Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Things I've Taken for Granted

Now that I'm home, I am really enjoying some things I used to take for granted...

1. Houses with walls (hence no chickens, rats, stray cats, wild birds or geckos in your living room)
2. Hot showers (need I say more?)
3. My washer and dryer (so the rain doesn't become the rinse cycle)
4. Soft things to sit on (i.e. not the floor)

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Past Week in Surveying

*The following two posts are about a week late. I literally got sick in the middle of writing them last Wednesday. I am home now and feeling much better. Thank you for your prayers and support!

The families that we have been surveying are recent transplants from an area right on the ocean. They were actually forced from their homes by the government because the land was sold to a developer for a hotel. In addition, there is no running water in the area they had to move to. The Samoan government promised water last October, but as of now they still have to draw water from a truck that comes around. This situation made the social worker inside me want to organize and petition.

I have been struggling with the amount of child abuse there is on the island. In many families, if you are sick you get hit for being a burden, if you get hurt you get hit for being stupid, if there are guests you get hit for playing or wanting to be near them. It is really hard for me to handle being able to hear a 3-year old being beaten from 30 yards away. There are no protective services for children. They even get hit in the head in school by their teachers. I have been praying often for the Lord to protect these kids' hearts. Anger is a huge issue here, and it does not surprise me since many children grow up being hit all the time, often for (what seems to me) no reason.

Miscellaneous

I am leaving Samoa on Friday, so I am tying up lose ends and working with the hospital eye clinic to get statistics on the number of patients they diagnose with cataracts and pterygium. After a preliminary look at my surveys, I counted 19 people in the 31 households I surveyed as having cataracts or pterygium, which is surprising. Most of the 19 were pterygium. There are no ophthalmologists in Samoa, so they rely on mission teams to do any eye surgeries, especially the YWAM Marine Reach. I'm hoping that bringing light to this will cause more ophthalmologists to go there on mission.

The School of Mission outreach team (which includes Emily) left from the YWAM base on Monday for Fiji. They are training people on how to build the biogas for cooking fuel and doing evangelism. In 5 weeks they are going to Vanuatu where they will be doing similar things plus reconciliation ceremonies for the missionaries that have been killed there and going through the jungle to a village that has never been reached by the Gospel. PLEASE PRAY FOR THE TEAM. Especially when they are in Vanuatu, which should be the end of July-beginning of September. There is a lot of witchcraft there and physical dangers. They also need more finances.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Keep Praying

I think I might have a parasite or something. I have had stomach problems for several days, I vomited this morning and I am tired, so please pray I will figure out what it is because I have meds with me and that there won't be any more vomiting (sorry for the graphic details).
At least you know how to pray :-).

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Please Pray

Please pray

I am getting sick, please pray that it will go away over the weekend. I still have surveys to finish up on Monday, which involve a lot of walking in the heat and as it is now I will not be able to do it. Thank you for your prayers!

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Lessons Learned in Samoa

1. Never stand under a coconut tree.
2. If you talk loudly on the bus the old ladies will shush you.
3. Always carry a stick. (To fend off the stray dogs) 4. An umbrella is not just for rain. It is good for the sun and dogs (see above).
5. Pigtails do not denote the gender of a child.
6. If the bus is full, your lap doubles as a bench.
7. It is not acceptable to drink or eat while you are walking.
8. Always take your shoes off before entering someone's house.
9. If you are on the sea wall at night, you have to be on guard for giant cockroaches.
10. Samoans talk with their eyebrows.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Surveying in the Village

Yesterday we surveyed 7 families in the little village hamlet.
Explaining about how the bio-gas works and doing the survey can take anywhere from 40 minutes to 1 1/2 hours depending on how much the family wants to talk. I think more than half of the participants had a serious eye problem and cooked over open fires, which is an interesting find and hopefully will help me show the health benefits of switching to bio-gas.
We also prayed over several families, especially those with eye issues.
Unfortunately there are no eye doctors in Samoa, so there is no one to properly treat these issues unless a mission team comes.

I've been having fun playing with the kids while my translator administers parts of the survey. A three-year-old kept boy wanting me to tickle his feet when we were at his fale (open-air house) and then when we returned after lunch he got excited and said "My palagi (white
person) is here!" Someone also brought me their baby to hold for the first time yesterday. I taught a group of brothers how to act like you are eating someone up and they thought it was hilarious and promptly started "eating" my arms, hair and ears. You can see groups of boys in this area giving each other wheelbarrow rides and playing makeshift cricket throughout the day. We are finished surveying in this area now, but I enjoyed it. Everyone calls me by name now (Samoan name that is) and the kids run up to me. Luckily we walk to the shop there occasionally.

Things to pray for: the surveying will continue at a good pace next week.

Title: On the Base and Dance Crews

Currently we have a man on the base visiting from Thailand, Ekk. He is here because of connections to the bio-gas system. He creates all kinds of things, including machines that turn plastic, charcoal and wood into gas, a way to run cars on leftover cooking oil, and something to do with coconut oil and energy. This week the boys have help him build something that makes charcoal and a miniature bio-gas system that is all in a barrel. Not sure what he will come up with next.

A group of people on the base, including Emily, are preparing to go to Fiji and Vanuatu on mission outreach. They are taking the biogas to both places and going to a tribe in the Vanuatu jungle (literally cutting through the jungle with machetes) that has not been reached by the Gospel. They will be leaving as soon as they receive their funding. We are having a prayer chain so 2 people are praying 24 hours/day for that and for their trip.

The past 2 Friday nights have been filled with dance crews. Last Friday it was the "Best Samoan Christian Dance Crew" semifinals by the sea wall in Apia and last night it was "Samoa's Top 5 Dance Crews" concert. As many of you know I love dancing, so this has been very enjoyable. Last night, there were a couple of dances that had traditional Polynesian mixed in, which I really like especially because it has some Tahitian mixed in which I used to do. There were also a couple of "fafafine"numbers, which is what the Samoans call cross dressers. I was surprised at the number of cross dressers here, it is culturally appropriate as far as I've heard.

Things to pray for: Ekk, that he will see the Spirit of the Lord here and wonder; for the team's physical strength, safety, mission fees, the team leader, and against spiritual warfare.

New Pictures!

New Pictures

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Surveying

Today we started surveying in a hamlet in our village that is owned by the methodist church. Earlier this week, we took a cake to the pastor (who has the power in the area) and he gave us permission to survey and told his church members we would be coming to their homes. Three people in four households had eye problems and cooked over open fires, which I ask about in my survey. One man we talked to said that 9 years ago he was cooking over the fire and opened a pot and his face was too close and the steam went in his eyes. The pain was very bad, and his vision became blurry. His vision never recovered. When we asked how he would like us to pray for him, he said he wanted to regain his sight because he wanted the Lord to use him more in the church to preach and he thought his sight was preventing that. Another household we went to listed their income as about $400/year and there were 5 children, including a daughter with Down's Syndrome who has severely delayed speech. Both parents said they had skin growing over their eye and it was affecting their vision, and they were using a natural remedy. One of the children picked the leaf for me that they were squeezing to use as an eye drop to help with the pain. When we prayed over the family, the woman cried and cried.

We will be going back to the same area tomorrow to continue surveying, they are expecting us.

Samoan Funeral

Yesterday the whole base went to the funeral of a big YWAM supporter who was also one of the main intercessors for the Samoan government. He was an electrician and was killed saving a worker from electrocution. We went to the day of burial service, but I have heard that the full funeral lasts about a week. At the beginning, we lined up and held a length of lace at least 4 yards long, we walked in behind the casket and wrapped the lace around it. A few groups of children did the same until you couldn't see the casket through the lace. The casket was simple wood wrapped in a woven mat and some palms. The service was 3 hours long and most of the time people went up and talked about the deceased. This included his wife and his 2 of his children, who were just teenagers.
During the service, many Samoans laughed at what seemed to be inappropriate times or at things that made me want to cry (like the daughter talking about how she was grieving). I have been told that many Samoans laugh when things are difficult. Throughout the service, people brought flower arrangements and wreaths to the front and went to comfort the wife and children.

In Samoa, there are not graveyards. People are buried on their family's land. If a family owns land here, they do not sell it. Even if they move away, someone else takes care of it for them. If it is a very poor family, someone in the extended family will own land that they can bury the dead on.

Monday, June 6, 2011

And the Surveying Begins...

Up until the last few days I've mostly been talking to people on the base about issues with open fire cooking and looking up journal articles that speak to the dangers related to it so I could prepare a thorough and culturally appropriate survey for the village. I'm hoping my results will show that it would be safer and healthier to switch to biogas stoves, which are run on gas generated from human, plant and animal waste. This will help the YWAM base gain credibility in their biogas project and hopefully help them get more funding so they can help more people build the biogas systems. Regular gas stoves are not a great option here because the LP gas is more expensive than most people can afford. I'm looking at things like burns, injuries while gathering firewood, eye irritation, cataracts, and pterygium related to cooking with open fires. Last week I was talking to someone about the issue of finding firewood. They were saying that people will climb up the trees (mostly palm type trunks) and cut it with machetes, which can be dangerous. Some people also do not have any wood on their land and trespass and may be injured if they are caught. You can buy firewood, but it is about $6 a bundle, and that only lasts 1-2 meals.

On Friday, we surveyed a family who had actually come to the YWAM base to see about the biogas because they had heard about it and were interested. They were happy to see us and gave us lemonade and cookies, which is a rarity. The grandmother in the house is on dialysis, so we prayed for her healing while we were there. She was grateful to us for praying and sent us home with a bag of cookies. I think I read only about 50 people in Samoa are on dialysis because they do not have a doctor that is qualified to do the surgery that enables someone to do dialysis, so one comes on mission every so often. There are also no ophthalmologists (eye doctors) here. The people often rely on mission teams for specialists.

Things to pray for: that we are able to survey a lot of households and have the energy to keep walking (and walking) in the heat; that my translator will understand how I need the survey to be presented; that the families we go to will be happy to see us, open to the idea of biogas, and clearly answer survey questions. On a personal note, my eyes are itchy and yucky, so please pray that it goes away.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

pictures!

http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.549537596866.2047747.177502257&l=e5abc07af7

Friday, June 3, 2011

Samoan Independence Day and Fishing

Wednesday was Independence Day here so I went to the celebration in Apia (along with the rest of Samoa). It started with something similar to a parade that was what seemed like every school, organization, village, and university marching, some dressed in traditional Samoan outfits and showing off their traditional tattoos. After nearly 2 hours of this, we decided to take a break and walk along the sea wall to a market and enjoy some passion fruit ice cream. We also stopped by the big food and crafts market and bought luao which is coconut cream wrapped in taro leaves to scoop up and eat with breadfruit; both are baked in an umu, the traditional lava rock oven. I would compare it to spinach cheese dip and bread. The second part of the ceremonies was several types of dancing from Samoa and the Pacific and it began after the Head of State of Samoa (like the president) arrived to watch. My favorite was a boys school that had over 200 dancers and in their "traditional" performance they included Thriller.

Yesterday Emily and I went on a fishing trip with the boys on the base.
The traditional Samoan way of fishing uses a very large net and several people slapping the water with sticks and making noise to get the fish to go into the net. Emily and I just walked around because the ocean is shallow for quite a ways. We found bright blue starfish, sea cucumbers, coral and something living in a pukka shell. The boys cracked open sea urchins and ate the inside. Emily tried it but was not too impressed. We mostly played with them and saved them from imminent death.

I received approval for my research from my university so we are planning to begin surveying people today as soon as it stops raining. We are also going to visit a Matai (leader)/pastor and bring him a gift so we can get permission to survey the people in his village.

More pictures coming soon!