| February 2000
Dear Family and Friends:
We thought we would have a lot to tell when we came back from
our retreat at Victoria Falls. The most important story is that
we did come back to Tshikaji. We have too much to tell you everything,
but not enough important things for a newsletter.
We left on January 26 to go to Kinshasa for a few days of shopping
for the hospital. When we arrived at Kinshasa after seven months
in Tshikaji, it seemed like we have arrived at a metropolitan
city. Parts of the streets were paved, there were lots of cars
and stores that sold "real food stuff." We decided right
then and there that we would eat all the food we craved. Money
was not the object. It was a busy week, making new contacts and
purchasing medicines, car parts and the cars themselves. We arrived
at the Nairobi (Kenya) airport around midnight because we had
to wait for three hours to get the jet fuel at the Kinshasa airport.
The taxi ride back to the airport early the next morning revealed
a bustling city with signs of all the familiar brand names shocked
us. "This is not Africa!" we told each other.
We felt guilty when we checked in at the Bronte Hotel in Harare,
Zimbabwe. It was a very well kept garden-style hotel with a good
dining room. Is it okay to enjoy this much luxury? Never seen
a better sixty-five-dollars-a-night hotel. After two nights, we
finally gathered at the Kingdom resort at Victoria Falls. We started
the retreat with an inspiring worship and rededication. Each morning
we opened the day with a worship service and a Bible study. By
now, we had already eaten all the rich food that we craved and
were looking for a simple, light lunch. While we were stuffed
with good food the evening before, by next morning we were hungry
again. The only thing that remained with us were the uncomfortable
effects of over-indulgence. But, as we got into regular worship
and the study of Scripture, we got hungry for more. We realized
how much we missed the regular worship and the community to study
the Word together. Could this be the difference between the "living
water" and the water from Jacobs well? It was also
a great time of seeing old friends and making new ones. We did
not forget to take a trip to the Chobe Game Reserve in Botswana.
We are no longer impressed with any herd of elephants less than
one hundred and further than ten yards away. Imagine 50,000 elephants
in one park. We also visited the Victoria Falls. The main fall
is deeper than Niagara Falls, and one can see it much closer because
the river is narrower than the banks of the lake at Niagara, almost
too close for a panoramic view. One can never cease to marvel
at the wonders of nature.
Too soon, it was time to bid "till next time" to friends
and start on the return trip. It would be less than honest to
say that we were fully charged, ready to face any challenges that
may come our way. In some sense, we got a real taste of what we
were yearning for and to return to "reality" was difficult.
But, the real world awaited us, and albeit reluctantly we went
to Harare for an overnight stay. We had an opportunity to do some
souvenir shopping and to look at the downtown shops. We saw what
escaped us the first time. Twenty years after independence, the
buildings and the basic system remain, but the countrys
economic and social system were not well maintained. We saw the
vast gap between the well kept stores, hotels and restaurants
that cater to foreign visitors and the rich, and the everyday
life of the ordinary people. We wondered whether our spiritual
health will likewise keep up the outward appearance but be bankrupt
within. Pray for us that we would be continually restored. Also
pray for the Worldwide Ministries Division staff in Louisville.
They are the invisible servants who get blamed whenever anything
goes wrong, regardless of the source.
We spent a few days in Nairobi with the Tim and Sue Anne Fairman,
who work with the students at Daystar University in a servant
leadership program. Besides hitting Japanese and Korean restaurants,
we had two memorable experiences. On Sunday we went to Nairobi
Chapel in downtown Nairobi. When we got there at 9:40 for a 10:00
service, the earlier service was still going on with more than
a hundred worshipers sitting on benches set on the perimeters
of the sanctuary and another hundred or so waiting in line to
get seats in the next service. It looked like an Olive Garden
restaurant on a Friday night. It was an inspiring experience.
Next time we go to the States and are waiting in line for a table,
we will say "Its just like the Nairobi chapel!"
Lets pray that we will be able to say "Its just
like xxx Presbyterian church!".
The following Wednesday was Sue Anne Fairmans Mother Teresas
Home day in a Nairobi slum. It was a large compound caring for
broken and abandoned people of all ages. We spent most of our
few hours with the crippled children and the abandoned ones. At
first we could only see the broken bodies. As we overcame our
hesitancy and held them and talked to them, we were able to see
the soul and humanity, with joys and sorrows in them. It would
be presumptuous to say that we were able to see it all in just
a few hours. However, the effect on us was unmistakable. Once
we were able to go beyond the initial barrier, we found a whole
new world that always existed but to which we were blind.
We want to share with you the struggle we have had for the past
few months. As we look back, our "ministry" was to put
our, and your, resources to good use. In practical terms, we had
to work hard to keep our medicines, fuel, food stuff and money
from being stolen and misused. In a sense our mission is that
of warehouse guards. How can we witness Jesus Christ while trying
to protect our resources from the very people we are to serve?
What sort of missionaries are we? Through the retreat and other
experiences during the trip, we learned that we have the opportunity
to deal with people at their raw and basic needs, ugly as well
as good. Perhaps, a true witnessing can take place at this naked
relationship. Pray for us that we would be able to witness our
Lord in our daily dealings with the people.
We did not forget to bring back good coffee from Kenya and food
items from Kinshasa, including a 50 kilogram sack of Italian rice.
We will be all right until we go to the States in June for a medical
check-up. We have been back in Tshikaji for almost a week. Based
on the number of people knocking on our door with problems, we
can tell things are back to normal. Thats how our second
month of the year or the millennium went.
Love to you all,
Haejung & Simon Park
(If you e-mail us, please don't send attachments. We have
to pay by the byte.)
The 2000 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 29
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