I hate saying goodbye – who knows when we’ll
be back, and we can’t exactly pop over if we want to see each other!
The
conference was at a Christian Training Centre.
The whole event had similarities with a UK Christian
leaders’ conference. The rooms were basic but pleasant, the grounds peaceful
and attractive, meals were communal affairs, there was too much food, including
snacks during breaks, we worked very hard.
The differences included monkeys in the
garden, cold showers, the food itself (e.g. matooke…boiled, mashed plantains
[green bananas], and goat stew), hot milk for cups of tea, mosquito nets, huge
millipedes, and gorgeous flowers and trees.
It was an
oasis outside the hectic noise and madness of Kampala. Travelling to the
airport, it was a jolt to be back amongst crazy roadside markets, gangs of
motorbike boda boys, a poor slum area, an accident, and barefoot people at the
side of the Kampala to Entebbe expressway. (Expressway is a joke – the speed
limit is 30K/hr!).
I’m finding
it quite hard to write tonight. I don’t want to trivialise or patronise. I don’t
want my reflection to be about me, but about the work we’ve seen, the way the
staff here lay down their lives for vulnerable children.
It was a privilege to
work with them at the conference and see their passion and concern. They
achieve so much with so little. They’re not afraid to acknowledge mistakes, and
learn from them. They want to see children lifted out of extreme poverty, and
families able to support themselves.
They want to find sustainable solutions to
generate income from within Uganda so they don’t have to be so dependent on UK
donors – in some areas, sponsor numbers
have reduced significantly.
We need to
review our own contributions – not just monetary. We need to remember the faces of the sets of
twins and how children’s lives can be changed. Marginalised and isolated
children given love and hope. Hungry children being fed. Uneducated children going to school,
completing vocational training, being self-sufficient. I suspect there’ll be
more blogs over the coming weeks as we digest our experiences. Two things I’m certain of – Uganda and her
people still hold a part of my heart, and this time I have to remember for
longer.