(Written on January 17th, 2012)
Today was the day! Nandi was coming to spend the night,
after faithfully staying at her own house for two weeks. She’d been singing,
dancing, begging and counting down since the day we found her in the shelter.
Despite the 15-hour rainstorm and wet everything, I was
beside myself. I was ready to welcome a perfect little girl into my home, treat
her broken skin with the new lotion and medicines I bought for her, tuck her
in, pray over her, make chocolate milk when she woke up, pack her lunch and
take her to the front door for her first day of the school year – even if she
is repeating the same grade she was in last year. I couldn’t wait to celebrate
her and make her feel proud to be her.
When we pulled up to the muddy yard, she ran out with a
consuming smile.
And then she remembered.
Faster than her smile disappeared, Nandi quickly ducked into
the kitchen to cook her family’s dinner. Her mom was in the other room with the
door closed.
I scooped up an armful of children, began kissing the
raindrops off their perfectly kissable foreheads, and went to Nandi’s auntie’s
shack. Ivonne is Mama Nandi’s sister (Charity, Kevin, Given and Karabo’s mama)
and lives in the same yard. Ivonne
told me nervously Mama Nandi had changed her mind about Nandi coming to stay
with me.
Last time Nandi came over, her mother was relieved. Mama
Nandi has welcomed me into her family with hugs and kisses ever since. This
time, I found a little girl hiding behind a door while she cooked dinner. She
fought back her tears until she managed to turn her face and her emotions into
stone, even willing her limbs to be immobile. Mama Nandi locked herself into
her room when I came to greet her and shouted to her sister in SiSwati that she
didn’t want to greet me.
I decided to give everybody one last kiss and leave quickly
to avoid causing trouble for Nandi later.
And now I’m sitting here alone in a cottage I was sure would
be filled with laughter tonight.
And I’m thinking about why.
I can’t translate, unravel or make any sense of Mama Nandi’s
quick change of heart. But I’ll give you a few background stories…
A couple of weeks ago, the two families (Mama Nandi and Ivonne)
had no food. It was heartbreaking to see the underweight children fight over
the last morsel of food they found buried in the dirt. One of the staff members
from TTH brought over some food. Only Mama Nandi was home at the time. Later we
found out she had kept the food all for herself. A local pastor intervened, had
what seemed like an incredible talk with the sisters, and they agreed to share
the food.
I wonder if Mama Nandi’s change of attitude toward me had
anything to do with what she might have felt was us taking food from her when
she was asked to share what she thought she had been given?
In a whole new story with a whole new set of people…
We met a group of people nearby who were feeding 120 every
single day, but didn’t have much meat or nutrition to offer. We were blessed
with extra meat, so we took a few packages to them. Later we found out that the
local volunteers had each taken a package, leaving one small packet of meat for
the 120 children.
I wonder what my thoughts and motives would turn to if I
spent 7-days a week feeding people’s kids and didn’t have enough to feed my
own?
And just one more…
I went to a friend’s house today. She is the oldest of a
child-headed household at 18-years old and the mother of a 6-month old. We
built her and her siblings a home last year. She begged me to come inside and
away from others to tell me she wanted to go back to school but needed someone
to care for her baby. And she was out of food. Her eyes filled with hurt and
frustration as I explained I had no money with me nor the ability to care for
her baby full-time.
I wonder what hope and home are shaped like to her,
beyond the four walls of the house we built. Can she even imagine not having to
depend on people who she thinks have money and power? Can she grasp feeling
value and worth in who she is and escape the oppressive lies of poverty?
I started the day floating in God’s provision, swimming in
hope. I started the day in a posture of Thanksgiving for all the goodness
flowing out of Him. And then I left the sanctuary of my fluffy couch, oversized coffee
cup, iTunes and Bible.
I encountered the orphan crisis today.
I know their names. I know where they live.
Some of them are parents. Some of them have parents.
But they are each under the same crushing arm of that tagline
we use – The Orphan Crisis - that makes us think of cute, little brown babies
eating under that perfectly-shaped silhouette of “the Africa tree”.
The orphan
crisis is the voice that seethes and slithers through Africa and says:
You’re
on your own.
There’s
not enough for you.
Nobody’s
really here for you.
You’re
alone.
You
will live your life scraping from the bottom of the bowl and from the bottom of
the rich man’s shoes.
You
will never be anything but poor. Orphaned. Alone.
If that was in my ear…
If I was born into a culture that breathes and breeds these
statements as reality…
If that’s all I ever knew…
I would shut a foreigner out of my family for stealing from
me...
I would take the only meat I could get my hands on and feed
my kids...
And I would shamelessly beg for handouts, selling my
self-respect for a full stomach…
But we’re here
to shut that voice up, and stomp out the orphan spirit.
We’re here to
build a Home, create Hope, and raise up the Family of God.
You probably grew up in a family that had enough meat. You
probably have, at one time in your life, sat around a dinner table,
family-style and shared a meal… for the very experience of sharing the meal.
It’s probably rooted somewhere in your culture’s values, even if it’s been
buried in the past few generations, that there is something to family –
something about sharing meals, experiences, life and provision. Something
that’s worth it and something that’s good.
The people I encountered today didn’t.
How can we end the orphan crisis if we don’t model family?
If we don’t spread the news about the Greatest Adoption? If we don’t give more
than the meat we have – but give love that doesn’t stop and comes in whatever
form it takes.
Love that keeps coming back to knock on that door you’re
locked out of…
Love that offers to cook the meat and dish it out to everyone...
Love that sits down and helps a young single mom find
resources to empower her to make her family thrive…
So, at the end of a hard day, and from the quiet of this
empty cottage, I’m going to choose to find the hope. The possibilities.
We’re here to create hope.
We’re here to speak Family to the orphaned. To welcome
them into the Family where they’ll never be orphaned again. To be His
voice. The ambassador of His Family.
My
right hand upholds you.
There’s
more than enough for you, and I will never run out.
I
am here for you. I desperately want you.
I
will never forsake you.
The
Kingdom is coming. The poor will inherit the earth.
You
belong to me. I want you to be mine. I will never stop loving you.
Despite what I feel like after a day like today, Africa is not
hopeless.
There is endless potential for hope to be released through
this nation and the entire continent.
Today I got insight into how to love, how not to love and
the atrocious lies the orphan spirit burns into hearts.
Hope
is like Jell-O…
There’s
always room for more.
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