Friday, July 29, 2011


As my time in Tanzania draws to a close I'm pulled into reflection on my time here. It's been a rocky journey. There have been tough times like when the Morning Star School gardens were canceled and there have been high times like when we got the funding for the Green Eden school.

Development is a tough business. We spend hours, days, weeks working
towards a project in hopes that it will revolutionize Tanzania and pull this country out of poverty. All that effort to have our project shot down in team meeting o it goes to completion and we find out it wasn't all that helpful to the Tanzanian people.

There are so many good ideas that end up being mediocre. But every once in a while we stumble upon that one gem of an idea. It may seem crazy, wasteful, or both but someone sees the magic in it and pushes through all the doubt. This is what it's all about, this is HEM orphanage.

When the project was presented in team meeting it sounded sketchy. An orphanage in some far off, distant part of Tanzania that wants to raise chickens. Do they know how to raise chickens? Can they sell the eggs? Are they just looking for something free from the white people? There were so many questions and I wasn't fully convinced. In spite of all the doubt one team member, Faith, pushed it through and pleaded with the team on behalf of these kids, it went through.

After one visit to HEM I could see this was something we needed to do
and I'll show you why.
This is what it's all about. This is why I came to Tanzania and this is why you donated to send me out here. Yesterday we finished the orphanage, we moved the chickens in, and the printed off the care manual. Ester, the woman who runs the orphanage, is well qualified to care for these animals and has already established a buyer for the eggs. Like I said, this is one of those rare gems that makes all the failures worth while.

Before we started. Left to right: Faith, Manase (our translator), Anna

The completed coop.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

All Tanzania needs is Faith and A Net

The Black Tiger's Acrobat Show. They are here so wellcome.

Thanks to all of you who helped with the Green Eden school! Some of us will be leaving on Tuesday to start building. My massive biceps have been enlisted in this cause. With any luck we'll have a fully functional school by the end of the day (or maybe the end of the month). It'll be a good week coming up.

This past week has been bitter sweet.


On Sunday I had to inform Geofrey, the headmaster of Morning Star school, that we were helpless to help his school. My heart broke as I explained to him that his mounting debt to the owner made the project unsustainable and therefore a poor candidate for HELP. Why is it that the neediest people are often the ones we help last? The town of Morombo, where the school is located, is probably the poorest place in Tanzania. They have no water, no power, no sewer, and no industry. It's a wonder that this place even exists. Well, soon they can add 'primary school' to the list of things they don't have. Not that it's HELP's fault, we don't have the resources to keep the school going either. This brings me to the lesson of this school: Faith. Geofrey, who wears a constant smile buried under his permanent scowl, is always telling me that God will send someone his way, someone that will save the school and keep it alive. In spite of the dwindling school attendance and mounting debt he is still sure that God will provide a way.

Monday brought some better news. We, as a team, traveled to a small town called Sanya Juu. In Sanya Juu we are building a chicken coop for an orphanage called H.E.M. It's run by a wonderful lady named Ester and the teacher there is a girl named Anna. If you ever wanted to hear a story about faith you need only hear Anna's. She's a bright, sunny girl, full of stories, songs, and games. Definitely the person you want teaching a bunch of young orphans. With Anna, there's never a dull moment and the smiles on her students prove it. Sure, they're orphans, but you spend one afternoon with them and you'll be convinced you're the one with the sad life. They laugh and sing, play games, and learn to read and write all at the hands of Ester and Anna.
This is Ester

Anna came to Sanya Juu from Arusha (the bustling city I live in). After finishing Secondary School her minister suggested that she come to HEM to help out. Anna doesn't get paid and she rarely gets to see her family but she doesn't ever bemoan her fate. Rather she sees her work at the orphanage as an extension of her devotion and service to God.This is Anna

Wednesday was another sad day. The second wave of volunteers left. They have done some amazing things. They have taught English and Women's empowerment, built pigs pens, cleaned up trash, fought AIDS and poverty, and more or less solved all of the problems of poverty. Which brings me to the title of this blog. With this wave we lost two of our best volunteers, Faith and Annette or Fainette as we affectionately call them. They have personally taught scores of young girls to reach for their dreams and to value themselves. Additionally, they have championed the chicken coop project, the Maasai womens health pamphlets, and several other projects. More or less if we left them here they might just solve all of Tanzania's problems on their own.Fainette, solving the problem of hunger (from lack of cookies).

Friday and Saturday brought Safari. It was a blast and a much needed break from the hustle and bustle of development work. We saw all of the big animals and the ugly ones too (that's Lion, Elephant, Buffalo, Rhino, and Wart hog, Stork, Vulture, Hippo, and Hyena). We didn't see the Serengeti but we did see the Ngorongoro crater.
The team on Safari!

Today, Sunday, I learned the massive importance of bed nets. Josh, one of our spunkier and more vertically accomplished volunteers woke to find that his bed was too short for him. I don't know how he didn't notice this over the past six weeks but the scores of mosquito bites on his feet (acquired over the past night) confirm his beds shortness. Thank goodness he's taking his malaria pills!

Tanzania is great and the Tanzanians are great people. They have so much faith. They don't always know how they will get by but they know they will with God's help. Thanks to Josh I now know how important the bed nets are. Thanks Faith and Annette, for keeping us going, keeping us safe from mosquitoes, and showing us how to serve.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Green Eden Primary School-You can help!

So we're trying to complete a school near the Kenyan border. They don't have a roof. As you may assume a roof is very important to learning. If you don't believe me just try doing differential calculus on a chalk board in the rain. If you think that's hard then you know what it's like at Green Eden primary school. Oh, and to add to that imagine that if you don't get your roof built by January you'll be out on the street. Have I tugged your heart strings enough? No? Ok, well I've got more. Unlike American schools these kids won't get bussed to another school, they just won't get to go to school at all.

Now you are probably hearing Alice Cooper singing,"school's out for Summer. School's out for-ever!" but before you get too far just think about the last time you balanced your check book (I know it's probably been a while, maybe you've never done it but you know you could if you wanted to). Well these kids won't ever learn to balance a check book, write sentences, or figure out the precise moment a train leaving chicago will pass a train leaving from Boston (face it this is a universal torture that no child should be deprived of.

So now is your chance to help. All we need is $3500. We have $600 and the good people at tipping bucket have promised not to take your money unless we raise it all. Do you have a dollar? Do you have five dollars? Weren't you just scolding yourself for having that double-shot mocha capuccino with the extra shot of carmel and whipped cream? How much did it cost? $10 so you could skip the next one and build a school. Think how good you'll feel. Not only do you NOT have to spend an extra 30 minutes hating yourself on the treadmill but you can enjoy the warm fuzzy feelings of building a school in Africa. Now if you think that'll feel good just think about how great you'll feel if you invite a friend to donate too. Perhaps you can go together to skip the next coffee run. Good moral support, healthy lifestyle, and warm fuzzy feelings-does life get any better? I submit to you that it cannot!

This is what you do:
Click here: Tipping Bucket
Make a pledge
Invite a friend
Feel Warm and Fuzzy
Repeat as desired

Be well my friends. Remember: Never underestimate the power of a small group of people to change the world, for they are the only ones who have.