Monday, May 25, 2009

Tann-zane-ee-ah

The primary work of eMi is to help international ministries develop designs for their land so they can more effectively do their ministry. However, this is not what I have been doing out at Bukaleba. Usually eMi turns over a set of design documents and helps ministries with design questions while they build, but leaves the actual construction management to the ministry. My construction work with John is one of a few exceptions.

So what was I doing in Tanzania this past week? Well some previous construction interns mentioned that they would have really liked going on a project trip so they could experience the bread and butter of eMi. Megan asked me if that was something i was interested and at first i thought probably not. But as events unfolded, our trip leader came up short on Civil Engineering interns for the summer, and John was able to get another CM intern for the time i would be working on the project, so things just kind of fell into place. Let me just say that I am so incredibly glad that I got to go.

After a 15 hour drive over some of the worst roads i have ever experienced, we arrived at the Kamanga ferry, which takes vehicles and passengers across a small bay to Mwanza. Mwanza is a city of about 250,000. The second largest city in Tanzania, it is a major port on Lake Victoria. We checked into our hotel and the next day met with End Time Glory ministries. They recently acquired about 20 acres of lakeside property and want to put up an orphanage, among other things. The architects spent the week in meetings and preparing drawings and floor plans. The other engineers did soil and water tests on the site, while Ryan and I teamed up to do a survey of the site. Ryan is a really good surveyor and taught me how to work the machine, while he tromped through waist high grass with a rod to get the data he wanted. We did most of the survey from the top of "Glory Mountain" (what the ministry has decided to call it), a high rocky hill in the center of the site. After 3 days of carrying equipment up and down the hill, I had some other names in mind. We spend the last few days working on water and waste water designs and presenting our work to the ministry. Now that we have their approval of what we have done, we will spend the next month or so finishing designs and writing reports.

Tanzania gained independence from Great Britain in 1961. The national language is Swahili, and very proper Swahili at that. In a lot of ways completely different from what the Kenyans I have met speak. Not many people speak English but we made it around OK with a some translators from the ministry and my pocket phrasebook. Also, TZ seems more... under control... than Uganda. What I mean is that the streets are cleaner, the police seem more official, the City is better organized. That was just my impression after a week though, and only in a small corner of the country.

I am back in the office, new interns have just arrived for the summer, and I am excited to get into the work!

Saturday, May 2, 2009

The Longest Week

"Consider it pure joy, my brothers, when you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance. Perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything"

Last Sunday Pastor JB gave the message on that passage in James. The Lords timing could not have been better. Last week was one of the most difficult I have ever faced. Let me tell you about it.

John and I went out to the site on Monday with a generator and some drills. We were intent on setting trusses for the kitchen roof that day, maybe continuing on Tuesday. The first day, our inverter broke and we could not do any drilling. John went back to get a new inverter and brought it back on tuesday, then the Generator broke. John went back and returned it to the rental place, and we borrowed one from a local pastor. This one worked, but then we discovered our drill bits were not exactly what we needed. We had to rack our brains for creative solutions to so many problems that we had not anticipated. It was mentally exhausting. John and I both came close to losing our tempers a few times, I may or may not have let some swear words slip under my breath. To make a long story short, we finished setting trusses on Friday. Four days late. Four, twelve-hour days where nothing seemed to go right. On top of that I faced some of the most intense loneliness I have ever experienced.

The good part? Well, Jesus was still in control through all of it. The trusses got set, in his timing. Also, I kept remembering Pastor JB's message. It kept me from despair more than once. I was still tired and miserable, but I had hope. I understood why the Lord, who is in control of everything, was letting it be such a hard week. So now, on Saturday, I am able to count it all Joy that I faced trials of various kinds. I know why I was allowed to face them, because Jesus cares about me. He cares so much that he is going to do what it takes me make me mature and complete.

The Crew

Our smallest construction worker. Don't worry, we don't have child laborers on site. But when school is out a lot of kids come hang out on site until we make them leave (its a dangerous place). This guy likes to come out and try to help, and we have to chase him of the site sometimes so he does not hurt himself. Still, I catch him every now and again with a shovel trying to help mix mortar. He is a really cool kid.

The masons taught me how to dress stone. Here I am with the fruits of my labor. Took me about an hour to shape an 11 inch stone. Then the masons helped me set it in mortar and plumb it. Benson, one of our Kenyans, dresses up to 60 feet a day with nothing but chisels and a hammer.

This is God (the nickname here for Gordon). We have become pretty good friends. He does contract labor for us now and sometimes drives me up a wall. But we get along ok.

This is our crew on the site right now. Foreman, two masons, and three masons assistants. For digging and concrete work we hire out contract labor. I am getting better at negotiating contracts, but its not my forte. This was taken on April 21st, Texas Independence Day. I made everyone an honorary Aggie so we could have muster. The flag flew proudly over the site for a few hours, until i needed my handkerchief back.


And here I am with my crew.

The Buildings

There are a total of four buildings going up on the site. A kitchen/dining hall, babies home, and two nursery school buildings. Info on the project is at www.iloveorphans.com.






Here are some pictures of the construction of the babies home, one of our 4 buildings. I came right after the slab was poured and now we are about to put the roof on. Exterior walls are dressed stone, interior walls are brick with plaster.




These 5 pictures are of the first nursery school building. John and I started the building layout a month and a half ago, and we are about to pour the slab. The Second nursery school building is nearby and at about the same stage of construction. The masonry will be a job for the next intern.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

My Summer Skin

So its been a few weeks. The internet in our Jinja office has been out. Also, I think my body is acclimating to the mefloquine, because I am not having the same vivid dreams as I was before.

Some things I have done in the past weeks:
- Travelled to Lake Bunyoni for Intern Retreat (really good experience)
- Repaired my chacos with binding wire
- Rafted the Nile River (class 5 rapids, pretty sweet)
- Poured a Concrete Ring Beam
- Poured a Concrete Strip Footing
- Eaten Italian Oatmeal (parmesan cheese and olive oil, delicious)
- Driven John's Land Rover off Road on the site. The thing is a beast. Dont worry mom and dad, I would never take it out on the road with other drivers. The roads are really crazy round here.

The rest of my time in Uganda has been planned out. On may 16th I will come to Kampala and from there we will go on a project trip to Tanzania. I will be there roughly 10 days. Then I will finish out the rest of my time in Kampala. So only about 5 more weeks of construction managment left. I need to make the most of it, I am getting attached to this project and I want to see it through as much as possible. That being said, project trips are the EMI staple, and this will be a great oppertunity to see what a project trip is like and do some engineering.

Last wednesday we had the emi office prayer day. It was really awesome, and we listened to a life changing message about prayer by John Piper. It is called "Put in the Fire for the Sake of Prayer" and I think you can find it online.

I have been working in Kampala since Wednesday, hard at work on the water system for the babies home. Its hard work, and its brain work. Managing is emotionally draining. Engineering desing is hard on the brain.

Jennifer (in Kampala) has Deathcab for Cutie on her Ipod, and I love it so much. Hence the title. Also my skin is very dark now from being in the sun all the time.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Silent Night, Holy Crap

Alec Burnter-Abt, my best friend from middle school, is treating me to dinner for my birthday. Only his parents are there, and his mom looks just like my grandmother. In the middle of the meal everyone starts quietly singing "Silent Night". Slowly the whole restaurant joins in, and we are all singing together. Our voices sound exactly like the kids from "Charlie Brown Christmas".

This week was long, and interesting. Here are the Highlights.

Monday - While riding with a cement truck out to the site, the lug nuts pop off of the front drivers side tire. Apparently our driver was trying to make it on 3 nuts. He knew he was trying to cheat the system though and was driving very slowly when it happened. So there wasnt any kind of accident. Thankfully we are in the middle of a village, so our driver hops onto a boda-boda (motorcylce taxi) and drives all the way back to Jinja to pick up more bolts. 3 hours later we are back on the road. A potentially frustrating experience but i did have a good time talking to the other transport guys and the village kids.

Tuesday - We start pouring a foundation for the nursery school. All concrete here is mixed by hand, and we were only 1/4 done by 5 PM. So We cut a deal with the laborers and worked until 2:30 AM, by moonlight and lamplight.

Wednesday - I killed a snake with a piece of reinforcing steel. Caught the sucker eating a toad. Like shooting fish in a barrel.

Thursday - Had a great talk with one of our carpenters about the Kingdom of God manifesting itself here on earth. One of the singularly most encouraging moments of my life.

Friday - we are supposed to be pouring a beam in the afternoon, but the carpenters are running behind on the formwork. So John decides we are going to stay and pour on Saturday. I am not happy but decide not to complain. The masons and carpenters were pretty upset. We were in the middle of a meeting discussing the terms and conditions of a weekend pour (and facing a potential mutiny) when we get a call from the head carpenter. He has decided to go home, and we can't pour without him. So we went home early after all. Turns out God is in control, not us, and the pour is moved to Monday.

Next week is a short week. Our intern weekend is next weekend. We are travelling to Lake Bunyoni. A popular resort/camping spot to re-connect as interns and discuss our first 1/3 of the time here.

I appreciate your prayers and emails so much. This past week was a homesick week. I miss family, friends, cold milk, and beer. But not to equal degrees.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Fightin' Texas Aggie Rosebushes

I am the 12th man on the field, playing for the Fightin' Texas Aggies. But there are only about 100 people in the stands and they are all wearing red. The student section is filled with large flowering shrubs. The red flowers are in full bloom and gardeners are tending them.

Last week was a lot of hard work. I helped dig a foundation for one of the nursery school buildings and the stone is almost up. I am feeling more comfortable in the culture, but I am still trying to learn my job. There was a moment when I imagined that there was a magic door that would take me back to the states, I asked myself if I would walk through it if such a door existed. The final verdict, it would be a decision I would regret. So maybe that means I am adjusting ok.

This weekend was pretty cool, apart from Lindsey being gone. Bobby is one of the Church of Christ missionaries here. I spent Saturday helping him work on his car. He is installing a vegetable oil conversion for his 1997 diesel suburban. Then Saturday night I read a really good Alistair MacLean novel, and went with bobby to his friends house to help them harvest from a bee-hive. Got stung once through my suit.

Book Recommendation: Pursuit of the Common Good. By Paul Newman and A.E. Hotchner. I wept.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Crab-Walking Through Middle School

A dear friend from high school is following me around my old middle school in Panama. Curundu Middle School, to be exact. I am sliding trough the halls on my back, propelling myself with my legs. Kind of like crab-walking. We travel through the halls this way for a while. Finally we come to the cafeteria, only to discover that the school has been converted to a women's college.

I pitched in with a lot of the work this past week, mostly carrying stone and mixing mortar. The problem has been that by becoming more of a laborer, I lose some of the clout I need in order to be a manager. I got really frustrated when some of the workers did not want to do their jobs because it was something that I had been doing. "Oh, Andrew will do it". No, Andrew is reading plans and trying to talk to the stone-cutters right now. So you need to mix the mortar. Lindsay and I talked about it for a while. It is more important for me to do my job and keep track of quality control than it is to feel good about pitching in with the work. I plan to keep working hard, but giving more attention to my managerial duties. The building is going up, the plumbing is installed, and we start digging foundations on the nursery school next week.

This weekend was AWESOME. My friend Lacey just got in country a few weeks ago and is the librarian at a Christian school in Kampala. She and her friend Jean came in to Jinja for the weekend. We celebrated my birthday, ate cake, had some great conversations, went to the official source of the nile (tourist trap, but fun), and watched Lost.

Lindsay is moving back to Kampala next week. I am really pretty busted up about it, I won't have my Jinja buddy to eat pizza with on Friday nights. But now that we know it isn't that hard to travel back and forth from Jinja and Kampala it will probably happen a little more often.

Other news, I am going on a project trip to Kenya in May. There aren't a lot of other details yet, but I will let you know as I get them. Time to work on my Swahili!

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Ferris Bueller's Other Day Off

I am Ferris Bueller's best friend, so I assume that makes me Cameron. We are trying to break into at room at his high school to steal back a banner that was confiscated from him by the principal. As we are opening lockers, we keep finding jeans that were taken for being too baggy. Eventually the banner turns up. It is one of the impact banners from when I was a co-chair.

This past week at the site was tough. The workers have been putting in a lot of energy, but things seem to be moving a lot slower than we had hoped. Some big potential problems are cropping up. If the Kenyan stone dressers decide to go home early, we won't have enough shaped stone. And even if they stay, we might not be able to squeeze out enough stone from what we have on site. Also, it has been tough to sleep out there. The rats are really active and I woke up with one almost in bed with me two nights in a row. Almost killed the little blighter with a sharp stick, but it got away. At least it associates my scent with the fear of death now. Investing in some traps tomorrow.

All that said, I have been learning some of the best lessons about faith that I have ever learned. Faith seems more real when things are bleak. Faith is choosing to believe that the Lord can make this building go up even if the Kenyans go home and rats carried all of our stone off in the night. Faith is believing that if I imitate Christ in the way he served, then that is enough, regardless of what I see being accomplished.

On a different note, Lindsey and I went with our British friend to a Catholic church in Bujagali Village. As I sat in the service and listened to the fiery Italian priest tell Ugandans in English (translated to Lusoga) that Christ forgives sins through the priesthood. He made sure to emphasize that forgiveness comes by Christ's blood acting through a priest. Then the congregation sang some songs to Jesus and Mary. It struck me how wrong I thought some of the doctrine was. But the Holy Spirit was working in my heart during the service. The Priest said a few key things that I want to point out. First he said that we are saved through the blood of Christ. Secondly he exhorted the congregation to serve the poor, because that is the same as loving Christ. The Scripture says that no-one can say "Jesus is Lord" apart from the spirit. It also says that pure and faultless religion is to look after the orphans and widows in their distress. So we have the important things in common. It always upsets me when I hear people differentiate between "Catholics" and "Christians". Catholics are Christians. Some are anyhow, in the same way that there are plenty of Baptists and Methodists who aren't. I disagree wholeheartedly with a lot of Catholic doctrine, but anyone who claims the Blood of Christ as their sole justification before the Lord is my brother or my sister in Jesus.

Its not letting me load pictures right now, so I will try again next weekend. I got a great one of God (his actual name, I found out is Gordon, but poeple call him Gordy, which sounds like "God" in an African accent)

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Super Pine Cove 64

I am on a date with someone I don't know. But I seem to know her in the dream. We are eating dinner at a hotel restaurant, but the hotel is the castle from Mario 64, and run by Pine Cove (A Christian Camp in Tyler, Texas). A lot of friends are working there, but they all have strange hair and beards. A friend from school has long wild hair and is taking care of the two kids of the missionaries I work for here in Jinja. For some reason we keep having to switch tables.

Hopefully these pictures will Load. The first is the team in London. Lindsey is standing to my left, he and I are staying in Jinja together. The rest are working in Kampala. Next is me at Bukaleba. Lastly, the building I am working on. I will keep posting pictures so you can see progress.

Work out at the site has been moving along. We are bringing on more laborers next week and it should speed things up and help with morale. Right now the three guys we have are being run ragged. There has been plenty of work for me to do, I help with the layout and setting windows, and when there is nothing technical to do I put my hand in moving stone and bricks, mixing mortar, or fetching water. The house I stay in is nice, but no plumbing or electricity. I caught a bat on Thursday, but decided to let him go. I spend most of Thursday thinking that if I only had one of those round straw Chinese hats, I would be perfectly happy. I started trying to make one but the grass out here is no good for weaving.

The Ugandans tell me that I look like Peter Crouch. A football player for Portsmouth. Football (soccer) is a really big deal here. Apparently it is very important that i pick a team to support.

Benson, one of the Kenyan masons, made a Chuck Norris joke on Tuesday. We were trying to move a 10,000 Liter water tank and he said that Chuck Norris could do it by himself. God taught me how to say “Do your work, with energy!” in Swahili. “Fanya Kazi, Nabidi!”

Money and skin color are two things I struggle with. I have lots of money, I am white. Ugandans know I have money because I am white. I have been told at least 4 or 5 times by someone that they are looking for an American sponsor to help them, and asked if I knew anyone who could help. I don't know how to respond.

Lindsey and I are going to go watch Lost at a friends house. The Mzungu missionary community is pretty tight knit here. Even after being here for years, these folks need at least a little “normal” time.





Saturday, February 7, 2009

Japanese Football at Kyle Field

For some reason, the Japanese National Football Team is coming to play the Aggies at Kyle Field. Some friends and I are excited to go see them, but when we arrive, it turns out that the Japanese team plays “soccer” and not American football. Also, the Japanese team has arranged itself on the field like a foosball table, all in rows. Each player is wearing a yellow trucker hat and broad silk tie. Somehow they are playing a combined version of American football and soccer, but everyone is staying in one place. The result is a lot of people standing around and frenzied activity surrounding the ball.

I just got back in from the bush. Construction on the children’s home is going very well, but there is still a lot to learn about Ugandan construction. I am getting to know the workers a little better and finding the best way to help out around the site. Mostly my job is to helping to lay out the floor plan and keeping the stonework level with the transit. John has me doing some other small projects in my downtime, and I am able to pitch in with the workers some as well. I am hoping to get to know the staff that is working out there with me because it is pretty lonely after all the workers go home.

The house I am staying in is fairly spacious for one person, with a gas stove and tin roof. So far the rats have been active, but well behaved. The food and dishes stay locked up and I sleep on a top bunk. I haven’t seen the bats yet, but I can hear them in the rafters. Bukaleba has a pretty mild climate and not many mosquitoes so far. The rainy seasons just started and it gets fairly cool after the rains. I have seen 5 new different types of birds every day here. It is pretty incredible. To summarize, I was enjoying myself a lot by the end of the week, but was also very relieved to have John come fetch me back to Jinja for the weekend. There is a team of 28 short term missionaries from Virginia staying at the guest house, and it is a big change from Lindsey, a Welsh woman named Anne, and myself being the only residents.

I am able to get in the word a lot, and have been reading in Joshua and Mark since coming here. I am learning a lot in Mark about service, and servant leadership. I think living out at Bukaleba will force me to do a lot of adjusting, quickly. Culturally speaking, I mean. Language is coming along well though. Soon will come the time when I have to focus on either Luganda, Lusoga, or Swahili, because people here switch fluently between the three.

Oh yeah, one of the construction worker’s name is “God”. It makes for really funny journal entries. “Talked to God today about setting door frames” and “God and Julius got in an argument today”.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

The Great White Elephant Pony

I am trying to feed a giant white horse, the size of an elephant. But it is rearing and kicking. Bystanders are warning me to stop, telling me that it is dangerous, but i just keep trying to pet the thing. All the while a hyena-horse (like from Lord of the Rings) is running around in circles. It has a white Texas Tech logo on its forehead. We are in some sort of corral.

They have been stranger, but that one was pretty vivid. Thankfully they are not frightening, just entertaining.

We have been to Bukaleba for the past three days, John taught me a lot about my job out there. It is going to be half construction management and half owners representative. The building will be beautiful. The misistry brought in four Kenyan masons to do the stonework, the whole building is cut stone, and it is all cut by hand. I will take pictures next week.

Arise Africa is pretty incredible, the more I see of the minsitry the more impressed I am. It is a Uganda based minsitry that plants churches, schools, and orphanages. The land out at bukaleba is very fertile but largley undeveloped, so in addition to a babies home and pastors school, they are putting in sugar cane fields and goat herds to help fund the ministry. The goal is to be self sustainging. Their main office is in Jinja and I have been spending most of the day helping out with some renovations they are doing to an adjacent building. Jerome is teaching me some Lusoga slang.

God is teaching me here. A lot about missions and service. John Sauder is a pretty incredible example of humility and a servants heart. I will have to explain more about his work later.

Mukama wafo yebisibwe

Andrew

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Zombies and Yardsticks

They told me that mefloquine gives you weird dreams. They were right. So Lindsey and I were riding a bus and suddenly realized that all of the passengers were zombies. They were not very aggressive, but we still felt threatened. The only weapons we had to defend ourselves were yardsticks. I feel like what happened next is fairly self-explanitory.

Actually the weird dreams were all in Colorado Springs. So far, no weird Africa dreams. This is probably a blessing from the Lord, because things are strange and different enough as is. One of the Ugandan staff here explained to me why roosters crow three times in the morning. Once at 2, just in case you are making a long journey, once at 3:30 to remind you, and once at sunrise to wake everyone else up for the day.

Thus far we have ventured out into the city, gone to a Ugandan construction site, and visited a school in a rural community. Everything is very different. Ugandan construction practices are really different, but very very clever. Labor costs less than machinery here so everything is done by hand, from the brick making to digging a septic tank. Being a mzungu (white person) means you attract a lot of attention to yourself. In the back of my head I think that my plan was to just adjust right away and skip culture shock. Words to the wise: that is a bad plan. Things are different and uncomfortable. And they might be for a while. I read in a book that the best way to deal with it is to keep trying new things and understand why it is hard.

Church tomorrow, heading to Jinja on Tuesday. I will try to post some pictures soon. I have been taking them.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Colorado Springs

It has been one full week in Colorado Springs.  There are about 35 interns and long term volunteers going to the various eMi offices.  It has been so great to be around so many like minded people.  In that same vein, so many experienced minister/engineers are here.  My goal has been to keep my mouth shut and listen as much as possible.

The culture training was eye opening, and really prepared us I think for the countries we will be traveling to.  Also, a big part of the week has been a strengths test, personality test, spiritual gifts test, and testimony preparation.  For anyone that is curious I am an extrovert who cares about peoples feelings with vague engineering tendencies.  Also I naturally gifted in the areas of Developing, Connectedness, Belief, Communication, and Positivity, according to Strengths Finder 2.0.  it was such a blessing to talk about gifts and personality in the context of missions.  However, the biggest blessing was hearing my team's testimonies.  God has been so good in our lives.

Colorado is beautiful.  Hiking is wonderful.  People are awesome.

We leave for Uganda on monday.  Pray for safe travel, freedom from fear, and a smooth transition to the Culture.  I will be working out on a construction site about an hour from Jinja, one of the major cities.  I couldn't be more nervous or excited.