Saturday, January 5, 2008

Kenya Holiday

Apologies for not being in contact recently – but read on…and you’ll find out why!

On Boxing Day, we headed off for Kenya by car with 3 other families in convoy. There were 8 adults and 13 children in our group. The trip can be done in about 13 hours of straight driving, but we figured that with so many kids, we would have a significant number of toilet stops, and so our lead car/organizer extraordinaire – Isabel - planned two overnight stops. So the first day, we drove 7 hours. First we went via Jinja to the border at Busia. At the border station, all the husbands (culturally it makes things easier to have a man deal with officials) went to deal with the paper work. This is no easy task. There are about 4 different offices that need to have paper work filled in – visa, immigration, car insurance, car registration etc. To think that these all might be done by one person is far too easy! Each one has a different official with a different office, and it took about 1 ½ hours to get through the border. It was very hot on the border, and the kids got pretty bored. Once over the border, we got going again and headed for a campsite in the town of Kisumu. Tents were put up and we sorted out who would sleep where. In the end – 9 children went to bed in the same tent as Isabel and her husband James. Our girls had never camped before (they were given a torch from Father Christmas and a sleeping bag from Uncle Roger and Aunty Sue).
It started well, but by 9.30pm when the noise from the kids had not calmed down, we started removing children. So, Naomi ended up sleeping with us in our little tent.

The next day was a big day for Kenya – election day. The front runners were the incumbent Mwai Kibaki and the opposing Raila Odinga.
On that morning, we packed up and drove through the eerily quiet Kisumu main street (more on that later) straight for Njoro via Molo where we stayed at a very beautiful place called Kembu Campsite. This was about a 4 hour drive. Quite a bit of the journey was on roads with pot-holes large enough to swallow the car (ok, I am exaggerating, but not much!) This took its toll on our car, and it started making a bad clunking noise. Once at Kembu – the farm mechanic was called out to look at it, and correctly diagnosed and treated the car for a case of the ‘broken bushing on the left rear car suspension’. We were very grateful, and thanked God for providing someone who knew what the problem was and how to fix it in very literally the middle of nowhere! Kembu was significantly more upmarket (and more expensive mind you) than the first place. There were large lawns and the kids really enjoyed blowing off some steam. In elevation, this was the highest point of the journey and was jolly cold! We all dug out the warm clothes that we had brought. The stars were amazing that night, and the adults spent a nice time that evening being introduced to the Plaides and Haides and other constellations by Laurie who just about managed to remember some of his Astro-Physics degree.

The morning of the 28th, we had a short trip – 2 hours to the Brackenhurst Conference Centre in Limuru. This trip was amazing – it took us through the Rift Valley – along some really awful roads, and one superb road from Nakuru to Naivasha. You almost felt that you were driving through Derbeyshire on a big wide freeway – wonderful! We were glad to arrive at Brackenhurst though. This is an amazingly beautiful spot with quite a colonial looking main building which is owned by the Baptist Missionary Organization.

Coming here was the whole reason for our trip. Every year a missionary conference is held with teaching and seminars for the adults. The kids had their own teaching sessions led by a wacky group of Australians from Jannali Anglican Church that did a superb job of entertaining and teaching our kids Biblical truths – all while dressed up as Pirates! The kids were given goody bags on arrival – a winner for our kids – containing all sorts of Pirate-y paraphernalia. We had 4 wonderful days of teaching by Stuart Pascall. All the while, we kept our ears on the news of the elections. After the announcement that Kibaki had won the election and had been sworn in, it became quite apparent that many Kenyans were not at all happy. Violence in the capital – Nairobi began to escalate and also trouble in the West of Kenya, (Odinga’s home ground), that we had just driven through was also starting to get troubled. Kisumu that had been so quiet only a few days earlier was now a place of gun shots and cars being set on fire. Somewhere about then, there was a media black-out across the whole of Kenya. So we had no TV news, or radio news from inside Kenya. It became very hard to know what was really true. Various people on the conference had friends in certain western towns, and so with that information we started to make plans to return to Kampala. We tried to weigh up the risks of driving home. At one point our plan was to drive in a four car convoy to the border and not stop for anything. I have to say that at this point I was as frightened as I have ever been in East Africa. Most of the drive home would probably have been fine – but once we hit the Western part – we were a long way from anywhere and we would have had no escape route. It eventually transpired that a town called Eldoret – which was on our way home – had suffered very badly. A church containing 30 people who had gone there to hide and seek refuge had been burnt down. It is hard to imagine villagers doing this to their fellow villagers. To this day, it seems that Eldoret is still a place of violence. Despite being told to stay on the Conference compound and not leave – we still celebrated the start of the New Year with silly songs around a bonfire, toasting marshmallows on sticks and party poppers. (Fireworks had been bought, but the organizers worried that they would sound too much like gunfire). New Years Day was spent figuring out what to do. People from the conference were traveling in all different directions – some to Sudan, some to Tanzania. So, we got into traveling groups and spent a lot of time looking at the problem before a wise person suggested that we look up and pray about it! Duh! So obvious! It turned out that the road to Eldoret had been closed – which prevented us from driving home and clarified our decisions. After that airlines were called and we tried to reserve flights for the 2nd Jan. Then we had to try and get taxis to come and collect us from the Conference Centre. This didn’t happen as the taxi drivers were not happy about driving out away from Nairobi because of the violence in some parts of the city. In the end, we drove our own cars to the airport very early and left the keys with a trusted person from CMS (Church Mission Society). The cars were then picked up from the airport by a friend from MAF Kenya who has taken our cars to the compound in Nairobi. We are hoping to get our car back sometime this month but we are not sure yet.
After scrabbling around for the cash to pay for the tickets (no credit card machines here), we flew back to Kampala! In the end there were 25 of us on the flight. The children all cheered on take-off, talked loudly through the 1hour flight then cheered again on landing! Moments after landing – we turned on our phones. Laurie immediately got a call from MAF here asking him to come and help get the internet working! So, it was back to work with a bit of a bump!

As you can tell from the story, this was one New Year that we won’t forget in a hurry! There were many lessons to be learnt from the trip though. I learnt some things about myself that I didn’t want to know, but we also learnt a lot about God’s protection and guiding hand. There were many times when things could have gone very pear-shaped – but we were prevented from getting our selves and our kids into danger. Please do pray for the country of Kenya and particularly for those in the West.

Due to the roads being closed – we now have a severe fuel crisis as all Uganda’s supply comes through Kenya. Petrol is now nowhere to be seen and diesel is in short supply.

1 comment:

Rob Green said...

Thank you for sharing this with us.
We praise God for you and all you are doing and all that you are. We love you and will continue to pray for the 4 of you and your work and Uganda and Kenya. Much love in our Lord and Saviour Jesus' name,
Rob, Debs, Caleb & Hope Green
www.rob-green.blogspot.com
www.flickr.com/photos/robdebsgreen