I've been back in the US since mid
November after a short three months in Kowak. Christmas is just around the
corner so I’m working a little on the decorations, but mostly just visiting
family and friends since I returned about 6 weeks ago. I spent a few days
in Louisville and Atlanta visiting my son’s.
Kowak was a different experience this
year, mostly due to the absence of Fr Conard, who I lived with the last 11
years. It is unlikely that he will be allowed to return to Tanzania except,
perhaps, for a short goodbye visit next year. I have volunteered to escort him
through the airports, if and when he goes. As planned, I did work on his
finances this year to document where his money and the Maryknoll funds were
used the first six months of the year. He departed for Kenya and then New York
at the end of June.
I had planned to stay six months this year
but found there was not much work for me after I finished the financial
reports. As I mentioned in the last blog (August) we had a volunteer nurse
(Maranda) from Minnesota who arrived a couple weeks before me and she stayed
two months as planned. She was a real jewel and we had a lot of fun in the
school, hospital and surrounding villages. She worked every morning in the
hospital, mostly in the children's ward and then the afternoons at the girl’s
secondary school. She fell in love with the girls and them with her, so I
always knew where to find her in the afternoons.
We had the Silver Jubilee for the Kowak Girl’s
Secondary School a week after I arrived (Aug 26th) and the Form IV (seniors)
graduation Sept 30, so Maranda got to see the difference in an African vs US
graduation and meet some of parents of the graduates and their families. I took
video's of the Jubilee for Fr Conard and still photos of many of the 116
graduates for prints and for the school Facebook page.
We did have one sad event just a few weeks
after I arrived. One of the seniors died suddenly a few days before graduation.
Maranda and I were there when the 420 students were gathered and were given the
sad news. It was devastating, especially to the other seniors who had lost
another classmate just the year before, almost to the day. The student had been
fine until just a few days before she died. Maranda and I stayed up late that
night preparing memorial cards for the memorial Mass the next morning, just as
Therese McCarthy and I had done the year before. A few days later we attended
the funeral and burial at her grandmother’s home in Sirori Simba about two
hours from school. About 20 students and 10 school staff joined us. It was very
crowded and very sad.
Maranda and I made three other trips during
her stay. One was to a new English-medium primary school which had been built
last year buy my friend Fr Joel Marwa in his home village. It opened in January
to pre-schoolers, so we were invited to meet the 30 young students, teacher and staff and have lunch there. One week-end we spent the night in Musoma with my friend
Liz Mach who is our oldest Maryknoll Lay Missioner and is also a nurse from
Minnesota. She celebrated 41 years as a lay missioner in Tanzania so she and
Maranda had a lot to talk about. It was a fun week-end. The last trip was a
short one day tour of the Serengeti Park with Liz and Maranda. We did not see
as many animals as usual, but we did see a lot, and some unusually good looks
at several hyena, ostrich, many giraffe and a huge number of hippopotamus. It
was a fun day and night.
Maranda headed home
in mid October, after a sad goodbye to the students and hospital. I continued
to work with the new pastor, Fr Julius Ogolla, until mid November. During my
stay I met several other village students and one KGSS senior who needed
financial help, so I agreed to sponsor
them (5). Maranda and her parents also agreed to sponsor one of the sophomore
(Form II) students for the next two years. We also both contributed to the fund
raiser for the secondary school to help build a new assembly hall. I received
two donations from a couple in Colorado for soccer balls, volleyballs and
volleyball nets so I gave them to the secondary school and two village volleyball
men’s teams and one hospital women’s volleyball team. As usual I took a lot of
photo’s during this visit and distributed the photos. I distributed mosquito
nets and photos and rosaries to the hospital maternity patients as I have done
several years. I paid a few medical
bills including one for my older friend, Mzee Rya, who had cataract surgery after I left.
We had three very
nice visitors who stayed with us at Kowak Mission my last two weeks there.
Alesha was a graduate student from the Univ of Toronto; Editha was one of her
research assistants from Arusha, and Lameck was the other research assistant from
Mwanza. They were all very pleasant and fun to have around at meal time. Alesha
is working on her PhD for the next 3 months at Kowak and the final 3 months in
another village not far away. We have two American volunteers (Jay and Kathy) coming
in late January from Colorado to teach English for two months so I helped them make
the contacts before them arrive. Maybe I’ll meet them, if Fr Conard is allowed
to return while they are there.
I attended several
Masses in outstations with Fr Ogolla. One of them was for a blessing of the new
church in Miko which Fr Conard finished building just before he departed. I
took a nice video during that Mass and Blessing ceremony to show Fr Conard in
November. I stopped in New York on my way home and spent three days with Fr
Conard at the assisted living center (St Teresa’s) at Maryknoll. We had a very
nice visit and he was able to view my video’s with the help of Fr Dick Quinn,
Fr Conard’s first pastor in Africa. I also got to greet many of the older
Maryknoll priests I knew when they were in Africa.
Merry Christmas
ya’all