| A letter from Simon Guillebaud, 23 October 2007 | |
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PRAYER LETTER NO.51. Subject: Crushed and Elated in Burundi… Dear Team, 26th October 2007 Greetings from Africa! How are you? I hope you’re well. On my end, I feel crushed and I feel elated. There is so much bad stuff going on, but also some incredible stuff. Life is so raw out here, so black and white, such a rollercoaster of highs and lows. It would be so much easier to remain aloof and keep an emotional distance from my adoptive people, but I want to care and I choose to care, although it hurts to care… I sit listening to friends pouring out their hearts. Burundian men don’t cry – as the local proverb puts it, ‘A Burundian man’s tears flow inside his belly’ – but John does shed some tears as he shares how his pregnant wife Sarah has recently mysteriously died, leaving young David confused at home and Daddy absolutely devastated. Peter and Ruth have had their fourth and very late miscarriage, and are clinging to God to get through the anguish. Alfred comes in and tells me two members of his family have died in my absence. Privat shows up to work after a sleepless night listening to renewed bombing, with the radio reporting eleven dead as factions of the last remaining rebel group kill each other. DD shares how the streetkids’ project simply doesn’t have money for them to eat, whilst his 3-year-old daughter is recovering from being raped. Unemployed Ildephonse looks at me imploringly in the eye and talks of his wife and four kids who have nothing and he can’t provide for them. Meantime corruption scandals are being reported all over the place. Crime is absolutely rampant. The government is paralysed in inactivity. The schools and public universities have been on strike country wide because salaries aren’t being paid. Extremist Muslims are rapidly gaining ground and maximizing the discontent with fiery rhetoric and aggressive evangelism. “In ten years this country will be dominated by Islam,” they brazenly claim in their open air meetings, totally confident and unabashed, riding the wave of massive funding from Islamic regimes in the Middle East. People are thin, really thin. I get called fat here, can you believe it?! It’s a compliment, by the way. I mean, I’m a skinny runt by any objective standard, but I’m considered fat and well fed. Most people struggle to afford to eat. The price of some essential foodstuffs has doubled in the last few months. What would I do if I couldn’t feed Zac and Lizzie? I think I’d steal too, or maybe change religion if the Muslims were offering me some money to help start a little business. Yes, that’s what’s happening all over the place. Yes, there’s plenty to get angry, dejected, discouraged about or crushed, but that is only half the story. Seeing kids at the Youth For Christ orphanage who would otherwise be dead is overwhelming. Little Tom who was found in a gutter is at last able to smile for the first time in his two-year-old traumatized life. Six-year-old Helene is almost unbelievably no bigger than our two-year-old Zac, but is steadily growing emotionally, physically and spiritually. The school has started and for me to see twenty little lives be frog-marched into their classrooms in their smart uniforms was a joy.
God bless you, Simon Guillebaud PS A reminder for Christmas: For Christmas cows to provide milk for the orphanage, click Here. By the way, a development is that this week I inspected a plot of land, just under 4 hectares (600m by 60m), and it looks like we will buy that for the dairy farm. For Christmas cards to provide income for child-headed households, click www.CardsfromAfrica.com For Christmas books to get the message of radical living out to as many people as possible, click BOOKS
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