Scripture Favorites

From VSI literature: We loved you so much that we were delighted to share with you not only the Gospel of God but our lives as well, because you had become so dear to us. 1 Thessalonians 2:8

Gary's: Humble yourselves, therefore, under God’s mighty hand, that he may lift you up in due time. Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you. 1 Peter 5:6-7

Joanne's: But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Matthew 6:33

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Working the "Shamba"


It is Annual Exam time at Idigima, which means a lot of late nights typing and printing exams . . . after trying hard all day to make sure the students have all of their notes completed and are ready to start their intense “study week” when the teachers are not allowed into the classrooms.

We’re spending a lot of salary on students right now, preparing a larger vegetable garden and fence and having an acreage worked up for corn . . . more to give the students work/income than anything else, but it may produce a profit to share as well, or some grain for students to grind for ugali. We have five exceptionally needy students working at present, and may add a couple to get the land hoed for planting. We had the power of the ox plow half of the land yesterday, and they are to return today to finish that aspect of the project. These “shamba”/farms are offered to staff to help offset the low salary; we declined last year, being new and ignorant, but this year thought it a good way to help the students have a source of employment/income. Unlike the national teachers, we are not out there barefooted, digging with jembe and chapakazi. We do work in the garden by the house . . . wearing flip-flops.

Joanne has also not slowed down on her sewing of student uniforms. We’ve purchased three bolts of white fabric for shirts and a bolt of burgundy fabric for trousers, ties and skirts. She’s looking forward to the holiday break so that she can sew day and night . . . instead of just at night after teaching all day!


Gary completed the painting of all window frames for the Pre-Form buildings (462 panes of glass), which is a lot of small inside corners and edges. He also finished this week the painting of the six blackboards (30 feet by 5 feet) in the same six classrooms. Joanne now has the best blackboards on campus. All of this was done with a 1 ½ inch brush . . . you use what is available.


We are going to student ghettos twice a week, eating ugali with greens or avocado (and once daga—a small dried fish that I think is used best as cat food), and playing UNO until it is time for the students to return to school for evening studies. This past Monday we were scheduled to be with two boys, but one had gone home to help his family. We were thinking it was going to be a bit strange playing UNO with three people in his 7x7 foot ghetto, but word got out and we had students and a couple of village kids show up. We ended up with 13 of us squeezed in that tiny room, two deep sitting on the bed mats, water buckets and stools. With only the door for ventilation and light, and it closed to a six inch crack to make room for guests, we survived a very interesting afternoon.

During this holiday season, we’d say, “Wish you were here!” but we know you probably have better plans. We at times “wish we were THERE,” when we think of family and friends and holiday parties and food, food, food, but we are content in the work and relationships here, and we thank you all for being a part of the hope and future you are giving to these people.

May God bless you in special ways as you live in His adventure, wherever He has placed you!

Love,

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your hands and feet to Tanzania

Monday, December 27, 2010

Christmas in Tanzania

Season’s greetings with love and best wishes to all,

There is no snow to be “dashing through,” but we’ve been dashing through mud and rain a bit lately.

School was dismissed on December 17 and will resume on January 17. Joanne will continue with other Pre-Form I teachers during the break for the newer students who’ve arrived . . . and continue to arrive. We expect to have 400 in the opening Form I class this January. The rest of the student body numbers 405 to put that into perspective. We’ve completed the class time-table and distributed copies to the teachers so that they can prepare for a very busy year. We are hopeful and expectant of receiving some additional (national) teachers in February. Joanne will be teaching Form I English, as the government has made edict that secondary schools cannot demand more than three or four months of Pre-Form studies.

At the school closing ceremony, we found out that the students had requested and been granted permission to have an alternative uniform to wear two days of the week. Instead of red trousers, ties and scarves, they may wear black with their white shirts. Joanne had orders to make 35 school shirts at that time, which at this writing has grown to 43, as well as five or six pairs of pants, so she had to find out the color of pants desired by the boys, and I will need to go to town to buy black fabric . . . Joanne has developed quite a system for pumping out shirts, cutting as many as 12 out at a time, bagging the pieces with the students’ names, and sewing different pieces together in stages. Those of you who know her well can imagine she is having the time of her life; getting to sew is a form of worship with her.



On Christmas eve day, the “Second” of the school and I went to Mbeya to buy supplies . . . fabric for Joanne, more blackboard paint, and new sports uniforms. As usual, planned activities seldom play out as planned. The material Joanne wanted was not available, and the uniforms were three times the cost we had expected to pay. Fortunately, the Lord got involved, not only in keeping us from spending money on fabric, but in reducing the price of the uniforms so that we had the resources needed. As it turned out, another school had ordered netball uniforms and then backed out of the deal, so the store gave us a very big reduction on that price. They also reduced the individual and total price of the order in gratitude for our buying uniforms for all three sports. In the past, the girls’ netball team (which I think is undefeated) has had only a colored shell to wear over their clothes, the volleyball team has had no uniforms, and the football/soccer team has had only enough jerseys to field a team (subs scramble into the jersey of the person they are replacing) with only a couple of players sporting matching shorts.

I pictured us buying matching uniforms for all sports and creating “school colors,” but that isn’t how they view it over here. It was explained to me this way, “To have the same color will make us look poor . . . people will think we are using the same uniforms for all sports.” Okay, well, we are poor, but to make us look good, we got three different color combinations. I let the VP decide what would be best, suggesting we avoid the same colors as area schools with whom we compete. The resulting selections I honestly didn’t think about it at the time, but those of you in the Iowa City area should get a chuckle…The soccer team will be in West High green and yellow, the volleyball team in City High red and white, and the netball team in U of I black and yellow. (We’ll send pictures later.)

As usual, the trip going and coming is never without adventure. Going, we were in the back of a Toyota pick-up with 25 people and a large crate of chickens and other luggage. Coming back, we missed the last “transport” tuck and finally had to hire a small car, sharing the expense with four other desperate individuals. With the sun well-set 13 hours after leaving, I was met by an anxious wife.



On Christmas, I took a 2½ hour walk to Shomora. I was to go to Ikoka with one of our students, but as often happens, they decided to move the meeting to a branch church in another village. (I’m always told about these changes AFTER we are half way; I suppose they think I’ll back out.) We took the “short cut” to Ikoka, had tea and fry bread at the student’s home, then proceeded the additional 20 minute walk to Shomora. The service was attended by three pastors, lasted 3½ hours, broke for a luncheon of rice, beans, chicken and fish, and concluded with another service of special music by small groups. I was struck with the thought that some of these people are quite talented, would have promising music careers in America, but will be a blessing to just a few people during their lives. When I shared this thought with Joanne, she set me back on the narrow way, reminding me that God is being blessed by these lives, which is a far better service of worship than for the praise of man. The combined church sends its Christmas greeting to the church of America. With the sun setting 11 hours after leaving, I was met once again by a wife relieved to see me home safely and ready to hear of my adventures with God.



Joanne had a few visitors on Christmas Day, staying home to serve the students and staff of Idigima. She made two banana cakes for the teachers, each cooked in a Dutch oven on the charcoal stove. One teacher brought a dressed chicken, which we cooked on Sunday. One of our top girl students came to visit Joanne, bringing gifts of eggs, beans and passion fruit. Joanne reciprocated with gifts of rice and spices to make a favorite dish here of rice pilaf. Joanne had been sick and lost her voice for the week following the closure of the school, so didn’t want to risk relapse from the long day at Shomora, and she avoids at all costs the trauma of traveling to “town” in the back of a truck, hanging onto roll-bars while we bounce over the rocky mountain roads. Sunday night, it was my turn to feel queezy, and after a restless night and day in bed on Monday, am feeling up to some light duty on the computer and around the house.



I've arranged with the Registrar to buy the remaining glass for the classrooms, amounting to 186 panes, which we want to get installed before the students return in January. That and the renovation of the older blackboards on campus are the focus of my holiday break. I will also be serving time on the crank of the sewing machine and working on my Form IV curriculum of summarizing the Old Testament and going into the New Testament.

Busy, but joyful at this season of our Lord's birth. Please know that you, our family and friends, have been in our thoughts and comments a lot. (We’ve been singing to each other, “I’ll Be Home for Christmas, if only in our dreams.”) Our prayers for all of you, the church, is to have a joyous celebration of His redemptive love. Please let us know how we may pray specifically for you.

Love,

Gary and Joanne

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Tanzanian life at Idigima Secondary School


Things are going well here. Form II students start their two-week National Exams this week, so Gary will have a few open periods to devote to lesson preparation and final exam development, not to mention assisting with student projects and his Form I and Form III classes, which have a lot of material to cover before the December finals.

As for Joanne, her Pre-Form I student count now stands at 331, nearly as big as 2/3 of the rest of the student body! They’ve been divided into five “Streams” (classes), and Joanne is the teacher for the two most advanced streams of students. Five new national teachers, who arrived just a week ago, are teaching the other three streams.

Things haven’t changed much on the home front; students and teachers line up for filtered drinking water and sewing projects. A big change is that the students have added a small store (duka) to their canteen. Students can now buy school supplies, uniforms, and household items right here on campus. Joanne is making the uniforms after orders are placed at the duka. Scarves and ties are made in bulk and are in stock at the store. She’s got the system down to a science, sewing a shirt in 2 hours and 45 minutes. (Gary is the donkey that gets to go to town and haul back bolts of fabric and inventory.) Student leaders of the project are frequently at our house wanting to brainstorm ideas of how to expand the services: kerosene for the study lamps used in the ghetto, cooking oil, and even a barber shop. It would be nice to see a permanent structure for the canteen, but that will not likely take place until a lot of other buildings are completed. We will be content; the nationals certainly don’t mind . . . it is far more than they’ve had in the past!

Thank you for sending us here as your hands and feet of hope and service. We continue to feel a strong sense of purpose and belonging here.

Love and grace to all,

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your ambassadors in Christ to Tanzania

Thursday, December 16, 2010

New classrooms


A very excited student body assembled at 7:00 Saturday morning to “fire line” the stacks of burnt bricks to the locations around the foundations of the four new classrooms that will be built in the next couple of months on the west side of the campus, nearest the road. As some of you may have heard, there is a shortage of construction funds with so many schools in need, so it was such a relief to find out that we will get enough cement to erect the walls and not lose the bricks to the damaging rains. We have the timbers and metal sheeting on site for trusses and roofs. This next Saturday is the date scheduled for the start of the building; we hope and pray the cement arrives. The students have been working after school this week to haul fill for the floors and walkways, and water for the cement-mixing.

Next year’s bricks will be used for the foundations on the east side of the campus complex, earmarked for science and computer laboratories. There are also smaller foundations in place for a medical clinic and storage building.

Buildings going up makes for an exciting atmosphere, but the real “building up” are the lives these walls represent. It is so exciting for us to watch these students grow in their self-worth and confidence, social skills, language development, and awareness of God’s goodness, purpose and love for them.

For being a part of this work in your prayer and financial support, we say, “Asante sana!” (thank you very much) and, “Mungu aku bariki” (God bless you!).

Love and grace to all,

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your ambassadors in Christ to Tanzania

Monday, December 13, 2010

The Mbuzi Cup


To all of our sports fans, the students had an internal sports competition over the past couple of weeks: The Mbuzi Cup, consisting of competition between the Forms in boys’ soccer and girls’ netball. Joanne’s Pre-Form teams were feared contenders with such a large body of students to draw from (330); their fans certainly overwhelmed the others, and Joanne was in the midst of the cheering crowd. However, Gary’s Form III (although he couldn’t really show favoritism as a teacher for all Forms) dominated due to their years of experience playing as teams. Something to note, however, is that an all-star team was formed, and quite a few Pre-Form players were chosen. They traveled to Mlowo, but the match was stopped short of completion because the other team was getting a bit hostile (European soccer?). Although we have some very competitive types, I was proud of their self-control and good sportsmanship.

The winner of the Mbuzi Cup (Form III) got a big, 7 hour celebration, complete with mbuzi (goat) dinner. As it turned out, many students from all Forms attended. There were speeches, congratulations, dance competition (boys and girls separately, not as couples), and food. They also had a fund raiser for the athletic department; people offered money to see a student or faculty member perform. If the person didn’t want to do what was asked (sing, dance, do push-ups, etc.) he or she had to pay a larger sum. It was well attended and was still going on hours after we went home.

As a side note, the balls used in competition were donated by our wonderful supporters in America. The balls they normally play with would be passed over in an American garage sale, so “thank you very much” to those who sent the World Cup replica and other sports balls. The students literally freaked out when they were brought onto the field. It made them feel . . . wonderful.

Thank you all for making some very special contributions to the lives of these students.

Love and grace to all,

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your ambassadors in Christ to Tanzania

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Language barriers


A girl came to the house with a cut on her foot, and because Joanne was busy with three students on some sewing projects, she told me to have the girl wash her feet. I gave the girl a basin and directed her to the kitchen area where the water bin is located. When she poured three pitchers of water into the basin, I said, “My goodness, girl, that’s enough for a bath. Are you going to haul water for me later?” (Water is precious during the dry season and has to be carried from the river.) She just smiled and took the basin to the wash room. I went back to what I was doing, Joanne treated the girl’s cut, then the student disappeared with one of our buckets. She was back in minutes and returned to the wash room. Shortly, we heard splashing going on and the other students began to chatter and laugh. Obviously, the girl had understood me to say that she should haul water for a bath. The girl came out a bit later wanting to know if she could borrow lotion (they “oil down” after a bath). We all had a good laugh and teased her about maybe wanting Joanne’s eye liner and lipstick as well. Like Joanne says, “These are our kids.” Well, some are getting quite comfortable with the idea.

Love and grace to all,

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your ambassadors in Christ to Tanzania

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Happy Thanksgiving from Tanzania!


Dear beloved supporters,

Thanksgiving Day in Tanzania…was just another day, for the most part. Getting to discuss the history and concept with the students, as usual, brought on questions about other aspects of American history and family traditions. Most of their history classes to this point have been about Tanzania and Africa, with only an overview of world…and most of that European…history.

When we finally settled down to our meal for the day, we did think more about our families and friends in America…how they would be enjoying turkey, ham, sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin pie…and so much more… No, our imaginations could not bring any of that to replace the taste of our beans and rice. Still, we did give thanks for His provision for the day and always; and we thank our God for the relationships demonstrated by this ministry…both the senders on your end and the recipients on this end: thankful students and their teachers.

We hope your Thanksgiving Day was full and wonderful in His grace.

Love,

Gary and Joanne

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Joanne wrestles the computer from Gary!

This update comes from Joanne! She usually lets Gary draft their updates, but not this time!

************************

Dear friends and family,

Greetings from your work in Tanzania. Thank you so much for allowing us to be your ambassadors in the Lord’s work among these eager students.

Every weekend I grade a small Friday exam that I give to my Pre-Form students. This past weekend I also had to write 100 names in 2 roster books for attendance taking. The cut off for new students was last Wednesday, but there are sure to be more that will try to squeeze in. In fact, on Sunday Gary had a shopkeeper in town say that he was bringing his daughter this week. I have 67 kids in “A” classroom, 86 in “B”, 53 in “C”, 55 in “D” and 55 in the newly formed “E” stream, for a current total of 316 kids! Wow! New teachers have arrived and I have been able to focus on my teaching with the A and B Streams.

There is no way I can get to all the classes everyday, so I assign the A and B classes to do their own lessons and get an arm load of books from the library for each class to “read” during the times there is no teacher in their classroom. (Streams A and B have been here for at least six months and are the best students in Pre-Form.) It’s working out quite well. We were informed today that VST is sending five national Form IV graduate students to assist with Pre-Form. Gary has also submitted his schedule of open periods to the academic office to be used when needed. All the classes (streams) are at different levels of the English course, so changing the classroom sizes is not what I want to do. I’m concentrating on the new students in C, D and E, so that some of them can pass the English exam in December. We hope that those who do not make it into Form I will return in January to take a full year of English and then pass the exam in the next December finals time. Many students here are quite small. Then, again, they can be 12-13 years old up to 20 and 22 years in Pre-Form, so, it’s quite an age and maturity range. I depend on the older ones to be the leaders, and they do rise up to be that and are often the more intelligent and focused students.

Oh, you would not believe the rags these kids wear to school! And their shoes are falling apart, sewn long ago with “thread’ from woven bags. No socks, short trousers, huge shirts, few buttons, no zippers, etc, but they still come, no matter what, to get an education. These new students (in C, D and E classrooms) are not required to dress in school uniform, as they have just come for a few months, and may not return in January. It’s a stretch for the parents to send their kids to school, pay for their ghetto (2-3,000 Tsh/mo), basic needs (a blanket, soap, beans, cornmeal, a small stove to cook on, charcoal and a pot or two, etc) and student tuition (10,000 Tsh, Tanzania shillings). As their teacher, I see all this and cannot let it affect me and my teaching. I love them as my children (an understatement) and want to fix all their clothes, etc. So, with their language limitations of English, I’m finding myself teaching more boldly and using more Swahili this time than last year. Giving them a small exam every Friday makes them (hopefully) study all week for the exam. It also tells me how my teaching is going; if they are understanding what I’m teaching, etc. It’s a real challenge to manage a classroom of 90 students (which was the case before we split out the newest students into the E stream), but I’m able to do it. I’m pretty strict and do a lot of pointing at students, if they are talking together, or NOT talking when I want them to be practicing words and sentences as a class. I ask them, “How old are you?” “Are you 4 years old or 14 years old?” And, “This is secondary school, not primary school.” “Putting a student down” in a “shaming” way, is what they do here, so using one or two students as examples and pointing at them, works pretty well for discipline and control.

The students just love to see pictures! I have a picture album sitting by my sewing machine for me to flip through anytime I feel like it. When anyone comes to visit, they will flip through and we’ll talk about everyone in the church and personal family. Gary likes to make the photos appear on the computer screen in the evening. It makes us feel like we’re with you more this year than last, and since we are seldom alone, a lot of the students and staff are getting to know you.

There were a few drops of rain on the roof the other day, so the rain is coming soon! I planted some seeds in the garden in hopes for the rain to wet them and get started! Our diet is quite limited: beans, rice, some leaves to cook for “greens”, a few bananas, cornbread, and potatoes. Avocadoes will be ready to pick in a few weeks.

I went to the ghetto “community” of 5 of my students after school last Wednesday. I took a deck of UNO and a “gift” of a small bag of cornmeal (their staple food). I sat on a little bench, shared their lunch of ugali and greens and played UNO for 4 hours. We had a “blast,” laughing and trying to teach them how to hold their cards, and learn how to shuffle them! The mother of the family that has the ghettos for the girls came to visit as well, and gave me an egg and 2 cups of fresh cow’s milk! Wow! It was really nice to have real milk. I let it go sour (1 day) and had Diana make it into cornbread. It was really good!

On Saturday and Sunday, we do our own cooking on a kerosene stove. I thought maybe I’d try something really different! (Sound familiar?) So, I took the Strawberry protein shake mix that Gideon had thrown out (I can see why, but we’re hard up for protein here) and made pancakes from it! Well, they turned out ‘not SO bad’, says I, but Gary made me promise to never do it again!

May God’s grace abound to you as you glorify Him in your lives.

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your feet on the ground in Tanzania

Friday, November 5, 2010

Work & Play

Dear Friends in the Lord’s work,

I just wanted you to see an updated picture of Joanne’s new Pre-Form class, which is now at 130 and new registrants showing up daily. With her previous two groups, the total of students who will be testing in December to enter Form One in January is currently at 299.

Also pictured are some of the work and play going on (see the slideshow for more photos). The students worked very hard the day following 3rd quarter exams to carry and stack bricks for burning. That evening, however, they had plenty of energy restored for good games of football (soccer), netball and volley ball.

Today, we had a four-hour student and faculty meeting outside to go over some new development plans. This came about after the appointment of a new headmaster and day-long meetings with student leaders. The students are pretty excited about the addition of clubs for choir, debate, and dance. Special recognition was made and thanks given for the school supplies and sport balls donated by the people back in the U.S.A.

The development of a student store is also exciting to see grow and expand. Starting out with pens, pencils and exercise books, it is now providing students with soap and food items. Joanne’s sewing items (shirts, trousers, skirts, ties and scarves) will also be handled through the store. Needless to say, Gary had to make a trip to town for more fabric.

Joanne has hired a Form One student who was “financially disturbed” to turn the crank on her sewing machine (picture attached). For those who did not get that story, Joanne hand-carried her favorite machine (Pfaff) from America this September, but the circuitry was not suited for over here, so after trying and failing to set it up as a treadle, hit upon the idea of a hand crank. Joanne and Ndipo produced their first pair of trousers this afternoon.

In the trip to town, Gary also purchased window frame paint and the very special and expensive blackboard paint as the first phase of completing the Pre-Form classrooms, sponsored by the Missions Club of Grace Community Church in North Liberty, Iowa. Glass will follow, and any money from the donation left over will likely be used for cement to close up the building. You will notice from the pictures that the gable is still open.

All thanks and praise for what you are doing for these kids. They love to hear about you and see the pictures of you that we brought back.

Pray for us as we do for you!

Gary & Joanne Grenell, in Tanzania by God’s grace and your commission

A happy girl. A tragic death.

Dear Friends,

Be in prayer for our student body at this time, as one of our Form III students has died. She leaves behind a sister in the same class she was in. The girl died night before last in the hospital in Vwawa from a lung condition. The funeral was today (10-4-10) in Iyula-A, about an hour’s walk from the school. Classes were dismissed in mid-morning for anyone who chose to attend, which was most of the campus. Many of our students left early to assist the family in the preparations. The custom here is for open invitation to the village, including a meal. Students collected fire wood along the way. It is customary for those attending to bring a gift for the family, ranging from money to food items, chickens, fire wood, etc. We were touched by the compassion of some who came to us wanting to do chores in order to have some money to donate.

Our friend was an above-average student; a happy girl. Joanne remembers making a school shirt for her last year. With as many students as Joanne works with, for her to remember this girl’s smile says something about her joyful spirit and attitude. I’ll miss her in Bible Knowledge, but have a confidence that she had a saving knowledge that will result in our meeting again on the other side of this life.

Be faithful in your giving of praise,

Gary & Joanne Grenell, yours in the happy and sad times of ministry

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Gary goes on a long safari

Dear friends and family,

Greetings from your work in Tanzania. Thank you so much for allowing us to be your ambassadors in the Lord’s work among these eager students.

I went on a long safari (journey) Sunday by bicycle and foot that I want to share with you.

Bahati and I traveled to Mlowo on Sunday morning, traveling by foot and bicycle. It wouldn’t be fair to say “bicycle,” as much of the roads are too steep and rocky to ride up OR down. We made good time going, reaching the church in three hours, but the mountains were working for us more on the way than on the return trip. Pushing the bikes up what seemed like more mountains than we’d ridden down, I joked that Bahati was taking me on detours to show me all the hills in the region. He claimed he was taking a different route to avoid the really steep slopes. It took me five hours to get home, sore in muscle, parched of throat, but filled with a joy in the day I’d had among the people. The people of the church I visited are a satellite of a larger church on the far side of the city; a quality group of people who are excited about growing the church in their neighborhood. We had a fantastic song service, much of it led by an elementary aged girl that was simply amazing, filled with the spirit, enthusiastic, and fully animated in her dance choreography. She had a back-up of older kids. The adult song leader had a deep bass voice that I imagined was heard well beyond the walls of the building.

I preached to a very attentive and responsive crowd, Bahati doing his usual very good job of translation. I was able to give some Swahili greetings and interjections, which are very much appreciated by the people. The luncheon with the leaders of the church was held in a small back room of the rented meeting house, which we’d luckily finished before the building was struck by a ‘kimbumnga.” You’ve doubtless seen in America the little “dust devils” snatching up dust like tiny tornados. Well, during the dry season, with the dust inches deep, these whirlwinds can get 50 feet high and quite forceful. The building was immediately filled with a haze of dust, and people were scattering to open doors and windows to clear the air after the whirlwind had passed.

An even more severe kimbumnga hit our house on Monday, completely stripping away the corn stocks laced in our bamboo fence to keep chickens out of the garden, and leaving dust and debris in the front half of the house. We look forward to the rainy season for obvious reasons. Water is a lot easier to sweep out of the house, with actually beneficial end results.

On our way home Sunday, Bahati and I took a route through Ichesa and I got to view the school grounds I’ve written of in the past. Many brick stacks were present and piles of foundation stones. I actually met up with a student on his way back to Idigima from Ichesa. He has a ghetto in Iyula-B, so we had good conversation on our long trip together. He, Alon Mwampamba, wants to be a future math teacher at the Ichesa Secondary School. We always hope that students will give back to the program after they receive their education.

Bible Knowledge classes continue to go well, especially since incorporating the flannel graph set donated by Deaf Missions in Council Bluffs, Iowa. The students are captivated with the illustration of the lessons. With their limited skill in English, the pictures do more than my thousand words can accomplish in many instances. We are studying Abraham in Form I, Moses in Form II, and David in Form III.

I’ll close with a couple of prayer requests.

First, our Form II students are facing national exams in the second week of November. The students organized an all-night prayer vigil, followed by a three hour prayer service the next day with area pastors in attendance. One student accepted Christ at this service, and many others came forward for specific prayer needs. Pray that the students perform well on the exams to the glory of God. Last year, the results were so fantastic that the school received national recognition, which is no doubt the reason for the numerical growth in the school.

Second, VST is in a really critical time right now with all the building going on at so many schools, and most make bricks every year during the dry season for the continual addition of classrooms. The threat and danger, however, is that the bricks can be destroyed by the coming rains if they are not used in construction. The students have worked so hard to make the bricks; pray to the Lord that sufficient funds will be received to buy cement for the many projects and that the workers will be given God’s speed in building. A bag of cement costs 15,000 Tsh, or about $10.50. Idigima alone needs an estimated 300 bags to complete the project goals of this year, so you can imagine the needs of the total 29 schools.

May God’s grace abound to you as you glorify Him in your lives.

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your feet on the ground in Tanzania

Sewing made easy!

Dear friends,

As many of you know, Joanne has applied her sewing talents in a big way here at Idigima Secondary School in Tanzania. The treddle sewing machine, however, has been a constant frustration. Her solution was to hand carry her machine from Iowa all the way to Africa, literally. It never left her side until it was safely set up in our house here.

However, she only got to enjoy a few seconds of powered sewing before the generator peaked and her foot peddle burned out. Not to be stopped by the lack of electricity, we tried and failed a half dozen different methods of connecting the machine to her treddle cabinet. One of the students came to help with laundry one day and brought a window crank handle she'd found along the way, which gave birth to a new idea. The result is a hand-cranked sewing machine! It actually works and is a great upper-body workout. As sewing projects begin to pile up, the remedy came in the nick of time...or is that a stitch of time?


We've given a "torch" (flashlight) to the student president, Justin, so that he can see students safely home after evening study at the school.

Best to all in the Lord,

Gary and Joanne

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Brick by brick

Dear friends and family,

The dry season, which is coming to a close in another month, is the time of year that sun-dried and fired bricks are made for the construction of the VST schools. Each class and student is assigned a quota of bricks and the work is very exhausting.

(I hope I captured that in the attached pictures - see the slide show for these photos.)

Land is cleared and plowed up by hand using the big hoes they call CHAPAKAZI. Next, water is irrigated into the field and further hoeing and stomping is underway to work the soil into muddy clay. Hundreds of brick molds are then brought to the scene and students literally run all day long back and forth from the mud pits to the drying field, which had to be cleared of all grass and stones to allow a flat surface. Once the bricks are laid out to dry, they are covered with grass threshed by the students. This keeps the fresh bricks from drying too quickly and cracking.

After about a week, the grass is removed for final drying. We will move the bricks from the field to school property across the valley, where they will be stacked and burnt. The mounds, each containing from 1500 to 3000 or more bricks, are covered with mud to retain the heat. In the meantime, students have spent hours cutting with hand axes and collecting fire wood for the burning.

I asked my students what future students will be doing at Idigima, since the current classes will be involved in all the building projects. With some sarcasm, but I hope a lot of pride, one student said, “They will get to spend their time in study.”

The bricks made this year will be enough to erect three buildings, and possibly starting a fourth building for the science labs.

For the walls to go up and the floors to be “poured,” we need a lot of cement, which is one area of contribution that is always in high demand. With 29 VST schools at various stages of construction, the students are making a lot of bricks. We invite you to join them in building schools that will provide both them and their younger siblings and future families with an education.

May God bless you richly for your involvement.

Gary and Joanne

Monday, September 27, 2010

How do we feel? We feel at home.

(Disclaimer: The first half of this update is a repeat of the previous post. There is new information if you read beyond it.)

************************

Dear Friends and Family,

Ah, the blessing of having a laptop during travel. We’re able to give you a review of each leg of our journey back to Idigima Secondary School.

The past couple of weeks have been a blur of activities with the sale of our house, the removal of 19 years of accumulated home and business “stuff,” and assisting our boys with the same burden. Pray for the family, as the departure of our son and beautiful daughter-in-law to college in Florida and our departure to Africa two days later may be causing some emotional disturbances. Pray especially for Jerry and Natalie, who were left holding the bag and many, many, many storage tubs.

Dear friends and family saw us off on Monday around 12:45 with Frank Stephen, who drove us to Chicago, engaged us in a tremendous Italian beef and sausage combo at Jay’s (think Man vs Food), found our terminal at O’Hare Airport, and got us unloaded. We checked luggage (Yeah; the weight of the 6 containers was fine!) and cleared security smoothly.

We are settled in at our departure gate, writing “thank yous” and repacking our carry-on after having it “explored” by security. (Why do we spend so much time getting them packed just right when we know they will be torn apart? I need a schematic to get them back the way they were.)

We heard this morning that Emanueli will be waiting for us in Dar-es-Salaam with the second bus from Village Schools Tanzania. We hope you are on Steve Vinton’s email list to hear about what God did with the bus that was wrecked. The Lord was working ahead of us again in providing a new body from a bus whose engine died…at the very town and body shop that was chosen to do the body work on the crumpled VST bus, whose engine avoided damage in the wreck. Sign up for Steve’s letters at: www.villageschools.org

Tuesday at 11:30 a.m.
Well, after a jolly good flight from Chicago to London, sitting next to a Portuguese pilot who flies luxury private jets for top executives and celebrities (we discussed the social gulf between our lifestyles), we were so tired that we passed on the thought of touring London during our ten hour layover. Leaving at 8:10 pm and gaining six hours makes London’s late morning feel very much like very early morning. Joanne set a course for the nearest lounge where she commandeered three armless chairs to line up as a bed and was asleep within a couple of moments. I stand guard the first watch.

Later, after the flight gate was posted, we met for the first time some of the other teachers going in. They were easy to spot, as the women were dressed in longer skirts. They are coming in from TX, GA, ID, MD, and CA. As was true last year, the airline has us seated close together for our flight to Dar-es-Salaam. Leaving late due to the French traffic controller strike and related air space arrangements, the flight was accompanied by an awesome light show as we flew between some thunder storms and experienced some turbulence. By morning we were over Mt. Kilimanjaro, but it was on the other side of the plane, so we didn’t get to view it this time.

Wednesday
We landed on schedule, retrieved our luggage and went through customs and immigration without a hitch. VST’s personnel director, Emanueli, finance person, Janerose, and her husband, Mtuli, were waiting for us with a bus, which in time was filled from floor to ceiling, under the seats, and down the center isle. Getting in and out of our seats should have won us a medal in gymnastics, and you can only imagine how cramped we were, not being able to move our feet once we were seated. On top of that, Joanne and I were in the seat behind the wheel well, which served as a shelf for the tool box. (This too shall pass.)

We left Dar-es-Salaam at 9:05 a.m., which should have put us in at Mafinga in mid-afternoon. Before entering the national preserve, we stopped to get out and stretch. A group of five baboons became interested in us, came within 20 yards and then climbed nearby trees to watch us. Going through the preserve was good for the new people, as there were a lot of animals present today, with elephants, zebra, antelope, monkeys and giraffe very close to the road and a large group of cape buffalo about 100 yards out.

Leaving the park and entering the Royal Gorge slowed the trip substantially. When we came out in June, there was only one small part of the road being repaired, but today we found much of the road reduced to one lane, dips and bumps, and graveled sections. We slowed to a crawl, adding hours to the trip. At one point, the bus actually bottomed out in a rough spot and damaged the exhaust pipe, requiring two different stops for repair. At the second stop, children gathered at Joanne’s window for a lively chat. A couple of the kids were secondary students at a government school. Some of the new teachers sitting around us were straining to hear the interchange, which resulted in lively discussion for quite a few miles down the road. For most, it was their first exposure to the art of communicating with students of limited English vocabulary and the national’s eagerness to “have an experience” with white people. We eventually reached Mafinga at 2:00 a.m. Steve Vinton met us at the door of the hotel, gave us our room assignments, and told us to go straight to bed. No complaints there.

Thursday
We awoke and were at breakfast by 9:30, had a short meeting with Steve and Godfrey, the Director, and ate chapatti with hot milk or tea. Oh, we had our first cold bath from a bucket this morning. Welcome back to Africa!

Steve shared that some of the new teachers will be placed at new schools that have never had a missionary. News from Idigima is that our former headmaster, Justin, who returned to the university last year to complete his degree, and our current headmistress, Upendo, were wed during our absence and are living in the fourth house that was nearing completion when we left in June. Tanzy, our cat, is still present, and we now have over 30 guinea pigs…they stayed busy while we were gone. Most of all, the staff and students are excited about our return. Ditto on our part.

This is how God works with VSI/VST. During breakfast, a man entered the café and there was immediate and excited greetings shared between him and our leaders. Steve and Godfrey stepped outside to talk with him more after breakfast. Before the rest of us left, Steve came back in to explain that the man is a high government official of the area and a Christian. He had been instrumental in helping VST with Madisi in the beginning. In the course of their short conversation today, it came out that VST will have difficulty continuing the work on the college after the rains begin due to the condition of the road. The man assured Steve and Godfrey that he has authority over road work in the area and will have a new road built to the college.

After breakfast, we began the chore of unloading the bus to find our luggage. Originally, the plan was to drive straight through to Madisi and then see us off to Idigima from there, so our crates were loaded first, most of the other containers being soft shell. Be flexible. Joanne and I will stay here in Mafinga today to rest and make commercial bus arrangements for an early departure on Friday, to be dropped off at our middle-of-nowhere junction on its way to Tunduma. A truck will meet us there from Idigima, if all goes according to plan. We were so busy visiting with some local kids that we failed to wave good-bye to the bus headed for Madisi.

We are now on our own. We immediately had questions as to WHO it was that was to help us with our bus arrangements.

Joanne went to the room for a nap, and I went outside to explore the possibilities of a bank, internet café, and some shopping. A young man rolled up on a motorcycle and handed me a package, in which was a cell phone. He explained that he was to take me to a shop to buy a SIM card and voucher for minutes. (Is this sounding like the beginning of a Mission Impossible movie, or an involuntary organ donation?) When he mentioned the name of the VST Director, I was ready for a cycle ride. We bounced over the eroded dirt streets, down alleys, across a paved highway, and down more dirt streets, finally reaching the cellular center, got the phone operational, and after a 15 second, broken connection, the battery went dead. It would be the only time we use the phone.

Once back at the hotel, I snagged a couple of locals hanging around the hotel lobby and asked them to escort me to the bank and Internet café. They were willing, but we found the bank had closed a half hour earlier. We/I did find success at the Internet café and left the poor fellows standing in the sun outside for an hour. We then did some shopping and headed back to the hotel.

Daudi to the rescue! A Form IV student that did student-teaching at Idigima last year, Daudi showed up at our hotel from Madisi that evening, saying we should be at the bus station at 9:00 a.m. We assumed that would be the time the bus leaves, so planned to be ready at 8:00.

Friday morning at 8:00
We were up at 6:30, thinking we may get on the road at 8:00. We had the crates outside waiting for a taxi… Instead, at 9:00, a wood cart mounted on a pair of car tires rolled up with three young men, and we were off on foot following. Arrangements had not been made ahead of time, but through radio contact the booking agent could find out if incoming buses had space for luggage and passengers. As it finally turned out, we stood in the dusty and hot bus square until 12:30 before getting a “seat” on a milk-run bus to Mbeya. We were wedged in so tightly that I finally chose to stand. Our luggage left a half hour earlier on an express bus we’d hoped would be our ride.

Justin was standing by our crates and luggage, stacked on the curb, when we finally rolled into the Mbeya bus station. We had to pay for eight seats on a small bus to transport us and our cargo to the junction, where a land cruiser was waiting for us.

We are home! We arrived at about 7:30 p.m. after a very long day.

The evening was spent eating and greeting with Justin, and his new wife, Upendo, the headmistress of Idigima Secondary School. Almost as if by orchestration, waves of teachers arrived to greet us. Much hugging and laughing! Our house was locked up and nobody seemed to know where the key had been hidden, so it was after dinner before we finally entered our house, and who should greet us but our cat, Tanzy, and five kittens!

Saturday and Sunday flew by with trying to get unpacked, sorted and organized…with the help of inquisitive kittens and a constant flow of visitors.

Monday was a lot of fun, greeting the student body at the morning assembly. A common comment was that it had been reported that we were coming back, but they would not believe it until they saw us with their own eyes. That was also their excuse for most of them not having their exercise books with them when I showed up for Bible Knowledge class. Good thing they are accustomed to borrowing notes from one another.

We jumped right into our lessons and then found out that the exam week had been moved up and we only had a couple of days of class before we were to allow the students study time. As it would turn out, exam week would be pushed back two weeks due to the brick-making efforts and the utter exhaustion of the students. A vacation was declared September 20, with the exam week to start September 29. In the meantime, we are busy with the typing, proof copy printing, editing, and printing of 32 exams, with each exam needing 120-175 copies, depending on the Form level. With the usual challenges of computer incompatibility with the printer, lack of ink cartridges, and trips to the academic office for reams of paper, we are working through the process.

While I am free to work on the exams, Joanne is busy during the day with her NEW Pre-Form English class, which will not be involved in the up-coming exams. In addition to the 169 students returning from the June break, she now has at least 65 new students and more arriving daily. So now Joanne has three classes. Erasto, the building director from a new VST school east of here, visited to say he would bring her four more students from his village on Monday.

Now here it is, the 24th of September, and Sifaeli is planning a trip to town on school business. I’ve asked to escort him in order to send some e-mails and see if we can find some household items that were used up in our absence. Yesterday, I walked to both Idiwili (40 minutes one way) and Iyula-B (20 minutes) in the opposite direction, both up-hill from Idigima, looking for Joanne’s favorite laundry soap. I didn’t find the soap, but I got some great buys on avocado and bananas.

We were asked while in America to put more of our “feelings” into our e-mails this year, rather than just facts. Hmmm, I hope your emotions/feelings are stirred by the “facts” as are ours. When I visit the students working in mud up to their knees, working the clay to the proper consistency to make bricks, filling molds and literally running back and forth to the field designated for them to be lined up for drying, threshing grasses to cover the field of bricks during the first stage of drying, carrying and stacking those bricks for burning…and babysitting the fire half the night as the bricks are burned…all of this after a day in class and followed by a night of study. How can we feel any other way than to want to be there for them and give them all the encouragement possible?

Personally, Joanne and I have committed to going through the gospel of John together, discussing each passage in turn. It is surprisingly challenging to find consecutive moments for a half hour of uninterrupted time, but even that is a blessing, in that visitors always want to know what we are doing.

How do we feel? We feel at home.

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your hands and feet in Tanzania.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Back in Tanzania!


Monday at O’Hare

Ah, the blessing of having a laptop during travel. We’re able to give you a review of each leg of our journey back to Idigima Secondary School.

The past couple of weeks have been a blur of activities with the sale of our house, the removal of 19 years of accumulated home and business “stuff,” and assisting our boys with the same burden. Pray for the family, as the departure of our son and beautiful daughter-in-law to college in Florida and our departure to Africa two days later may be causing some emotional disturbances. Pray especially for Jerry and Natalie, who were left holding the bag and many, many, many storage tubs.

Dear friends and family saw us off on Monday around 12:45 with Frank Stephen, who drove us to Chicago, engaged us in a tremendous Italian beef and sausage combo at Jay’s (think Man vs Food), found our terminal at O’Hare Airport, and got us unloaded. We checked luggage (Yeah; the weight of the 6 containers was fine!) and cleared security smoothly.

We are settled in at our departure gate, writing “thank you's” and repacking our carry-on after having it “explored” by security. (Why do we spend so much time getting them packed just right when we know they will be torn apart? I need a schematic to get them back the way they were.)

We heard this morning that Emanueli will be waiting for us in Dar-es-Salaam with the second bus from Village Schools Tanzania. We hope you are on Steve Vinton’s email list to hear about what God did with the bus that was wrecked. The Lord was working ahead of us again in providing a new body from a bus whose engine died…at the very body shop that was chosen to do the body work on the crumpled VST bus, whose engine avoided damage in the wreck. Sign up for Steve’s letters at: www.villageschools.org

More later.

**********

Tuesday at 11:30 a.m.

Well, after a jolly flight from Chicago to London, sitting next to a Portuguese pilot who flies luxury private jets for top executives and celebrities (we discussed the social gulf between our lifestyles), we were so tired that we passed on the thought of touring London during our ten hour layover. Leaving at 8:10 pm and gaining six hours makes London’s late morning feel very much like very early morning. Joanne set a course for the nearest lounge where she commandeered three armless chairs to line up as a bed and was asleep within a couple of moments. I stand guard the first watch.

Later, after the flight gate was posted, we met for the first time some of the other teachers going in. They were easy to spot, as the women were dressed in longer skirts. They are coming in from TX, GA, ID, MD, and CA. As was true last year, the airline has us seated close together. Leaving late due to the French traffic controller strike and related air space arrangements, the flight was accompanied by an awesome light show as we flew between some thunder storms and experienced some turbulence. By morning we were over Mt. Kilimanjaro, but it was on the other side of the plane, so we didn’t get to view it this time.

**********

Wednesday

We landed on schedule, retrieved our luggage and went through customs and immigration without a hitch. VST’s personnel director Emanueli, Janerose, and her husband, Mtuli, were waiting for us with a bus, which in time was filled from floor to ceiling, under the seats, and down the center isle. Getting in and out of our seats should have won us a medal in gymnastics, and you can only imagine how cramped we were, not being able to move our feet once we were seated. On top of that, Joanne and I were in the seat behind the wheel well, which served as a shelf for the tool box. (This too shall pass.)

We left Dar-es-Salaam at 9:05 a.m., which should put us in at Mafinga in mid-afternoon. Before entering the national preserve, we stopped to get out and stretch. A group of five baboons became interested in us, came within 20 yards and then climbed nearby trees to watch us. Going through the preserve was good for the new people, as there were a lot of animals present today, with elephants, zebra, antelope, monkeys and giraffe very close to the road and a large group of cape buffalo about 100 yards out.

Leaving the park and entering the Royal Gorge slowed the trip substantially. When we came out in June, there was only one small part of the road being repaired, but today we found much of the road reduced to one lane, dips and bumps, and graveled sections. We slowed to a crawl, adding hours to the trip. At one point, the bus actually bottomed out in a rough spot and damaged the exhaust pipe, requiring two different stops for repair. At the second stop, children gathered at Joanne’s window for a lively chat. A couple of the kids were secondary students at a government school. Some of the new teachers sitting around us were straining to hear the interchange, which resulted in lively discussion for quite a few miles down the road. For most, it was their first exposure to the art of communicating with students of limited English vocabulary and their eagerness to “have an experience” with white people. We eventually reached Mafinga at 2:00 a.m. Steve Vinton met us at the door of the hotel, gave us our room assignments, and told us to go straight to bed. No complaints there.

*********

Thursday

We awoke and were at breakfast by 9:30, had a short meeting with Steve and Godfrey, the Director, and ate chapatti with hot milk or tea. Then we began the chore of unloading the bus to find our luggage. Originally, the plan was to drive straight through to Madisi and then see us off to Idigima from there, so our crates were loaded first, most of the other containers being soft shell. Be flexible. Joanne and I will stay here in Mafinga today to rest and make commercial bus arrangements for an early departure on Friday, to be dropped off at our middle-of-nowhere junction on its way to Tunduma. A truck will meet us there from Idigima, if all goes according to plan.

This is how God works with VSI/VST. During breakfast, a man entered the café and there was immediate and excited greetings shared between him and our leaders. Steve and Godfrey stepped outside to talk with him more after breakfast. Before the rest of us left, Steve came back in to explain that the man is a high government official of the area and a Christian. He had been instrumental in helping VST with Madisi in the beginning. In the course of their short conversation today, it came out that VST will have difficulty continuing the work on the college after the rains begin due to the condition of the road. The man assured Steve and Godfrey that he has authority over road work in the area and will have a new road built to the college.

News from Idigima, for those of you who keep up on things is that our former headmaster, Justin, who returned to the university last year to complete his degree, and our current headmistress, Upendo, were wed during our absence and living in the fourth house that was nearing completion when we left in June. Tanzy, our cat, is still present, and we now have over 30 guinea pigs…they stayed busy while we were gone. Most of all, the staff and students are excited about our return. Ditto on our part.

Oh, one more thing…we had our first cold bath from a bucket this morning. Welcome back to Africa!

Love and prayers as you glorify our Lord,

Gary and Joanne Grenell


P.S. A young man showed up on a motorcycle outside the hotel here with a package for me. Inside was a cell phone and charger. He told me we needed to go to a shop for a SIM card and minutes voucher, so I got on behind him and off we went. It was a nice ride through back streets, across a busy highway, and through more back streets filled with erosion dips. Instead of being kidnapped for my organs in some back room, we did actually go to a duka selling the cards, after which the man entered a number, dialed and handed me the phone. (Sounds like something from Mission Impossible, doesn't it?) On the other end was Godfrey, the Director of VST, who wanted to let me know more details about catching the bus in the morning and their desire to supply us with a phone...just in case we needed to be in touch.

Every day is an adventure with God; enjoy!

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Staying in touch

Dear Friends,

A recurring comment we're hearing is that you would like to hear from us more often. We are working on ways to make our reports more regular while we are in Tanzania. It occured to us that many of you may not be aware that Village Schools International has a web site. At the site you can read archived letters from Steve Vinton and view pictures of the schools. From time to time, the school we serve is mentioned. The web site is:

http://www.villageschools.org/

You can receive current news from Steve by signing up on the web site or contacting him directly at:

steve.vinton@villageschools.org

Just ask to be put on his mail list. His letters give news about VSI's expansion and ministry. His letters will give you the big picture, whereas our letters focus on the school where we are located, Idigima Secondary School near Idiwili in the Mbeya Region in western Tanzania.

We will be traveling to Minnesota and western Iowa over the next couple of weeks, then back to the Coralville area for a few days before flying out of Chicago on September 6th. Until we leave, we would be happy to speak to anyone about the work God is doing. Please consider the needs of the students and staff at Idigima, as we are allowed to carry 300 pounds of checked luggage back with us. Attached is a revised Needs List.

Thank you for partnering with us in this adventure with God.

Gary and Joanne Grenell

Monday, July 26, 2010

Summer back in the States

Dear Friends,

Joanne and I have been back in the states since the end of June and already visited with many of you, every such meeting being a blessing to us. Thank you for your warm receptions. The past couple of weeks have been spent with family in Council Bluffs, producing a video presentation (at our own expense), which has been well received. If you have not seen it or would like a copy to share with your church or small group, let us know. Supply is limited, however, so please share with others if you end up with a copy.

One thing we keep running into in our presentations is the request for satellite coordinates for our location in Tanzania. In fact, we included some of that technology in the video. Attached is a list of the VST schools and their GPS coordinates. Have fun zooming in on the schools and villages of rural Tanzania.

Also attached is the revised Needs List. We will be allowed 300 lbs of luggage on our return trip in September. We found out yesterday that all of the supplies we carry in will go with us to Idigima Secondary School. Last year our contributions were distributed between the various VST schools, as were the supplies brought in by the other incoming teachers. This year, as veterans, we brought a needs list specific to Idigima.

To God be the glory!

Gary and Joanne Grenell

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Hands & Feet

Dear Friends,

Thanks again for all that you are doing to serve the Lord Jesus and us here in Tanzania. We are so grateful for the opportunity to be your hands and feet on this field of ministry.

We had a couple of medical emergencies a couple of months ago, and it sure would have been nice to have a car available to take the students to the hospital. As it was, Joanne did the best she could with the little medical kit we have, and the kids seem to be mending nicely without infection. So the breaking news is that VST purchased a dump truck to be located at Idigima to service this and three new schools under construction in the area (Salejele, Ichesa, and Shangware; I don't have Internet access to see if the VSI website has a new map out to show these and other new schools.) The cost of the truck was $25,000. It has already served greatly with both trips to the hospital and supply hauling for this and other schools, as well as hauling our teams and many students to area athletic events. We encourage you as the church to visit the VSI website and contribute to the work at Idigima. I think people can contribute to a specific school or missionary as well as designate the part of the mission they wish to support. I may be mistaken; we don't have Internet capabilities...just email...sometimes. Another option is to have contributions for the truck gathered for us to bring back at the end of our visit this summer.

A word about Ichesa, mentioned above: The Director recently paid Idigima a visit and wanted me (Gary) to accompany him to Ichesa. We stopped at the land designated for the school and then found a village meeting waiting for us in the market place. Speeches were made on both sides, little of which I understood. We enjoyed an ugali and bean lunch and were back on the road. After leaving the village, it was shared that the people of Ichesa are calling me (your ambassador) the founder of their school. I was humbled, arguing that it was the vision of the village leader that should be honored, but they said I was the first white person to show compassion in visiting the needy of their village. They consider my preaching at their local church, spending the afternoon visiting widows and orphans, and answering their questions about VST's vision to bring schools to the villages as the catalyst for the discussions and organization made since then. Praise goes to the Lord.

So many of the students are struggling with daily life expenses and school fees; it is heart-rending. Pray for Idigima and what VST is doing; these kids, most between 14 and 18, move hours from home to attend secondary school, live on their own in a tiny 6x6 foot rented room, fix their own food, wash their maybe two sets of clothes by hand, haul the water from a river on the edge of town, walk a half hour or more to school twice a day (here at 7 am to 2:50 pm for classes, then go home, eat their first and maybe only meal of the day, and return from 7-10 pm to study). Needless to say, they value their opportunity for an education. It is what they know will break through the generational poverty that exists in the villages. When you can't afford a 40 cent haircut or 10 cent piece of fry bread, times are tough. We give many jobs around the house and grounds to help them earn money for living and school fees. More importantly, we build relationships with the students and staff and encourage them to do all to glorify God in all that they do.

We have a number of projects in the works to benefit the students, including building a dam at the river to bring water by pipe to the school (this project will be completed this next week of April 4th). Currently all drinking and cleaning water is carried from the river in 5 gallon buckets on their heads, not mine!!! (I think my arms are a couple of inches longer from the process; we praise the Lord for rains that provide cleaner water caught from the roofs). Other projects include planting fruit trees and expanding the vegetable garden so that the students and staff have a ready and free food supply. Our little chicken project also caught the eye of the Headmaster, who wants to build a hen house and have as many as 100 chickens for meat and eggs. (We've been sending eggs with students to the market for them to make some money for themselves.) On top of all this is the objective to this year build additional classrooms (Joanne currently has about 130 in her Pre-Form English classes), and two or three dormitories for girls. Ambitious goals by an ambitious people; it is exciting to see their confidence in the Lord and their own abilities grow. Lights go on when you share with them the concept of God blessing them with opportunities and possibilities. Thank you for being a part of Here's Hope in Tanzania.
All our love and appreciation,

Gary and Joanne Grenell, your ambassadors to the Mbeya region of Tanzania

P.S. I have sent a NEEDS LIST to Brother Tom. I hope there will be a great show of love out-poured upon our hard-working students.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Babu and Bibi

Dear family and friends,

Bwana asufiwe; greetings in the Lord Jesus.

Sorry about the temp in Iowa...it's 70 in the cool of the morning and when it is raining...otherwise it is a dry and breezy 85-90 degrees. You don's sweat, it is so arid. No mosquitos, no chiggars, and the only ticks I've seen are on dogs. There are the cobras and mombas, but they are rare in our area. I did think about them last night, though, when I was out in the bush, in the dark, chasing my neighbor's pig that got out of the pen. The owner went in another direction with his dogs, but I was the one to find the fool thing. I ran myself into the ground trying to herd the thing by myself. I did work up a sweat on that deal.

School is going well here. They are getting four new classrooms finished, which will allow us to spread out and have separate classrooms for each of the "streams" in each of the three class levels (Forms I, II, and III). I teach all Forms and Streams of Bible Knowledge, and Joanne has added Form I English to her scheduled teaching of all Pre-Form English students. She is also very, very busy with sewing repairs and fabrications of students' uniforms. (I am in an Internet Cafe in Vwawa on a rare trip to town, with the school registrar, for school supplies; one item of which is fabric to make ties for the boys' uniforms.)

I'll be returning to Ihowa this Sunday to preach in another one of their branch churches. The last visit resulted in the establishment of another VST school, which we dedicated last month.

I've purchased my second pig as part of the Ihowa widows and orphans project; the members raise the pigs and the sale proceeds go to finance the replacement of the thatched roofs with metal sheeting.

More as I am able.

We pray for you all often!

Love,

Gary and Joanne Grenell (a.k.a. Babu and Bibi Philipo)

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Yesu ni Bwana!!! (Jesus is Lord!!!)

Dear Family and Friends,

Yesu ni Bwana!!! (Jesus is Lord!!!)

I'm in an internet cafe in Vwawa, on my way with a student to Tunduma, on the boarder of Zambia. Nestory is a Form I student who has been very helpful to Joanne and me as an interpreter, laborer and friendly counselor about African culture. We are out on holiday break, so wanted to treat him to a trip to the city for school supplies and a fun time. We didn't know the bus system was on strike! After a ride in the back of a dump truck over 15-20 miles, we arrived at the junction to find lots of people waiting, and we joined them. An hour later, we were on a very, very crouded bus, squished like sardines in the aisle. It was wonderful to be on our way and everyone was in happy spirits.

Christmas was quiet; they don't practice gift-giving here...they just eat a lot. We were encouraged to donate our month's supply of rice to the party, and then watched the Lord return upon us in the following days special treats of fruit, vegetables, and goat meat.

New Years brought some real excitement. Back on the first Sunday in December, I'd preached in the village of Ichesa, a branch church of Ihowa, where the evangelist has established a great program for the widows and orphans. In the service that day was the village elder/leader. He was very excited to hear about VST and had lunch with us at the pastor's home. Two days later, he and 5 others were at Idigima to talk to the leaders there, and in the following weeks were in contact with Madisi, where Steve Vinton lives. On last Saturday, five of us from Idigima took part in the land dedication and village meeting for the Ichesa Secondary School. The meeting was open-air in the market place, full of speeches and Q&A.

Back home, the latest excitement was when the SIAFU went on the march. Joanne was visiting the facilities one morning and came in dancing and shaking her skirt, then headed out to the neighbors to report that red ants were swarming the area. I took some video, and watched as the ground gradually cleared into well-defined trails. By the next day, there was no sign of them. They did visit our neighbor for a steak dinner, sending his cattle in a bit of a stampede. We learned from our language helper that they will routinely enter a chicken house and kill the chickens, but that the tiny black SISIMIZI ant chases them away. I was happy to hear that, as we have many SISIMIZI in and around our house. The SIAFU also enter termite and rat holes and kill the occupants.

Joanne is busy with Pre-Form English students, who don't get so long of a break, as they must be up to speed for the classes taught in English. She's spending 3-4 hours a day with them each morning. I am working on Bible Knowledge curriculum, as I will have all Form II and Form III student come January 18th. I may also have some Form I classes, but that has not been finalized. We have many visitors to our home daily...students who can't wait for school to start again...some wanting to know how they did on the final exams...some to continue in the work of building (this helps pay some of their student fees)...and teachers coming to get filtered water or any extra food we have in the house.

Joanne had a local tailor give her a treddle sewing machine for use free for three months. She's been repairing student uniforms and teachers' clothing, made herself an African skirt and blouse, and is giving sewing lessons to three students, a couple of teachers, our cook, and a village pastor's wife. It's a good thing we don't have electricity, or she'd bee up all night. As it is, we eat a lot of meals by candle light because she wants to use all available sun light.

We think and pray for all of you daily, desiring that the Lord is glorified in all you do.

Gary and Joanne Grenell