Wednesday, August 14, 2013

The Reality of it All


I have been trying to write this blog for awhile and I start typing but then delete it all. How do I express myself in a way that will help people to understand, to get behind us and other ministries in Kenya and support this life here and know that it IS our call, our passion to be here?

I, Meredith, have been in Kenya for almost eight years.  I have seen and experienced more in those eight years than I did in the twenty-eight years of living in Canada.

Why?

North America has bad things happen. Children are abandoned, starving, beaten, raped and dying.  I know that.  Kenya has bad things happen. Children are abandoned, starving, beaten, raped and dying.  I know that too.

I think the difference is, and knowing that the economy and government services are struggling, is that North American government still helps their own people, in some way or another.  When bad things happen to children in North America, someone is held accountable for it. The justice system isn’t always the greatest there but when bad things happen to children, the public HATES it and fights for them.

I know in many States that if a mother can’t care for her child any longer, she can drop that baby off at a hospital or police station or a fire department, with no questions asked, no charges laid.  It’s a safe place; it’s a place where a mother knows that her child will get taken care of. 

In Kenya, there really no safe place and so many mothers are left with the choices of abandoning the baby in a maize (corn) field, the hospital, the side of the road or a dump.  They do this with the hope that their baby will be found and taken care of by a passerby or taken to a children’s home where the baby will likely be fed three meals a day, have nice clothes on his/her back and get an education. Things the mothers believe they would never be able to provide. 

There is no real assistance from the Kenyan government and if there was, it’s not going into the mothers’ pockets.

The mothers also cringe at the thought, and quickly brush it from their minds, that their child will die where she abandoned him/her.  Hypothermia, wild dogs, sepsis or starvation.  To think about it aches too much.

And then there are the mothers who don’t want to be found out that they desire to abandon their babies and so they drop them down thirty foot outhouses where the baby likely drowns in the filth that lies below.  Never to be heard from or seen again.  Only a small percentage of those children are found alive.

There are mothers who are forced to give up their children because their first husband ran away with another woman and the new husband loathes the fact that the children aren’t biologically his and so he beats them, enslaves them or tells the mother to send them away.  This also happens vice versa too.

There is a lack of education here for new mothers. They give birth at home, in the hospital, in the field and that is it.  Especially a first time or young mother needs wisdom and direction.  New or young mothers don’t know what to look for; what is right or what is wrong.

For anyone who has been following my status updates on Facebook this past week, you’ll know that I have been visiting the local district (government) hospital.  It’s a sad place. It’s dirty, cockroach filled, understaffed and overcrowded.  In the children’s ward, there are almost always two children to a bed plus their caregivers.

The caregivers usually consist of either a mother or grandmother who looks exhausted and overwhelmed. And almost all of them having that burning question in their minds, “How on earth am I going to find the money to pay for this hospital bill?” A bill that could be no more than $50 to $100 at the government hospital.

On Friday of last week, my friend Kim and I went to the hospital to visit twin boys who were brought there by a social worker who met the boys in a nearby slum area.

When we arrived, we found out that only one of the twin boys, named Kevin, was admitted into the 
hospital. Apparently he is in worse condition than his brother. 

Kevin
Kevin is five years old. He is still in size one/two diapers; he is the size of a one and half year old. He cannot walk and can only stand on his very skinny, weak legs when he is holding on to something or someone.  After a minute or two, his legs become shaky because he doesn’t have the strength or muscle in them yet.

His face has sores on them; his teeth are rotting; his belly is very distended. 

He laughs and talks and tells stories. 

He sees people walk into their ward area and demands to know who they are and who they are the mother of.  Everyone that has a bed around him laughs, being entertained by this little boy.

Kevin’s mother died awhile ago; their father and step-mother took them in. They weren’t wanted there and so the two boys paid the price. They weren’t being fed properly and were being beaten.

At one point during our visit with Kevin that day, the social work, asked Kevin if he wanted to nap. He said that he didn’t want to in fear that his dad would come and beat him. Broke our hearts.

Katherine & Valerie
On the same bed as Kevin is a sixteen/seventeen year old mother, named Katherine. She is holding on to a very sickly looking baby. We find out that the baby, named Valerie, has just turned one. She is long in length but super skinny.  She can barely muster up a cry.  She has no teeth, not one single tooth.

Katherine didn’t know that it wasn’t normal for a baby not to cry and because the baby didn’t cry, she didn’t feed her very much.  Valerie, we learned, although does suffer from malnutrition, is also suffering some sort of heart condition. Katherine and Valerie can’t be released from the hospital unless she is immediately transferred to a referral hospital in another town less than two hours from Kitale. She doesn’t have the $50 plus whatever the costs of the tests will be to check on Valerie’s heart.

So she sits in the hospital.

Yesterday when Sean and I went to bring food for Kevin and the others in their section, I saw a new baby on the bed next to Kevin’s.  She was gorgeous.

Her name is Cynthia. We were told by her grandmother that she is seven months old but the size of a three or four month old.  She sucks her middle and ring finger (just like another Cindy Lou I once knew!).  She’s fussy so I go and sit with her and stroke her cheek; she immediately quiets and just looks at me.

My heart melts.

The mother to Cynthia is in school. She is in grade eight. The grandmother feeds Cynthia milk when she can get it. She knows that she is small for her age.

Cynthia has a chest problem. She is on antibiotics and will be in the hospital for a few more days.  I just want to scoop her up and bring her home.  I want to love on her and feed her until she gets those cute little baby rolls.

These stories are only about two beds in that big ward. Two beds.

I was talking with a friend today and I said, “Sometimes we wonder if we are even making a dent of a change/difference in this place.”  She said, “I know what you mean! There is no end to it.”

And no, there is no end to it, at least not on earth.

But this is when we know that we can push through, get down again on our knees, and ask God for the wisdom, the strength, the resources, the ability, the peace, and the direction so that we can keep being His hands and feet in this place.

I want to be a voice for these children. I want to be a shoulder and an ear for these mothers and grandmothers.  I want to help lead them to a Father who supplies all their needs in a way that only He can supply.

It is overwhelming but in those moments of being overwhelmed, Kevin laughs and tells a story.  Cynthia stops crying and falls asleep.  Valerie looks more alert and healthy.  And I feel Jesus making my arms long enough and big enough to hug them and growing my heart big enough to love them the way He loves them.

Sean & Kevin

Sunday, April 14, 2013

The Joy of Bubbles



Each month we celebrate the birthday of each child that was born during that particular month in one big party.  Today was such a day.  For those of you unfamiliar with the way we celebrate birthdays at In Step, we call each child up and announce the age that they are turning.  When everyone has been called, we sing “Happy Birthday” to them.  The “birthday” boys and girls, who are old enough then serve cake and ice cream to the rest of the children, then get their own.  Then, we go outside into the yard and the adults (Mama Mary, Mama Carla, Madam Beth Ann and me, usually) blow bubbles for the kids to chase and see who can pop them.  Usually a little one gets knocked down in the excitement, but no one gets seriously hurt.  The next wave of bubbles usually makes a kid forget any offense committed against them.

There is one little guy named Fred, who just loves bubble time.  He runs around chasing the bubbles laughing the whole time.  Fred has a great laugh.  It is a laugh that comes from deep within his soul.  It doesn’t take much for Fred to get that laugh going either.  Any fun play activity can set him off.  It has gotten to the point where the other kids don’t notice, or pay attention anymore.  That is a sad thing.

It is a sad thing, not because the other kids have lost interest in the bubbles.  They have lost interest in Fred’s laugh.  There is innocence to it, and for them it is just another occurrence.  It is just Fred being Fred.  But, what if it was something more?

I just finished reading Rob Bell’s new book “What We Talk About When We Talk About God.”  Love him or hate him, Bell generates thought and discussion about Christianity and faith.  In the book, he talks about looking past the mundane and seeing God in everything.  In the West, a lot of us live in the mundane.  We forget to look beyond the moment and see that we are part of something bigger than ourselves.  In most circumstances, we get up, do our work, go home, go to sleep, and repeat and repeat and repeat.

If we blow bubbles for kids, it is just blowing bubbles.  We don’t participate in the enjoyment of them.  We don’t often marvel at how they float, sometimes out of our grasp and hover over our heads, and at the last minute change direction and come back to earth so that we can pop them. Almost like they are playing a game with us.

Children have a sense of wonder at so many things, and we adults take them for granted.  Eventually kids start to take them for granted, the way the rest of the kids at the home have taken Fred’s laugh for granted.  They are no longer entertained by it.  They don’t laugh with him anymore.  They don’t roll on the ground with him.  What if Fred’s laugh contains the presence of God?  What if God is laughing through Fred to teach us that we need to be enjoying the small things?

I hope that Fred never loses the joy of bubbles.  I hope that his laughter will always come out in the simple things of life.  I hope that we can teach the kids to once again see the sacred in the mundane.  I want to learn to find God in everything.  I want to see him behind every corner.  I pray that you will see the wonder in simple things.

Next month I want to post a video of Fred’s laugh from the next “Happy Birthday”.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Happy Birthday Happiness



This is Gilbert.  He just came to In Step on Wednesday (the 10th). 

This morning, he came to me with big tears in his eyes and said in Swahili, “Mama Mary, I want to go home.” 

I knelt down and gave him a big hug and told him to just wait some time and that for now, In Step could be his home.

Today was Happy Birthday Day at In Step.  It is always loads of fun for the kids. Cake. Ice cream. Juice. Bubbles.

Philip, one of our other boys and Gilbert’s classmate, was with us when I was hugging Gilbert. I asked Philip to explain to Gilbert what happens on Happy Birthday Day.  Philip was so happy to fill Gilbert in; his face was animated, his arms flailing, his eyes wide with excitement.  The more excited Philip got, the more excited Gilbert got.

All the kids gathered in the veranda. I called all the April birthday kids up to the front.  We sang Happy Birthday and then we handed out the cake and ice cream.  I caught a glimpse of Gilbert at the table and he had the biggest smile on his face. Cake and ice cream.  I think today was his first time ever having ice cream. I could see as he took a bite/slurp of the ice cream, his face scrunch up from the cold of it.

After cake and ice cream and the juice, we went outside for bubbles. Baba Sean, Mama Carla, Madam 
Beth Ann and I went out and blew bubbles as the kids chased them around to pop. 

Gilbert was having a hay-day. He had the biggest smile on his face as he chased around with the other kids, trying to be the first to pop a bubble.  After bubbles were done, some of his classmates were showing me their somersaults, cartwheels and jumps. I would clap and cheer and say, “Good job so-and-so.”

Gilbert shouted in Swahili, “Mama Mary; look at me!”  So I looked and he did a cartwheel. I cheered and clapped for him.  Again, “Mama Mary, look at me!” More cheering and clapping.

I asked him, “Gilbert, are you happy now?” 

His answer, “Yes, Mama Mary; I am VERY happy.”

And off he ran to play. 

Nothing a little cake, ice cream and bubbles can’t help. 

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

A Whole Lot of Stuff...



Oh the weather outside...

Rainy season is in full effect here in Kenya.  It rains every day now.  Thankfully, the mornings are hot and sunny and by the afternoon, it’s gloomy, grey and cold with either a few sprinkles or a torrential downpour. 

I don’t mind the rainy season, well except for the mud part (which includes walking in the mud, getting the car stuck in the mud, mud covered feet and mud covered clothes) and the part where it takes a few days longer for your clothes to dry out on the line.  I don’t mind the “cool” days; it’s an excuse to light a fire, make a nice hot chocolate and wrap myself up in a warm, fuzzy blanket and curl up with my sweet husband on the couch.

A whole bunch of people...

This year, In Step has quite a few teams coming, which is exciting.  The kids always enjoy having visitors and being loved on.  It’s just that many more hands to hold, arms to be hugged with and fun times to share.

The last weekend of June, we have a team coming from Sean’s and my home church in Canada visiting for two weeks.  We can’t even describe how excited we are about them coming.  Like I’ve said before, it is always such a gift when family/friends from back “home” come and visit. It brings a little piece of Canada to us. Plus one of the team members will be staying for a few months. Yay Karin!

One hundred and twenty-five kids...

In Step picked up their 125th kid today. His name is Gilbert and he’s four years old.  We don’t know how long he will be at In Step for as it depends on his mother’s court case.  It is not a case of abandonment or abuse on him.  His mom wants her son back, once she is cleared of charges.  If she is not cleared of the charges, Gilbert will stay at In Step.

We had a massive flu bug go around In Step a few weeks back.  It was a messy flu bug to say the least.  It swept through all the age two and under babies first and then went to a few of the older kids and then stopped. A few of the adults got sick; it was a nasty bug.

Thankfully, everyone is healthy and the home seems to be back to normal now.  Well as normal as it can be with 125 kids running around.

(IM)Patience....

On a personal note, Sean and I are still (im)patiently waiting for a letter from the Ontario government.  I contacted the Canadian Embassy (as they’re the middle man for us) and they haven’t received anything yet.  To know that we’ve done pretty much all we can, it’s difficult to wait on one more thing.  One more thing and then we can hand in our paperwork.  Oh, the wait.

We have a bin of clothes of baby’s clothes; we have a high chair. We have a baby carrier; we have a playpen.  We are anxious to meet and hold our little one.  It takes a lot of patience though to not have a crib built, to buy things to decorate his/her room. 

We don’t know if we will have a him/her. We don’t know if he/she will be a six-week old, a six-month old or a sixteen-month old. We just don’t know so it makes it more difficult to “plan” but no matter what the gender or the age, he/she is going to be our sweet little child.  So won’t you continue to join us in prayer over this whole adoption process?

Prayer Requests:

Our adoption process
Finances for projects at In Step (dorm, veranda, etc.)
Health of all the kids, staff and volunteers.

Much Love,
Meredith





Monday, March 4, 2013

Kenyan Election Article




IEBC orders repeat polls in five wards

The electoral commission has ordered repeat polls in five of the 1,450 wards around the country due to irreparable errors on the ballot papers.

Chairman of the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) Isaack Hassan addressing journalists in Nairobi.  Photo/EMMA NZIOKAIndependent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) chairman Ahmed Issack Hassan said the commission had called off County Assembly ward elections in Nyabasi West and Goke Haraka Wards in Kuria East and Bunyala South, Gwasi North and Samburu North Wards.
“We have been forced to call off elections in these areas because of mix up in the ballot papers. In some cases we have missing names of candidates while in other cases names have been interchanged,” Mr Hassan revealed.
Speaking at a media briefing at the Bomas of Kenya Monday, Mr Hassan said the repeat polls would be conducted on March 11.
“In the interest of fairness and observant of its constitution mandate the commission has rescheduled elections in such county assembly wards to March 11, 2013. Our returning officers and presiding officers have been notified of this fact and candidate’s agents in respective wards notified,” Mr Hassan declared.
Mr Hassan also said that in some of the areas where the polls have been called off the erroneous ballot papers had missing political party symbols and  candidates' pictures.
The commission also expressed concerns over reports of failed poll books in several polling centres around the country.
Mr Hassan announced that where the machines had failed IEBC officials had been instructed to use printed versions of the poll books.
The IEBC boss called on Kenyans to keep vigil over the process to ensure fairness and integrity prevailed.
The printed versions of the poll books also had captured photographs of the voters in all the polling centres around the country.
"As of now the challenges posed by the poll book although predictable and largely addressed remain a matter of concern to the commission and necessary remedial measures have been taken and results so far indicate marked improvement in the performance of the devices."
Mr Hassan said that despite the technological problems the commission was still determined to deliver a free and fair elections and appealed to Kenyans not to worry about the few hitches reported.
The commission also announced the elections had experienced insecurity in some parts of Kenya citing incidences in Mandera where an explosion erupted.
In Garissa, he said fighting erupted in some parts while in Mombasa violence was reported in Changamwe constituency where armed thugs raided and violently killed five policemen.
“The response of security agencies has been commendable so far. The commission wishes to reiterate its appeal to the people of the country not to be cowed or intimidated by acts of lawlessness and wayward behaviour intended to cause despondency and disenfranchise the electorate,” said Mr Hassan.

Taken from: 
http://elections.nation.co.ke/news/IEBC-orders-repeat-polls-in-five-counties/-/1631868/1710766/-/ja3fuwz/-/index.html

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Kenyan Elections



The Kenyan elections are being held on March 4th; a week from tomorrow.  

As most of you are aware, the elections five years ago, didn’t go very well.  Thousands of people were killed and thousands more became displaced from their homes.

For the past few months, we had been hearing mixed messages about what people think will happen during these elections.  Some had said that Kenya learned its lesson from the previous elections while others had said, they have prepared themselves because of the previous elections. 

As the US embassy said, “Prepare for the worst; hope for the best.”

And that’s what we’ve done.

We have (almost) stocked up on necessary items as we don’t know if the transport of food and other items will be unable to get to nearby cities, let alone our little town of Kitale. 

Things have already started to heat up in areas around the country.  Here’s just an article on one incident (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/22/world/africa/neighbors-kill-neighbors-in-kenya-as-election-tensions-stir-age-old-grievances.html?smid=fb-share&_r=0):

Neighbors Kill Neighbors as Kenyan Vote Stirs Old Feuds

 MALINDI, Kenya — In a room by the stairs, Shukrani Malingi, a Pokomo farmer, writhed on a metal cot, the skin on his back burned off. Down the hall, at a safe distance, Rahema Hageyo, an Orma girl, stared blankly out of a window, a long scar above her thimble-like neck. She was nearly decapitated by a machete chop — and she is only 9 months old.
Ever since vicious ethnic clashes erupted between the Pokomo and Orma several months ago in a swampy, desolate part of Kenya, the Tawfiq Hospital has instituted a strict policy for the victims who are trundled in: Pokomos on one side, Ormas on the other. The longstanding rivalry, which both sides say has been inflamed by a governor’s race, has become so explosive that the two groups remain segregated even while receiving lifesaving care. When patients leave their rooms to use the restroom, they shuffle guardedly past one another in their bloodstained smocks, sometimes pushing creaky IV stands, not uttering a word.
“There are three reasons for this war,” said Elisha Bwora, a Pokomo elder. “Tribe, land and politics.”
Every five years or so, this stable and typically peaceful country, an oasis of development in a very poor and turbulent region, suffers a frightening transformation in which age-old grievances get stirred up, ethnically based militias are mobilized and neighbors start killing neighbors. The reason is elections, and another huge one — one of the most important in this country’s history and definitely the most complicated — is barreling this way.
In less than two weeks, Kenyans will line up by the millions to pick their leaders for the first time since a disastrous vote in 2007, which set off clashes that killed more than 1,000 people. The country has spent years agonizing over the wounds and has taken some steps to repair itself, most notably passing a new constitution. But justice has been elusive, politics remain ethnically tinged and leaders charged with crimes against humanity have a real chance of winning.
People here tend to vote in ethnic blocs, and during election time Kenyan politicians have a history of stoking these divisions and sometimes even financing murder sprees, according to court documents. This time around, the vitriolic speeches seem more restrained, but in some areas where violence erupted after the last vote the underlying message of us versus them is still abundantly clear.
Now, the country is asking a simple but urgent question: Will history repeat itself?
“This election brings out the worst in us,” read a column last week in The Daily Nation, Kenya’s biggest newspaper. “All the tribal prejudice, all ancient grudges and feuds, all real and imagined slights, all dislikes and hatreds, everything is out walking the streets like hordes of thirsty undeads looking for innocents to devour.”
As the election draws nearer, more alarm bells are ringing. Seven civilians were ambushed and killed in northeastern Kenya on Thursday in what was widely perceived to be a politically motivated attack. The day before, Kenya’s chief justice said that a notorious criminal group had threatened him with “dire consequences” if he ruled against a leading presidential contender. Farmers in the Rift Valley say that cattle rustling is increasing, and they accuse politicians of instigating the raids to stir up intercommunal strife.
Because Kenya is such a bellwether country on the continent, what happens here in the next few weeks may determine whether the years of tenuous power-sharing and political reconciliation — a model used after violently contested elections in Zimbabwe as well — have ultimately paid off.
“The rest of Africa wants to know whether it’s possible to learn from past elections and ensure violence doesn’t flare again,” said Phil Clark, a lecturer at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. “With five years’ warning, is it possible to address the causes of conflict and transfer power peacefully?”
Spurred on by Kenyan intellectuals and Western allies, Kenya has overhauled its judiciary, election commission and the nature of power itself. Dozens of new positions, like governorships and Senate seats, have been created to ensure that resources flow down more equitably to the grass roots, an attempt to weaken the winner-take-all system that lavished rewards and opportunities on some ethnic groups while relegating others to the sidelines.
But in places like the Tana River Delta, where the clashes between Pokomos and Ormas have already killed more than 200 people, the new emphasis on local government has translated into more spoils to fight over. And there are nearly 50 governor races coming up across Kenya, many of them quite heated.
“The Orma are trying to displace us so we can’t vote,” said Mr. Bwora, the Pokomo elder. “They have burned our villages, even our birth certificates. How are we supposed to vote then?”
The Orma accuse the Pokomos of doing precisely the same thing, right down to the burning of birth certificates.
On the national stage, two of Kenya’s most contentious politicians — Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto — are running on the same ticket for president and deputy president. Both have been charged by the International Criminal Court with crimes against humanity stemming from the violence last time. Mr. Kenyatta, a deputy prime minister and son of Kenya’s first president, is accused of financing death squads that moved house to house in early 2008, slaughtering opposition supporters and their families, including young children.
He could quite possibly be elected Kenya’s next president and find himself the first sitting head of state to commute back and forth from The Hague, potentially complicating the typically cozy relationship between Kenya and the West.
There is a growing perception among many members of Mr. Kenyatta’s ethnic group, the Kikuyu, and Mr. Ruto’s, the Kalenjin, that they must win this election in order to protect their leaders from being hauled off to a jail cell in Europe, which is raising tensions even higher.
Most analysts here feel this election will be turbulent, though some argue it will not be as bad as last time.
“Things are different,” said Maina Kiai, a prominent Kenyan human rights advocate. For instance, he noted, it was the Kikuyu and Kalenjin who fought one another in the Rift Valley in 2007 and 2008, but now many members of those two groups are on the same side because their leaders have formed a political alliance.
“There may be new arenas of violence,” Mr. Kiai said. “But I don’t think the extent of violence will be the same.”
There is also a keen awareness of how much there is to lose. The Kenyan economy flatlined after the turmoil of the last election. But now it has recovered mightily, spawning a dizzying number of new highways, schools, hospitals, malls, wine bars, frozen yogurt stores, even free samples in the supermarket — evidence of Kenya’s position on this continent as home to a deep and booming middle class.
Many nations in this region depend on Kenya, as demonstrated by the economic chaos caused downstream during the last election when mobs blockaded Kenya’s highways and sent fuel prices spiking as far away as the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Another safety valve may be the courts, which are now considered much more independent, one of the biggest achievements since the last election. Kenya’s new judiciary is led by a former political prisoner and widely respected legal mind, Willy Mutunga, the chief justice, who said he was threatened this week.
The hope is that if any election disputes arise between Mr. Kenyatta and the other front-runner, Raila Odinga, Kenya’s prime minister, who says he was cheated out of winning last time, Justice Mutunga will step in — before people on the streets do.
But the Tana River Delta remains a blaring red warning sign, and there have been suspicions that political figures are deliberately fanning old disputes, in this case over land.
One leading Pokomo politician, who was an assistant minister, was recently arrested and accused of incitement, though the case was soon dropped. The allegation echoed the International Criminal Court cases, which assert that behind the ground-level mayhem in 2007 and 2008 were political leaders who incited their followers to kill for political gain.
Up and down the crocodile-infested Tana River, Pokomo and Orma youth are now patrolling the banks with spears and rusty swords. The result is a grim, sun-blasted tableau of ethnically segregated but parallel villages mired in the same poverty, misery and fear.

So pray for us in Kenya. Pray for the politicians of Kenya. Pray for the people of Kenya. Pray for us serving here in Kenya.  No one wants to see a repeat of what happened five years ago. I know I sure don’t. 

I will continue to update as best as I can on how things are going on before, during and after the elections.

Much Love,
Meredith 

Friday, February 22, 2013

Visit to Canada



On Tuesday morning, Sean and I visited Canada. The trip was short; it was only for three hours. And then we left again.

Okay, we didn’t actually get on a plane and fly over to Canada for three hours.  We went to the Canadian Embassy in Nairobi.  Sean and I needed to go to the Embassy because we need a letter from the Province of Ontario and the Canadian Embassy stating that both of them agree that we are Canadian citizens and that they are in agreement for our adoption.  It’s a standardized letter but needed by the adoption agency.

As we drove toward the Embassy, there was a drop-off lane that had Canadian flags leading up to the entrance gate.  I turned to Sean and said, “I’m so excited to be on Canadian soil; even if it’s only for an hour.”

We went through a bunch of security; we had to turn in our cell phones.  We saw the tennis courts and basketball courts (but didn’t see the pool).  I don’t think these luxuries are available for any Canadian who just strolls off the street; I assume it’s for the staff of the Embassy.  Bummer.

We walked to one department of Embassy and were quickly told to go to another department which lead to more security to go through.  When we reached the immigration side, we sat down and waited our turn.  We looked around at the people waiting their turn as well.  We were still the minorities. In the three hours we were there, we only saw two other white people. 

We then finished with immigration and went back to the other department to finish up with them.  As we sat in the comfy chairs, it was so comforting and cool to see the Canadian flag displayed everywhere. It was nice to read books about our Canadian history. It was great to see pictures on the wall of the Rockies, even a York University poster. 

It made me miss Canada a little bit but helped with a bit of the “homesickness” that I’m feeling.  You can take the girl out of Canada but you can’t take Canada out of the girl.  I’ll always have a soft spot and love for Canada.

It’s always nice to have family/friends come from Canada.  Although we can’t go there, when people come and visit, it brings a bit of “home” to us.  And usually family/friends are awesome to bring us things from Canada that we can’t get here or really miss from there. 

We currently have two friends here in Kitale from our church back in Newmarket; they are here through a different ministry but we get to see them.   We have a team from our church visiting us at In Step for two weeks in July.  And one of the team members is staying for three months.  Sean’s mom is looking at coming in the fall of this year too for a visit and hopefully to hold her grandbaby for the first time!

We don’t know when our REAL next visit to Canada will be. Sean and I looked at coming to Canada for a visit in April but just don’t see it being a financially responsible move right now, especially with the adoption stuff going on, among other things.  But God has been so faithful to us; I’m learning to worry less and trust more. J

So if anyone wants to plan a trip to Kenya to visit us, come on over!  We have the room for you.

Much Love,
Meredith

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