“Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless
is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself
from being polluted by the world.” James 1:27
I have been home from Uganda for a
little over three weeks now. As soon as I stepped off the plane life got a
little crazy. The first week I was home felt like a fog. I got home at 2pm and
left at 4pm to go on my family vacation to the beach for the weekend. I had
traveled for over 30 hours but was running on adrenaline to be able to spend
some time with my family.
Since then life has seemed to move into
full speed of preparing for the fall schedule, but every now and then, I get to
sit still and remember Uganda. Africa is a continent that stole my heart a long
time ago. When I was in college, I got to spend a summer in Kenya and the best
way I know to describe it, was I felt fully alive. That is pretty similar to
what I experienced in Uganda.
In December, two high school girls
approached me and asked me if I would take them to Africa. Although, I loved
their passion, I was certain that it was not possible. When I thought about
going to Africa again, my heart skipped a beat, however I knew that one more
trip would be hard to do with the already busy summer I had. After talking to
my husband, my boss, and the girl’s parents, miraculously everyone agreed! So
the planning began.
As soon as we stepped on the plane to
Uganda, I was already hit with culture shock. We were about to be on a plane
for 12 hours, leaving my husband, my dog, and all things that felt safe and
familiar. When I decided to take these girls, I knew they were young but I also
knew these girls have to be the sweetest girls around. When I got of the plane the
sense of responsibility hit me like a rock. I was the one these girls would be
looking to. I was the one who had to
protect them. I am only a girl that does not know any self-defense. What in the
world am I thinking?
When we arrived in Entebbe, Uganda Bob
and Carolyn Jacobson were there to greet us. I can’t begin to tell you how
amazing these people are. Carolyn had been sick with malaria for the last two
days. Malaria makes you feel like you are going to die, but with proper
medicine you can heal fairly quickly. Even
though Carolyn was sick and felt terrible, she still drove 3 hours on a bumpy
car ride, that you are afraid for your life most of the time, to make sure we
were ok. Not only was she caring for us, but her phone was ringing with
information about her pregnancy center that she runs. She probably handled 3 or
4 major crisis situations with ease on the car ride while she was sick and felt
like death. These people are saints.
The pregnancy center is a beautiful
place. Bob and Carolyn worked in an orphanage for eight years and now Carolyn
runs a pregnancy center to keep mommas and their babies together, and bob works
with students who have graduated from the orphanage to help them get adjusted
to life in the real word. The pregnancy center has over 80 women who come once
a week to Carolyn’s class. She has two beautiful Ugandan women working with
her, Sarah and Rachel. These women help her weigh the babies, take the
temperatures, teach them about basic health care and send the women with a bag
of food that should last them the entire week.
I am serious when I say that every time we turned around there was a new
person at the door with a need that could easily be met by American standards, but
they seemed desperate.
Bob’s ministry enabled us to work with
older students who had been impacted by Young Life. We got to go to a Young Life club and
campaigners. A young life club in Uganda is like a big talent show with a talk
about Jesus at the end. It was one of the best things I have seen in a while.
These people are so talented and have a passion for Jesus!
One of the Young Life leaders was
connected with a local radio station. He invited us to be his guest for his
two-hour segment that week. So, yes, we were on the Radio. This has to be one
of the funnier things I have done in life. On the radio, we talked how to love
Jesus as a teenager and how adults need to be invested in the lives of the
younger generation. I am confident that we probably talked too fast and talked
about things that don’t cross cultural barriers. But it felt like a platform
where Jesus could be proclaimed, and something that we will never forget. I
love how Jesus allows you to do crazy cool things not because you deserve it,
just because he loves you.
The second week we were there, we spent
at Good Shepard’s Fold orphanage. This place is beautiful. The land it is built
on is in the rift valley of the Nile so it is very green. The teachers and the
house moms might not know it but they are the hands and feet of Jesus. I have
never seen a classroom so packed (50 students, and that is a small classroom)
of kids who wanted to learn so badly and moms that live with 8-13 kids and do
everything a normal mom would do for these kids.
There are so many memories that stand
out to me from this trip, from sweet conversations I got to have with the high
school girls, to funny interactions with a nurse that ended up with us for half
of the time, to the hospitals and the slums, to going to church in Jinja. So
many small memories that I am flooded with. The only way to describe life in
Africa is purposeful. The entire time I felt purposeful. Even if I was holding
a child, I knew it mattered. That is how I think God wants us to live every
day.
In the quiet moments of my day, I
remember the faces of these beautiful children. I remember the missionaries who
have sacrificed an easy life in America to serve. I remember the kids who live
in the orphanage that might not have a blood family, but they live together as
family. I think my job now that I am back in America, where life is easy is to
remember. I don’t have to worry about
when I am going to get clean drinking water, worry about Malaria, or what will
happen if I get sick. But my responsibility now is to never stop telling people
about what I have seen and experienced. To give financially as much as I can,
and most of all to Pray.
Lord, I pray for the girls that I took
with me to Uganda. I pray that they would be world changers. I pray for the
kids that we played with and loved on. I pray that they would know that the God
of the universe dearly loves them. I pray for the Young Life volunteers, the
women who work with Carolyn, and the house moms at GSF that they would trust
you, and that you would provide for their basic needs. I pray for the
missionaries that you would give them strong community with each other and
provide for them! Jesus, I pray that you would never let me forget these people
that you would continue to show me what to do with what I have seen and now
know. In Jesus name, amen.
Beautifully written, what a gift!
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