Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Christmas in Dar


We are in Dar es Salaam, the largest city and capital of Tanzania. Actually, several years ago they tried to move the capital to another city, Dodoma, but that was only partially successful. Dodoma is the official capital, though. And it is warm here, current temperature at 6 pm is about 91 degrees. It feels good to stay in our hotel room, which is air conditioned. As I am writing this, I hear the Muslim call to prayer. 
Last week we were at the Mennonite workers retreat at a conference center just outside Nairobi, in Kenya. It was good to meet others working with MCC, mostly, and a few with EMM. We had a speaker who talked about transition and transformation. Life is always changing, even when we like the way things are now. He made a comment that "being touched by God is not the same as being transformed by God. Transformation is a process that comes from a lifetime of obedience." 
Overall we are doing well, being received well everywhere we go. It helps that we have previous experience and many that we did not know before have heard our names and seem able to trust us. Since we came in September, we have been mostly traveling around visiting the various church locations and talking with the bishops and pastors about their leadership training needs. We have one more bishop to go, in the city of Dodoma, where we will be next weekend. Then we will get back "home" around January 2, near the town of Musoma. In mid-January we will begin training seminars to begin to implement the program we have been developing and proposing. That will be done in each of the Mennonite dioceses in both Kenya and Tanzania, so we have plenty to fill our schedules for the next several months. The training seminars will be 3-4 day events mostly with local pastors, who will be encouraged to begin having training sessions with their leaders and congregations. 
Christmas here is not so commercialized but there is a little of that. Still, we have been able to avoid most of that, having a mostly quiet day. It has been refreshing to focus on the true meaning of Christmas without the distractions that so often come with the season. This morning we attended church with the Mennonite pastor, in whose home Beth stayed when she was in Tanzania with the EMU semester abroad program in about 2000. It was good to meet them and thank them for providing hospitality for Beth. 
God bless all of you through the Christmas season and in the New Year.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Serengeti

Elephant family crossing the road
Serengeti National Park is always an inspiring experience. It is the vast openness of the plains, the variety and numbers of animals, roaming free in their natural environment. Serengeti is always changing, never the same, depending on the rains, which affects the growth of the grasses and where the animals are.
Herds of zebra, always on the move



Giraffe, always graceful, curious, friendly
From the rim of Ngorongoro Crater, looking into the crater
We drove through Serengeti last weekend - it is on the main road from Musoma to Arusha. It takes us through Serengeti, through the barren area of Olduvai Gorge, where some of the earliest human fossils were discovered, then up and over Ngorongoro Crater, then down into Arusha. I began to wonder, is this what the Garden of Eden was like? Not hard to imagine it. I never really tried to imagine how big the Garden of Eden was. The road we traveled was about 100 miles in the park, which can take 3 hours total if you drive the 50 km/hr speed limit and stop occasionally to view animals.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Mwanza Pastors Meeting

We are attending the annual meeting of pastors of Mwanza Diocese today. Mwanza is the second-largest city in Tanzania, located at the south end of Lake Victoria, a scenic area. Many of the towns and villages outside the cities do not have churches. So the Diocese is taking seriously the challenge to do evangelism and form faith communities in these rural areas.
This is the first we have presented our proposal to a group of pastors. Overall the plan has been received well, but we took some time to answer questions they had. This is a different approach in some ways from the TEE (Theological Education by Extension) that we did in the 1980's. The earlier program depended heavily on teachers and funding from overseas for travel and books, and that resulted in the program stopping when missionaries were no longer involved. So it is a bit difficult for some to visualize how it will be possible without that assistance, without books, and using people who are not trained teachers.
Our proposal is to train local pastors to be instructors, so they will have only their local group and it does not involve extensive travel or additional salary. We plan to use the Bible as the primary textbook and provide them with outlines, so few books need to be purchased. The proposal also focuses on training in character for leadership and for the tasks of leadership, rather than focusing mainly on intellectual learning. So the leaders will be mentors, not only teachers. This is entry-level training, and some will then go on to further training. But the need is there and we hear it everywhere we go, that the lay leaders usually have no training, and their leadership suffers as a result. Some are afraid the training will be too elementary, but we are trying to work within the economic and educational realities.
Keep Mwanza Diocese in your prayer in their efforts to develop churches in rural areas. Pray also for us as we are developing the curriculum and helping them implement a training program.
Bishop Albert Randa, second from right, with some of his leaders in front of  Mwanza Mennonite Church

Sunday, December 2, 2012

December update

We have spent the past 3 weeks or so at our home in Nyabange, just outside Musoma, TZ. There have been some house repairs, generally taking things at a slower pace, but also getting curriculum together for the training workshops we will be giving. This week we begin traveling again and will be on the road for about a month. Our travels will include Mwanza, Arusha, Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, Morogoro, Dodoma, and Tabora.
Sunday, December 2, we worshiped with the Rwamlimi Mennonite congregation, just outside Musoma town. We were invited by a former neighbor  Rhoda Koreni. The church has been meeting for many years, but they are just now getting around to building their building. For years, they met in a local school, but recently needed to move. The building has foundation and wall, but the roof is not yet on. Still, they meet there, with tarps stretched over poles to give some shade.
One of the challenges we see is church buildings. Some of the materials they can make themselves, such as burning bricks, but purchasing cement, and then the lumber and corrugated metal for the roof, are more of a problem. But it happens, through fundraisers and just keeping at it, little by little. At least, when they are finished it is paid for.
We continue to hear about the need for training for church leaders. In Lake Diocese, which is based in Musoma, we were told that about half of the ordained pastors have no training in Bible or leadership, and among lay pastors, the number is even higher. Most of them have completed only primary school, that is usually grade 7, so the educational level in general is lower. We also read that the literacy rate in Tanzania has actually decreased over the past 20 years, from about 95% in 1980 to about 78% today. Not sure what the reasons for that might be.
We are proposing a locally-based training program in which the local pastor or some other leader is the main trainer. Since many of them have some had some biblical studies, we will rely on them to train their lay leaders at a basic level. We say this will be a "primary school for leadership training" and those who are able can move on to more advanced training later. Even at the most basic level, it will be more than most of them have had. So far our proposal has been received well and there seems to be some urgency to get the program started. The question we often hear is, "When can you come and get us started?" So we are putting together a schedule beginning in January to hold "Training of Trainers" workshops in the dioceses.