An update is long overdue if I am going to get two entries
in the month of December. I don’t know what has happened to life these days. It
just seems that there is very little time to sit down and reflect on the recent
past, much less write it down.
I am currently sitting in a restaurant at a hotel outside
Nairobi. Our family is here for an East Africa MCC Representative gathering—something
between a retreat and a team meeting. We have been here for two days. It is a
stark contrast to Tanzania where we never wear a mask. Kenya is experiencing a
COVID spike and mask requirements are extremely rigid. You can even be ticketed
for driving in your car with another person while not wearing a mask. I am
grateful for the policy because one of our group actually recently tested positive just
prior to arriving here. The threat is real!
Crossing the border with valid COVID tests could be a story
unto itself. Suffice it to say, trying to get a test in Arusha during the Christmas
season that is ready on time for departure but not done too early was very
tricky. We actually picked up our results only hours before we left. I was very
happy to get four negative results back because Rebecca, Oren, and David, have been
fighting a respiratory illness for the last 10 days, and it was worrying.
I will say less about what we are doing in Kenya and talk
about the weeks leading up to our departure. It has been a very busy holiday
season and a time of several ‘closure’ events around the official closing of
our MCC Tanzania office.
The most memorable event of the past 3 weeks was definitely
a Tanzania team retreat we did with our colleagues Chrispin and Lucia. As we approached
the imminent closing of our office, Rebecca and I really wanted to have a last
chance to spend some non-work time with our national staff and their families.
With the decrease in tourism these days, it was not difficult to book a safari
lodge. We booked one in the town of Mtu wa Mbu (means ‘mosquito river’) which is
next to the entrance to Lake Manyara Game Park. This is a park Rebecca and I
have been to once before. Not typical as game parks go in that it is along the side of a large
lake and has a ‘rain forest’ appearance thanks to an underground aquafer that keeps
a forest watered year-round. Because of this, it is not uncommon to see
tree-climbing lions, who have adapted to this habitat.
We traveled in two cars. Chrispin drove Lucia and her
family (husband Nicolas, and two girls, Esperanza and Novella) in the Landrover, our family drove our Harrier. We left in the
afternoon and got to the hotel after dark. Chrispin was ahead of us and fortunately
found the place first, because our family got lost in the town and had to be
met at a gas station and led to the gate. (This is not uncommon because there
are never road signs and most resorts are off on small dirt roads.)
We went to bed shortly after arrival since it was late, but
did wake up to find the hotel charming in daylight. All of us had our own bungalows but met
for meals in a common lodge/restaurant. There was also a small swimming pool
that provided several hours of entertainment during the two days we were there.
The safari was the highlight though. Lucia and her kids had
never been on safari in a game park. We rented a safari vehicle and spent the
day driving around the park. I think it was especially fun for the girls who sat
in the front seat next to the guide who gave them a lot of extra information about
the flora and fauna we were seeing. He told us he had enjoyed seeing more
Tanzanian tourists during the time of COVID because many could take advantage
of lower fares to go on safari.
Although we did not see lions on the day we went on safari,
that was about the only thing we did not see. One of the highlights of the Lake
Manyara park is the astounding variety of birds. Rebecca, being a birder, was particularly
enthralled. I was amazed that we saw at least 4 very different species of hornbill
from the great hornbill that had a toucan like snout to the giant red-headed
ground hornbill, big enough to devour small monitor lizards, as well as smaller varieties of these large beaked birds.
The big game included elephants, cape buffalo and giraffe, and every kind of antelope there is. We stopped for lunch by a hot spring and
were amazed that boiling water could come straight out of the ground. Lake Manyara
is very high this year because of last year’s rains so we could see many areas
which had been flooded out and had to take several detours to keep from driving
into the lake.
We spent most of the day in the park and returned in the
early evening to spend at the pool. David has a great rapport with Lucia’s kids
and they always enjoy playing together at team retreats.
We spent the last morning together with a devotional,
singing, and prayer, (as it was a Sunday). We had a good time together and
exchanged some gifts before heading down the road back to Arusha. It was a very
meaningful time, and I felt the weight of finality as we remembered retreats in
previous years—in Zanzibar the past two.
By this time we were fully into the Christmas season and
there were a number of events around the holiday. We set up our tree the
weekend after Thanksgiving as is our tradition. This is our fourth year of doing
this in Tanzania so we have a way of decorating our house that we like. We are
also big on Advent so we have an Advent wreath with calendars, an Advent calendar
with chocolate, and a daily reading that we share each evening. We enjoyed
setting up our tree together for the last time in Arusha.
One Saturday, we went to a Christmas fair at the school of our
friends the Taylors. These Christmas fairs are a great place to pick up gifts
for family, as they are loaded with boutiques. With COVID, this is the first
year that we have no visitors arriving from the US to bring gifts from relatives.
That usually makes Christmas quite extravagant. We all went with money and bought each other several gifts which meant we were able to make the Christmas tree look
quite full once they were all wrapped. We could also buy gifts for the family in the US through Amazon, so exchanging gifts for the season was not entirely lost.
The fair ended with a pantomime play (in the British style)
at the end of the evening. It was based on Aladdin and one of our friends, a
teacher at the school named Ruth was in it. (She was the genie). It was quite
funny. The only uncomfortable part was that it was indoors without masks or social
distancing. Although we have not had COVID here in the past 4 months, it was definitely
out of my comfort zone and I sat by a window.
The weekdays have been very busy with packing our office
into boxes. This has involved going through many files and folders to decide
what to keep and what to throw away. We hauled several boxes of records to our
home, and I was able to read up on a number of archived items on the history of
MCC in Tanzania. We have been here since the 1930s which makes our departure even
sadder.
The fact that we have had to be closing our office has made home
life difficult because our kids have been off school since the first week of December.
Normally we can take some time off as well, but with the end so near we have
needed to be at the office every day, all day—leaving them to their own devices
(literally). Fortunately, they have been able to get together with friends from
time to time.
The last day in the office was December 22nd. We
had made arrangements with the Tanzania Mennonite Church (KMT) to bring a truck
to pick up all of our furniture and two vehicles (as our Constitution made them
the beneficiaries of our assets in the event of dissolution.) They were able to
clear the office and we signed over the vehicles in half a day. It was a
surprisingly unemotional event, as we had been going the process of grieving
for several months at this point. We did manage to get our lawyer to notarize
all of the proper documents to make the dissolution legal. We still have some
issues to resolve with the Revenue Authority (TRA) but we effectively closed on
that day.
This was not a moment too soon for several holiday functions.
Rebecca and I are active in our church and I preached the Sunday before, then
me, Rebecca and David participated in a Christmas lessons and carols service at
our church on the 23
rd. David, who can be quite fickle about participation,
agreed to sing ‘Gabriel's Message’ with the choir humming in the background. It
sounded great and you can see it on Rebecca’s Facebook page.
Other Christmas preparations included making Christmas
cookies and cinnamon rolls for friends (a Sack family tradition). On Christmas eve
we watched the Polar Express, which has been a family tradition the last few
years since we usually do our Lessons and Carols on the 23
rd.
Christmas finally arrived. We had a very nice family
Christmas morning with gift exchanges. We then headed off to church as Rebecca
was leading music for the Christmas day service. I helped with singing as well,
and Katie Taylor played flute. It was a very nice service.
The best gift of Christmas was a waffle iron for David.
David loves to cook and make elaborate meals for himself and others. He also
loves waffles, so there was a recipe included. Needless to say, we had waffles made by David on Christmas morning.
Last year we started a tradition of going to a resort in Usa
River called River Trees for Christmas day dinner. We were joined by many friends
from our small group including the Taylors and Ruth (the genie from the pantomime’s
family). It was really fun, and the place had a Christmas dinner with real turkey
and many activities for kids.
We had the day after Christmas for packing and picking up
COVID test results, so it was a fairly undramatic day. We left the following
morning in our Harrier and drove across the border to Kenya. The border crossing
takes a lot more time with COVID checks. We got across and stopped at a mall in
Nairobi on the way to the place where we were retreating. We picked up a few
things and headed to the hotel. Driving after dark to a new place in Africa is always a challenge and one of my least favorite things, but
we made it here safely. (Google maps is almost never right about the location or route.)
We will be here for about 5 days then drive back and finally
get a short vacation in Zanzibar. More about that later.
So glad you are making these office transitions at a time when celebrations of holidays and get-aways can diminish the stress
ReplyDeleteGlad you made it here, and happy to be sharing the MCC meetings with you--albeit from a distance!
ReplyDeleteThank you for this amazing glimpse into African life. The photos are gorgeous. Blessings as you make this transition. Praying all goes well. Louise
ReplyDelete