Monday, June 27, 2011

P.S. A visit with Ronika

I am adding this as a P.S. because our side trip to visit our World Vision child whom we have sponsored for the past five years really wasn't part of the Hosanna mission trip.  But I do want to share the experience, as it was at Hosanna that we began our relationship with Ronika.

One Sunday at our church, hundreds in the congregation  were moved to sponsor children throughout Tanzania after a presentation from the World Vision organization.  We met Ronika through letters and pictures from her worker in the small village south of Arusha.  We saw her grow up from a 7-year old little girl to a 13-year old girl who loved going to school, learning English, and had dreams of continuing to be a teacher or a nurse someday.  We always thought it would be such a blessing to meet her  and when the opportunity to go to Tanzania on a mission trip evolved, we checked  to see whether it would be at all possible.

After emails and phone calls with the World Vision staff, we discovered we would only be about three hours from her village....and yes, they would indeed welcome us to visit her and her family!  We wrote her to tell her and she also was excited! I packed a small suitcase with some clothes for her and her family, a children's Bible in simple English, a few pieces of jewelry, and some school supplies and games.  Arrangements were made for us to go ahead of our team by a few days so that we could make the side trip before our mission team arrived.




The day after we arrived, we were picked up at our hotel by World Vision staff who lived in Tanzania and were assigned to take us to her village.  They clued us in on what supplies the family would need and helped us shop for them in Moshi, a large city on the way.  We could see the curious looks on the faces of people nearby as we walked into the  small stores to buy rice, cooking oil, corn meal, flour, and soap.....lots of it!







As we drove south,  we stopped at a small hotel where we were joined by a couple of staff members who worked with the village, one that specifically helped Ronika with her letters and translation.

We had some breakfast and a potty break.....YIKES!  I hadn't seen this since my trip to China!






The landscape changed from the green landscape of the area on the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro to a drier area that reminded me of Arizona.  Vegetation was scarce, but enough for the herds of cattle and goats....


.....and we finally arrived at her village, a mixture of mud huts and dried brick houses.



And then we got our first glimpse of Ronika, coming back from the well with a pail of water on her head!


She was shy at first,  and slipped into her house to put on her white and black dress which she had been able to buy with Christmas money we had sent.  After introductions and finding a shady spot under a tree, we talked with her and her parents, met her two older sisters (she is the youngest....and her father is in his 70s!)




....and shared pictures of our family on the ipad.  Not only they, but the World Vision staff also had never seen such a thing!




Ronika's father makes a living as a fisherman.  They live on a large reservoir, built by the Germans, and it provides enough fish for the family and to sell.  They dry the fish on the straw roofs and also cook it for their daily meal with rice or corn meal.  It is basically the same every day.  As honored guests, we were invited for lunch in their tiny dining area.  We sat on buckets around a small table and had boiled fish (our translators called it tilapia), chicken, rice and soda pop.  I am sure it was a generous thing for them to do and it was actually quite good!  There is no electricity or running water in the house and they usually eat outdoors when the weather is nice.....and it is usually one meal a day.


We had some curious village onlookers peeking through the window....


When we opened the suitcase and gave out our "gifts", we could see the big smile on her face...and her mother let out the traditional African "squeal", showing her deep gratitude.  We all felt blessed.

















Ronika was anxious to show us her village and the lake, so we took the short walk to the shore, with a sweet group of preschoolers following us (the older children were all in school and Ronika was excused for the day for her special guests).  How those children loved getting their pictures and videos taken....and then saw themselves on the tiny camera screens!


She was so anxious to take us for a boat ride in her father's boat, so Lyle reluctantly got in and I volunteered to take pictures and video of his ride......we were all laughing as it nearly tipped over!



                   (And how they balance those buckets of water on their head I will never figure out!)

We walked back to the village, past the fishermen working on nets...


.....visited a little with the curious children and took more photos...



We knew the afternoon had to end, just as we were all feeling comfortable with each other.  Ronika tried some of her English words with me and also told me she loved me.  Wow! Her mother wanted to pray for us so we all joined in a circle, held hands and prayed for each other.  There were tears as we climbed back into the jeep to head back.  But we promised her that we would continue to write to her, support her, and see her through school if she wanted to continue after this year (schooling is free until age 14 or so, but then families must pay tuition).  It was a blessed time with her and it impacted both of us more than we imagined.

On the way out of the village, we stopped at Ronika's school and visited her classroom.  We again were "honored guests" and the students stood up to greet us.  Many of them have sponsors in this village, but to actually meet them is quite a treat.  We were impressed at their smiles, politeness, and eagerness to see us...



As we drove away, we saw their water buckets under the tree...a reminder of how important the water well is to the region, and of the children's responsibility to bring the water home as they walked the mile or two back to the village.  Life there is not easy......but with help from many World Vision sponsors, the children are getting an education and are being prepared hopefully for a brighter future.


1 comment:

  1. That was wonderful to read, Penny. Roger and I sponsor first a little girl in Malawi, and now were switched to a boy named King.But it didn't seem like we could send any packages because they can' handle duty on all that stuff. but you can actually send money to them directly? and they get it .wow.....I guess I haven't been real good about writing, because at first all the notes were written by the staff, but it was words that the adults might have used. not the kids....so I asked them to have him write the note, and then they could translate below, but your note has inspired me to do better. great hearing about your visit with her. Yes, we have no idea in this country who much we take water for granted:coming into the house etc. just having a clean source....no water related parasites.....unless you want to count leeches!

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