Today we met our children and today I think my life
changed. I should probably start at the beginning. We woke up early
to tour Lusaka to gain some context about the city in which our children live. The weather is beautiful. It is the dry season or winter here and the
Zambians think it is freezing at about 70*.
We all think it is fabulous (at least the Houston and Texas
contingency!). There is a slight wind
and the sun shines so brightly that it seems to light up the entire
country! We boarded a bus that by US
standards would be small and is considered large here. It was old and rickety…you see them crammed
with riders all through the streets of Lusaka.
The roads are very narrow and some are paved but then disappear into
dirt and gravel.
Lusaka has two parts. One area of town, near
Family Legacy's Compound, houses the wealthy. We passed the President's
home and the US Embassy. Like most US embassy buildings, the Zambian
location is a huge, fortified building compared to the buildings that surround
it. Unfortunately, local laws prohibit photography of the Embassy or the
President's home.
We then began to pass into the other manner of life
in Zambia. We traveled through two compounds. Compounds are huge areas
that have formed communities. The first compound we passed through was
the worst of the worst. The houses, if you can call them that, are little
more than paper bags. We continued on to a compound with concrete
buildings. As we drove through the narrow, dusty streets, shoeless and
smiling children chased after our bus. We stopped at one of the Family
Legacy schools in the community. Family Legacy has created 17 schools
called Lifeway Christian Academy that serve 17 different areas, in addition to
the school that is located within the Family Legacy Compound.
In order for children to attend "government
school", families must pay, so most do not attend at all. Family
Legacy works to find sponsorships for children so that the cost of the school
is underwritten by contributions. Donors contribute about $40 per month
to send a Zambian child to a Family Legacy School.
The school that we visited was formerly a bar and
brothel. Our Family Legacy Tour Guide
told us that many of the students at this school saw their fathers become
alcoholics or watched their mothers work to provide for the family with in the
same walls of what is now the school. Renovated,
it is now a gated, concrete structure that represents a future for these
students. Every morning this year, the
students begin the day by proclaiming, “We are stars!”
After visiting one of the schools, we stopped at a
local grocery store where we purchased delicious, authentic bread and then
returned to Camp. Hundreds of dancing children greeted us as we drove
through the gates. Locating our Zambian "Partner" (translator)
was our ticket to finding our group of children. I am matched with a
group of 10 girls between the ages of 8 & 10. They are beautiful and
truly a gift. We danced and sang and it was the most fun I have had in a
while! During some free time, we are asked to take one child aside with
our partner for something called "Blessing Time". Blessing Time
offers us the opportunity to learn more about our girls and, hopefully when we
return to the states, we can tell their stories to others in hopes of securing
sponsorship for them to attend school. I was able to participate in three
Blessing Times with my girls and they really shared a lot about their lives.
One of my girls, Cleo, asked that we pray for her nightmares to go away.
We prayed with Ruth that she might be able to attend school and that
violence at home would stop.
I cannot wait to see my girls again tomorrow and spend more time with
each and every one of them. I would ask that you add these special girls
to your prayers ~ Cleo, Ruth, Gift, Memory, Esnart, Natasha, Lungowe, Marriam,
Judith, and Tina. Also, pray for my
Zambian Partners, Monica and Mwamba. I
will be praying for our group and that our “campers” accept Christ into their
hearts during this short, but powerful, time at Camp Life.
(Photos to come)