Tuesday 24 October 2017

Nearly November !?!

Warm greetings from Lubango!


The magnificent, endless blue skies have been brilliant for our planes to fly in to remote, isolated communities, offering some transformation, taking medical personnel and supplies in to villages and medivac'ing desperate folk out: some elderly, sick and dying, young mums suffering following complicated deliveries, newborn babies struggling to survive malnutrition.  This is Angola, our part of Africa.


Magnificent views from our kitchen, over the city



Just look at these skies: we last saw rain here in May, now its October and the rains are coming.... the first few most WELCOMED showers turned the dust into sticky red mud, the stagnant sewage swelled and swarms of flies awoke......as has the pong!




Most areas have piles and piles of discarded plastic - everything is recycled and reused until it is truly useless... then it's dumped for the next needy person to pick over..... ruining any potential beauty sites, at least around us here in the city.  Rubbish collection doesn't happen.  Burning does.  Going for a local walk just isn't a feasible option ... we were told it wasn't safe with "bandidos".









Carina was away in August, back in the UK, with lovely family, mostly on nanny duty, with a couple of weeks either side for other matters.   Gorgeous wee Zebedee J. Simpson delighted the hearts of us all, a surprising 9lb 7oz





Grandad Jez had saved up his annual leave and flew in at end of August, to meet the new addition to the family, this precious young fella!
















Jez (and of course Zebby) arrived in time to celebrate adorable big sister Lily turning a terrific 2!   The photo shows her with her daddy: Asher, "dunkle Loliiii" (taking photos) and mummy Louise.


September is a busy month with celebrations galore, including this cherub: Lucas turning 7!






Before returning to Angola we met with a number of lovely, lovely friends, shared at our Chudleigh Church and had some medical appointments, one of which was physio/x-ray and discovered the cause of much of the pain Carina has endured this past year: osteoarthritis!  She is now on the "hip pathway" to the miracle of healing: supernatural preferably please, or a hip replacement with the marvellous National Health Service.   With air tickets booked we weren't able to wait for the (ultrasound guided cortisone) injections and instead returned with a suitcase full of pain relief  (medicines are hard to access here) and a heart full of thankfulness and expectant Hope.  No jogging for her then!

Ooops: Jez's trainer falling apart!


On our return to Africa we ran a mini retreat for some of our MAF staff,  staying in rustic beach "lodges"..... time away from the city for discussion, strategy, prayer, food, fun and fellowship.   The Faus family later joined us after this photo.  The Boer family are back in Canada on Home Assignment, imminent arrival of new baby and we look forward to their safe return early next year.

 

















We had some personal time to walk or swim and fish too, some suitably kitted out with wet-suits for the chilly Atlantic Ocean!



There were no crowds at all, just us and a handful of local people to fish and cook, just shoals of fish and pods of dolphins with millions of sea shells on such a deserted stretch of the coast, down towards the Namibian border... and no shortage of whale bones!

The journey was amazing on the eyes (awful on Carina's back/hip) with some spectacular views, both on and off road, here one friend walks on the beach with a few of our team children, a Brides whale in the background....we saw a few: marvellous - a first sighting for us!!!







We were assured it just wouldn't have been a proper adventure without getting stuck in the sand....all three cars at once!  Interestingly it was a whale bone cleverly wedge under a tire for traction that helped us out!







Meanwhile "back at the ranch" there have been meetings to run,  plans to be made and executed,  stock to be counted, officials to liaise with,  internet to tackle!?! new friends to make, old ones to say goodbye to, networking to undertake, Bible students and MAF staff to teach English to and churches to share with:



Last and certainly not least (quite the opposite: the most important part in our minds) we would so appreciate your on and on and on-going prayers please for permissions to be granted for airstrips to lighten the loads; for our health and safety for both pilots and staff, navigating our hearts and heads, bodies and burdens, on "road" and sky in order to share Jesus: Hope for this beautiful nation of Angola, both here in the city as well as into the Interior where our faithful Partners in mission fight the good fight against malaria, TB and cholera epidemics, leprosy and laws (man's and nature's) ...to stay connected and faith-filled.

Grandad Jez, Dunkle Loli and Lily




Sending our love from afar .... after almost a year here!
Grateful for your friendship and (electronic) fellowship ๐Ÿ˜Š
Wow it's over a year since we left Portugal!  Que giro!
Jez and Carina x๐Ÿ’“x








Monday 22 May 2017

May 2017

Greetings from Lubango

Friday 14 April 2017

No bunnies here!

Bom dia!!.... hello.... happy Easter 2017.... happy Passover.... greetings from Lubango!


It has been a long time since our last blog, it was the end of January in fact....  we shall try to catch you up, short and sweet ๐Ÿ˜Š

We thank the Lord for answered prayer: our long awaited "caravan" plane has its new engine and is being put to good use!  

We also praise Him for answered prayer regarding Kalukembi air-strip being re-opened.  Another one Jez is working hard to get operational requires government permissions and partnering with local church leaders.  Cavango is key to developing medical ministry toward the east of the country which will bring benefit to many thousands of people.  

Dr Annalise (shown under the H of Wings of Hope) with some of her team/medical students have now been able to fly to remote communities, offering help, healing and HOPE to isolated folk needing medical care and loving attention. In rainy seasons "roads" are often impassable... flying also saves valuable time and energy, perhaps making the impossible possible!

Dr Tim and wife Betsy have returned from furlough to continue with their amazing work amongst the rural communities in and around Cavango.  It is truly an inspiration and their blog gives tremendous insights: https://kubackisinangola.com






In addition to CEML hospital Jez has been able to meet some of our other Angolan mission partners, seeing the marvellous work they are doing, assessing and offering  MAF's assistance where it would increase efficiencies.  His other duties have included so far preparing to upgrade the accounting system to a cloud based version bringing many benefits to internal reporting and accountability , liaising with airport officials and Church leaders, leading staff prayer meetings...    





Also in February...   and ongoing...Carina has been visiting the "fistula ladies" at CEML hospital, assisting the dedicated medical staff, serving to improve these dear womens' lives, who have faced harrowing journeys, often repeated surgeries following multiple excruciating long and painful still births, offering them some skills to improve their quality of life, many having sadly been disowned by husbands, cast out from families, villages, stigma following them, minus the very sad loss of their little ones.














She also enjoys teaching English to trainee church pastors at ISTEL: the Bible Institute here in Lubango.

The symptoms of sciatica continue to lessen with care, daily exercise and avoidance of unnecessary journeys and dreadful potholed roads.  Air travel seemed not to have exacerbate the discomfort.  ๐Ÿ˜Œ Thank you for those prayers.


Onto the month of March ...




Following just a short stay in hospital Great Grandma Margaret Rose passed away.  The photo shows her first and last aeroplane flight, up to visit Jez's sister and husband in bonnie Scotland, just this past year - an amazing feat at 83 years of age!   


     

We returned to the UK, to Shropshire, to celebrate her life with family and friends.  We remained in England for a couple more weeks to sort domestic affairs.

Celebrating Oli's and Lizzy's birthdays
Beautiful Creation/s...Asher, Jez and Lily










Jez's brother Jon with Lily Rose


The unexpected trip gave us the opportunity to spend time with precious family and dear friends, thankful for glorious Spring weather .... daffodils and lambs..... our first Spring in the UK for a few years.

Rooftop view of Luanda's harbour




Also in March we were able to celebrate our wedding anniversary, Jez combining meetings with MAF staff and Church leaders, with our flight out from Angola's capital to England.  In addition we were able to sort and transport the final consignment of our personal goods from Tanzania, just two years since we packed them all up!


Dust comes earlier as we move towards the dry season. but no long light evenings
Finally, we continue to bring before our Father the needs of this beautiful country: poverty, malnutrition, sickness and disease, landmines, uncertainty with the upcoming elections.

We pray for the timely return of our pilot Marijn and family with VISA's to enable us to maximise the planes' potential in reaching isolated communities, venturing further into the interior.


The country continues on with economic uncertainty, falling rates of exchange (some 50% since we arrived!!!) and ongoing fuel crisis'.  We are grateful for the generator, fitting our work and lives around when we have power.

In closing we would like to send you thanks for thoughtful messages of condolence and assurance of ongoing prayer for us and the work here in Angola.

We send our love and greetings, grateful for your input into our lives and service with MAF to see Mark 13 fulfilled: "this Gospel of the Kingdom will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come".

May the Lord bless your health and energy levels with Resurrection life:  Christ is Risen.

Jez and Carina xx



Tuesday 31 January 2017

HALO



Greetings from Lubango, here we are, outside our home and the MAF Angola office, with often beautiful, crystal clear, bright blue sunny skies, temperatures remain a constant mid 20's, cool evening breeze, plague of flies and often putrid smells.๐Ÿ˜ถ  Unlike Tanzania mosquitoes are rare and thankfully we have no bites (we sleep under a net, pop a daily pill, use repellent and dress sensibly).

It's the rainy season so the landscape is lush and green, plants and trees bloom and give ample fruit, if one is quick enough to pluck it before one of the hungry locals rightfully claim it.


Here's a wider photo of the front of the MAF properties, with one of our national staff "guarding." Our apartment is to the left, office below on the right.


This is our view out from the front bedroom/living room (as shown above), looking through the barred, netted windows, up towards the escarpment which runs down through Namibia to S. Africa, with Cristo Rei statue on top of our small section, some 300m above the city.   The potholed road is often full of  noisy children, happily playing in the brightly coloured mud, p'haps with an inner tyre, a make-do football or set of plastic bottles, often barefoot, amidst rubbish dumped from neighbouring houses. sometimes awash with overflowing sewage...


Pity we can't capture our spectacular view from the kitchen and front bedroom, overlooking the sprawling city... absolutely beautiful sunsets, brilliant for watching in-coming weather fronts, lightening, etc.  Many weekends we have the sounds of 48hr marathon "discos" interspersed by dogs and cockerels and more dogs, ending with full days of Church music, replaced by heavy traffic during weekdays.  But the views, o wow  ๐Ÿ˜




HALO. This month we were able to facilitate flights for the HALO Trust, a key MAF ministry partner, along with CEML mentioned in our last blog,๐Ÿ˜‡

MAFs flights enabled commemorative celebrations of the 20 years since Princess Diana visited Angola, as the patron of  HALO; now Prince Harry continues on the good work.





She came to the Huambo Province, to highlight the plight of the ongoing ravages of  civil war and the dreadful, needless destruction that land mines continue to inflict upon the innocent population.  Hers was a significant milestone which influenced the creation of the International Mine Ban Treaty 1997.๐Ÿ’ฃ

HALO Trust is an international, humanitarian work, established to remove landmines and other debris left behind by war, to create safe and secure environments.




Chris Pym, HALO Regional Director SAfrica

HALO is a non religious, non polital registered British charity and American non profit organisation.    Serving Angola since 1994 this severly impacted nation is believed to be one of the most mined countries in the world ๐Ÿ˜ข   Estimated casualities range from 23,000 to 80,000!!    In the period 2006-2016 1,371 metric tones of explosive devices have been destroyed, 370,000 landmines and 117,000 arms; the USA contributed 70% of the funds to carry this out, UK's £2.8million equating to 23% and Angola 2.5%, plus funds from other governments, which amounts to $10million during that period.  HALO estimates approx 10 yrs worth of work remains to rid her of all her landmines, equating to several $million more required.   Here, with age, they are sadly leaking their toxicity into the once lush and nutritionally rich, fertile soil, rendering much of the land unusable, increasing poverty and malnutrition.   We have discovered a number exist in our area here!๐Ÿ˜ฆ


Jez with Gerhard Zank,  HALO executive staff

MAF is the only operator that consular staff members are permitted to use for domestic travel within Angola.  During the celebrations Jez was able to meet with senior HALO personnel and 3 consular staff from 3 nations, as well as  Andrew Ford, Deputy Head of Mission representing the British Govt.   Sadly the BBC were unable to attend due to lateness in applying for visas, something we are all too familiar with!๐Ÿ’ฅ




We have had the pleasure of our first house guest, Lowell Deering (centre),
MAF Canada VP Ops, who was able to connect with several contacts whilst at the HALO weekend and during his 3weeks here, meeting all national and international staff and families, with Jez they furthered contacts with Wycliffe, American Bible Society, Seed Company, the Lubango Theological School ISTEL, along with aviation regulator and airport authority.✈๐Ÿ‘ฎ




"Brave" pilot Marijn flew the chaps on one of our two 182 four seater planes, with poor ol' Jez plus upset tummy, minus bathroom facilities.....  he shared the bug with Carina who was already enduring her own ~explosive~ issues: herniated disk/s/sciatica. ๐Ÿ˜She has spent this entire month recouperating, thankfully progressing to walking and sitting, each about half an hour at a time, laying flat inbetween times..... enabling lots of thoughtful prayer, a most worthy task at the beginning of our time here!  ๐Ÿ™Œ You'll see from the photo she's upright, but not quite whole yet!

So may we please share some praise points and prayer requests:

Last blog we mentioned a few requests, for which we say hurray or boooh...
Hurrah and Halelu-Jah Carina's visa arrived, hers and Jez's will both need to be reapplied for renewal in September.


Marijn's visa hasn't been granted, just YET!!!..booh
Photo here shows him, Noortje, Judah and Salome at the airport today, as they travel back to Holland to have their case reviewed and, we trust, visas issued.
Even tho it isn't holiday time do pray with us for them to have a great, useful inspirational and even fun family time back home as they trust and wait.   We so want/need them back! Please pray for favour with the consular officials and of course for a positive and timely outcome.    We believe the Lord has much FABULOUS work for them all, here.
We sent them out as boomerangs!!!!

Hurray, thank you Lord for answered prayer for safe arrival of long awaited NEW ENGINE for our larger plane, the caravan, currently being installed down in neighbouring Namibia, by visiting engineer Tim, to be joined shortly by our own Marcel!

We thank the Lord that Oli and Asher are both managing their responsibilites well, Louise coping with the dreadful hyperemesis but it was a joy to "meet" baby no.3 on a recent scan photo ๐Ÿ˜   We continue to pray for Great Grandma Margaret. 

Finally, please once again bring to our Father the need for land title documents for the Cavango runway and progression to permissions for the Kalukembe runway.  There are currently high numbers of fatalities from malaria in Cavango and malnutrition is sadly on the increase, following drought. 

Thanks for taking the time to read this... heartfelt appreciation if you're able to pray with us too.

Gods' blessings and our love
Sending "beijinhos de Angola" ... little kisses,
Jez and Carina xx