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Friday, May 30, 2008

Passion:: Kampala

Today was incredible. My words will not do it justice. To see so many young Ugandans worshiping all out- wow!

I am way way tired and I am hoping that it going to sleep, I will forget about how much pain my feet and back are in.

Our wake up call is in 5 hours. Please pray for strength and endurance. Tomorrow is the long day.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Again

If you go to Doug's blog, you can see a picture of our registration area. It is in the mud and basically in a trash heap. Later in the day, we got a tent, but that doesn't change the fact that we were standing in trashy mud.

One of the weird things about the Passion event is how it is Passion, but different. Where else would we hang a sign with duct tape to an uncovered wood table in a trash pile? What kind of excellence it that? But here, it's what we have to do. Strange.

(You can see a bit of my red shirt behind one of the pharmacy students from Ohio.)

Thursday

Wow! Y'all are some praying fools. Not only am I not having stomach issues (which really, praise God because those porter potties are NOT getting any better), but also the LED screen is working!

Today was really long. I spent about 8 hours standing in the registration tent. The ground is hard mud and since theft is a big issue, I had to carry all of me stuff in my backpack (actually, Scott's backpack- thanks again). Though it seemed like we were slammed all day with people, our location only registered about 900 students. At the other locations, they must have been rockin, because as of tonight, we are at about 20,000 students! I mean, really, how incredible is that!?!?

We also had our first big volunteer meeting and about 300 actually showed up. Of course, I was given 53 volunteers to help with registration and I had 3 come. I am a little worried about the last 10,000 tomorrow, but I know that God will provide. Today I had great help from Caitlin (on our team), 5 pharmacy students from Ohio (Sarah, Liz, Kelly, Kyle, and Andrew) and three of the Harding girls (Megan, Haley, and Kelsey) and two Ugandan volunteers (Liz and James). Without their help, today would have been impossible.

At some point remind me to write about the kid that pretended to be Chris Tomlin and about how I got to tell the story to Chris at dinner. It was really funny.

Today was long. Tomorrow and Saturday will be longer. I am so incredibly excited to see the students worshiping tomorrow. I think that we are all going to be blown away.

I can't believe that I have been given this privilege. Thank you so much to all of you who have made it possible for me to be here.

Must get some sleep.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Today in Africa

It is about 11PM here and with a 6AM wake up call I need to go to bed soon. But all day today, I thought about how I need to write a blog and let you know what is going on here. I'm afraid that if I wait until tomorrow, then there will be just as much to write then.

Please tell me that you are reading the blogs of Doug, Michelle, and Renee, Kristen, and of course the Passion blog. They are on my team and it is good to get another perspective. Doug manages to post the most pictures, which is quite a feat since the internet connection here is such a pain.

I'm going to give you a run down of today.

After breakfast, we had our usual meeting, but today all of our Ugandan counterparts came to the meeting. It took longer than usual.

After the meeting, most of our team went to Bethany village to visit an orphanage. I was really looking forward to going because even though I am in Africa, I don't feel like I have seen the real Africa. I have been staying in a really nice hotel with armed guards at the gate. I leave and go to a field on a college campus (and only a very elite 1% of students go to college here) and then I come back to the safety of the hotel.
Unfortunately, I did not get to go the orphanage. We officially opened registration at the field today and since that is my job, I needed to be there instead.

While I waited on the wrist bands to get to the field, I met with Dan, Sally, and Susanne about the touch team (essentially the informational and directional volunteer team). Then Susanne and I finally started cleaning up the field. It was hot!

When Ben (my Ugandan counterpart) got to the field with the wristbands, I was able to take a few early arrival volunteers and set up a registration table.

Here's the tough part: this event is for college and university students. I can't tell you how many stories I got today about why I should give someone a wristband even though they didn't have a University ID. But we have to be firm. It makes me so sad to turn anyone away, but I believe in the strategy to reach the people that will reach the most people. I am just trusting in God that He will take what happens here and multiply it.

Registration at the field only stayed open about an hour and a half, because the sky quickly turned dark and the bottom fell out. We are at the end of rainy season, yet it hadn't rained all week. Today made up for it. In a matter of 45 minutes, there was a good 4 inches of standing water on the field. And lots of mud.

And one of the 2 ton LCD screens that are set up beside the stage (it's the huge screen that shows the speaker and band and lyrics) was blown over by the wind and ended up face down in water. That's not such a great thing for an LCD screen.

I got some great pictures of it, but as we have already discussed, posting pictures is a pain. You might just have to wait.

After getting entirely soaked, we left the field to come back to the hotel. The van I was in got stuck in traffic and a 15 minute trip took over an hour. We got back and I took a very warm shower (have I mentioned how in love I am with the can shower head in our shower?) and then met Sally and Dan for dinner. There are two restaurants in the hotel where we can eat dinner. It's okay food, but I am ready for something different.

After dinner, we talked more about touch team and I drew out a map for them to use in placing volunteers. Maps make me happy. And I am pretty sure that my map made them happy too.

Now it is bed time.

Here is the good news:
-as of today, we have had about 12,000 students pre-register and get their wristbands.
-we have plenty of volunteers signed up and many of the American volunteers will be joining us tomorrow (including a group of 30 from Auburn)
-no one was hurt when the LCD screen fell and I heard a rumor that it might actually still be in working order

Here are the things that we could really use some prayer for:
-unity between us and the Ugandan leaders. We definitely work differently.
-pray that we would be able to pre-register the rest of the students tomorrow and Friday morning. It was make things so much easier Friday afternoon.
-pray that our systems will work and that we will not have people rush the field (I keep having visions of a soccer match in an overcrowded stadium, but on a field).
-our energy as things really kick into high gear now
-the LCD screen and equipment that got wet today

Finally, you can pray that I will feel better. I have been fine thus far, but tonight I have had some stomach issues of which I will spare you the details. Even though I missed out on the orphanage, it seems as if I am indeed going to get to experience the real Africa.

thank you for being on this journey with me.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

You thought that you knew gross.

But, my friends, I am here to tell you that you don't. Because, you have not used a porter potty on a hot field in Uganda. Trust me, it was nasty and I don't usually get all grossed out by that sort of stuff.

Today, we spent about 4 hours over at the field. We did not end up picking up trash- there was a bit of a logistical problem. Apparently, over here people do not use trash bags. And so we couldn't find any to buy. A few from our team happened to bring trash bags with them, but then we didn't have gloves. It looks like the field might stay dirty.

Most of my time was spent discussing how to get the students registered before entering the field. Basically, we have two gates for everyone. Since the event is focused on the student generation, they have to show some sort of ID to get a wristband. The problem is that the field is right next to slums and when the sound starts up, it is predicted that everyone is going to want in. Add to that the fact that one of the gates is serviced by a path that is 2 people wide at the best parts, and you have a little bit of a logistical nightmare.

The good news is that as of this morning, we have about 8,000 students that have preregistered. Only 12,000 more to go!

I'm having trouble uploading photos but I will try later, for now, I have to go eat dinner.

Monday, May 26, 2008

The field

I promised pictures of the field and so I am going to try to get them posted before breakfast. It is 6:50 AM here on Tuesday. We have a full day ahead and I am starting to get tired. About 10 seconds into my morning brushing of the teeth, I realized that I had used tap water. You have never seen me spit out something so fast in my life. (Except for that one time that I took a sip of momma's cold coffee only to realize that it was bacon grease cooling off in a coffee cup. I was pretty fast then too.)

Anyway, back to the field. Here are two general pictures:



You can see what has been done on the fence and in the background you can see a women's dorm
on the right. There are also some "tennis courts" (Appropriate use of quotation marks) back there and that is where resources will be set up. Can you see all the trash on the field? In that trash, I saw several condom wrappers and another girl on my team actually saw a used one. I have a feeling that one of our jobs today or tomorrow will be to clean the field- with gloves of course.

I am try to post a picture of some kids playing on the field, but my internet connection became really slow and now I am late for breakfast. It will have to wait.

Love you all. Thanks so much for the comments- they have been a real encouragement.
Here's another blog for you. http://dougmancosky.blogspot.com/