I arrived back in East Africa
on April 5 and have been in Kowak village in Tanzania since then. I escorted
our Maryknoll pastor, Fr Conard, to Nairobi on May 31st so he could
return to the Maryknoll Fathers headquarters and home to Green Bay. He will
celebrate his 60th year of priesthood at the end of June in New York and then
again with family in mid-July in Green Bay. We expect to see him back in Kowak
by Aug 5th. He will have a third celebration here on August 11 at
his parish where he has lived the last 38 years. He is the last of his 50+
ordination classmates to still work overseas. 12 are still alive, I believe.
I
want to thank my friends at our Tuesday Mystics prayer group in Kansas City for
their prayers and generous support of my ministry and the Maryknoll ministry at
Kowak hospital. They have given me over $500 for mosquito nets for newborn
babies and have given Fr Conard and the Kowak Hospital over $1,000 for needs
there. We were blessed to finally find and employ a young doctor on March 1,
Dr Lazaro Mwikwabe; he joins our older Dr Ernest in treating the local patients
in our area. We are especially blessed that he is from a village in our area
and we hope to keep him here for many years. He is 30 yrs old and was just
married in February to a lovely young lady, Devota, who is also from our area
(Tarime). She just got her BA degree in Human Resources a few years ago. Our new doctor is being trained by Dr Ernest
in surgery and he has already done 45 surgeries in his first three months. We are
averaging two major surgeries per day and about half of those are C sections. We
average another 4 minor surgeries per day so the doctors keep very busy. We
also have a large number of x rays and ultra sounds. Dr Ernest does all the
ultra sounds. Sr Linet does the x rays.
The
Queen of the Holy Rosary parish in Mission, KS gave me 300 more rosaries
to distribute among the local people and I have been doing that as well as
distributing nets to new mothers. I have been concentrating primarily on mothers
of new born babies at our hospital where we are averaging two births per day.
In addition to the net and rosary I take their photo and give them a copy of
it. They are very pleased. So far I have given out 31 nets in the last two
weeks. One of my first mothers had triplets which thrilled us all, especially
being the first triplets in many years at Kowak. Since she already had 7
children at home I gave her 4 nets. The following week another mother had twins
so I gave her two nets. The young girl in this photo is the daughter of this
mother of triplets and she is very attractive. You can see the babies usually are
born much lighter in complexion.
Our 170 bed rural hospital was recently awarded a Three
Star rating by the national health survey which makes us at least equal to the
District Government Hospital in this area. The best hospitals can achieve a
Five Star rating.
In addition to the daily visits to the hospital I have
spent a lot of time on the computer entering the financial data generated since
I departed in November. I finally issued a 4th quarter, 1st
quarter and partial 2nd quarter report for Fr Conard so he could
make decisions on what money is available for repairs and construction over the
next two months while he is on home leave. I also prepared a budget for next year since
he had to request money from Maryknoll by mid-May. We have about 4 projects
totaling $24,000 that was requested. I
have been given two or three smaller projects to work on in addition to the
routine repairs in the two months Fr Jim is home. We also hope to purchase a
small lorry next year to haul medicines from Mwanza, four hours south. We
recently got news that one foundation in Minnesota will give us $10,000 over
their normal donation next year.
One of my least pleasant projects recently was the
termination of our grinding mill operator who we have employed the last two
years. I had to find a new operator and train him for the last three weeks
before terminating Kurwa. Lawrence has good references and a lot of experience
so I hope he works out. This is a difficult job mostly due to the temptations
with handling money in a very poor area.
Fr Conard just finished construction of a large church
about 18 km from our parish. We had a lovely mass and church blessing last
week-end (Corpus Christi Sunday) and I took a video of it for him to take home.
I just burned a few DVD’s for him and friends. I am also working on a video of
the Kowak Girls Secondary senior class (Form IV). The teachers are doing most
of this work and it will also be about an hour long. This DVD will be a gift to
my friends, Henry and Jeanne in Salt Lake City, who volunteered at the school
here in early 2013 when these girls were freshman and just learning English.
Three years makes a big difference and I think they will enjoy seeing them “grown
up”.
I just finished reading a wonderful biography of Pope
Francis called “The Great Reformer”. It talks a lot about his love of the poor
and his joy of being with the poor of Argentina. It has really helped me
understand why I enjoy being here, especially these last two or three years
where I have been able to get to know the locals versus the wealthier teachers
and secondary students of previous years. The poor really have solidarity and
enjoy the very simple things that most of us take for granted. Some of their
biggest celebrations are funerals, masses and football games. We have had a lot
of all three in recent months. I wish
you could see the joy they had in this blessing of their new church last
week-end; such joyful singing and dancing during the gift giving. It was a real
mix of young and old but everyone enjoying the “celebration” of the mass. In
many ways similar to the joy they express during the local soccer games next to
my house. I heard a local recently at one of the almost daily games, who had
come home for the weekend. He was telling his friends how lucky they were to
get to see these games so frequently for free where he had to pay significantly
to see a game in the city of players he hardly knew.
Speaking of sports, I have really been enjoying the
amazing KC Royals games these last ten days on espn gamecast on my smart phone
(3:15 am to 6:15 am). The come-from-behind victories remind me so much of the
attitude and skills they demonstrated last year in the post season. This year’s
rookies have been super, Thank God. We really needed them due to so many
injuries of our top players. I do miss
those games with the family drinking beer on the back porch.
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ReplyDeleteThank you for your news Tom, it's so good to hear about the work that you're all doing, and of course I love to hear news of Uncle Jim.
ReplyDeleteI've enjoyed your articles and would like to ask you about your experiences, particularly in connection with Kowak Girls School. I did not have any luck using the "contact me" link, so if you have time to correspond with me, could you please drop a message to Marge at mbalde41@maine.edu? Thanks very much!
ReplyDeletewonderful job saving the lives of many poor and abandoned people in the interior may God bless the Maryknoll fathers
ReplyDelete