first week it was. Here are some of the highlights and low lights.

We spent a lot of time this week looking at houses. On Monday we found a really good house and we told the owner that we would take it. We were set to return the next morning to sign a contract. But that night we had no peace about the decision and the more we prayed the worse we felt about it. We felt that we had made the decision without God’s leading. So the next morning we called the owner and told her we had changed our mind and why. We instantly had total peace about it, and I am so glad we did. If we had signed the contract we would have spent Tuesday cleaning the house, installing mosquito screens, and moving in. Instead God had different plans for the day. Jennifer was able to go to the hospital to assist a 17-year-old Shawi woman in child birth. The woman had never been to Yurimaguas or a hospital and was very scared. The hospital was very different and scary for even Jennifer so I can not imagine how the woman felt. But mother and child are doing well.
 This morning she left for a 3-4 hour canoe ride back to her village. In the afternoon a 14 year old Shawi girl came to the hogar. She is pregnant and running away from home because her parents want her to abort her child.  It is rumored that in the villages unwanted babies are killed at birth instead of in utero although the Peruvian staff here cannot confirm that.  The young age of the pregnant woman is common as most Shawi woman are married by age 15-16.  She does not want the baby either but does not want an abortion. She came to Yurimaguas to look for work when someone told her to come the hogar to receive help. We called the local authorities because in Peru you can receive medical treatment at little to no cost if you are a citizen but you must have documentation. Obviously this woman had no documentation but the authorities can give  the native people the proper documentation.  She spoke no Spanish so we had to have the help of a translator. She was put in the custody of the hogar until she could be processed. She lived in a remote village and has never received any education or health care.  She is approximately 30 weeks gestation.  I am struck by her bravery - to save a child she doesn't want to raise, she left everything she's ever known and broke ties with her family.  Today she left the hogar and said she was returning to her home village. Our hearts our broken.  Whatever path she chooses, the decisions and consequences will be difficult.  Please pray for strength and wisdom for her as she navigates this difficult road.

So instead of moving into a house we spent the week loving the woman and children here at the hogar. I am so glad we did not take that house. It seemed like the logical thing to do but we would have missed out on some amazing opportunities. I was able to spend time talking with a ten-year-old Shawi boy named Percy. He was here in the city for the first time. I asked him many questions about his village and life there. I learned a lot, including some Shawi words.  Jennifer spent a lot of time talking with the hogar staff, playing with the children, and painting fingernails. She learned a lot as well. Sometimes following God does not seem logical but He always knows what is best.

This is Percy doing the limbo.

Now for some culture highlights: One Monday we saw a naked (and I mean stark naked) man just casually walking down the street. I don’t think that is a highlight but I was surprised. I would expect to see nudity in the native villages but not in a city of 30,000 people. At the market I saw grilled rat.
I asked twice to make sure I understood what it was although it was obvious because it still had the head on it. Wanted to buy one just to show Jennifer but decided to take a picture instead. Henry and I held a monkey. Almost bought that too but was wiser.


Also saw a boa constrictor skin.
Right now is a 15-day celebration in town. Every night there is a huge party. It moves around town and they close the roads and set up a huge stage with loud music in the middle of the road. Last night was our neighborhood’s turn, it lasted until 4am so not much sleep for us. At the party the people celebrate traditions from the jungle which include a parade led by a cow and dancing around a totem pole.

Overall we had a good week. Still don’t have a house but that’s ok. God will provide, He always does. 

Maggie has adjusted to the heat and is feeling much better even though she still has a heat rash. 

Lucy started home schooling and that is going well. Henry made friends with the Shawi children and shared his toys with them.

We are homeless, hot, and struggling to understand the culture. Life is hard but we are doing exactly what God has called us to do and therefore have peace.
Que Dios les bendiga.