Friday, November 30, 2012

WRAP-UP Pt. I


       
by:   Doug Roland

  This post is the first step a series to sum up what we have found here, what we have done and what it means.  

I begin with a listing of incidents and problems that we have encountered during the 28 months we have lived here.  It is a compilation of observations that, in the aggregate, suggests that a social, moral and and political cancer is threatening the people of South Africa. 

        I am keenly aware that I am here by invitation, a foreigner, a temporary guest.  So the litany of items below are filtered by my own culture. It's risky business.  In the eyes of South Africans, this may be seen as alarmist, biased or unnecessary.  Nevertheless, I must be honest in recording what I have seen and experienced. 

For my friends back home, the intention is to share a sense of what it is like to be here day in and day out.  It may help make it clearer if, after you read this, you try to imagine what it would be like if you were here.  How would you act and think?  How would you feel?

 
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Things seen, read, heard or experienced:

  •   frequent power outages and water main breaks
  • the solid waste pickup takes one vehicle, the driver, and about four others 
  • a deep hole in the sidewalk, large enough to swallow a small child, resulted from the repair of a water main break; the hole remains 5-6 weeks later 
  • about 20 yards from the hole is a street named "hores", or at least it was 2 years ago;  recently the sign was repainted, "Shores";  glad they cleared that up
  • potholes in our street are not fixed for 3-4 months
  • robots (stop lights) go out regularly, usually during rush hour
  • police investigation of the burglary at our house last February; a promise from the Captain to send a fingerprint team.  The prints remain on the wall; the team never showed
  • car accidents near us, glass and debris on the road is swept into a pile and left
  • street lights on our street and a street nearby have been out more than on in our 28 months
  • there are high schools with libraries of empty shelves; but, outside there are athletic fields sufficient to accommodate soccer, cricket, track and others;  most have competition level swimming pools, including primary schools
  • the nearby university has built separate clubhouses for rugby, field hockey, cricket;  and an array of outdoor lighting for the fields even when no one is there (these lights seem to always work)
  • proportionately more Mercedes and  BMWs than I see on Florida roads;  this in a country of  27% unemployment
  • a trip or phone call to any public office is often depressing due to employee incompetence and dreadfully slow pace;    

Recent stories from the evening news:



       miners go on strike, express their demands by marching, singing, shouting slogans;  police open fire, killing 31 miners.  200 police are involved

    wildcat strikes have broken out in mines and agricultural areas; strikers sing, march and dance;  demanding up to twice existing salaries

       a platinum miners demanded equal pay for all the regular miners regardless of skill, years with company, absences;  also demanded that the job of foreman be eliminated, i.e., no bosses

         nearly every newscast begins with 100's of strikers, their, families, friends and hangers-on demonstrating for their causes; it has been said that this country is the only place where people express their anger by singing

  the economy's growth estimates are adjusted downward;  the value of the country's currency has dropped during these strikes

       a school has one bus to pick up students;  it's either late, broken or doesn't show up at all

     5-6 children ride to school in the back of a pickup truck as parents have no other way to get them there;  truck crashed into another vehicle;  all children were killed

       an adult was carrying three young children to school in his car did not arrive;  children found dead, including a girl who was raped 

     in a protest against failure of the government to provide help to a poor community, parents kept their children from going to school  (think about that)

       in one of the provinces, a supplier failed for over 10 months to deliver books to schools; one truckload was found along the roadside, simply dumped; investigation continues

        a week ago a 12 seat van belonging to the seminary was stolen from within the seminary's  apartment complex secured by metal fences 

      some universities lower their academic standards because of unprepared students;who can't cope; otherwise, if students are failed, there would not be enough to remain open;  in short, institutional dumbing-down

  •   there is a constitutional right to a college education;  last January
  • thousands of hopeful students en mass tried to get into one of the
  • universities that could not accommodate even a fraction of them;  a riot ensued
     
        the president of the country is a grade school dropout;  he  approved a project to "improve" his personal home for himself and his several wives at a cost of about $25 million of taxpayers money;  the home is in a far rural area;  the president answered the critics by saying that the millions were being spent because of security issues; [Note: it is not an "official residence" that would qualify for security as a government expense.]
  • the ANC (African National Congress) has been the dominant
  • political party in the country since the end of apartheid and has
  • commanded about 2/3 of the electorate; every province in the country,
  • save one, is governed by the ANC
  • the president has had some setbacks from the Constitutional Court. 
  • He is fighting a movement from critics to hold a vote of confidence. Fearing the Court, the president has called for a return to the "Traditional African Court" way of doing things, thereby showing an indifference to the rule of law.

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        Folks back home, I think  you should be very thankful. 

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

WHAT'S GOIN' ON

BY:  Cheri Roland




Dearest Family and Family,
         Guess you might have thought we had vanished!  But, no, this is crunch time when working in an almost new institution with a whole world of God possibilities just waiting to be tried on.  “Exciting” would be a gross understatement.
         First we need to thank the United Methodist General Board of Global Missions for developing a dynamite internship program for budding ministers.  Hillary Taylor, a new Furman University grad, came to us a month ago courtesy of GBGM, as a 14 month volunteer to SMMS, after which she will serve another 18 months in mission stateside.   We are grooming her to take over the reins of the practical ministry course, FEM, when we bid adieu in 2013 on April Fool’s Day.  Maybe a message there…
         Finishing the academic year comes with challenges of its own, as all of you teachers will appreciate.  The flurry of assignments, final exams, marking, averaging, avenging!!!  Just kidding…   A major mission for us, exclusive to our course, has been tracking down evaluations written by our partner agencies on individual seminarians.  OH the trauma and gnashing of teeth around typical TIA (This Is Africa) complications - no copier, the weather, no way to bring them, no one there when we go to pick them up, having not even begun to fill them out when we arrive at the agreed upon time, no email access because the power lines have been stolen (to get the copper)…  We also have helped with invigilating, or monitoring, exams.  And all this must be done allowing time for those who have failed an exam to take “supplementaries” (for students who have failed).  Our valedictory service closes out the year this Saturday.   We staff members then work through December 14th.
         But the MOST exciting project now is the makeover of our FEM program.  It all began with a visit by Dr. Mark Fowler from Garrett Theological Seminary in Chicago, a friend of Pete Grassow.  Pete is our Chaplin and new Head of Formation, under which FEM falls.   Anyway, Mark came this past winter (Tampa’s summer) to review our FEM course; his speciality is practical ministry, so who better to help expand our vision?  He was full of praise for what Doug and I had put in place, saying our program rivalled those of many seminaries in the States.  What he saw missing was integration into the academic side of seminary life.  We wholeheartedly agreed.  Our meager attempts to link with our lecturers had fizzled, often because of the existing seminary structure.
         The renowned Dr. Peter Storey to the rescue!   He has been our interim president and most excellent backdoor neighbour when in visiting in Pietermaritzburg.   Dr. Storey has redefined our internal structure to compliment a just birthed revolutionary seminarian assessment tool.  This is so new that MCSA General Council hasn’t even voted on it yet!  The idea is to evaluate the person called to ministry using the same criteria from day one till ordination seven years later.   We can’t wait to try it out!   No longer will the three years at SMMS viewed as a separate and sacred time block not to be messed with by EMMU bishops peering down from their thrones.  No, now we are all one big happy family, thanks to Ross Olivier, his son Jon-Mark, and Peter Storey expanding horizons.  Yes, there have been hands of reconciliation across the water.  
         With this fortuitous  rethink, FEM will indeed to join the rank of an honest-to-goodness academic class – and get this – will be taught by none other than our new seminary pres, Dr. Mvume Dandala!  Take about instant clout .   One week will be classroom time, and the next, their agency visits to apply what they are learning.  SMMS offers both a Diploma in Practical Ministry and a Bachelor of Theology, with year one providing the foundation for following in Jesus’ footsteps, year two focuses on deepening  servanthood and year three culminates in leadership training.  
         So all of these changes have necessitated ferretting out NEW agencies to partner with SMMS in this adventure.  I’m sure you all are OK with CHANGE, but it’s still a six letter word for me.   My gut reaction was to circle the wagons around the program we had built – but how silly is that?!   This overturning of the apple cart – forgive my mixed metaphors – has actually knocked out the rotten air, making room for revitalization and exploration of other wonderful agencies in our area who are doing amazing work for the Lord.  And, shock of ages, they are not all Methodist…
         Hillary has come to the fore to shake up our in-the-box-thinking (see the need for our blog’s name?), and with her enthusiasm will propel this program to new heights.  She will be the official coordinator, linking the agencies with the lecturers.  And get this!  Our new accountant and his wife from Malawi -- who knew they both have a Masters in Practical Ministry?  Yet another God thing!  So they have been recruited as adjunct lecturers for FEM. This classroom experience will also offer a fabulous venue for our agency staff members to share their stories and expertise as well as greatly increase seminarians’ exposure to issues at the intersecton of ethnicity, church and society .
         SOOO, as you can tell, we have tons and tons to be thankful for this Thanksgiving.  Although we are soon closing this indescribable chapter in our lives, our hearts are bursting with joy as we birth a new era of FEM, secure that our call to work with future ministers has been taken up by others.  This seminary will continue to bear fruit!  And, in that spirit we are celebrating Thanksgiving Thursday with real turkey and stuffing and pie and the rest.  Hillary from South Carolina, Wilhelmina and Rodrick from Jamaica, Frenchey from Mississippi, and Nellie and Rob from Holland are converging on #7 Isabel Beardmore to keep up the American tradition of over indulgence alive and well.  And you all will be in our hearts and minds as we praise the Lord for his providence and love.
Blessings for an awesome Happy Thanksgiving,
          Cheri