Saturday, September 28, 2013

SEPTEMBER 22, 2013  UPDATE

It’s another Sunday morning and that always seems to be the time I find best for a letter. But it’s been a long overdue letter this time. Things are going well here in Kowak village and it’s good to have Vikki mama back after her 10 weeks of home leave. I think she is also happy to be back to a more comfortable life style. We got her house painted inside while she was gone and I think she is happy with that. I am relieved to have her back as I have been doing her data entry job at the HIV center (CTC) while she was gone. I only spent a few hours a week there but, along with my other activities, it was more than enough.

We had a big day yesterday with the blessing of the new convent at the secondary school. The bishop was scheduled to do that but cancelled at the last minute due to an emergency meeting. So Fr Conard, being the school manager, filled in and all went well. We had about 20 sisters (10 visiting) and 7 priests (4 visiting) and a few brothers along with the 20 teaching staff and 470 students. Most people were sitting outside the small chapel, under the tarplins, like they do for our graduations. Fortunately it was a nice sunny morning and not too hot; just a little warm in the chapel due to all the body heat. The 2 hour service was followed by a little entertainment by each class and a few speeches by Fr Conard, the mother general of the Adorations sisters, the Head Girl and the Second Master. That was all followed by a short lunch for the visitors. This has been a 4 ½ month construction project so we are all pleased it is finished. There will be a little party for the 45 workers that helped the most in the construction later this week. I had to select who worked them most of the 80 some we have used off and on, since I pay the weekly salaries and have the records.

School opened a week ago after a 10 day mid-term break. Actually only half the students went home as Form II and Form IV stayed to study and attend refresher classes in preparation for their big national exams in a few weeks. It’s hard to believe that school will be finished for this year in a couple months (Dec 1). I still have a lot of work to do before I head home for the winter (Nov 1). Mainly I need to finish training the new sister on how to do the bursar job (accountant) and to prepare the budget for next year, which will determine the school fees. Fortunately Sr Marietta is young, intelligent and energetic so things are going fine with her these last 6 weeks. She just finished her accounting degree and has 5 years experience with Swahili which is a big help.

My oldest son Adam is coming to visit me for the month of October so that is exciting and will also keep me busy. I will take the bus to Nairobi this week-end to meet him and ride back with him. I also need to get more dental work done which was started a week ago in Nairobi. Adam is an electrician and I hope to have him working with our electrician along with many other little projects and, hopefully, a day in the Serengeti Park which is just 2 hours away. I am now living in a little two bedroom house next to the soccer field and the church so it is very comfortable and plenty of room for the two of us. I just moved here a few weeks ago, since we had to make room in the rectory for the new priest and a visiting seminarian. I had been living there the last 7 years, so this is a nice change. I still eat all my meals there, but do my own wash here or hire someone.

I’ve enjoyed the company of one of the university students that I sponsor for the last few months. Bhoke has been working here at our school library and store since mid-July. She has one year of school remaining and half of that is a “field” work experience in Dar es Salaam. So she will be departing next week-end. She has enjoyed her time here and made many new friends with the students. She will be missed. She has been teaching her young sister on week-ends in hopes of getting her to score well on the Form I entrance exam which will be taken in about a month by her and about 700 others from around the country. She will have a very difficult time scoring above the 50% cut-off due to her poor local public education.  However, her sister, Teddy, had the same primary school education and did well enough to get in and graduate division 2 (B aver) just 2 years ago. Teddy starts university in October and I will continue to sponsor her, but we are hoping she gets the student loan she applied for. Another local girl that I sponsored this year failed the first term due to her poor primary school education, which was very sad but she was the bottom of 150 classmates. Another one I sponsor had to repeat Form I last year but is doing fine now in Form II. We have 14 repeating Form I now, for the same reason.

Tanzania has many challenges but one of the biggest is their poor education system. There are three teaching certificates.  After Form IV (high school) and “A” level (like a community college) you they can get a teaching certificate at a 2 year Teachers Training College (TTC) and teach in a primary school. Or you can get a “diploma” at the same TTC and teach at a secondary school. Or after A level you can get a degree at a university and then teach at an A level school.  The problem is that these teachers have a very poor primary and secondary education at local government schools and know very little English which is what all the exams are in. So they are supposed to be teaching in English, but few of the secondary students know much English. So everyone scores less than 50% on the national exams and it gets worst every year. It’s been a very big political issue here for tyears and it gets bigger every year as the students score poorer every year.

On a brighter note, I’m anxiously awaiting the arrival of my third grandchild, Ryan Scott. I think his due date is about Oct 21st, so it will not be long. It seems my son Kyle has already started posted pictures of him on the icloud from the ultrasounds, but I have not been able to access them yet. That will be a fun visit when I get down to Texas before Thanksgiving.  I think they are planning to go to Atlanta to visit Chrystal’s parents that week, so I need to get there soon and still see some doctors before that in Kansas as well. So Nov will be a bit of a rush. But I’ll see them again in Kansas for Christmas so that will be great.

I suppose many of you have heard of the bombing of the Westlands Mall in Nairobi last night about 6 pm. That is a couple kilometers from the Maryknoll Society house where I stay and just a couple blocks from the Sarit Centre where many Maryknollers shop and visit doctors and dentists. In fact my dentist is at the Sarit Centre and I was just there a few days ago. I am headed back to that dentist this Saturday  so I suspect the traffic will be terrible with increased police presence in that area. Adam is scheduled to arrive Saturday evening, so it may be a little more hectic at the airport also, esp. after dark. He will be traveling by taxi and should be fine. I will keep the family posted if anything changes there.

I received a nice email by surprise a week ago from an old friend in England. His two sons are about Adam and Kyle’s ages and one of them (Steve) is working in the US and will be traveling by motorcycle from the East Coast at the end of the month. We are hoping he will arrange to stop in Kansas City for a few days and meet my family. I have never met either boy so I am disappointed I will not get this chance. I hope those plans come together and the family gets to meet him. Adam and his family were just in KC a few days ago on a driving vacation around the country. I suspect they had a great time visiting family. But after 4 weeks in a car I suspect they are all glad to be back at grandma’s house in Texas.  


AUGUST 4, 2013 UPDATE
Sunday morning and time for mass (8 am), but I’ll skip this one since I’m driving Fr Jim to the next one at 11 am. I’ll attend that one with Jim and our new seminarian. Fr Jim still falls asleep at the wheel if it’s more than a 20 minute drive; esp. late in the morning. His new breathing machine has been working well, but he still gets tired in late morning and takes a nap if possible; sometimes one in the afternoon after lunch.
             We bought all the new pipe (7 rolls) and installed one section at the bottom of the hill. Now all is working well, Thank God. We will probably never get compensation for the thin wall pipe or the labour. We use the mission pump several days a week to fill the school tank, as the #3 generator is still not repaired. We cannot find the part needed. Even if we could repair it, the water source is drying up and can only pump a few minutes. It appears to be due to the dam break last year near there. Lameck the MP (member of parliment), brought in a very large bulldozer last week to make dam repairs but it was still too wet to get where it needed to. We had two nice rains (2” and 1”) about a week apart so this may be the start of a new rainy season, but it seems too soon.
             Fr Jim and his vicar attended the 3rd and final ordination of new priests this week. In addition to announcing the new priest at Kowak the bishop made a point to say the Fr Matungwa would continue living at Kowak.  Jim asked Fr Val about that later and Val said that was “just words” and he still plans to move when his new house is ready in late Sept.  Jim does not expect that and wants me to move soon to Alex’s house to make room for the new priest before the 18th. I hate to make two moves but looks like I need to and see what develops.
            I met a former Form IV student, Milka, this week that I had sponsored during her last two years here. She asked for money to attend an A level school (Jr College) in Tabora. I agreed, so will send that via mpesa this week. Her mother died 2 years ago and her new mother refused to finance her. At least it is a gov ernemt school, so $300 for a year including pocket money is cheap, she says.
             The Adoration Sisters are all well now, but that varies from week to week. Two of the new ones have had their first cases of malaria. I worked with Bhoke and Sr Theresa in the duka this week to get it better organized, so we can inventory more easily. That will be a monthly thing along with the cash count at the school and parish. Bhoke had some good ideas and I think we will be impressed. I am getting the school store well stocked now and sales are increasing. That may not last as the student pocket money is depleted. The new head mistress, Sr Tessena, came to inspect and was shocked at the condition of the small denomiation notes. She wants me to take them back to the bank and get new ones. I laughed and said we are lucky to have small notes in any condition. These are normal for Tanzania. I thought she had been here for several years. She must have lead a sheltered life. She has asked all the employees to return all the school keys to my office or hers at the end of each day and pick them up the next morning. I just installed a key panel on the back of the bursar office door with names of each employee to allow us to get the keys more easily and see which are missing.
            No new construction projects now except for a large, rock lined drainage ditch in front of the school mango tree near my office. It will be done Monday. The convent is about a month away from completion, so the 4 new sisters are all living in the head mistress’s house. We will open the new children’s ward after the new chairs, desks and kabati are built. Fr Jim is using a craftsman in Utegi to do that.  Maybe it will be ready in two weeks. We had the hospital four wheel drive Toyota rebuilt this week and expect it back tomorrow. Then we will have the hospital pickup motor rebuilt. 
            Mass is almost over so I better get ready to hit the road. I’ll be going to Musoma tomorrow for more cash, to pay bills and get more school store supplies. I also need to go into the CTC today or tomorrow and finish entering 6 new patients as I did not get to do that on Friday. 

Tom in Kowak
AUGUST 2, 2013 UPDATE
Exciting news for us yesterday here at Kowak Mission. But first --Happy First Friday for those of you that celebrate that. That is pretty big here and keeps our two priests busy. Soon I will be able to say three priests, because the bishop announced yesterday that, Item 1 : we are getting one of the newly ordained priests, Augustino, on Aug 18th. That is really big news for us. It also means I may be moving next door so the three priests can live together. Item 2: I got more help this week at the bursar office at the secondary school. A young Indian sister, Sr Marietta, arrived Monday and has hit the ground running. She has some training in accountancy and knows Swahili well as she has been in Tanzania 5 years. Item 3: we got a young seminarian, Francis, yesterday and he will be living with us for the next two months. Item 4: the District Medical Officer (DMO) has been transferred and a new one will arrive soon. He has stolen thousands of the dollars in government funds from us over the last two years and he finally got caught and transferred and the money was refunded. Item 5: my nephew, Braden, and his wife, Shanna, are expecting their first child. I just got that news on email today and this will be sister Peggy’s first grandchild. Of course I am expecting a new grandchild (Ryan) in October (Kyle and Chrystal), so this is a really, really big year for our family.
One other minor item but big here is the arrival of our new diesel generator for the school. We have been waiting for the this for three years and finally got the money to get an 18 kw Lister from the UK. It will be installed over the new few weeks. Another big item here last week-end was the baptism of 99 children and students. About 10 of these were from Kowak Girls Secondary and another 12 received first communion from the school. We hope to open the beautiful new children’s ward in a few weeks (54 beds). We are having furniture and cabinets made first. The new beds arrived and are now in place. We got a new Indian sister a few weeks ago to work at the hospital as an x-ray technician and pharmacist, so this has really been a big help. We are expecting another sister in January. That will make 6 sisters at the hospital and 5 at the school.
I have one of my sponsored University students working here, Bhoke, at the school as a librarian and girl Friday. She has been a big help and it is nice to finally get to know her. I am also encouraging her to teacher her young sister, Sophia, English so she can apply here next year in Form I (freshman). We had a very nice visit from 2 German University students last week that I met in town a few weeks ago. They are volunteering at a handicap children’s school in Musoma for a few months. They monitored a few classes and got the usual tour of everything. They were very pleasant.
I think I’ll make this one short and sweet, so good night.

Tom in Kowak
JULY 31, 2013 UPDATE
We are starting to get some rain again and everyone is pleased. The last rainy season ended in mid May, so it’s a little early but welcomed, if it is the start of another season. Of course the road are our hill will be very slippery as no one has delivered any clay soil (morem) to smooth things our and shed the water better. Anyway we had one heavy storm (lightning and 2 inch rain) 2 weeks ago and another nice shower last night, so we shall see. The lightning really did some damage to electrical fixtures including lights and a TV and the hospital X ray machine and both well water pumps. We are waiting for a technician from Nairobi who should arrive today.    
The parts for these repairs was not cheap, but part of life with electricity. Our electrician had to travel 4 hours by bus to Mwanza to find what we needed.  He still cannot find the part we need to repair our new generator which failed after 10 hours of operation and required rewinding the generator. We are still not sure what caused that, but no one warranties anything here you hope these dealer is honest and sells you a good machine. In this case it may have been a used machine, but no way to know.
Our new poly pipe (1 1/2inch plastic) is working well now and no more daily leaks due to the thicker wall. Our new large generator for the school arrived last night. It should be a little more reliable as it was built in the UK and cost a bundle ($15,000). Now we need to unload it from our lorry. They said it took 10 people to load it yesterday in Mwanza. We also got 50 boxes of chocolate cookies and a ton on meds for the hospital. Our driver finally arrived in the rain at 9 pm. He left here at 5 am that morning so he was exhausted.
Today is pay day at the school and the mission, so I will be busy. Fortunately our newest India sister, Sr Marietta, arrived Monday so I had started training her yesterday. She should be a big help today. When I told her I was going home for 5 months in November she about went into shock. She is young, so this really too much job for her just yet. It should be interesting. We now have 4 new sisters in the school and 2 more coming later this year and January from India. Out next project is to change most of the 200+ padlocks around the school. That starts tomorrow. Then we need to start keeping inventory in the school store to see why we are not making any profit. We have big income ($100/day +) but never have any money left after expenses. It goes on and on with need-to-do projects. Well it’s 8 am so I need to get to work.

Tom in Kowak
JULY 19, 2013 UPDATE

I am embarrassed; my apologies for the long delay in updating this Blog. I probably had the time to do it the 5 weeks that school was closed on June, but now that it is open and Vikki is on home leave, all hell has broken loose. Somehow I kinda like it, cause there is plenty of work and never enough time. I never have to watch the clock, except to see how late I am for something.

Yesterday I spent 4 hours on data entry at the HIV center (CTC), putting in the statistics for 84 children under 15 yrs that came in on Wednesday. That is so sad to even think about 3 and 4 yrs old kids and young teenagers with AIDS from their mother; as if they did not have enough hardship with the constant threat of malaria and other common diseases of this poverty ridden area. And most of the mothers probably got it from the bad conduct of their husbands. What a culture. I think we have a lot to learn from them on how to handle adversity. How they can stand in a line at the bank for 2 hours to make a deposit for school fees to a distant relative is beyond me.

Speaking of bank deposits. When school opened (2nd term) I had 450 girls with cash for pocket money and deposit slips to handle in 5 hours (2pm to 7pm). Since then we have been going thru the bank statement to confirm that they are all real deposits and getting them deducted from their school fee debt. Most only pay 50% every 2 months. Thank God I have a new sister, just off the boat from India, helping me. We have to issue the new debt list next week and file the 6 month report for income taxes and make salary deposits (40 employee), so it will be another crazy week.

Our new generator (15 kw) is due to arrive next week from Nairobi and I cannot pay for it until one of our new sisters becomes a signatory on our account. The new convent construction is coming along but we have another 3 weeks of hard work. Of course I have to be available to supply cash for supplies and salaries at the end of each week. Today was payday for 25 workers, plus a few at the school. I picked up 60 boxes of cookies on the way to the bank and then stopped at the electric company to pay the hospital, school and mission bills (about 80 of them). Then I had to get cash for Fr Conard and talk to the bank manager on how to transfer 23 million shillings to a bank in Mwanza for our new generator.  We hoped to pick up the 6 windows being fabricated for the convent but they were not ready. We I got back I had to take pictures and print passport pictures for 26 seniors so they can get their certificates tomorrow for the environmental club.

I hope this finds you all well and enjoying an active life.

Tom in Kowak

Saturday, April 6, 2013

EASTER WEEK IN TANZANIA


EASTER WEEK IN TANZANIA ..March 5, 2013
            I’m now in Nairobi, Kenya but departing tomorrow (Sunday) for home (Kowak). Vikki and I brought our Utah volunteers (Henry and Jeanne) up to catch their plane on Wednesday. It was the trip from hell (13 hrs on the road and 2 hrs in the dark and rain). Not fun. When we arrived at the border customs would not allow us to bring the RAV4 across due to lack of registration papers. So we had to wait another hour for our head master to bring the school pickup. We could not get car insurance for Kenya a week early (very strange) so had to get it at the border (another delay and cost). After two hours on the road the car over-heated due to a bad radiator cap. We hired someone to look for another cap that would fit our car and after 2 hours we were back on the road. It started raining and we had all our luggage under an old tarpaulin in the truck bed. We finally found a small hardware store to buy a plastic sheet to go under the tarp. Things still got wet. We reached the steep escarpment outside of Nairobi about 10 minutes after dark (7 pm) and the rain came down harder. We followed larger lorries up the escarpment as it was impossible to pass and nearly impossible to see the side of the road due to lack on painted lines. We finally made it to the Maryknoll Society House about 8:45 pm and got a quick left-over dinner that we scarfed down. What a day; it is normally an 8 hours drive.
            Last week Vikki and I took Henry and Jeanne to the Serengeti Park where they hired a driver for two days. Henry loves photography so they spent one night camping in the park and two nights just outside at the West gate in a little cabin. Vikki had never been in the park so after we dropped off Henry and Jeanne we drove into the park for a couple hours before heading back to Kowak (2 hr drive). We saw quite a few animals but it was not the migration season. Still it is fun any time of year and it has been over a year since my last visit. We got some good photo’s and Henry said he really got some nice ones.
            A few days later I met Henry and Jeanne in Musoma, as they caught the bus back part way. Henry and I then picked up Liz Mach, our long time Maryknoll Lay Missioner. We three all headed south for a few days camping with the Watatulu tribe and Fr Dan Ohmann in the Tabora Region. Jeanne went back to Kowak. I try to do this each year but missed it last year. We spent the first night with the Maryknoll priests in Mwanza and had a nice Indian dinner at our favorite hotel with 11 of the local Maryknoll Lay Missioners. It was great to see them again. In Tabora we had a great time despite the occasional rains each evening (this is the rainy season all over). We did get pretty wet one evening and Henry slept the last few hours in the truck. Fortunately it was sunny and dry during the day, until the Monday of our departure. We hit high water levels on our normal route so took another longer route that we were able to manage despite several hours of mud and some dry paths (no roads) until 10 am. We had departed our village (Chagana) at 6 am (1 hr before sunrise) so we had to pack up the tents in the rain. Fr Dan (now 86 yrs) had 10 school kids in the back of his truck and I had 6 adults including the driver (me).
            This was Henry’s first trip to this remote area and we met Emmy, a young volunteer (31 yrs) there from Slovakia who has been teaching at a local kindergarten the last 3 yrs. This was also her first time in this area and they both really enjoyed it. We arrived Holy Thursday and had services each day and visited lots of locals during the day to get pictures and see their simple life style. It is like going back to visit the Native Americans 150 years ago. They all seemed very happy with nothing. Besides our 10 school kids we had many of their parents that Dan had brought in and us 5 wazungu (whites). By the time  Easter rolled around we had a total of about 70 people for Easter dinner (1 goat and 1 chicken). We visited a local family who was preparing for a large wedding feast on Good Friday afternoon so there we about 50 people there waiting for the bride and groom to arrive. We convinced them they needed pictures taken, of course. We just got back in time for a late “way-of-the-cross’.  We were all invited to a nice dinner at the local Pentecostal church Saturday afternoon. The pastor was out making rounds but his wife was there to greet us. She has been living there in the bush since 1993. She said they had just got married then and were living in a tent. It got pretty scary at night with the lions, elephants and hyena’s roaming around.  She is of the local tribe so and is charming and smart. Back at our camp we had the 8 pm Holy Saturday mass (2 hr). Then we had a big dance with the locals that lasted until 3 am I heard. Emmy stayed up for that. Most of us were in bed by midnight. There were a lot of young mothers there, each with a baby under 10 months on her back and bobbing up and down to the singing. The men danced on one side facing the women on the other and the teenagers in the middle. What fun. We recorded the singing.
            I hope this finds you all well and ready for the Easter Season. Tom in East Africa     

WEEK THREE IN KOWAK,  17 March, Saint Patrick’s Day
It’s Sunday morning and I’m driving Fr Conard to his to masses at the local parish churches. The first mass starts in a few minutes so I’m in the car until it starts. I’ll just skip the second and type in the car if my battery holds out. He had a difficult week at the hospital. First our young doctor resigned without any suggestions that he would not renew his 1st one year contract. We really don’t know why yet. His wife and child live 4 hours south in Mwanza so that may be a factor, of course, but he would never admit a women has influence over him. Anyway the new AMO (doctor’s assistant) is doing very well and is a better surgeon, so that helps. He just retired and moved here a few months ago.
A young nurse was caught stealing meds one night this week and was fired. This upset several of the medical staff, including the doctor, and a new CO (clinical officer). The other CO supported the sisters (administrators) and said all the others are stealing meds also instead of giving them to the patients on the night shift, so they don’t want any procedures to change their source of extra income. Anyway, a few days later the doctor resigned and then Fr Conard and Sr Teresa got a call the next day from the DMO (district medical officer) to come to a meeting at his office. He basically said if the young doctor was not given full administrative control of the hospital he would have it demoted to a Health Clinic and we would loose any funds given by the federal government so expansion and training (basket fund). He is still mad because he had to return the $6,000 of basket fund he stole from us last year in a fake audit. So yesterday I drove Fr Conard and Sr Teresa into Musoma to meet with the bishop, who owns the hospital, and his lawyer and the human resources manager. The meeting went well and the sister felt much better, with hope that they would be able to stay and not return to Indian.
While they were in their meeting I did some shopping for the mission and school (food and supplies) and had lunch with the Maryknoll Lay Missioners who were all working on the new home of our oldest missioner, Liz Mach. She works for the bishop now so wanted to move closer to the office. The three new lay missioners finish language school on Holy Thursday and head to Mwanza so it was good to see them again before they depart this area. Vikki also came in with our head master. She bought a TV and dish so was in a hurry to get home and get it installed. I bought 40 seedling fruit trees ((35 cents each) for the school as part of the project of our Utah volunteer Henry. He has an area cleared and fence post up near the school pig pen. So they will start running barbed wire Monday and getting the seedlings in the ground. Henry took a group of 20 students from the environmental club to the Agro Forestry nursery in Musoma last Friday and they all enjoyed it very much. They then had lunch on the beach of Lake Victoria and a few had to jump in, uniforms and all. 

WEEK TWO IN KOWAK March 12, 2013
            Well it’s been a busy few days. This is Tuesday night. The bishop was here today visiting with the Indian sisters from Nairobi and our pastor and the Head Master (Elias) of the Kowak Girls’ Secondary. These are exciting times for the school. The Indian sisters will take over the school in June and 4 new sisters will be brought in. Alex will remain as the school bursar (accountant) and Elias will be demoted to Second Master and teacher, which he prefers after three years in administration. The new Head Mistress is currently a Head Mistress at Mafinga Girls’ Secondary in central Tanzania, which is the second ranked school of the 4400 secondary schools in the country. She will bring a personal secretary with her and two teaching nuns, with more to come in the future. Our current Tanzanian teachers (20) are a little nervous. The two new teaching nuns are science teachers and the new Head Mistress will also be teaching (math and physics).
            Yesterday I took my friend Vikki to the border to get another 1 year visitors visa since her residence permit has not yet been approved after a year of waiting. The delay has been due to lost papers by the immigration people in Dar es Salaam and she had all the documents to show that. She was finally able to talk them into giving her a residence permit for two years so we were very excited about that and it was a big relief after worrying about getting another visitors visa back to back. While at the border I met two former Kowak graduates who had just finished junior college at other schools. It was great to see them again. They will start University in the Fall. Then I met another one who was home in her village near Kowak as we were driving home. She is in her senior year at University. He father is on our school board so I had just stopped to say hi to him when I learned she was home. Her two older and younger sisters also attended Kowak so I know them well also.
            Our electrician was finally able to repair the generator which runs the new well water pump so we are finally getting some water in the school tanks after 3 weeks of rationing using the old smaller pump which requires electrical power from the grid. That has only been available at nights for the last 10 days. So that repair just occurred yesterday and was well worth celebrating. We will not have to close the school due to lack of water.
                      

            I had a fun Sunday with the village kids flying kites I brought last year, and then later in the day we had a fun game of softball with my experienced team from last year (now seniors). The sophomores watched us play Saturday and were begging to learn the game, so we had our first practice session after the seniors game on Sunday. The new girls did very well so I may need to practices several days a week after classes, to get them up to speed.
            The new doctors office building and out-houses are just about finished. The doors and windows of the office were just finished and the paint and tile finished today. So, most of the construction will be finished until more money comes in for more projects. We had a near disaster today when our security guard at the hospital started the generator and left the oil cap off. It blew oil all over the place so he shut it down and put the cap back so he would not get caught. Then he claimed he did not know where the oil came from. While we were waiting for our mechanic to figure out the problem the surgery theatre lost power and had to finish a caesarian in the dark. Fortunately it was still day light so they were able to finish with low light. An hour later the mechanic figured out what had happened. So, we plan to buy a smaller generator to mount just outside the theatre for lights and instruments. Never a dull moment here, as usual.   Tom  in Kowak 

WEEK ONE IN KOWAK


WEEK ONE IN KOWAK , March 8, 2013
It’s Friday evening and it was an enjoyable and slow week here in Kowak village. Our American visitor, Lora, from Duke Univ had an enjoyable visit and departed yesterday. She hopes to return in June with a new research student to help implement a 2 month evaluation of a little catsup-like envelope meds for HIV positive babies. We are looking forward to her return and her student. This will be the first trip for this student to Africa so this will be quit an experience for her. Lora will be going home in August to get married and attend grad school.
            I assisted our Utah volunteer, Henry, in getting his first fence erected for his little tree seedling garden to keep our cows, goats and sheep out. He and I and his wife attended the debate club practice competition yesterday and found it interesting and inspiring in some ways. They were debating the advantages of women-only teachers in a girl’s boarding school. We are about 80% male teachers. I then attended one of Henry’s computer training classes which is open to anyone who wants to practice after normal class hours. He usually gets at least 20 and sometimes 50 or 60 girls every afternoon. I think he enjoys it also. His wife Jeanne is teaching freshman English plus extra sessions after class for the weaker students. I am sponsoring one of them and she is really weak so I suspect she will be repeating Form I if she does not pick it up pretty quickly. That is the disadvantage of sponsoring the village students who come from really poor primary schools. I had one last year who had to repeat but they say she is doing well this year in Form II. 
            I saw one of my other sponsored students several times this week and gave her a gift for completing “A” level (Junior college) last month. She is a local village girl and came to our hospital for treatment. They found that she may have chronic typhoid and is now getting injections every 8 hours. It’s a wonder she was able to finish her exams before she arrived. I haven’t seen the medical bill yet but at least she has friends she can stay with nearby. The hospital is getting more popular every year because of it’s good medical staff and nice facilities and lack of corruption; unlike the other hospitals all over TZ. We have some young doctors that are talented and really dedicated as are the nurses and Indian sisters. The new children’s ward is going up quickly and should be completed by July. That will add another 54 beds to the 120 we have now.  The new doctor’s offices (OPD) will also be completed about the same time.
            We had 2 visitors from Baylor University Medical School in Mwanza today testing for HIV by pricking the finger tips of 99 babies at the CTC (HIV) treatment center, so that was a busy place today. The mothers were able to get the results within one hour so they were very pleased. The visitors just departed a few minutes ago and seemed very pleased with the good turnout. 
            It rained all night so it looks like the rainy season is right on schedule. Everyone was very pleased, even thought we also got some light showers later in the afternoon. Anyway that postponed our plans for removing the well water pump #3 until tomorrow. Apparently something is jammed so it has to be removed and inspected. Fortunately it is only 60 meters down so relatively shallow. I sure hope it is not damaged. It is an expensive German pump (Grundfos) like those in our other two wells (boreholes is the British term they use here).
            Fr Conard has malaria again so he has not been feeling well the last two days. He had to miss two meetings in Musoma yesterday and today but hates to go to those anyway. We are hoping he is healthy for the big meeting Tuesday when the bishop comes to sign contracts for changing the administration of the secondary school. He plans to give it to the Indian sisters that are currently running the hospital (Sister of Adoration).  The teachers are very nervous about this big change so I hope we don’t loose any until they give them a chance to get started (July). I’m very pleased with this change and anxious to see what changes they will be making. The other school they administer in TZ was 2nd in the National exams for Form IV. We were 55th of 4400 schools.
            The power just went out 5 minutes ago. Fr Conard just came in to inform me that a young woman was just being wheeled in for a caesarian about 15 minutes ago, so they had to quickly start the generator. I’m glad we got it fixed this week. 

Tom in Kowak

BACK IN TANZANIA


BACK IN TANZANIA,   March 4, 2013  --Kenya Election Day
            I arrived back in Tanzania Friday afternoon (Mar 1) on schedule after 19 hrs in the air and 19 hrs waiting in airports. That evening I was pleased to meet the new Maryknoll Lay Missioners who were all in Mwanza for the week. Three had just come down from the Musoma language school for their mid-term break. The other 4 new ones finished language school last Spring and now all reside in Mwanza, which is a 4 hr drive south on the south shore of Lake Victoria. I also met our two oldest missioners, Liz and Joanne, our 2 Maryknoll sisters, 2 Maryknoll priests and 2 Maryknoll brothers. They had gathered there at the Mabatini parish for a Lenten reflection Friday evening.  I then went to dinner at a nice restaurant on the lake with the lay missioners so I could get to know them a little better. What a nice way to spend my first day back.
            The next day I was picked up by one of our Indian sisters, Teresa, from Kowak Hospital and her driver who had been in town buying drugs for the hospital. The ambulance was packed with drugs so we were barely able to squeeze my 4 bags in. We arrived back in Kowak in time for dinner, thanks to no mechanical problems. I was greeted by many who recognized me now after 7 yrs at the mission. That is always a nice feeling to see a smile on their faces, esp. the kids. This is the warmest time of year (85F) here, so it is still sinking in after leaving some pretty cool and white conditions in Kansas City. I was especially pleased to see our lay volunteer Vikki again, who has been “holding down the fort” while I’ve been on home leave, the last 4 months. I was glad to finally meet the two short term volunteers, Jean and Henry from Utah, who arrived in January and will be here one more month.
            The next day, Sunday, my house mate, Fr Conard had scheduled a nice welcome home party that evening, so it was a great time to say hi to everyone again and enjoy some great food and drink. We even had a special American guest who arrived that afternoon from the Arusha area near Kilimanjaro. She, Lora, is a young Biomedical engineer working in Arusha for Duke University. She had come to see if our hospital outreach program might fit their qualifications for medical equipment assistance in a new project to supply HIV medication to new babies at the very earliest stages. She will be with us for about 4 days and seems to like what she has seen so far. She has been in Tanzania 4 yrs, so has good Swahili skills and traveled alone by bus after flying to Mwanza; impressive.
            Today I delivered the three microscopes and 4 cameras to the secondary school and greeted many of the girls that I have come to know pretty well. They all told me how fat I have become at home. That is a complement hear, but somehow I did not feel that good about it. I will give the 20 girls on our softball teams their gifts later this week and give the 25 teachers and staff the little gifts I brought them tomorrow at breakfast tea. I saw some of them at chai today. I brought the men neck ties and the women little wrist watches. Henry showed me his new seedling tree project which is doing very well. I hope to attend one of Jeane’s English classes for the 120 freshman girls. I did talk to our regular English teacher and he said she is really giving him good suggestions for teaching techniques. We have a serious water problem which I hope to assist with in the coming days but it is due to the failure of electrical equipment on one of our two water well pumps, so I’m not sure how much I can do. This is our main pump because it is run by a generator and is not susceptible to the frequent electrical power outages of the other water well. They have had a lot of outages recently because of damages to a large gas turbine generator in Dar es Salaam on the East Coast. So our school tank was empty yesterday when I inspected it. It’s hard to keep 450 girls fed and bathed with the one pump that only operates part time. Never a dull moment, as usual.
 The bishop is scheduled to arrive next week for a big meeting to discuss the future management of the secondary school, so we are all anxious to hear what that is about. I am hoping to make another camping trip with my friend Liz and our new volunteer Henry during Holy Week. So, I hope that all comes together as planned and I can see the Watatulu tribe again and our elderly priests Fr Dan and Don who work with them. Today I am on my one-day-a-week water only Fast for Lent, so will be ready for a big breakfast tomorrow of pourage (Ugi).

Tom in Kowak

Monday, January 28, 2013

Adam's Moving Back

Wow, another interesting week. About the time I posted my last blog I got a call from my son in Baltimore informing me that he and wife Megan have decided to move back to Texas. In fact back they plan to move to his mother's home in Friendswood where he was raised. How fun. I'm sure his mother Pam is thrilled to have them and the two grandkids for more than the usual few days each year. I then got a call a few days later that my son Kyle and his fiance have set a date for their wedding, already. That will be Oct 19. So that means I will need to change my return flight from Africa to early Oct instead of early Nov. No problem, of course. Just makes my visit there a little briefer than I had hoped. At least I'll be there for the graduation of our seniors in late Sept. Today was another fun time as my sister, Janice, informed me that her former employer called to offer me a used microscope for the school biology lab. So we went to see it today and it is really beautiful and has an oil emulsion lens for bacteria, which we really need. They will be so excited to see this when I arrive. We only have one working microscope and it is in really bad condition, so this old 1995 model will blow them away. Of course it will add another 20 pounds to my luggage but it will be well worth it. Also my lovely daughter-in-law, Megan, has just offered me her awesome portable Epson printer, so I don't have to spend an arm and a leg on a similar used one. We really need something like this for all our passport pictures for the hundreds of ID cards we make each year at the school and I was admiring her's last November. This will make life so much easier. I had a lovely day at the diocese Prayer House (former Shantivanam) on Friday and had another lovely lunch with the staff. The weather was beautiful and after lunch I was the only one there, so it was a very peaceful afternoon to walk in the woods. That reminds me of the book "A Walk in the Woods" by Bryson, which I just purchased for my son Adam this week. Funny, when I called him that evening to tell him I had purchased it he about died. He had just borrowed the same book the day before from his friend the church pastor, I believe. We had not talked about it for over a year. Must be those brain waves. Finally I got a wonderful email from my friend and Maryknoll Lay Missioner Steve, who is now in Cambodia. He shared with us (23) his memories of our times together in Ossining, NY during our 3 month orientation in the Fall of 2005. What a wonderful time and such great memories. We will all miss that old building, Bethany, where so many former lay missioners first started their mission training. They will be moving down the street in a few weeks and selling the house and property, I believe.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

A Big Week in My Life

As the title suggests this has been a fun week. Actually the whole month of January has been pretty awesome, but let's start with this week. Most important was the wedding engagement of my son, Kyle (now 26), to his long time girlfriend, Chrystal Martens. The whole family has been hoping for this for several years, so we are all thrilled. So it looks like I may be returning a few weeks early depending on when that wedding date is scheduled. So far I hope to return Nov 5. Last Saturday I attended my first Jazz Festival and it was too much fun. It was free and held at the local Johnson County Community College and was called Winterlude. It was all local talent and was very impressive and in a very comfortable atmosphere. KC is really loaded with lots of Jazz artists, old and young and really encourages it in the youth. My family (brothers and sisters) have been enjoying one group weekly (Fri nights) at our favorite local restaurant, Lucky's Brew Pub nearby; always good food and very nice music to eat and drink by. There are a ton of restaurants, bars, hotels and casino's all over town with great weekly Jazz. Today was our weekly meeting of my contemplative prayer group at Guardian Angel Catholic Church basement and the 1 hour video presentation was great, as always. Today's presentation was the first in a series by James Finley, a former seminarian at Fr Thomas Merton's Abbey in Kentucky in the 1960's, I believe. He is a wonderful speaker and very humorous. Last Friday I called Fr Conard at his mission in Kowak, Tanzania, where I will be returning in 5 short weeks, God willing. He is feeling fine after a 2 week retreat and meeting with fellow Maryknoll priests and Brothers. So I gave him my arrival time and location for pickup (Mar 1). The next day I called (via Skype)to one of our two visiting volunteers (Henry and Jeanne)from Salt Lake who just arrived last week. They are enjoying Kowak already and are anxious to get to work. Jeanne started teaching English to the 150 freshman girls today, so I'm anxious to see how she likes that. Most of them only speak Swahili at this stage, but their classes will all be in English very soon. During my call with Fr Conard I informed him that I met Sr Ruth Baudhuin who is in our weekly prayer group. Her brother was a Maryknoll priest from the Green Bay area, like himself, and was with Fr Conard during their seminary days in the 1950's. I also met her friend Sr Mary Francis Kobets, a former K State grad, who is currently a Maryknoll sister in Zimbabwe. I learned that she was originally in Tanzania her first 10 years in mission, so she knows many of the old time Maryknollers that are still there. That includes her former classmate,Sr Marion, who I see regularly. Last Wednesday a few of the family celebrated our aunt Mary's 99th birthday with a nice Italian dinner at her favorite place near her assisted living high rise. It was a wonderful time and we all enjoyed her great company and being able to share this important day with her. We were all so pleased to see her in very good health. A few days later I saw her again as I took her to her monthly lab tests at the local St Luke's hospital. They noticed that she had just had a birthday so many joined in a nice Happy Birthday song as she checked in. She was very pleased. I also had the pleasure to have dinner with her sister, Francis, and her children at their weekly dinner for her at her home here in KC. I then stayed to have a nice chat with her about my grandparents before her important KU basketball game; she was a gifted athlete (high diver)at KU many years ago. She is now 90 yrs old. I have not yet visited my 96 yrs old aunt Louise, but hope to do so soon. Earlier in the month I made my long awaited presentation on African Spirituality to our prayer group and later that week made my first visit back to Shantivanam Prayer House near Easton, KS after a year of travel. It was wonderful to see the staff again (3 of 4) and to spend a few hours in the wonderful solitude of that beautiful rural site. I felt very much at home, as always, and was the only visitor that day, so was even more blessed. It really has been a Happy New Year!! for me so far.