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Tuesday, July 01, 2008

The thing about edges . . .

. . . Is that while standing on them, one is perfectly safe, but the perceived drop to disaster is very real.

Which may be why God likes to take our path along the ledge.

For instance, yesterday morning the UPDF began a training exercise that involved intermittent large artillery which we could hear in the distance.  The main barracks is about 15 km by road from us, though with mountains reflecting sound and our house being on a rise it sounds closer.  This practice is good, in reality, part of that solid rock where we now stand, protected.  But it started literally one minute after I hung up the phone with Scott who was from that moment on unreachable, en route to Sudan.  And in the early morning, the sonic booms of distant guns were for me a peek over the precipice, a gut-tightening recall of times now long past when we did not have a prepared military and when rebels could make forays across the border at will.  I am not falling, I’m standing on the path.  But the view into the Fall is dizzying.  

This is similar to the case of the little boy who died last week, whose blood and tissue samples are now being processed by the CDC.  The real danger of this being a viral hemorrhagic fever is almost nil; follow-up in his village has assured us that no one else is sick.  Again, we are standing securely, but the events of the last year make the view over the edge steeper and more frightening than it would have been.

So it is no surprise, in this context, that just after daylight this morning there was yelling, running, commotion and cries a few houses up the road from me . . . No, no rebels, no real danger, just a goat thief.  By the time I got there most people were laughing, perhaps to cover their anxiety.  The goat had been recovered but the thief got away.  

And though I am distressed by the slowness of UNICEF to get milk to our malnourished kids (18 of 29 inpatients now with severe acute malnutrition, little signposts of no rain and rising food prices), when I plead on the phone I’m looking over the edge and feeling faint, instead of noticing that we do still have enough for another two weeks, and kind supporters who I know will rise to the occasion if nothing happens by then.

A wise friend asked me last night to reflect on the timing.  When I am here alone, my sense of the edge is more menacing, my reserve more strained.  But this is the time to look at the path instead of the drop-off, and be thankful for the Rock on which I stand.  Not easy.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Edgy

Scott and Luke headed out under the crescent of a waning dawn-tinged moon this morning for Kampala with Kim, Nick, Jesse, Katie and Michael.  Unfortunately, they had to go in a vehicle with the hood held on by a bungee cord and hourly bolt-tightening checks to make sure one of the loose wheels does not fall off.  That’s because this vehicle is MORE reliable than the one that nearly subverted my trip last week:  after much work, Michael and Scott prepared it for a test run last night, but it overheated without ever leaving our driveway.  And that’s because they had to leave me the MOST reliable of the three, our truck, which had three flat tires within the last 24 hours but still beats out the other choices.

The group is heading to Mundri, Sudan, where the Massos hope to establish a WHM team presence by the end of this year.  And the unsettled, edgy feeling I have today reminds me of that the team will not just materialize, there is cost involved. All three Masso children are moderately ill, not a great way to be left with a single parent, one with the first really significant asthma attack of her life.  As soon as they pulled out Jack, who had had a better weekend, began to spiral downward, and only went to school by faith, pocketing a verse from Psalm 23 to read and memorize when he felt the waves of sadness coming.  CSB was attacked by theft on Friday, someone breaking two padlocked doors and getting into a safe, someone who was incredibly lucky and brave or who knew just what they were doing.  So a school already in debt, already struggling, now losing another couple of thousand dollars. Our RDC is mobilizing people to awareness in case the anti-LRA increased pressure by MONUC in Congo sends any rebels our way (no real threat, just being cautious, but not the kind of thing one wants to hear).  Some of the UNICEF milk is now expired and patients showed me maggots in their packages today, just as the nurses I sent for training to Mulago called to say that in spite of my visit and verbal affirmations from Kampala that it would be fine, now that they are there the Mulago staff are expecting to be paid “something” to allow these two nurses, their own Ministry of Health colleagues, to observe and learn.  Aren’t we all trying to help starving children here?  Just to remind us of that reality, the latest admission, a 15 month old boy, severe malnutrition (6 kg--of which a fair amount is edema) Owera came in with his burning fever, listless gaze, scabby skin.   His father died with AIDS last year, and his mother finally gave up on the meager slow help she was getting elsewhere and came to Nyahuka to try and save his life.  And I hope hers, while we’re at it.  My patience wears thin and I was not so pleasant to two men asking for money and medicine, stopping me in the hot sun as I huff back home on my bike.  I feel overwhelmed already, and my guys have only been gone six hours.  In short, it is a morning that screams, “the world is not right”.  

But we head out on a wobbly wheel, believing that the Kingdom is still coming.  Needing prayer for our hearts mostly:  that hours and days of boxing with the devil, of pleading phone calls, of sympathetic listening, of weary prayers, of plain old sweaty gritting it out, will see the results.  That the cost will not prove more dear than the beauty to be revealed, in Nyahuka, in Mundri, in us.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Shooting Dogs




In the midst of being tossed about  in the sea of life’s sorrows here (see post below) we do still have our dear interns, and one of the ways we generate awareness and discussion of African issues is to watch a few movies after team meeting on Thursday nights.  One of the best:  Shooting Dogs (2005), set during the first tragic days of the Rwandan genocide in April 1994.  This movie got little play or attention compared to Hotel Rwanda, but it is a hundred times better.  Grittily real but grappling with redemption, it follows the true story of 2,500 Tutsi and moderate Hutu refugees who sought protection from the UN in a Catholic school compound.  It was produced by BBC Films.  The frame story is of a British career missionary priest and a young teacher year-long volunteer.   This movie is not for the weak of heart:  the violence of genocide is not glossed over.  But it asks very clearly:  where is God in the midst of this tragedy?  How should missionaries, powerless citizens, or foreign soldiers respond to flagrant injustice?  

As painful as the movie is, I’ve watched it several times, and each time I find it profoundly moving.  Many reasons:   it is based on actual events that occurred only a few hundred miles from our home, while we were living here, and contains many scenes that are familiar, from the dusty roads and chattering children to the agonizing scenes of evacuation and survivor guilt.  And because many of the actors and producers are actual witnesses and survivors.  But mostly because it provides a modern-day picture of the Gospel.  The Christ-likeness of the priest would be remarkable even in a Christian film, let alone a BBC secular production.  I won’t give too much away, but in this viewing what really stuck with me was the final scene.  He is driving a truck full of hidden Tutsi children through the dark streets of Kigali and meets a road block manned by a former school contact whom he knows.  As the man with the gun accosts him, he says “The amazing thing, Julius, is that I feel nothing but love for you.”  The first time I saw this I found that line unbelievable and corny.  But since it is witnessed by a survivor, it is probably true.  This time I saw it with hope.  That in the most extreme moment, a person who has chosen a cross-path, can actually be supernaturally filled with enemy-love (hesed) even as Jesus was.  

Our trials here represent cup-sized empty pots in comparison to the life-and-death whole-scale societal implosion of 1994 Rwanda.  But if God was present in the midst of that suffering, surely He is able to meet us in ours.  Because in the end, the reason the priest stays is that he finds the desperation of the tragedy makes God more real than ever.   This is the longing of the songs of lament:  relief, yes, but more deeply to meet God in the sorrow.  

(NOTE: a comment under this post by an informed reader says that this movie was marketed in the USA under a different title: 
Beyond The Gates (2005)). 

Friday, June 27, 2008

The Party's Over

For a few days we rode the crest (Bdays, good decisions, hopeful connections, healed patients) but we’ve now been thrown back against the unyielding rocks of reality. Death.  Yesterday morning as Heidi was weighing patients before rounds, and I was evaluating a dehydrated baby an off-duty nurse had pulled me aside to see, a family burst into the ward with their semi-conscious 6 year old son.  He began to vomit a putrid blood-tinged bile, and pass foul bloody stool.  Within a minute we had cleared out the treatment room, gotten gloves and IV supplies, and Heidi and the other nurse began to work on IV access.  The family gave a story of a grandmother who had just died, then this boy became suddenly ill the day before with headache and fever, and even blood in his urine.  A year ago I would not have been as concerned, but post-Ebola our awareness of the nearness of disaster has been forever heightened.  And our staff acted quickly, carefully drawing lab work, preparing the isolation ward (which has been closed for months), treating the patient’s symptoms.  When the malaria smear, sickle cell test, and other labs all came back negative we knew that the sudden onset and hemorrhagic symptoms warranted reporting the case and sending samples.  Sadly the child died about an hour after he arrived.  So the rest of the morning we had edgy staff, tangles of phone calls, a loudly wailing mother, and the  sad task of decontamination and bagging this small body.  The chances that this case will turn out to be anything worrisome are very, very remote:  his age, his location far from the other cases in the past all suggest that we were merely seeing the agonal last hour of a more common disease.  But I found the whole process profoundly tiring, dredging up the memories of the uncertain days of last December.   I found out that Heidi is made of strong stuff, calm in crisis.  I found out that once I got people on the phone, the mention of “bleeding” and “died” and “Bundibugyo” in the same sentence gets action.  Within two hours a blood and skin sample were delivered to the district for forwarding by the surveillance officer to the lab at the Uganda Viral Research Institute in Entebbe.  Results will take a week.   Discouragment.  Our youngest is struggling.  He was sick more than a week ago with an impressive rash, and now feels profoundly tired and sad, sort of a post-viral blueness exacerbated by the you-don’t-belong nature of his stressful school life, the spiritually dangerous nature of this place, anticipated grief in changes in the family as Luke moves towards boarding school, and mostly by his own discouragement that his calcaneal apophysitis (the heel problem) has still not fully healed.  I am used to a clash of wills.  I am not used to a heart-wrenching helplessness of a sobbing child.   Depletion.  CSB has its daily draining needs, 99% of which fall upon the Pierces, but as their team leaders and friends we ache here too.  Income (student tuition) has NEVER (since the inception of the school) covered Expenses (primarily Teacher Salaries and Student Meals).  This gap has been growing and now looms menacingly. Then this week they analyzed the food allocation more closely, and realized that as the numbers of students had expanded over recent years the protein provided in the diet had not kept pace.  When David saw that they were getting less than 20 grams of protein a day (instead of a good adolescent minimum of 50) he doubled the purchasing of beans and ground nuts.  An appropriate move, but a move based on faith and not on money in the bank.  Many schools in Uganda have been hard hit by the escalating food prices, and a season of relative drought.  We are not exempted.  Almost every day there is another challenge, and the ever-present background of debt makes each one more difficult. Demands.  One of our team Bible study questions this week was : Where are you, and where does God want to take you?  I had an image of treading water.  There is an occasional crest of wave when prayers are answered, when vision clears, when the ride is exhilarating.  But mostly I’m down in the valleys between the waves, pumping and paddling to merely stay afloat.  Progress is elusive.  Every hour of every day brings another needy person or undone deed.  The demands of life in Bundibugyo are endless.  Taking the time to advocate in Kampala and to spend on a fun activity last week means that this week I feel even further behind than usual.   But this morning in Psalm 88 I read:  “You have afflicted me with all your waves”.  What if I’m not treading water, but I’m enveloped in the very substance of life that God has sent?  What if the answer to “where is God taking you” is a wilderness of water, a dragging expanse of death, discouragement, depletion and demands?  What if He has allowed this for good, because what I really need and want is Him?  A theme of our study:  all true worship begins in wilderness.  Not in spite of wilderness, but because of it, because we need the gasping clarity of the struggle to stay afloat in order to know God’s grace. The party seems to be over, but I have a thin lifeline of hope that it’s just beginning.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Happy Bday to Me: wild nerves but generally unshockable


My kids, with Miss Kim’s help, put together a sweet folding book of family pictures, then Pat surprised me with a bag of dark-chocolate-covered-expresso beans from Trader Joe’s when I went into the exam room to see my HIV positive patients.  I’m sure that was the best thing that ever happened in that sad room.  There was a note saying “you need Holy Spirit to meet to be a strength in weakness. .  . but a few espresso beans can help.”  It was my turn to be prayed for at our weekly prayer meeting too, and Scotticus burned me a CD of a new artist (we over 40s need help to not get too stodgy, though Luke’s card assured me I was “sparky” and Jack’s was also very encouraging). We had a quiet family dinner and enjoyed a cake Scott made.  He and Julia both wrote me poems!  I’ll share Julia’s below, since Scott’s is at least PG-13.

My mother is amazing
With four kids daily raising

She helps a starving child
Comes home with nerves wild

The cook of the best food,
In a much cheerier mood.

Bad cases does she doctor
But Maate has yet to shock her

She’s a beautiful crazy mother,
And I’d like no other.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Miracle of medicine, surgery, hope, and prayer



Maate is being healed, slowly but surely.  This is the 15 year old boy, Luke’s age and Liana’s size, who was suffering from severe abdominal pain and wasting thin-ness a couple of months ago.  We thought he must have TB but he did not improve on the medicines.  His patient perseverance really got to my heart, and when he began to deteriorate more rapidly we could not bear to watch him die.  The International Hospital of Kampala, founded by missionary Dr. Ian Clarke, has the best care in the country and one ward dedicated to providing free care for a limited number of desperate people.  Many people prayed for Maate and the Hope Ward of IHK agreed to admit him in late April.  

It turned out that he did have TB, but the TB was located in the linings of his intestines, making it difficult for him to absorb both food and the medicines that would save him.  Doctors at IHK inserted a feeding tube that bypassed the worst area, and allowed the drugs to begin to do their work.  We visited him twice in Kampala, as did other team mates, he looked so out of place on that shiny new ward, a lost soul in a big city.  But he did get better, slowly.  When he was discharged back to us a month ago his weight had crept up from 19 to 22 kg, but his pain was much less and his fevers gone.  Now after a month of nutritional rehab (thanks to UNICEF milk) he’s up to 27.4 kg today, and officially discharged.

He’ll have to complete months of daily anti-TB drug doses, but his returning muscle and ever-present smile are signs of hope.  He and his mother walked to see us from the Congo border today lugging a jack-fruit almost as big as Maate as a way to say thanks.  He’s planning to re-enroll in school next term.  I don’t know what plans God has for this boy, but the visible sign of “all things made new” is enough for me.  I heard staff commenting that he should be named Lazarus, one who was raised from the dead.  In the midst of many struggles and disappointments, seeing someone like Maate transform from a skeleton to a boy, is a miracle that keeps me going.

Golden Girl




Miss Ashley turned 23 on June 23rd, which makes this her golden birthday, a little slice of American culture I did not learn until my team mates here introduced it (your special Bday is the the one when the day and the age you are turning match . . ).

Perhaps appropriate that it should fall while she is here.  There is a haunting Edgar Allen Poe poem called El Dorado, where the knight is searching for the land of gold, and goes “over the mountains of the moon, into the valley of shadow, ride boldly ride, the shade replied, if you search for El Dorado!”  We are definitely over the Mountains of the Moon and deep into the valley of shadow here.  Interesting that this is where we find true gold, far from “home”, in a place of shadowy distress.  Ashley has been one nugget of that gold for us as she teaches the team kids and coaches the girls’ soccer team, or just hangs out with our family as a friend.  The Pierces planned a surprise pre-school breakfast party for her in the morning, and we joined in with the Massos and her housemates for an evening complete with special lava cakes (her mom sent a mix for her favorite dessert all the way to Africa . . .) and gifts.  And that is the real gold here, the community formed in the valley of shadow.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Advocacy efforts...

Jennifer's efforts at advocacy for the children of Bundibugyo have not been in vain...
Uganda's Monitor newspaper picked up her concerns in the article below...

On mountain climbing, and swords to plowshares




There’s a day coming
When the mountain of GOD’s House
Will be The Mountain-
Solid, towering over all mountains.
All nations will river toward it,
People from all over set out for it.
They’ll say “Come,
Let’s climb God’s Mountain . . . .
He’ll settle things fairly between nations.
He’ll make things right between many peoples.  
They’ll turn their swords into shovels,
Their spears into hoes.
No more will nation fight nation;
They won’t play war any more.
Come, family of Jacob,
Let’s live in the light of GOD.
Isaiah 2 (from The Message translation)

Michael arranged a hike for the interns yesterday, and since my kids were tagging along and I had been away for three days, I went with them too.  We started in Kakuka, at 4,000 feet, what had always seemed to me to be a high and distant town, the last habitable spot before Uganda blends into Congo on the slopes of the Rwenzoris.  Three interns, Kim, Michael and Acacia, and four Myhres (Scott stayed back with Jack who is still trying to recover from his heel injury), two park rangers (required) and six soldiers from two different camps.  The mountain trails are rarely traveled from this side, and the park was, many years ago, the territory of elusive rebel bands, so tourists are required to inform the proper authorities and accept security escorts.  We wended our way along the Lamia river as it flowed from a fold of the hills, the seemingly random border that divides Uganda from the chaotic Eastern Congo.  Our trail ascended past scattered mud homes, gardens of cabbages and beans, the occasional goat or stand of coffee trees.  Compared to the densely populated valley around the mission, these slopes felt peacefully spread out.  At 6,000 feet we entered the forest, and the Rwenzori National Park, leaving all signs of human habitation far behind.  Our goal was a junction called Kakole, at almost 8,000 feet in the bamboo, where the path meets another trail from the Kasese side.  We walked single file on the narrow muddy trail, our arms in front of our faces often to protect us from the damp bushy overgrowth.  Sometimes the trail was so steep and slick we fell, or grabbed roots to almost crawl upward.  It was a strenuous, muscle-taxing, gasping sort of walk, 5 hours up and 3 hours back down.

But well worth it.  The forest shimmers with a thousand greens, from giant wlid banana leaf fronds to spiky prehistoric ferns to feathery bamboo.  Thunder rumbled, echoing, reminding us of the mystery the Rwenzoris held for the people who have lived for generations at their feet, the place where the gods create rain and send it down. As we went higher we passed into the mist of clouds, and then later the drenching of rain.  Ridges overlook deep and unexplored valleys.  Birds call from hidden roosts.  There were hooved prints in the mud, a forest duiker, and probably monkeys watching, but we never saw any animals.  The terrain is vast and dense, nearly impenetrable, thick with the buzz of life and the richness of regeneration, sprinkled with the delicate colors of wild flowers, hiding untold beauties.  

This morning as I read Isaiah, I thought more about why God uses mountains to describe His dwelling.  I think He had something like the Rwenzoris in mind.  Not bald hills, not tame rises one climbs in a car on a paved highway.  No, real mountains, mountains that wrinkle and rise in confusing patterns, with hidden valleys and sheer drop-offs, with rewarding vistas and abundant life.  Mountains that would take a lifetime, or more, to really know.  Mountains where danger and beauty, risk and reward, mingle moment to moment.  

Perhaps it was the presence of the heavily armed guards that made the risk palpable, even though we were quite safe.  (A parentheses:  unlike any popular media portrayal that comes to mind, the UPDF we usually encounter are serious and professional, competent and alert.  The battalion has the nickname “Mountain Sweepers”.  These men carry ropes of bullets and heavy guns but they are the good guys, the ones that ensure that the unrest in DRC does not spill into Uganda, the ones that ensure that rebels who would terrorize civilians can not move with impunity through the anonymity of the forests.)  And here the image fragments a bit.  As we move through our literal mountains, there is danger of exhaustion or illness, of injury or disorientation, or theoretically of attack.

No so on the mountain of God.  There risk remains, but the risk is that of losing self and finding Goodness.  When we finally climb that mountain, the 30 caliber bullets will be melted into ornaments, the AK-47’s will be flattened into hoes.  In God’s presence there will be no evil, no need for armed escorts, no playing war.  Just climbing, further up and further in, to explore His presence.  And again I am reminded of the main theme God seems to be impressing upon me this month:  we only experience as much grace as we risk needing.  Setting off on the trail which is almost too steep and long for my strength puts me in the place where He can reveal His vastness.  The reality of the mountains does not change, but only by risking can I encounter that emerald beauty.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

On Advocacy


THE ROAD, EARLY: Scott’s post from yesterday eloquently puts that day into words.  Heidi and I left home at 9 am, did priorty-only hospital work and were on the road at 10:15.  We arrived at our destination in Kampala twelve hours later about 10 pm, and only by the grace of God, the prayers of the powerless (I started the day on the ward asking a widowed grandmother of a motherless baby to pray for ME since I pray out loud daily for them), and the chivalry of my husband who sacrificed his entire day to our rescue.  Please try to picture Heidi and I, with Melen and baby Jonah, peering under the hood of an unfamiliar borrowed car, discussing in Lubwisi mechanical issues I don’t even understand in English with a motorcycle mechanic who materialized out of the nearest village slightly inebriated.  But even in that hour or two, we saw some amazing mercies.  We broke down 50 meters from a pay-to-use phone kiosk, probably the only connection within many, many miles.  Within minutes people we knew in a hospital truck stopped, gave intelligent opinions (including chiding me for not checking the water in the radiator like any decent African driver before a trip) and offered to take Melen on her way, since she was trying to get to Fort Portal and back the same day (still chasing the paperwork for Jonah’s estate).  In the midst of trudging back and forth to the nearby village to get water and use the phone, the young man who owned the phone kiosk became my self-appointed assistant.  I could hear his friends, the ever-present idle crowd of men, teasing him.  And he turned to them and said something like “Of course we are helping her, she is our person, don’t you know she works here in our district for us all these years?”  It was a very sweet moment for me.  How many times have I seen our own need call out kindness, the opportunity to be helped a moment of connection?

THE ROAD, EVER ON AND ON:  Once Scott saved us and switched cars, we bounced along to Fort Portal, where we did have one moment of panic when the truck would not turn on after refueling.  But it turned out to be a loose battery connection from switching batteries from car to car (so we’d have the only functional one) . . .and so we went on.  I don’t usually drive, and felt pretty nervous about the responsibility.  But I thoroughly enjoyed talking to Heidi more than we’ve ever had a chance..  We knew we were so late by this time that we pressed on without stopping for food or drink or anything else.  But our rush was not enough to get us to Kampala before dark.  The last hour and a half were nothing short of harrowing:  darkness unbroken by street lights, so only the narrow field in our headlight beams was visible, the crumbling road pocked by random deep hidden potholes, swerving to maneuver around them, while trying to avoid head-on collisions with oncoming road-dominating suicidal trucks on a fragment of tarmac that is not wide enough for two vehicles, being blinded by the oncoming headlights, and just to make things interesting the sides of the roads packed with pedestrians, bicyclists, the occasional cow, students, last-minute market shoppers, carts, you name it, all seemingly dressed in the darkest clothes possible.  And to make it even more interesting, we were right behind a fuel tanker for a good while, the kind that regularly blows up in accidents here.  At one point a mountain of dirt, no doubt intended for road repair, appeared in our lane suddenly out of the dark, and if Heidi had not yelled I might have hit it.  But she kept her humor, I kept my focus, and somehow we survived.  We were so exhausted by the time we arrived we could barely eat and fall into bed.

THE APPEALS:  We were up early today to re-enter the traffic struggle, an hour-and-a-half of inching progress, futilely whistling policemen, cars driving the wrong way in lanes that don’t exist, swarms of boda-bodas cutting in between the bumpers, in short Kampala.  Our first stop was UNICEF, a brand new beautiful building with security and buzzers and air conditioning and desks and phones . . . Not exactly what we’re used to.  But we dressed up and tried to be confident.  Our contact there put us at ease, and within an hour we had worked out an agreement for them to supply our nutrition unit with about 9 thousand dollars worth of special formula per year.  Small in the UNICEF world, but huge for us.  Instead of being cut off, we are expecting a supply to arrive next week.  Hooray!

From there we found the nursing board, the initial impetus for the trip.  Heidi had been scheduled for an interview at 11 am.  We checked in with the receptionist, and sat to wait. The lady on the phone had told Heidi it would take a few minutes.  A half hour later we decided I should proceed with the day’s tasks and come back for Heidi.  It turned out to be a wise decision, since the 11 am interview happened about about 3 pm..

Meanwhile I found the Mwanamugimu Nutrition Unit at Mulago Hospital, the national referral hospital.  There is something about the open-air, single-story clusters of colonial-era African hospital wards that I love in spite of the peeling paint and scant resources.  Here disease is not glossed over or sterilized:  hungry kids are lined up and intent staff are going about their daily tasks as if it is perfectly normal to mix milk in plastic pails and cook porridge in charcoal-blackened pans.  Because it is.  I stumbled upon Save-the-Children-UK filming documentary footage of malnutrition in relation to rising global food prices, and then spent some time with the staff.  I came away impressed by the articulate and competent nutritionist in charge, and having a connection of sorts for sending our staff for better training.  

Heidi was still waiting.  So from Mulago I found the Clinton Foundation office, where I had a very pleasant meeting with the young program director.  He listened to the needs in Bundibugyo and then pulled out a pen and calculator and committed to sending 150 cartons of plumpynut, a ready-to-eat  food supplement the foundation supplies to HIV positive malnourished children, next week!  It turns out he’s changing jobs next week, so the timing was very providential.  I was beginning to have that feeling that the angels had put a sign on my forehead:  give this woman whatever she asks for.

Heidi was still waiting, so riding the crest of the prayers going before me, I next found the EGPAF offices. I never do this kind of moving about town .. . . So they were all surprised to see me instead of Scott.  But I explained that we had not been able to follow the newest guidelines for the treatment of HIV-infected mothers and babies because we lacked baby-formulations of AZT . . . And came away with 20 little boxes, a good start.

THE HARD NEWS:  By this time it was late afternoon, and Heidi called to say she had finally been seen by the board.  It seems they liked her paperwork and her presence, but there was the little detail they had forgotten to mention that she’d have to spend two months interning in a hospital in Kampala supervised by one of their registration board nurses if she wanted a work permit to continue nursing in Uganda.  This was shocking news to all of us, and we’re still processing it, since 2 months without Heidi sounds pretty bleak to me, and two months in Kampala alone sounds pretty stressful to her.  But after God opened the doors so decisively at UNICEF, Mulago, Clinton Foundation, and EGPAF . . It was hard not to suspect that even this apparent setback had a purpose we do not yet realize.

FINALLY:  We finally got a bit to eat, a “breakfast” of falafel at 4, and managed to knock off some shopping and errands for team mates.  One of the freedoms of being without kids:  we had ice cream instead of dinner to wrap up our second 12-hour intense day.  

I started the day with a Psalm about justice for the fatherless and widow, and ended the day having witnessed that Justice in motion.