Welcome
to our revamped newsletter of stories from in and around Kamuli written by us
and our growing number of Ugandan friends. We hope you like it. Our dear friend
David Hey-Cunningham from Australia, on his second visit to us this year, has
designed a newsletter template for us and arranged for some of our Ugandan
friends to write entries. We anticipate that it will make it much easier to
produce future newsletters that will be more readable and more frequent. We
have not sent a newsletter for some time as we have been working through
various difficult matters plus the usual work load. We have seen many exciting
things happen and lives changed. We want to acknowledge God's provision and the
wonderful support of Australian friends in very many ways and Ugandan friends
who live in and around Kamuli. So, here are a few of our stories! (more to come
..).
Pam’s Corner … World's Tallest Maize!
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This
is our second attempt at Farming God’s Way in our front yard. Not bad for
beginners! This is a God given tool to increase the yields for African
farmers. Farming God's Way involves renouncing witchcraft, handing the land
to our Creator and then following guidelines that are able to be put into
practice with a minimum of cost locally. This method of farming increases the
yield of the harvest in a dramatic way increasing the fertility of the soil
and helps prevent soil erosion. The outstanding differences to traditional
methods of farming are:. No tilling, No burning, Preparing the land before
the rain comes thus getting an early start with planting, Frequent Weeding (especially
early), Measuring the distance between holes, Mulching ('God's Blanket) and
Adding inputs of ash and manure.
Our
results speak for themselves. We have strong, sturdy maize up to 3 metres
tall yielding at least one good cob per plant. Farming God's Way website is http://www.farming-gods-way.org/ for those who wish to know more
on this subject.
We have
been privileged to have Chris Sperling of
Equip Canada come and run a workshop and demonstration of this method
of farming in Kamuli where we were able to invite 40 local people for
intensive training. Small numbers who are committed to change is better than
large numbers who are not committed as follow up is imperative for good
results, and this is a very big job.
We also
sponsored 5 Pastors to a 3 day FGW course in Kampala last year and want to
send 5-6 key people again this year so that they may be able to do the follow
up in their district and also teach others.
On the
lighter side let's share some differences in English meanings in different
cultures.
Ugandan
schoolboy "I need money for
escort"
Pam "Escort, what does that mean?"
Schoolboy
"You know, food to have with tea"
Ugandan
man "You are fat"
Ugandan
girl "Thank you"
Not in
Australia, but here this means you look well, you have enough food and things
must be going well for you.
You can
see there can be great hilarity over language differences and many other
things.
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Helping
People Generate Income by Christine
(A group called Tent Makers in
Orange NSW makes zero interest loans to selected village Pastors to start
businesses to help support them and their families. We helped to arrange a
loan and purchases for a pastor we know, Ps Nelson, for solar panels, battery
and other equipment to run a phone charging and hair shaving service. Yes,
many Ugandans have cheap mobile phones and no means to charge them! On this
particular day after the solar installation we were delivering the head
shaver. The article below is by Christine who lives with us.)
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On Friday 7th/06/2013
we went to visit pastor Nelson’s place, we went with Pam, Allan and
David. It was such a nice day for us
because we enjoyed it a lot. On that
day we took a machine for pastor Nelson because he was going to start a
business of phone charging and shaving hair where by here I was showing him
how to shave hair, not because I was professional in it but I managed to show
him how to do it. I thank God because
I had an idea on it and now I can shave students hair for example Paul, Aisha
and Lmulatti. These students are
sponsored by Allan and Pam and so I shave their hair from Pam and Allan’s
house.
We were
served a big meal from pastor Nelson’s house and I was the interpreter of
David, Pam and Allan and after that we went and visited people’s gardens for
those with practice farming God’s way, this way of farming was introduced to
people by Pam and Allan plus Chris Sperling the teacher. This way of farming has helped people of
Uganda in Kamuli in terms of fighting poverty. So people liked it and they are practing
it. Then after visiting the garden we
came back home. All in all I send
greetings to all and may God bless whatever you touch with your hands.
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Taking
Responsibility by Sajjabi Budhala
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My name is Sayjaba Budhala, born
on 11th October, 1991. I am
an orphan at the age of 22 years now.
In
life I had goals, but I believed for my goals to come to pass, I had to work
for people and save the wages given to me.
The
saving took me one year and for that money I decided to start a pig rearing
project. I believe this project will
able one of my goals to come to pass.
I
am sure if I had my parents it would be hard for me to work and save because
I would look at everything from the parents.
So
I do encourage both orphans and non orphans to develop a heart of working and
saving for their goal to pass.
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Introducing Books to Bezallel Primary School
by David Hey-Cunningham
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Pam
and Allan were given thousands of books that are stored in the container they
brought to Bezallel School. I have numbered and indexed the big picture books
donated by an Australian lady who loved and used these books with children in
Australia including aboriginal communities.
The books have been sorted into
Christian, introductory reading, fairy tales, factual information and
Australia and are being stored in the school principal, Beatrice's office. I
introduced the teachers to the books at their Thursday fellowship here in Pam
and Allan's home. Each teacher has been provided with a listing of the books
and suggestions on how to use the books. Book reading is rare in Uganda and
most of Africa. Pam and Allan want to foster a love of books. This is a
beginning.
David is a long-standing Sydney
friend on his second visit this year.
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Allan’s
Bit …
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Here in rural Uganda we are constantly faced with
extreme poverty and need, especially in the villages surrounding the small
town where we live, Kamuli, but also in Kamuli, especially certain areas. It
is forever ‘in our faces’. Pam & I as Christians are told by Matthew
25:31-46, and many other verses in the bible, that we are to minister to the
whole person spiritually and physically. But the problem is so overwhelming
how can it be handled? We have finite resources of course so how to decide
who to help and who not to? How to say no to desperate people? How to be a
genuine help and not do harm by, for example, creating dependency and having
people lose initiative. There are many issues in this area that we deal with
constantly, too many to list here. We pray constantly for wisdom and over our
time here have become a lot wiser. Some examples. We NEVER give a child/young
person cash for school fees, we or our friend Budhala go to the school bursa
and pay directly; twice recently some deception has been found out this way.
Never loan money without being prepared to lose it; loans are very rarely
paid back despite promises. A lady came to us for school fees for her
children; we got our friend Budhala to speak to her (we can’t speak Lusoga
and still have a lot to learn about local culture) and instead spent the
equivalent of about $55 to build a stall for her in her village and stock it
with tomatoes to start a small business to earn money for school fees. We try
to avoid ‘handouts’ and instead look for ways to assist in a way that
generates ongoing assistance; promoting Farming God’s Way is an example of
this.
However with the extreme poverty in the villages we
can’t always ignore it and are sometimes involved with ‘handouts’. We
recently received a shipment of about 94 boxes from Australia sent by Art
Daniel of South Pacific Ministries (our church in Aus contributed to this)
including quite a few boxes of clothes. With the help of Budhala the clothes
have been distributed to quite a number of people in extreme need, and
received with great joy. Below are some pictures describing just one of these
clothing donations in a village in a region north of Kamuli.
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These are
some of the many stories from us and people with whom we are involved. More
coming in the next newsletter …
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