South Africa

South Africa

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Winter's Coming To An End

Aug 29, 2012

 While most of you are enjoying the last days of summer, we are seeing the first signs of spring.  The noisy birds (hadeda ibis) are back, trees are budding and the weather is mostly warmer.  At the beginning of August we had a most unusual event weather wise.  It snowed here in Johannesburg for only the 4th time in 61 years.  The snow didn’t stay on the ground very long, but it did come down in large flakes for a couple of hours.  The locals here in the Area Office were acting like small children seeing snow for the first time, for in fact it was the first time for many of them.  Those of us from much colder climates kept our smiles to ourselves.  There was a YouTube made by someone in the Area Office that is fun to view.  Try http://youtu.be/4TbISgQgqHU .


Mama and Baby Rhino
Lion at side of road
Early this month we took a weekend trip to Ndola, Zambia.  We went to train priesthood leaders in the Kitwe District.  Kitwe, Luanshya, Kawama and Ndola are cities in the northern part of Zambia known as the Copperbelt because so much copper is mined there.  It is one of the world’s richest sources of copper.  Nevertheless, it is not a prosperous area.  There is a new, beautiful soccer stadium just outside Ndola that the Chinese built.  We did not stay in a big hotel; it was more like a motel as the rooms all had an outside entrance.  It was named The Michaelangelo and it followed the theme in the décor.  It was warmer that much farther north; the evenings felt wonderful – like we were in San Diego, CA.  There are no LDS chapels in this district.  The Church has rented homes and converted them for church use.  Sacrament meeting in Kitwe is held outdoors on a patio under a large canopy or canvas.  We sang without accompaniment.  It was reverent and spiritual.  The people may be poor as to worldly goods, but they are rich in spirit.   

Hardly anyone in the Kitwe district owns a car.  They get to church by walking, some great distances.  What amazed me is that some of the women wore spiked heels.  How could they walk several miles in such shoes?  In order for the outlying branch to come to the training they needed to be transported by combie (large van used as a taxi).  Tom (Elder Green) had a new experience.  Since the senior missionary couple lived in Kitwe and we flew into and were staying in Ndola we had to find our own transportation.  The car we rented was a stick shift.  When the driver sits on the right side of the car he must shift with his left hand.  Tom did very well and he got a lot of practice due to the hundreds of speed bumps he was shifting down constantly.  The district clerk rode with us on Sunday over to Kitwe, which was a big help because he could show us the way.  We took him to his house after and that is how we experienced the township.  He invited us in for a minute to meet his wife.  Their home was maybe two rooms.  The room we were in served as a living room and kitchen.  She was cooking something in a pot just outside the door.  There was no stove.  There was a small refrigerator in the room, a television and a couple of couches.  Their landlady was sitting in the front yard holding on to a chicken by a string which was tied to the chicken’s leg.  These people have so little.  He has one son who is in his second year of university in Kitwe.  It is probably through the PEF (Perpetual Education Fund) program of the church that he is able to go.  There is hope that the next generation will be able to overcome poverty.  Nevertheless they seem happy. 
 
Tuesday night is movie night and one Tuesday this month the couples watched a film titled Mandela and LeClerc.  It was about the years Mandela was in prison and LeClerc was the president here in South Africa.  I came away feeling thankful that God had placed such great men here at such a crucial time in the history of South Africa.  How apartheid came to an end and the blacks got their right to a democracy with majority rule peacefully was truly a miracle.  The blacks have political freedom, but it is still very hard for them to compete economically.  Education  and the gospel will make a difference.  This month about 40 miners were killed in a police stand-off and a dispute about wages and working conditions.  There was an inter-faith service for the miners which some of the couples attended.  They said it was very peaceful with talks and prayers from many denominations including ours.
 
Included are some photos we took of our Tembisa Ward members participating in a Mormon Helping Hands Project.  They were painting and sprucing up an orphanage close to the chapel in Tembisa.  Also are photos we took on a visit to the Lion and Rhino Park near Johannesburg and of us with the priesthood brethren in Kitwe.
Secretary Bird
 
Gemsbok
Tembisa Ward - Helping Hands
Young Orphan
 
Kitwe and Kiwama
 


Feeding Time