By 10:30, we had already seen about 225 people at the
registration table. By the end of the
day, we had served 545 people, leaving us just 5 short of 1,000 for the first
two days. Thank you, Jesus! Of course, seeing large numbers of people is
one thing that might be expected in a densely populated slum. But a great deal of the credit for the success
of our first two days at Kibera lies squarely on the preparation of the local
congregation at the Springs of Life Lutheran Church. When I first saw Pastor James on Sunday, I
had asked if any of our friends from the other Nairobi churches where we have
served in the past would be supplying us with volunteers, he was adamant that
the whole clinic would be staffed only by volunteers from the Kibera church. He said some of our friends might visit, but
that this would be a partnership between our team and this church. I was sad at first, because I wanted to see
my other good friends. But, after some
thought, I realized that this was a large step for the people of this flock,
since they had never been able in the past to entertain a clinic without some
outside help. Not only that, when the
volunteers arrived Monday, all of them were in medical scrubs, a nice display
of the teamwork that had been instilled in the young people since our last
visit two years ago. The high volume of
patients we have already treated is a direct result of the commitment and dedication
of the Pastor, the elders and the members have shown this week. Our friend Helen has been in the neighborhood with a bullhorn and Emmanuel arranged for a local radio station to interview him in Swahili and me in English on Monday about the clinic. By Monday afternoon, almost every facet of
the clinic was being manned by the volunteers and our roles as team members
were mostly relegated to helping solve bottlenecks, managing the traffic
control and flow of the clinic and providing encouragement and any support that
the volunteers required. We never looked
busy all day, which is the way a well-run clinic should look. In fact Pastor
James commented that we weren’t moving people through quickly enough, which is what a first impression would tell you, but at the
end of the day, a steady drip, drip, drip gets the job done. What a blessing to have everyone pulling
together from both our team and the church.
Three more member of Evelyn’s family were treated this
afternoon. I was able to get to know
them, Nancy and her children, as I squired them around the clinic. We had a nice discussion ranging from the
ministry the she and Evelyn are a part of at their large church to personal
situations that she was facing. We
prayed together in a corner over everything that was on her mind, it was a very
moving experience. I am looking forward
to seeing Evelyn’s father tomorrow morning for a cataract exam and possible
referral for surgery to correct it. There
were also several other situations today that always come to a team leader’s
attention where we have to decide how much help we can give individuals out of
our limited funds. Sometime we agree to
pay half for a procedure if the family and community can come up with the
balance, thus stretching our resources further.
Other times, it’s a decision like whether to help a child versus maybe 4
cataract surgeries for adults. I’m not
sure Solomon could figure some of these out and really feel good about the
decision either way it fell. Please pray for guidance for
me when these circumstances arise.
We were surprised to find when we returned from work that
our compound was experiencing a power failure.
I wasn’t concerned about the thought of cold showers or no lights, this
has happened before. I was concerned
that we couldn’t recharge the four dead batteries for our eye exam
equipment. Rosa Mystica fired up a big
generator and I got a cold shower and fell asleep for a brief nap to the drone of the
generator. I slept through my alarm and
went down to dinner about 10 minutes late.
We later learned through Catherine that there had been a nationwide
power failure caused by a substation going down. Power was restored shortly after dinner. I
already have two batteries ready to go and am hopeful that the other two will
complete overnight. Life in another
country can get interesting, you learn to go with the flow from these trips, it’s
a good lesson and builds character!
After work tomorrow night, we will be going to a Brazilian
steakhouse for our one nice night out on the town and our friends Catherine and
Shara will be joining us. We will have a
brief time after the clinic to shower and change, so if there is any blog
posting tomorrow, it will probably be fairly terse and factual rather than my
usual ramblings. Blessings to all,
please keep us in your prayers for a continued safe and effective mission. Glory be to God!
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