African Missions can mess you up! Southern Africa Missions 101
Of course we all know about the proverbial “good ways”, experiencing
Christ and all the great benefits of being a missionary- but how about fun a
look into foreign missions?
Here goes:
Welcome to course Southern African Missions 101, like many 101 classes-this information is generally useless, and may actually prove to be a waste of your time. FAQ-does this mean there will be a 201 course? Perhaps-but that depends on YOU dear reader.
The bacon is
BACONIER! (it is quite amazing and tops the list for differences from the
USA), however, my dad’s home cured bacon growing up(you know, the kind from the
pigs you fed, named and rode) was mighty thick and pretty awesome too.
We DO drive on the “other
side” of the road. Counter to popular
opinion, this is NOT wrong…it is LEFT
(and we pass on the right). Surprisingly
once adjusted, it does make sense, however the majority of the world does drive
on the right(India, Australia and Southern Africa like it on the left). Especially whilst looking out your
windscreen(that’s windshield in the USA) to see oncoming traffic. A song to help you adjust wherever you are “Keep
your butt in the middle of the road, keep your butt in the middle of the road”(sung to the tune Hi Ho Cherry O(or cheerio))
Not everyone LOVES
American’s. Hard to believe, I know
right? But it is true. We are often seen as arrogant, know it all’s
that take over and think we know best.
Fortunately, many people have grace enough to get to understand us and
know us, and if we just “gentle” our approach down and seek to understand
others before telling them how much better we are and how much more we know- we
do well.
Living with lots of
lizards is normal. It’s true, they
are cute(not to be confused with cuddly) and they sit by the unscreened windows
and grab a few of those pesky bugs. (not many screens in the rest of the world-
perhaps it’s considered luxurious) Big,
small, fat and ones that love to poo from the ceiling on anything below. We got ‘em all. (perhaps a future post we can talk about the entirely too big, freak of nature spiders we deal with)
Not everyone speaks
English. This makes ministry a bit
more challenging. Imagine this- a
culture just coming off some of the worst racism in history. A white person sees you and assumes you understand
Afrikaans(a dutch rooted language with throat clearings like german)-you
apologetically explain you are learning, but can not speak. A black person approaches you with hisses and
clicks(ok, not really, but I cant type out the phonetics of “schlaw” and
(click) very well) but is very timid assuming you already don’t like them, and
are shocked when you try to speak to them.
Here is where it get’s interesting: as you get tired you forget which
language you are supposed to try to speak, so you just mix them all together
and make your own… and those that are closest to you don’t even recognize that
there is anything wrong with a sentence that starts out English, throws in some
Afrikaans and finishes in Siswati. (a
few zulu, xhosa and Portuguese words welcome also)
Missionary Humor is
NOT easily understood. Somehow most
conversations lead back to “poo”. For a
junior high boy(or one that still often acts and thinks like one) this is
hysterical. If you speak fluent “scarcasm”
you are not generally understood unless dealing with others of your kind.
Bars look nice! No not the ones that serve alcohol silly, the
ones that goes on windows and door frames.
I can no longer imagine life without bars. The stronger and bigger the better. The longer we live here, we find ourselves
looking at others decorative bars saying “oh how nice those look” (like
commenting how nice a prison might look?-hey it might if they twisted and
weaved the bars together) The reality is
they give us a GREAT deal of safety, and make for interesting conversation
pieces around the campfires(we really should have more campfires, and smores…
ps-send chocolate, and graham crackers, and marshmallows…lol) Throw in razor wire and you are feeling
awesome and lookin’ stylish.
Odd signs don’t catch our attention anymore. The odder the better, but often we find ourselves just flying by a sign that makes no sense, or spells something phonetically instead of properly and don’t even think twice. Hippo crossing signs do however, still make me smile.
Hey, thanks for reading- hope you got a smile and had a
little fun.
3 comments:
Thanks for the lesson! They have bars on all the windows in Rio too and let's not even talk about the traffic :)
Y'all live in a roundbar hotel! Except you don't have armed doormen!
Enjoyed the read easy to forget all that is out in the world and makes you remember not to take it all for granted. I still remember my 13 months in Korea
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