Category: Burkina Faso

  • When 3,000 Miles Apart Becomes Zero {A Compassion International Story}

    When 3000 Miles Becomes ZeroThe fact that this has happened twice makes me undoubtedly assured that God did the orchestrating.

    A few weeks ago I got a private message from a woman I don’t know and have never met. She told me that she’s been trying to reach me. She just came back from a mission trip to Burkina Faso, West Africa. While she was there in the village, a young girl came up to her and showed her pictures of a couple who sponsors her through Compassion International. That couple was my husband and me. It being obvious that the missionary was American, without words the young girl was asking if the woman knew me. (more…)

  • Why I’m Not Ready to Read Jen Hatmaker’s Book “7”

    A dear friend who I love and respect and look up to so much (I secretly want to be like her when I grow up even though she’s a little younger than me) posted on Facebook recently that she is reading Jen Hatmaker’s book 7: An Experimental Mutiny Against Excess. She said that the book is “rocking her world” and she’s been “gutting her house and making packages for homeless people”.

    Oh wow! I want to want to gut my house and make packages for homeless people. I really do.

    But I’m not ready to read Jen Hatmaker’s book 7. (more…)

  • Africa Ruined My Fun

    We sat in front of the T.V. on Saturday afternoon, flipping channels, wasting time, and landed on the food channel. You know the one. The channel where either a food artist works a decadent act of chemistry on a white, ceramic, canvas disk, making your mouth water and making you wish you were the artist in your own kitchen. Or you watch other people traveling around savoring the prepared art of someone else in order to make a fair judgment about it, which always seems to be a pleasant one they can’t resist.

    On this day we watched the latter. A man traveling around from city to city indulging in wonderful food in quaint hidden towns and hole-in-the-wall secrets.

    My mouth, too, began to water, and I wondered what great food I could be missing right here where I live.

    Then my mind flashed back.

    Back to that trip six months ago deep in the bush of Africa.

    The women starting preparing our dinner at two o’clock in the afternoon. They started with cutting the cabbage as the chicken ran around them for one last time.

    Four hours later dinner was served. Some men brought benches over for us to sit on to eat. They had a few forks for us, too, but not for everyone.

    In the pitch black night the rest of the village sat over on the other side of the hut, away from us, as we ate. There was no thought of them ever eating with us. That was simply unspeakable. So they waited until we were finished.

    Whatever was left would be theirs. First the men, then the women, then the children would eat. In that order. If there was no food left, then the children would go hungry that night. That’s the way it is. A man is more valuable than a child. After all, how would the family get food if the father died?

    Just recently I was listening to a sermon by someone. I don’t remember his name because I have several podcasts downloaded. The pastor told a story about traveling to another country and seeing the people in that culture literally bow down and worship statues and sculptures and things. Just like the golden calf in the Old Testament. “Who still worships objects?” he thought. How ridiculous that seemed.

    Then a woman from that country came to America. He asked her, “How do you like America?” assuming she would love it. Who wouldn’t?

    “I hate it”, she said. “There is so much idolatry. People worship their stomachs here.”

    His point was the hypocrisy in both his heart and the woman’s heart. And the realization that we are a very idolatrous nation even in the most concealed ways.

    I watched that Saturday afternoon the man on the food channel full of enthusiasm and smiles almost panting as he traveled from place to place trying different cuisines and variations of food, and my heart began to ache.

    No longer can I see abundance and not think about my Compassion child and the little girl without a dress and then fall on my own knees in confession of the love of things in my own life.

    God gave me His eyes for those few hours there in the Bush, and I brought them back with me to the Land of the Free. I cannot hide behind oblivion because I’ve seen it with my own eyes, with my own soul.

    No longer may I fully enjoy all that’s around me, but then again should I? Or should I view it from His perspective? Is all of this stuff really a blessing? Or is it more of a curse, keeping us further from Him?

    I don’t know the answers. I want a clear-cut line, but there’s not one. I want to accept His blessings with open hands for what they are – grace-filled gifts, but I don’t want to be deceived into thinking they’re blessings when they’re not.

    Africa may have ruined my fun of sitting and watching the food channel, but it opened my heart to His and made me think about making abundance my God. I’ll leave the line up to Him.

    How do you view abundance? How do you view idolatry? Share with me in the comments. I would love to hear from you.

     

  • When Compassion Came to Life :: Burkina Faso :: Day 5

    We had only just started sponsoring her.  I had written her a few times, and she had written me back once.  But this was the day that I looked forward to most – the day I would see her with my own eyes.  Not just in a brochure telling me her name and her daily chores and her literacy level.  But see her in person and touch her and look into those eyes. 

    She is my connection to Burkina Faso.  I would go home, and she would stay, but it is through her that a part of me would come back every so often through my letters and the gifts I send with other teams who travel there from our church. She is my one person.  My one person who was appointed to me to hopefully make a difference.  A continual, ongoing difference, past the thirty minutes I spend with her here on day five of my trip. 

    I couldn’t wait to meet her.

    That morning we walked over the Compassion site.  The place where the children gather on Thursdays to learn etiquette and hygiene and Jesus.  There were so many children.  I carried the brochure in my hand, and her picture was right on the front.  The children would look down at it, and I would hold it up.  We couldn’t communicate, but they knew I was looking for her, and she was mine. 

    That day she had a big test at school, a test that would determine whether she goes on to the next level or not.  See, I chose her because of her age.  She is thirteen years old.  I knew that the little ones are often chosen, but I wanted to give an older child a chance before she turned eighteen.  So I chose her.   In her country going to school, even public school, is a luxury.  Only the brightest and the most fortunate are blessed with an education.  Today she was working on that chance, and she was not planning to come to Compassion.

    But I had to see her.  I couldn’t come all that way without laying my eyes on her. 

    The big pink bag was stuffed full for her.  Construction paper, markers, post-it notes, a notebook, a necklace, hair bows, a toothbrush, toothpaste, soap, and the skirts and t-shirts I had brought for myself to wear.  Along with a bag of rice for her family. 

    They told me they would have to go and get her on the moped. 

    So I waited.

    It wasn’t until late in the afternoon that the moped drove up with her on the back. 

    Children were all around me when she drove up. I broke away from the crowd and started walking toward the moped. They knew she was the one I had come to see

    And tears streamed down from my eyes.  There she was – the teenage girl on the cover of the brochure that I sat in the church office and picked out from a pile of many.  She was mine. My Compassion child. 

    We walked into the Compassion offices so that we could be alone and talk.  My words were translated, and she was mostly quiet.  I gave her all that I had brought her, and I told her that I prayed for her every day.

    Compassion came alive for me that day. 

    A few nights later – the night before we left – the missionaries had some Congo dancers come out and perform as an ministry outreach for the village.  As I walked to the school cafeteria to see the performance, I felt a tap on my shoulder.  It was very dark, and I could not see.  The voice said, “Blandine”. And it was her.  She reached out her hand, and I shook it.  She was wearing the pink t-shirt that I had given her, and that I had worn a few days before. 

    I saw her again that night for the last time in person.

    Each day as I pray for Blandine as I picture her in my mind – in her village, at the Compassion site, with her family.  She is a part of me.  And in some small way I pray that I am a part of her, and through my prayers Jesus grows to become the most important person in her life. 

    I realize that I had a rare and blessed opportunity to meet the Compassion child we sponsor.  Not everyone has that opportunity.  But I want to urge you to prayerfully consider sponsoring a child through Compassion International.  I have been to their facilities in Burkina Faso, and met some of the workers there.  This is an organization that is led by the Lord to provide education, medical care, and spiritual development to children all over the world.  It is an organization that is making a difference for eternity. 
    Sponsor a Child in Jesus Name with Compassion
  • You are Important, So I Came to Meet You :: Burkina Faso :: Day 4

    At first I didn’t think we could communicate.  I met her outside of the missionaries’ house after coming back from the bush.  She smiled sheepishly, and I smiled back.  I reached out and rubbed her back.  I found myself doing that when I met the children.  It was my way of saying what they couldn’t understand through my words. 
    You are important. So I came here to meet you. 

    She had a large, full smile, and the features of her face were dainty and defined and beautiful.  Jeweled braids fell precisely from her head and moved from side-to-side as she walked. 

    I began to ask her questions.  She would just look at me and smile. So I tried harder with hand motions and drawing pictures in the air.  But again, just a smile. 

    I asked her if she wanted to come and sit beside me on the bricks that were stacked nearby for the new wall we were building.  She accepted, and we made our way over and had a seat.

    “My name is Imelda”, she whispered.

    “What did you say?” I asked surprised that she spoke and making sure I heard her correctly. 

    “My name is Imelda”, she replied. 

    And she became my first friend in Burkina Faso. 

    That afternoon, sitting right there on those bricks, I painted Imelda’s nails.  I talked to her about school and her family and where she lived.  Her English was limited, but it was good enough to get to know a friend better. 

    Each day Imelda came to the LAC where we stayed.  She would ask one of the missionary children to go in and get me.  I would come out, and we would spend a little more time together.  It became our standard date.

    The day before we were leaving I had one of the missionary children translate for me that I was leaving the next day.  We took a picture together, and she asked if she could keep it.  I told her I had no way of making a copy of it, but that I would send a copy to her with the next team from our church that goes to Burkina Faso.

    Then she handed me this letter that she handwrote. 

    Not a day has gone by in the forty-six days since I left Burkina Faso that I have not thought about Imelda and her precious country.  Pockets of my days still get consumed with my memories, and I count up to see what time it is there, I imagine what they are doing, and I picture Imelda’s face.  But I remind myself that for them these are not memories.  This is their life that is continuing under that thick, hot sun and on that packed, hard dirt.

    Some often wonder why people would travel that far and spend such money when there are plenty of needs here.  And that is true.  There are plenty of needs here.

    But for me the answer is simple.  God knew I needed a friend named Imelda who lives in Burkina Faso.  He knew that only through that special friend, in that special country would my mind fully open to see his kind of love – a love so deep that he was willing to die for us just to claim us as his own. 

    God wants Imelda as his own.  God wants me as his own.

    Now, each day, she is a part of me.  I pray for her.  That she will know God’s love too. And eternity will be sweet as we sit in the sunlight and talk as I paint her nails. 

    My friend Imelda is important.  So I went to meet her.

    Please join me as I tell my story about visiting Burkina Faso, West Africa on a mission trip this past November. I am telling it slowly because a lot of emotions go into writing about the experience. Please join my story from the beginning here: Burkina Faso.
    To learn more about Burkina Faso, and the needs there, please visit Engage Burkina and Hope for Burkina.
  • Waking Up Without a Dress :: Burkina Faso :: Day 3

    There were a sea of children when we drove up.  Running from all directions as if a bull-horn announced we were close two miles back. I wondered where they were coming from.  And where their mamas were. 

    They stood in a pack and stared.  Mesmerized.  And to me they looked like the way children truly want to be – no shoes, shirts untuck, red dirt caked to their knees and dusting their faces.  Not confined by time or space.  Enjoying the day of sunshine and warmth and digging in the dirt.  Except that for them I knew days like these are like most other days.  Here digging in the dirt isn’t something the mamas have to bribe their children to do like back home.  The dirt is the prized toy.

    There was one dress, though, different from all to others.  It was blue and silky made from chiffon or satin. The wide collar held embroidered flowers and pleats fell from the waist.  It was a fancy dress – a party dress.  It stood in front of the sea, torn and stained, full of work and fun, but still beautiful. 

    Her little nose needed wiping and her face needed cleaning, but she still looked like she was on her way to a party with those round cheeks and perfect, small braided tight against her little head.

    Little Girl in Blue Dress 104

    The next day just as expected.  Full of light and sounds of cock-a-doodle-doo.  The earth shows its glory no matter where it is positioned.  The sun rises just as bright and the sky hangs just as blue no matter what it’s shining upon. 

    The Bush - The Next Day

    The Bush - The Next Day 2

    The children came back the next day from wherever they were coming from.  Some ran through on their way to school with their lunch pails clanging against their legs as they ran.  Others just came to be with us for one more day. 

    I noticed her from afar as she walked up to where we were.  She could barely walk from holding her new dress off the ground. Pink and made of terry cloth covering only the essentials.  It was nothing like the party dress from the day before.  Today was different.

    Today it was just a towel.

    Look closely at her face.  Look closely in her eyes.  Does she know that today is different?  Does she know that she woke up without a dress to wear? 

    We had a little girl’s dress.  And we gave it to her. 

    But to her it didn’t matter.  Whether blue satin, pink terry cloth, or green cotton she treasured each of them as a blessing worthy of holding onto tightly.  They were all party dresses in her eyes.
    Do I look at all of God’s blessing as party dresses? 
    I think not. 
    Do you?
    Please join me as I tell my story about visiting Burkina Faso, West Africa on a mission trip this past November.  I am telling it slowly because a lot of emotions go into writing about the experience.  Please join my story from the beginning here: Burkina Faso.
    To learn more about Burkina Faso, and the needs there, please visit Engage Burkina and Hope for Burkina.