My thanks to The Sonrise Morning Show for giving me the opportunity to be interviewed on radio this morning. For more information on my current projects, please see the project website at www.mwep.blogspot.com
Contributions may be made to:
Immaculate Heart of Mary Mission Fund
Africa Projects
5876 Veterans Way
Burlington, KY 41005
To contact me - ecolina@aol.com
Monday, January 26, 2009
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Events
Headed to be interviewed for ten or so minutes on The Sonrise Morning Show with Brian Patrick on Monday January 25th at 8:50 a.m. The station is connected to EWTN Catholic network. http://sonrisemorningshow.blogspot.com/
I also have a time to meet with the Florence KY Rotary Group in early February and talked with the pastor of St. Xavier downtown Cincinnati to meet with the parish there. I'll let you know how things progress.
All else goes well. I am looking for a good time to return to Kenya. Can't wait!
Chris and I are hoping to travel to New Mexico this coming weekend to see the sites and see some friends. Hoping it works out.
I also have a time to meet with the Florence KY Rotary Group in early February and talked with the pastor of St. Xavier downtown Cincinnati to meet with the parish there. I'll let you know how things progress.
All else goes well. I am looking for a good time to return to Kenya. Can't wait!
Chris and I are hoping to travel to New Mexico this coming weekend to see the sites and see some friends. Hoping it works out.
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Wish List
I continue to be blown away by the generosity of donors to the Masai project. www.mwep.blogspot.com We had a “welcome home” party the other night and so many good people showed up to greet me and to, once again, make some very generous contributions. It tells me that I am fortunate to be able to go to Africa physically. While so many others would love to go, they have legitimate constraints on their travel. In place of going themselves, they have entrusted me with funds and their hopes for the poor and marginalized in Kenya. I am humbled by their trust and excited about returning to Africa! This is not the best time to ask for money in America. We have so many problems and financial concerns of our own; it is difficult to think about others outside of our own families. It is understandable but makes the recent contributions even more amazing.
Many have asked about the most pressing needs for the Masai Project. We put together a wish list:
Sponsor 1 Student
At off-site school (1 uniform, fees for 3 terms, books)
9,000 Ksh $120.00 each annually
Water Tank
Will provide clean water for the Early Childhood Center
50,000 Ksh $650.00
Motorbike
Will enable Mr. Mwololo cheaper daily travel to site
100,000 Ksh $1,300.00
Bike Insurance
Annual to cover use of motorbike
15,000 Ksh $195.00
Build 2 Classrooms
Constructed in style of Masai Dwelling
70,000 Ksh $900.00
Build Cook Shed
Constructed to cook daily porridge
35,000 Ksh $450.00
Build Latrine
Constructed at classroom site
30,000 Ksh $390.00
Canvas Sheets
Used as floor coverings in 2 Early Childhood Classes
5000 Ksh $65.00ea
Plastic Chairs
Used for Kindergarten Class
450 Ksh $6.00 ea
Mattresses
Used for Baby Class
5000 Ksh $65.00 ea
2 Large Pots
For cooking large amounts of porridge
6,000 Ksh $75.00 ea
Plastic Cups
For Porridge
Spoons
For Porridge
Laptop Computer For record-keeping
Used would be great
Printer
Used would be great
Digital Camera
For recording still photos when I am not in Kenya
Used would be great
Dolls and Toys
To be purchased in Kenya for “baby class”
Learning Materials
To be purchased in Kenya for Early Childhood Education Center
Personnel Stipend
Monthly Stipend For Project Director
25,000 Ksh $320.00
Monthly Stipend For 2 Early Childhood Instructors
6,000 Ksh $75.00
Playground Items
Balls, ropes, etc.
* All costs are estimated, using exchange rate of 78Ksh = $1.00
Many have asked about the most pressing needs for the Masai Project. We put together a wish list:
Sponsor 1 Student
At off-site school (1 uniform, fees for 3 terms, books)
9,000 Ksh $120.00 each annually
Water Tank
Will provide clean water for the Early Childhood Center
50,000 Ksh $650.00
Motorbike
Will enable Mr. Mwololo cheaper daily travel to site
100,000 Ksh $1,300.00
Bike Insurance
Annual to cover use of motorbike
15,000 Ksh $195.00
Build 2 Classrooms
Constructed in style of Masai Dwelling
70,000 Ksh $900.00
Build Cook Shed
Constructed to cook daily porridge
35,000 Ksh $450.00
Build Latrine
Constructed at classroom site
30,000 Ksh $390.00
Canvas Sheets
Used as floor coverings in 2 Early Childhood Classes
5000 Ksh $65.00ea
Plastic Chairs
Used for Kindergarten Class
450 Ksh $6.00 ea
Mattresses
Used for Baby Class
5000 Ksh $65.00 ea
2 Large Pots
For cooking large amounts of porridge
6,000 Ksh $75.00 ea
Plastic Cups
For Porridge
Spoons
For Porridge
Laptop Computer For record-keeping
Used would be great
Printer
Used would be great
Digital Camera
For recording still photos when I am not in Kenya
Used would be great
Dolls and Toys
To be purchased in Kenya for “baby class”
Learning Materials
To be purchased in Kenya for Early Childhood Education Center
Personnel Stipend
Monthly Stipend For Project Director
25,000 Ksh $320.00
Monthly Stipend For 2 Early Childhood Instructors
6,000 Ksh $75.00
Playground Items
Balls, ropes, etc.
* All costs are estimated, using exchange rate of 78Ksh = $1.00
Sunday, January 4, 2009
What do you know?
I know nothing.
I have been enjoying these past weeks at home. After a time to be with family and friends, I have also been trying to find some time to process all that I have experienced while I was away. On my first extended trip to Kenya, I seemed to be more in touch with my thoughts and feelings; more connected to a spiritual life, possessing a decent prayer life. I was more structured and centered. On this trip, I was less focused on living a “Gospel” life, and let things flow more than before. That had both positive and negative aspects. In one sense, I let my prayer life suffer, did not always see God’s presence in the things I did (not that I always did). But I was also more at ease with my self; while less focused, I think I was more real and lived more day-to-day, as I did back at home. Now, as I reflect on my time and experiences in Africa, I can see that there was some inner growth; there was some small movement in my journey toward knowing God in a real way.
I initially went to Africa desiring to meet God in the faces of the poor and join in their struggles and pain. As I was warned, I probably went there with a high degree of ego. This last trip was more realistic and I think I can honestly say there was no ego involved, or at least very little. The romanticism of working and living a simple life in Africa has worn off and I think I am more realistic regarding its attraction and my role there.
I have been thinking about the variety of people I have met. Of course many are from the Kitui / Nairobi area. They are for the most part, Christian or Catholic. But I was also able to meet some terrific Muslims in Lamu and Kiwayu towns along the coast. I met some who believed in traditional Kamba or Masai tribal practices and some who had no strong religious connection at all – though they had quite a spiritual center. These peoples who initially were so “foreign” and perhaps frightening to me, became my good friends. These friends have caused me to think about how/why God created us all so different. Some of us have been fortunate to know Jesus and participate in an organized church. Others of us know nothing of Jesus but know only the God worshipped by primitive cultures and traditions. What is God thinking? Are we Christians the fortunate ones and the others simply out of luck? I was taught that Jesus is the "way" and it is through Him that we meet the Father. I know that's true but even more, Jesus is the strategy, the Way of Jesus, the Way of the cross is our destiny - if we set out to follow Him. We need to be prepared to have our lives taken away and only in losing our lives canwe begin to see the bigger picture. We have to know how to "die". That is what Africa is teaching me. I was taught that God is within each person. But I never took it seriously and as the base of my belief system. God dwells within the Muslims I met, within the tribal peoples in east Africa, within me. And . . . perhaps that is the main vehicle of each of us knowing God. Within these strange and exotic peoples lives another snapshot of my God. To the degree I can know you, my friends, my colleagues, my family; to the depth I can love and experience love – that is the depth with which I can know God. We need each other and we need others who are not like us. In God’s becoming a person, God has truly saved us.
I have learned that I/we have made God so small. Nowadays, when I am asked what I learned about God on this trip, I respond, “I learned that I know nothing.” It’s not false humility to say that I know so very little. I had thought that I knew God or at least knew so much about God.
But I know nothing, or at least very little. I am learning more daily. And what I know – I love.
I have been enjoying these past weeks at home. After a time to be with family and friends, I have also been trying to find some time to process all that I have experienced while I was away. On my first extended trip to Kenya, I seemed to be more in touch with my thoughts and feelings; more connected to a spiritual life, possessing a decent prayer life. I was more structured and centered. On this trip, I was less focused on living a “Gospel” life, and let things flow more than before. That had both positive and negative aspects. In one sense, I let my prayer life suffer, did not always see God’s presence in the things I did (not that I always did). But I was also more at ease with my self; while less focused, I think I was more real and lived more day-to-day, as I did back at home. Now, as I reflect on my time and experiences in Africa, I can see that there was some inner growth; there was some small movement in my journey toward knowing God in a real way.
I initially went to Africa desiring to meet God in the faces of the poor and join in their struggles and pain. As I was warned, I probably went there with a high degree of ego. This last trip was more realistic and I think I can honestly say there was no ego involved, or at least very little. The romanticism of working and living a simple life in Africa has worn off and I think I am more realistic regarding its attraction and my role there.
I have been thinking about the variety of people I have met. Of course many are from the Kitui / Nairobi area. They are for the most part, Christian or Catholic. But I was also able to meet some terrific Muslims in Lamu and Kiwayu towns along the coast. I met some who believed in traditional Kamba or Masai tribal practices and some who had no strong religious connection at all – though they had quite a spiritual center. These peoples who initially were so “foreign” and perhaps frightening to me, became my good friends. These friends have caused me to think about how/why God created us all so different. Some of us have been fortunate to know Jesus and participate in an organized church. Others of us know nothing of Jesus but know only the God worshipped by primitive cultures and traditions. What is God thinking? Are we Christians the fortunate ones and the others simply out of luck? I was taught that Jesus is the "way" and it is through Him that we meet the Father. I know that's true but even more, Jesus is the strategy, the Way of Jesus, the Way of the cross is our destiny - if we set out to follow Him. We need to be prepared to have our lives taken away and only in losing our lives canwe begin to see the bigger picture. We have to know how to "die". That is what Africa is teaching me. I was taught that God is within each person. But I never took it seriously and as the base of my belief system. God dwells within the Muslims I met, within the tribal peoples in east Africa, within me. And . . . perhaps that is the main vehicle of each of us knowing God. Within these strange and exotic peoples lives another snapshot of my God. To the degree I can know you, my friends, my colleagues, my family; to the depth I can love and experience love – that is the depth with which I can know God. We need each other and we need others who are not like us. In God’s becoming a person, God has truly saved us.
I have learned that I/we have made God so small. Nowadays, when I am asked what I learned about God on this trip, I respond, “I learned that I know nothing.” It’s not false humility to say that I know so very little. I had thought that I knew God or at least knew so much about God.
But I know nothing, or at least very little. I am learning more daily. And what I know – I love.
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