Allie writing on Sunday 2nd September:
This might be a bit long so I thought I’d start with 10
interesting (hopefully) facts about our lives here, then you can just read that
if you can’t face the whole thing ;0)
1. We keep our toaster wrapped in carrier
bags so that cockroaches don’t take up residence inside it (obviously we remove
them (the bags) before we use it)
2. Jez is honing his tennis skills and is
frequently found brandishing his orange electric tennis racket with a gleeful
grin and much fascination from small spectators every time it crackles and
hisses. Not so good over lunch when all you can smell is burnt fly.
3. Carrots are harder here and so take
longer to cook. Less water when they’re growing???
4. The kids have all been amazing at taking
their anti-malarials and are very proud that they can swallow their tablets (2 or 3 each) without
water!!
5. One of our guards is called Zebron. He’s
great – very keen to improve his English and teach us Kirundi. Cas and Fliss
call him Zebra.
6. We sang ‘We wanna see Jesus Lifted High’
at church this morning. In French.
7. I unexpectedly taught Sunday School at
church this morning – great kids, I loved it. I had to do some of that in
French too.
8. Our foster dog is responding beautifully
to the training we’re doing with her. We got a lot of interested looks when we
walked her on Friday morning!
9. Cooking separate veggie stuff for me is
too much effort so I pick out the meat and Jez picks out the veg and we do
swapsies.
10. It’s good to dress modestly here i.e.
no clothes above the knee, not too much skin on show eg. cleavage or shoulders.
So it’s a bit of a social dilemma when you bump into the pastor’s wife at the
pool wearing just a swimming cossie...
Finally, our
actual journey!
After all my anxieties about travelling with the children
but without Jeremy, we survived!! On Tuesday 28th August we
travelled by convoy to Heathrow, our 15 cases split between 4 cars (thank you
Mum and Dad and lovely friends). Check in and immigration (a necessity due to
our one way tickets) went incredibly smoothly, even though every single case
was over the 23kg weight limit by at least 1kg (except Andy’s guitar case – a
mere 7.2kg!). The Kenyan Airways staff were really kind and helpful.
Once through security (where we said an emotional goodbye to
my parents) we headed to the soft play area, which turned out to be supervised
– yay! So Andy, Harry and I sat around reading/playing on various electronic
handheld devices (!) whilst Cas and Fliss searched for stars hidden in the play
area. After tea at Pret and a visit to the Official Olympic Store (the kids now
all own a cuddly mascot) we headed to the boarding gate where we got priority
boarding as we had an ‘infant’ – have you seen the size of my infant?!!
Thank God for all the people who helped us in different
ways
Pray for our friends and family in the UK
Film Night for the
Wisdom Family!
Thankfully I’d packed plenty of activities to occupy the
children on the plane, although sitting in one place for hours was a bit of a
challenge. I couldn’t help thinking how roomy the seats were for them though,
with lots of leg room and everything! Cas and Fliss were very excited when we
took off, and once the TVs starting working they were quite happy watching The Lorax (a new Dr. Seuss creation).
Frustratingly Cassie’s TV didn’t work, though the attendant did offer to find
me two more seats together somewhere – perhaps I should have sent Cas and Fliss
with him?! I worked out that I could play the film in synchro on my TV and
Fliss’s (who was in the middle), and they could both watch Fliss’s screen
whilst Cas listened to her sound and Fliss listened to mine. I was very pleased
with myself for coming up with this idea and I don’t think she noticed that it
was slightly out of sync!!
After their film we did teeth and then I told them
it was bedtime now, tucked their blankets around them and they were asleep in 2
minutes – wow!
Finally I had my TV back and got to watch Salmon Fishing in the Yemen :0) Harry is
very proud that he watched 3 films (and didn’t sleep at all – talk about
grumpy), Andrew slept.
Arrived at Nairobi early morning. We were all very tired
and thankfully only had a couple of hours to wait until our next flight. It was
great to hear that we were going straight to Bujumbura as sometimes they go to
Kigali (capital of Rwanda) first.
Arrived in Bujumbura on Wednesday at 9.15am local time :0)
GREAT to see Jez at the entrance to arrivals and a colleague
from school who’d come to translate and smooth our way through arrivals. We
were through in five minutes, although collecting our bags took longer. One was
missing, which worryingly contained all the children’s DVDs – more important
even than all our medicines in the school holidays!! We were delighted when it
was delivered on Thursday afternoon :0) Thursday was spent unpacking – we’re
nearly there now. All those times I wondered if we really needed all the things
we were bringing; now I’m really glad we brought it all.
Thank God that we were able to bring many home comforts
and familiar things
Pray for those who manage with so little every day
Jez treats the
family to lunch out as Allie cannot face cooking stewing beef and there’s no
power anyway!
On Friday we went to a local swimming pool and had lunch
there. We have not had a cook since we arrived since the poor guy was admitted
to hospital on Wednesday morning with malaria and typhoid – a ‘Burundi reality’
as I recently heard someone describe similar situations. He is on the mend now
which is a relief – thank you to all who’ve been praying. Do please continue to
pray for him to regain strength, especially as he has a wife and newborn baby
at home. We are not sure when he will be able to return to work, but thankfully
our guards have been preparing fruit and veg for us which has been a real help
– I am missing the convenience of tinned tomatoes and tinned fruit!
Thank God for our lovely guards who’ve been so willing to
help out
Pray for our cook to make a full recovery, and for his
family
The challenges of
cooking in Burundi – and we have it easy compared to most...
It was really hard to arrive and straightaway have to start
cooking for us. I had emailed ahead with a shopping list and menu for the first
few days, but am having to be very organised as we have to send people to shop
for us at the local market, and then can only cook when we have power. The
electricity is on a schedule, and is pretty reliable. We seem to have power
either during the day or during the evening on weekdays and this weekend have
been treated to almost a whole weekend of continual power – yay!
The lowest
point was trying to make yoghurt as buying it is quite expensive for six of us.
Apparently milk is bought in the evenings, after 8.30, so we sent our guard for
some, but due to his lack of English and our ropey French, he bought us
unpasteurised milk. After an attempt at pasteurising it, with no power and the
gas bottle running out for the gas stove, it was getting late and Jeremy wisely
told me to give up! He phoned a local friend who sells pasteurised milk and he
kindly bought us some and then showed our guard where he lived so that he can
buy it from there in the future.
Someone had said to us the day before “You’ll
make lots of mistakes – don’t worry about it, as long as no-one dies!” , and
she was absolutely right! I managed to make yoghurt in the end.
Thank God for wise and experienced friends
Pray that we’ll adapt quickly, for patience when things
are hard or frustrating, and for energy when it seems overwhelming – thankfully
this is not often :0)
Beans and
rice...and Nutella
I have been shocked by how expensive food is here – it’s no
wonder Burundians mainly just eat beans and rice. We’ll be eating lots of those
too. I expected imported foods to be expensive, but everything is, especially
as there are no ‘bogofs’ or ‘value’ lines. Many of our basics are far more
expensive here than they would be in Tesco – e.g. Loo roll, bread and pasta.
Even the fruit and veg cost the same as they would in the UK, and the quality
is far poorer e.g. broken and split carrots. It makes me realise how much we
take for granted in the UK...
So far I have made granola and yoghurt, passion fruit juice
ice lollies, pan-fried cheese and tomato toasties, several kinds of soup, beef
casserole (eventually I plucked up the courage to tackle the stewing beef!),
tuna pasta bake (someone had left a tin of tuna here for us, not something I’d
usually buy as it’s imported and costs about £2.20 per small tin), M&M
cookies (we brought the M&Ms and cocoa powder with us), and we had pancakes
with Nutella for breakfast this morning. Eggs are pretty cheap , Nutella isn’t
- a small jar costs about £4, this is about 2 days salary for most people here.
Nutella will be a very rare treat for us.
It’s also quite hard to store food as you get bugs in it. I
have gone for overkill, storing all our dry things (e.g. Sultanas, sugar,
flour) in Tupperware and/or ziplock bags. Often the food you buy at market
already has weevil (I think) eggs in it so I think the other thing is to use
rice and flour etc. quickly. Nice. If in doubt I store food in the fridge which
is cockroach and bug-proof (though so far no cockroaches)!
Thank God for the variety of food we are able to access,
and that we are able to store it safely
Pray for all those whose diet is so limited and who
suffer from health issues due to poor nutrition and hygiene
Pray that we will
be good stewards of the gifts God gives us – it’s very hard living amidst such
poverty – there are good reasons why it’s not right for us to live just on
beans and rice twice a day, but it still feels very ‘wrong’...
Pants
The water is okay at the moment and has only gone off once
for a couple of hours, just as I was about to wash all the underwear! Washing
all our underwear is certainly an excellent incentive to encourage the kids to
wipe their bottoms properly...
Thank God for clean (though we still filter it) and
plentiful water
Pray for those with no water supply to their home, and
for whom doing the washing is a huge burden
Out and about...
on foot and on the roads
We’ve been visited by lots of friends which has been really,
really lovely :0)
We’ve also been out to see people as well as for a few
outings to see local places of interest (!) – the new gym that has Zumba
classes, a great boulangerie, a local sewing project to buy a new purse for my Franbu (Burundian Francs).
I have even been driving around a bit which hasn’t been as
bad as I thought as I’ve only been out when the roads have been quiet. Tomorrow
I get to drive to school for the staff meeting, during rush hour – eek!
Unfamiliar right hand drive automatic 4x4 + driving on the
right + unmade roads and potholes you could fit a person in + loads and loads
of construction work + other drivers + no speed limits or highway code = drive
confidently but with caution – “always assume it’s your right of way” –
okkkk....
Thank God for kind friends here :0) and that he’s given
me the confidence to drive
Ask for protection for us and all those who use the
roads, there are very many traffic accidents here, especially as there are so
many bikes and motorbikes, and very few helmets worn.
Will the school
holidays ever end?!
The kids have been bored and squabbling. They’re hot and
tired and grumpy, and ready to go back to school. They all broke up in early
July and by the time term starts on the 10th they’ll have had about
10 weeks of holidays – which is several weeks too long. We’re all looking
forward to more of a routine. It was so good to go to church this morning, and
we have school meetings next week where I’ll get to meet the rest of the staff.
Andrew’s leading worship at the staff meeting tomorrow morning and has already
been in touch with the guy who organises the music group at church – why hang
about?!
The school timetable is almost done and I’m going to be
working on Mondays and Thursdays teaching RS to years 7-13, which I’m really
looking forward to :0)
The children have already made some friends and had their
first play date yesterday, where they all played really nicely with the
playmobil, girly bits (pram, dolls etc.) and then on the Wii.
Harry saw some
friends this morning that he met back in February, they’re in his year at
school. I think because the ex-pat community here seems quite transitory,
people make friends quickly – at least that’s our experience so far :0)
Thank God that the children have already made some
friends and that Andrew has plenty of opportunities to be musical
Ask God to give me patience with the children and for
good meetings at school this week
And finally...
Have to finish quickly as we’re off to the orphanage in a
minute to watch a talent show!
We’ve been busy skyping friends – it’s been great. We’ll
soon be in touch with other people we said we’d Skype.
Church today was great – we sang several songs we knew, and
some we didn’t, in English, French, Kirundi and Swahili! Jez and Andy can tell
you about the rest as I was in Sunday School where we looked at this verse from
Micah and how we can live it:
Micah 6:8
New
American Standard Bible
“...And what
does the Lord require of
you
But to do justice, to love kindness,
And to walk humbly with your God?”
Weather – hot (I thought it was about 28 but I think the
thermometer might be stuck as it says 28 all the time...), sometimes humid,
sometimes breezy. Very rainy at the moment, mostly in the night, the noise on
our tin roof is deafening, and the rainy season isn’t due for several weeks.
Thank God for the amazing talents of the great kids at
the orphanage; for Skype; and for our new church. Also that we are all coping
with the changes so far. There are many challenges but we’re ok.
Pray that we will soon feel that BICC (Bujumbura
International Community Church) is ‘home’ and that we will find an
English-speaking house group to join. Also for a bit more family harmony, that
would be good!
Lots of love xxxx