Saturday, June 23, 2007

Come to the movies with me ...........

Interested in movies about the real Africa. I found a few which I think you would enjoy. If it's raining outside .... now is the time to spend a good weekend with some real good movies!!

Blood Diamond


I highly recommend seeing the film Blood Diamond. Great story of what is happening in our part of the world. I walked away reminded of why I am here, trying to make some sort of difference. I also thought Leonard DiCaprio was at his best, and would'nt mind seeing him pick up an Oscar for it. Some will point out that in most of these movies, there is a white/American “hero,” which perpetuates the stereotype that Africans need outsiders to help them all the time. Fair critique, though I don’t think it changes what the movies are saying about the cultural/political situations.

I really like movies that tell stories of contemporary Africa, particularly shedding light on some of the political/cultural issues that you don't catch on the six o'clock news. Fascinating, complex, tragic, hopeful. In this category, I also enjoyed:


Hotel Rwanda
The Constant Gardener
The Interpreter
Shooting Dogs (Beyond the Gates in USA)
The Last King of Scotland

Anyone else like/recommend any other movies like this?

Monday, June 18, 2007

..... that's just how it is!


I can’t stand “that’s just how it is” as an answer.

Usually, it really means I’m too lazy to do anything about it;
don’t question the status quo ;
I have no hope of anything different…ever, and neither should you.

So, when I take in an electronic device that is covered for repair under warranty, and it is going to take a really long time to get fixed (for no explainable reason), don’t tell me “that’s just how it is.”

Forgive me if I use this petty example to jump off onto big ones, because this attitude bugs me:
Sorry you don’t have electricity in your tin house and it’s 0 degrees, that’s just how it is.

I can’t find your file. No medical treatment for you. that’s just how it is!

Sure, people in the Sudan are killing droves of people, including all the civilians caught in the crossfire of war, but that’s just how it is.

WHY? Why is that how it is? Can’t we do something about it? I want to hear what you hate hearing “that’s just how it is” about…

Arthur Steward a great guy I met shared this and after thinking a lot about this I share this with my whole heart.

Meet a guy who hate the words "that's just how it is." His name is Steven and he took in 16 orphans in his own house. Feeding them, clothing them, loving them, educating them - being a father for those who have none. I will share his orphans with you.


Francois Rauch and Pastor Steven

Thanks for not saying ..... "well it's only Africa - that's just how it is!

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Rwanda and Uganda - I found God here too!

Some of our friends from Kenya which we met at the Amahoro conversation. 200 African leaders gathered from Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya, Sudan, Congo, Burundi and South Africa.
The most hospitable people ever in Rwanda. We were treated with great fish out of the lakes surrounding Rwanda. More friends - Diana and Eric. This restaurant was just outside Hotel Rwanda .... as in the movie.
Pastor Jane and her daughter after church. Past. Jane leads a congregation of about 600 people and I experienced one of the most powerful services ever with them in Rwanda, Kgali. She has an amazing and successful ministry with prostitutes and street kids.

To summarize what I have experienced in Rwanda is too difficult to put in words. The genocide which took place in 1994 touched me deeply.

I will use the words of Pastor Steven Turikunkiko when he says:

"Rwanda is a nation that is rising out of the rubbles of war and genocide. The country has a population of 8 million, having lost 1 million in the genocide of 1994. This was a phenomenon incomparable throughout human history. Every minute of everyday someone was being murdered, screaming for mercy, receiving none, and the killing went on and on and on......! 10 000 killings each day, 400 each hour, 7 each minute. The genocide has left an indelible imprint of suffering and pain that is still unresolved. According to statistics:

  • 15 % of children are orphans in the nation because of the genocide;
  • 2 % of the population is HIV orphans because of the genocide;
  • 250 000 women were raped during the genocide;
  • the life expectancy in Rwanda is 39 years;
  • 85 % of the population lives on less that US$2 a day.

What are we going to do today??

Saturday, June 02, 2007

One can NEVER be the same again!!

I am back - well still on-route to Mozambique but will give you a short "where have you been and what have you been up to??" report. Will share pictures within a week!!

Francois


Reflections on Amahoro-Africa May 2007
From Brian McLaren

TIA

Red African dirt. So red, like rust-dust, but brighter in the sun, sparkling hot, pure. Twin tire tracks make our path, short green grass between the parallel red trails, tall green foliage on either side. As we walk side by side, you in your track, I in mine, we're surrounded by a spherical cloud of hovering dragonflies. There are a few pale olive-green ones, almost invisible against the vegetation, and scores of brown ones with four transparent wings marked by paired brown bars. They follow us as they would follow a herd of buffalo or giraffes or zebra, a squadron of mini-helicopters, hoping our footsteps will stir up some small mosquito from the grass which they can swoop down on, scoop up, and eat in flight.

When we stop walking, they hover for a five or ten seconds, and then they settle motionless on the red dirt around us, wings spread like a little girl's barrettes. When we begin walking again, they arise as one, a cloud of whirring wings in which we move as if attended by angels. Above us, strange birds call, moving among the high branches.

This is what it is like to walk the dusty roads of rural East Africa. Overhead, the yellow-beaked kites circle and soar, constant companions. A gangly stork may fly among them, towing along its oversized feet, or a flock of weaver birds may swirl above us like smoke, chattering, yellower and blacker than bumblebees, drawn homeward to their village of hanging nests, woven grass teardrops dangling like ornaments from white-thorned acacia branches.

Everywhere, it seems, there is the distant sound of children laughing, and in many places at seemingly any time of day or evening, there will also be the sound of singing because church has a way of breaking out anywhere under an elder tree or in a windowless shelter or behind a wall of corrugated tin. Pentecostal joy is itself a revolutionary manifestation of the kingdom of God in the land of HIV, Idi Amin, civil war, genocide, and breathtaking poverty.

If we walk into town, the dusty roads give way to packed clay, mud puddles, deep ruts, sometimes slick and sometimes sticky. Shacks and ramshackle homes jostle with shops, stalls, booths: barber shops, beauty shops, little stores selling everything - phone cards, cell phones, fruits, vegetables, a goat carcass, cow stomachs, little dried fish, big smoked fish (refrigeration is not even imagined here), beer, peanuts in little paper cones, used but highly polished shoes, small stools, irons, clay ovens, charcoal, sugarcane, colorful fabric. Children scramble, goats browse, pigs sleep under a bush, a three-legged cow hobbles from tuft to tuft along the roadside, and cars and trucks and vans and buses scream by, impossibly fast, dangerously close, barely respecting the fading memory of lanes and laws, a kind of commonplace mania of frantic speed and wild trust between drivers in one another's way.

If we visit an informal settlement - a squatter area or slum, by whatever name - the red dirt and clay often go darker and darker, sometimes turning mucky and mealy black, with greenish and yellowish puddles and smells that could make you retch on a hot, windless day. But then comes a breeze and it's frying potatoes you smell, or roasting chicken, and there's almost always a sweet fragrance of woodsmoke that you taste as much as smell. Not far away, a church choir has come to sing and a crowd gathers, some people singing along, others tiptoeing through the muck, holding up their skirts to dodge puddles. Fewer goats here, but lots of chickens, always scratching about, heads bobbing.

TIA - you hear it a lot these days: this is Africa, where God is alive and where Pentecost is perpetual, hope and joy jostling with hunger and fear like trucks and scooters in the chaos of Kampala's traffic.

This is the context for the experience that about 40 guests shared with about 160 East Africans in early May 2007 - people from Congo, Burundi, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Kenya. There were Pentecostals, Evangelicals, Roman Catholics, Anglicans, Methodists, even an Eastern Orthodox sister at one of our gatherings...

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