After a traditional lunch of hamburgers, homemade fries and Cool-Aid,
we played games for about an hour.
Of course we had to have at least one Uno game going.
I got to meet the children, who are in school at PHC. They do have someone looking in on them and helping them until something else can be worked out. It was through the money that I was able to have sent over that provided for these children. PHC will continue to work through their needs but at least they have bedding now thanks to many of you.
Also, you should know that over 100 kids not in the PHC program showed up the first days of school in hopes of entering the PHC program, but there just aren’t enough spaces for them right now.
PHC also needs sponsors to take on some of the fifty or more new children taken in this year. Barb Wooler (bwooler@gbim.org) is the contact person if you would like to become a PHC sponsor. You can also sponsors a child through the PHC website (http://www.ph-c.com/) which will have some of these new children posted next week. These folks do a wonderful job . . . We are anxious to come home but missing our children and we haven’t left yet!! God Bless . . . Lee Ann
Brenda Artrip writes:
I’ve been talking to people and still need to get cleaned up before we leave so I’ll make this short. Delphin asked that I give my love to Terry and Godiva. He knew Godiva’s name from my letters! I got to be a room mother today and visit his class. He thanked me for everything over and over…such a little man…I am so proud of him.
Delphin presented me with a picture of him taken just Sunday (how he got it developed is a mystery to me). He was so very proud when he presented it to me. It is now one of my greatest treasures! He seemed sad to say good-bye but promised to work on his English so that we could write more often. I told him that we’d have plenty of time to talk in heaven!
I am emotionally wrung out, hot and looking forward to getting home now that my last visit with Delphin is over. In the picture he is wearing his Flambeau uniform (kind of like Bible Boy-Scouts) and he has already earned the first level (a big accomplishment I’m told for a boy his age.)
Blessings and home soon -- B
Brenda working the crowd...
Petula with mother (L to R) grandfather and aunt.
Kay during Uno game with Victor
Kirk & Kay with Sanbiro family
Lois sitting with one of her pupils. Lois was sent by the Palmyra, PA
GBC to visit their sponsored child as well as their Hand in Hand
School at Yembi III.
In Africa the stones have to be removed from the rice
before it is prepared. That's what these happy ladies are doing.
We were all ou-ing and aw-ing at this sight
of a mother dog nursing a kitten at the Cattin school.
Seemed an appropriate sight for a team doing orphan care to see!
Margaret and Elizabeth consulting at the chalk board.
Teacher Elizabeth is doing a great job with her students.
She is using a new exercise to teach the letters.
Lois Wilson and Barb Wooler visited the Cite de la Paix School, whose partner church is the Marysville, Ohio GBC. The level 2 teacher was absent so level one and two were combined today. We were very impressed with the control and teaching skill of Teacher Joseph.
Teacher Joseph with one of his students doing subtraction at the board.
Level III class meeting under the trees. The pastor (see photo below) of the Cite de la Paix church told us that they would be starting to build school rooms for their orphans when dry season arrives (January)
Pastor Simon with wife Helene and their youngest child. Pastor Simon has done a wonderful job mobilizing his congregation to care for orphans. Combining all 3 classrooms they are educating and feeding over 150 orphans!
Friday, October 18
Margaret Hull writes:
We drove out to Yembi this morning, getting there about 8:30. Three teachers were busy teaching their students. Saturnin (that’s the spelling, but he pronounces it Saturné) had his group inside the church because the hangar for his class had blown down in the great wind and rain of yesterday.
I’ve never seen such an orderly group of kids who answered immediately to their teacher, sitting up straight and doing as told. It was very impressive! The Level 3 class was meeting under a mango tree, using a blackboard on a portable stand. The students sat on benches in front of the teacher and could gaze out at beautiful scenery all around.
Lois Wilson’s home church sponsors this Hand to Hand school. Lois arranged to have a big FETE (party) next Tuesday for all the students. She gave 75,600 CFA’s (Central African francs = about $165.) sent from the church, to Pastor Pezza who will arrange to buy the food - meat and rice and an orange for each child. There are 125 students (3 classes). The pastor was very, very appreciative.
Today we all had visitors. Lois was delighted to see her special little friend Nadia, a deaf girl of 7, who may attend a school here in Bangui for the deaf. She had come down from Bata, where the Bible School is located. Lois taught there for years.
Margaret was busy doing interviews with widows. She has finished seven and doesn’t know how many more there are to go. There were originally only eight women chosen to participate in this project, but Barb explained that no one wants to be left out, so they are all trecking in to the mission to get their story written down on paper and get their picture taken. Two of them came directly from a funeral and didn’t have their jewelry on, so Margaret had to lend them her ear rings when she took their picture.
We are wondering where Becky Dick is now. She went out to the airport four hours ahead of time last night for the plane which was to leave around midnight. About 1 AM she and another missionary who was also to go showed up at the mission. A gas leak had been discovered, so the plane did not go. A phone call this morning told them to be back out at the airport as quickly as possible. The plane was supposed to leave about 11 AM.
We all appreciated so very much Becky’s input on the team. We miss her tonight and the dogs will have to howl and bark without her notice.