Friday, June 29, 2012

Clash.


Zambia is a strange dichotomy of the most hideous and most beautiful things on this earth. 

There are places like the special needs house at a local orphanage where children who can’t walk lie in the same pee-soaked bed day after day with flies crawling over them because there simply aren’t enough volunteers to take care of them all.  Where the healthy children run towards any vehicle that shows up on site because they are so desperate for any kind of love or attention.

And then there are days when you take 10 teenagers to visit this orphanage.  They clearly don’t know what to expect, but they get off the bus and immediately pick up whatever child is coming towards them with arms wide open.  And they not only push the children on the merry-go-round, they hop on themselves.  And they slow down their game of football when they realize the smallest of the small boys wants to play.  And they walk into that special needs house and see children with physical problems they’ve NEVER seen before, and they walk from bed to bed smiling at the children and tickling them to get a laugh.  And they tell you later that this experience made them realize how truly blessed they are to have even the small amount of things they have in this life.

There are people who see a Mzungu (white person) and immediately up the cost of something by 100%.  They come to your car door when you’re parked out on the street, assuming you are some kind of millionaire.  Little boys sit by your table through an entire meal at a restaurant angrily telling you to give him money.  Zambia, like everywhere else in the world, is full of liars and cheats and thieves.

And then there are mothers and fathers and aunts and uncles and grandmothers who have taken in 3, 4, 5, 6 extra children because all the other adults in their family are gone.  They sell tomatoes or beans or cabbage or whatever else they can in front of their house to make enough money to feed these extra mouths.  They graciously invite you in when you come to visit, give you the best seat and simply ask for God’s protection when you ask what you can pray for.  They don’t go on and on about what they need or how much money they want you to give them; they simply thank you for being here in Zambia to help the children.

There are children EVERYWHERE at all times of the day.  Children who are forced to become grown-ups at a very young age.  Six year old girls who carry their baby brothers on their backs.  Grade 1 students who come home to an empty house because the adult of the family has left for harvest season.  Children who sit at home for a month because they burned their leg with boiling water and haven't been to a doctor to get it checked out.  Children whose older brothers die of "TB," which means the most likely died of HIV/AIDS.  Children who get malaria as often as American kids get the flu.  Children playing with broken glass; chewing whatever piece of plastic they find on the ground; running through trash-infested streets in their bare feet.  Children who have nothing to do and nowhere to go because they can’t afford the small fees to pay for school uniforms and supplies.

 And then there are 120 children who DID get to go to school today.  They chew on anything they can get their hands on and don’t always listen when their teachers say “Nchongo!” (Stop making noise!), and their playground fights could put American kids’ fights to shame, but they are the future of Zambia.  They walk up to 40 minutes one-way to get to school; they don’t take a bite of their nshima before praying; the sound of their giggles is what the soundtrack in heaven must be; they spend HOURS writing letters to their sponsors back in America whom they love like their own family; they clean every dish and every inch of the school before leaving each day; they carry the little ones all the way home when they’re sick; they love without question.

Yes, living in Africa is hard.  It can be frustrating and overwhelming.  You can work tirelessly and still not feel like you’re accomplishing much.  But there is so much good.  And I choose to see the good.  I choose to focus on the breath-taking moments of beauty that I inevitably come in contact with every single day.  I choose to thank God that I get to see the generosity and the joy and the love; and I beg Him to help me be a catalyst for change in the dark and heartbreaking places.  I have no idea what is in store for me this year, but I do know I will experience both the horrible and the wonderful; and in the end, it is the good I will carry with me.