Water Chronicles
January 16, 2008 - 10:40am
or
Is There Anything Else That Could Possibly Go
Wrong?
Note: I intend to conclude the water chronicles
with a piece on cultural re-entry and a final summary of the trip which will be
posted at ChristianCentury.org
But for now, the events of the last day
---------------
Unfortunately for me, there seems to be no end
to the things I can and do forget. I’m the one who still gets lost in his own
city. I’m the one who forgets what day it is; indeed, sometimes I forget what
month it is. Occasionally I’ll be so lost in whatever it is I’m doing that I
forget what SEASON it is.
Okay wait, is it like Fall and we’re moving
toward Christmas, or is it sort of in the Spring and we’re moving toward Summer?
You think I’m exaggerating for effect with that
last bit about the seasons, right? Think again. That happens to me at least
twice a year.
So of course I’m going to leave a couple of
things behind in Santo Domingo. Of course I am. That’s a given. The only
question is, will the things I leave be important things?
In this case, they were.
For some reason I was the only one on our team
flying out Monday. My flight was at 4 pm. The women from Murray State left on
Sunday. The others were to leave on Tuesday.
I took a taxi to the airport, stopping along
the way at a bank to get some money to pay for the ride. It was about an hour
drive in traffic, and the driver told me it would be 1000 pesos - roughly $30. I
went to the ATM machine and withdrew 1500 pesos. Foreign money is always
interesting to look at, and Dominican money is very colorful, so I was pretty
intrigued by it. A 1000 pesos bill and a 500 pesos bill, both with strange faces
and markings on them. I was fascinated and walked away staring at the money.

Dominican Republic Pesos
I was so happy. I was happy to be going home
and back to a culture that is familiar to me. Back to a place where I actually
understand what is being said around me. The taxi driver spoke no English, but
we managed to communicate a little bit. He bought us both a popsicle from a
street vender, which was nice of him.
When we got to the airport, I tipped the driver
500 pesos. I mean, what was I going to do with 500 pesos? And he bought me that
popsicle. There was that. He seemed pretty pleased with the tip and shook my
hand vigorously.
This is the point where everything started
going wrong.
The first person at the Delta line said,
“Passaporta por favor.”
That’s when it hit me. I didn’t have my
passport. We put our passports in a safe at YWAM when we first arrived, and I
never gave it another thought.
If this was a movie, there would be a
fast-motion camera replay of the taxi drive going backwards, ending with some
sort of swooshing noise and a close-up of the door of the safe at YWAM.
Here is something you should know to fully
comprehend my predicament. While in Santo Domingo, I never paid attention to the
location of the YWAM house. While we were driving around, I was too busy looking
at traffic and houses and people to worry about where we were. I was like a
child in Santo Domingo. Other people were driving, so I felt free to just look
at things. What can I say? I like looking at things and then writing about them
later.
I didn’t know the address of the YWAM house. A
lot of the streets didn’t even have names, so it never seemed important to me. I
didn’t even know what part of town it was in. And I didn’t know their phone
number either. I never had to call them.
I had nothing. I had no idea where I had been
staying for the last 5 days. And I didn’t know enough Spanish even to explain to
anyone that I didn’t know where I was.
Strangely enough I didn’t panic. I think this
new reality was too shocking to accept. I just couldn’t emotionally comprehend
the fact that I was in a foreign country, in an airport without my passport, and
with no way of explaining to anyone where my passport was.
The only thing I could think of was that I
needed to find a way to call YWAM and get them to send my passport with another
taxi. There was no time for me to ride there and back again, and I wouldn’t know
what to tell a taxi driver anyway, even if I could find one that spoke English.
I opened my wallet to get out my ATM card,
knowing that I was going to have to pay for another taxi. No ATM card.
If this were a movie there would be another
camera shot in fast motion, going back to the bank and wooshing up to the ATM
machine. The camera would show a delighted Gordon, so amused by the pretty money
that he walked away staring at the money and left his ATM card in the machine.
Now I panicked.
In my wallet were 100 pesos - about $3 - and a
$20 bill. Not even enough for a one-way taxi drive, even if I knew where I was
going. I have to tell you, I’m not sure I remember a time in my adult life when
I felt more helpless and vulnerable.
I don’t know about you, but I think it’s time
for a little good news. There was one bit of saving grace in this story. When I
got out of the taxi, I noticed one of the YWAM staff, a man named Ony
(pronounced like only but without the L), who was there with a group of medical
missionaries who were also flying out on Monday.
All I could think of was, “Find Ony!”
I ran through the terminal, praying that I
would find him before he said goodbye to the team and headed back to YWAM. If
this were a movie, the camera would circle around my panicked face, surrounded
by a blur of
airport people going every direction.
I went back to where I had seen Ony, but he
wasn’t there. I looked all around and had just given up when Ony saw ME. He ran
up to me and said my name in his rough, Dominican way. “Gorrrrdown.”
I could have hugged him. He doesn’t speak much
English, but he understood “No have passport. Passport at YWAM.” His response
was one I heard many times in Santo Domingo. It is a colorful phrase with many
meanings.
“Ay yi yi!”
The crazy thing is, everything worked out very
quickly once I found Ony. It’s amazing how easily things work if you speak the
language and know your address and phone number. He called YWAM and they
immediately dispatched a taxi with my passport. A quick international call to
Jeanene from the airport cost 12 pesos. She cancelled the debit card. Ony stayed
with me until the taxi arrived. I bought a Diet Coke and a cup of coffee for Ony
with my last 100 pesos, gave him a huge hug, and got to my flight with about 5
minutes to spare.
Ay yi yi!
The last thing I said to Ony was. "SO glad I
found you." He pointed to the sky and said, "Es El Señor," which is the
delightful Spanish way of saying, "It was the Lord."
I did not argue with his theology.
It’s amazing how an experience like this can
change your perspective. When I got to San Antonio, Delta had lost my luggage. I
went to the luggage counter to report it, but who can worry about lost luggage
when you’ve been a lost man in a foreign land?
The woman behind the counter was speaking a
language I understood, and I was home. I had to have been the nicest person she
had ever dealt with. She told me the luggage was probably somewhere between
Santo Domingo and Atlanta.
“So what happens next,” I asked. “You’ll call
me when you find it?”
“Yes sir. We’ll find it and deliver it to your
home.”
“Really? Thanks, you guys are great!”
I walked off whistling, with no luggage and not
a care in the world.

Taxi driver and popsickle.

Ony (right), his two friends, and me waiting in
the airport.

Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
January 14, 2008 - 8:51am
Saturday Afternoon, January 12, 2008
This entry was meant to be posted Sunday,
but Internet outages made that impossible.
As usual, I have pictures with captions posted
from Saturday afternoon and evening at Flickr. Pictures
here, slideshow
here.
One of the most important things Edge Outreach
does is sanitation education and training. It’s well and good to setup some kind
of purification system, but if people don’t know how to use it or if something
goes wrong with it, they can be worse off than they were before. They could be
trusting water that isn’t clean.
Saturday afternoon half of us went to the home
of a man that everyone here calls pastor Antonio. He lives in a very poor part
of town, and though he is confined to a wheelchair, he works and ministers in
this little community. 80 to 100 people come to his house to get clean water
from an Edge system that was put in a few months ago.

Pastor Antonio's house. This room and two small
bedrooms.

The system is on his tiny back porch. One tank for
purifying, two on the roof for storage. He purifies three or four tanks of
water, two days a week for the community.
On this day pastor Antonio found a group of
children from the area to come and learn about water cleanliness and general
sanitation issues. There were a number of adults that showed up as well, though
the presentation was definitely geared toward children.
Edge has a set education program for children
in other countries, based on pictures. All you need is children, the pictures,
and a translator.
This was about as poor a neighborhood as I’ve
seen here in Santo Domingo. There is a vacant lot next to the pastor’s home
where they meet for church services if it is not raining. That vacant lot is
also, apparently, the local trash dump. There was a smoldering stump no more
than 5 yards from the stage.
And yet the children were spotless and dressed
in their finest clothes. Truly, these families take great pride in their
children.


I suppose the teaching would seem rather
obvious and simple to many, but the fact is, great numbers of people in poorer
areas do not know that bacteria in water cannot be seen. Just because water is
clear does not mean it is safe.
In one part of the training, the team uses a
little wooden doll, jokingly referred to privately as Diarrhea Debbie. Her
stomach is a clear baggie of clean water. Something dark is introduced, clouding
the water and making Debbie sick. The bag is punctured and she loses her water.
At this point the team talks about the necessity of hydration if you have
diarrhea.
Well, Debbie’s bag got punctured in the wrong
place on this day, and she sprayed water sideways on Amber and all over the
stage.
The children were delighted. Howls of laughter!
But apart from that, things went very well. We
broke out some balloons at the end and got mobbed by the children. I made as
many balloon sombreros as I could before we had to get on the bus.
At this point, all of our work was done. Both
purification systems were in place, and we had visited this previous
installation to check on it and do further education.
Saturday evening, we went out to eat at a Dominican
restaurant, treating ourselves, our driver, and our interpreters to a fine meal.
Not wanting to miss out on the experience of Dominican food, I ordered a lot and
then shared it with anyone who wanted to try things. I had boiled Yuca
(pronounced “Jooka” here), fried plantains, rice and beans Dominican Republic
style, and skewered chicken. It was all delicious. The plantains were not sweet
at all, more like fried potatoes.


Click for larger view
Sunday morning, the women from Murray State fly
out. The rest of us will attend church with our hosts and do a couple of final
things. Monday morning I'll try to post some final pictures and thoughts from
the trip. As always, internet access is irregular. I'll post when I can.
January 13, 2008 - 8:48pm
Sunday night: Internet very spotty tonight. I have reports for Saturday along with many pictures. I also have four slide shows with music I'm trying to get online at Google video. Will be working on this for three hours Monday morning, IF the Internet cooperates.
check back.
January 12, 2008 - 10:55am
Note: It appears that anonymous commenting
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leave comments once we get the new rlp up and running.
Saturday, January 12, 2008
Yesterday half of our team came very close to
completing the purification installation at Cure Hospital in Santo Domingo. If
you'd like to see the hospital using Google Earth, plug the following coordinate
string into the search box that says "fly to."
18°28'30.14"N 69°54'26.27"W
I have pictures from yesterday's work at the
hospital online at Flickr
here. Slideshow
here. There are a fair number of pictures
with captions and explanations of the work that was done.
Today we're at the hospital finishing up some
electrical work and preparing to train the hospital engineer in the use of the
system. The system is easy, but constant testing of the chlorine levels is
essential. You have to carefully test each batch of purified water. Obviously,
if you do not, you're worse off than you were before. You're trusting the water
from the tap and it isn't clean. But the engineer is clearly an intelligent
and educated man, so it will be no problem for him.

The original pump house

Working on the pump house

The new pump house

Our team in the tank enclosure
Later today half of our team is going to an
previous installation to continue health training. I'll be with that group and
will report on that tonight or tomorrow morning.
Mustard Seed Thoughts
This whole situation reminds me of something
Jesus once said. We'll leave soon, and the hospital will have a continuous
supply of clean water. Someone from Edge will return in time to see how things
are going. Edge is committed to following up all of its installations. This one
is unusual because there is an engineer here who is capable of fixing the
system. They will probably be fine. In any case, most of us will never come
back. Children will come and go in this place. Some lives will be saved because
of the clean water. Other lives will be enriched. Suffering from infections,
etc. will be lessened. None of us can look into the future to see what will
come.
Jesus once said, "The Kingdom of Heaven is like
a mustard seed. It is the smallest of seeds, but when it is planted, it grows
into a large tree and the birds of the air nest in its branches." So it is with
goodness and with evil. Seeds are planted, either in selfishness or in goodness
and service. What grows from those seeds is only known to those who are there.
The ones who planted the seeds often never know what good or evil comes of their
actions. Further, the idea of sin suggests that all of us have planted seeds of
evil from time to time. I know that I have. Grace is being forgiven for the evil
I have begun in this world. Redemption involves the changing of my heart and
life, so that I can be a part of goodness.
Pretty simple deal really. I don't know why we
Christians have made it so complex.
rlp
January 11, 2008 - 9:29pm
Friday, January 11th, 2007
Our team was split for the entire day today.
One part went back to the hospital. They didn't get back until late, so I'll not
be able to tell you about their work until tomorrow. The other team was the five
women from Murray State University who were in charge of the YWAM installation,
which is the one we paid for here at rlp.
Hooray for us!
I was hanging out with the young women, helping
some and taking pictures too. It was a basic installation. Two tanks in a
pumphouse, chlorinating the water and providing access at a spigot. It's not
fancy, but instead of buying 5-gallon bottles of water, they can fill them up
themselves at their pumphouse.
This installation was done almost entirely by
these young women, lead by Courtney. We were all so proud of them. And I thought
you'd like to see some pictures of the water purifier you made possible with
your gifts. I have a lot of pictures up at Flickr, but I'll include a few here
as well.

Courtney working on a water line.

Amanda working on the external spigot.

Putting together the Purifier

The finished system!

The team that put in YOUR purifier!
The hospital team ran into some...issues. So
we're a little behind there, but I'm sure we'll catch up tomorrow. The whole
team is going to the hospital, then the Murray State women and I are going to a
previous installation to do some continued water health training.
Please do check out the Flickr photos. They
show you more detail about the YWAM installation.
Pictures here.
Slideshow here.
I've got a couple of free minutes here, so how
about some personal stuff?
1. Dominican Driving - Driving here in
the Dominican Republic is unlike anything I've ever seen. At first I was
terrified. People pull in front of each other with the smallest amount of space.
Motorcycles weave in and out of cars. Two cars will merge into the same lane,
barely missing each other, horns blaring. And yet, we saw no accidents. My
theory is that there are several elements going on.
First, all traffic boils down to official
rules and unofficial morays. In the Dominican Republic, it's more morays
than rules. Everyone understands that if a person can pull in front of you,
they will. And it's your responsibility to watch out for that. Everyone
knows there will be motorcycles weaving around and people walking in the
street selling things. The whole thing forces you into a constant state of
defensive driving. You can't eat a sandwich or talk on the phone and drive
here. You have to be watching because on every trip, at least 5 or 6 people
are going to cut you off and pull in front of you or edge you over in your
lane.
In the United States, we drive according to
strict rules and expect others to follow them. This leads to us being on
auto-pilot. Then when someone makes a mistake and pulls in front of us, we
might not notice it because we aren't expecting such a thing. I wouldn't be
at all surprised to find that there are less accidents in the D.R. than in
the U.S., though I have no figures to support that.
2. Cold Showers - There is no hot water
where we are staying. None. At first this seemed like a terrible inconvenience.
"How in the world am I supposed to take a cold shower?" I wondered. Well, guess
what - If you are dirty and tired, you'll take any shower you can get. That's
the first thing to remember.
I don't have much experience with this, but
there seems to be two theories to surviving the cold shower. The first involves
sticking your head under the water and getting it wet, the pulling away,
shampooing, and sticking it back under to rinse. You basically do this with your
whole body. Quick wetting, soap without the cold water hitting you, then grit
your teeth for the rinse.
The other option is to suck-it-up and stand
under the cold water until you get somewhat used to it. Then shower as usual. It
never feels comfortable, but you do get so that it doesn't bother you as much. I
recommend the second method, but then I've only been at this for 4 days.
rlp
January 11, 2008 - 7:58am
Thursday, January 10th, 2008
Note: Rolling blackouts caused an
internet outage yesterday. As I said in the beginning, if you don't see a fresh
post from me every night, there was an internet problem. Here is Thursday's
posting:
Pictures of our day along with captions and explanations can be found at Flickr.
Read this but don't miss the pictures. They give more details about the work we
are doing.
Click here for a complete list of pictures
and captions.
Click here to view them as a slideshow.
(Note: clicking a picture in the slideshow
displays the captions. Clicking again hides them.)
We actually began work on the hospital
filtration system today. We placed three large, 400-liter tanks on a platform
right above the existing pump for the hospital cistern. We’ve dropped a pipe
into the cistern that will pump the water through our chlorination system and
into the tanks. Then a pipe will go from the tanks back into the main hospital
pump, allowing clean water to be pumped throughout the building. In a short
time, even the pipes will be cleaned by the chlorinated water.

There were several little glitches here and
there, nothing that Kurtis couldn’t figure out. We had to drill a hole for new
pipes into the back of the concrete housing for the existing pumping system.
Most of the morning was spent getting the tanks positioned and busting a hole
through 6 inches of concrete into the pump housing. During a slow time, some of
the team folded bandages and helped sort medical hardware in the pharmacy.
At 2 pm, our team split in two. Half of us
continued working on the water system at the hospital. By the end of the day
they had run pipes from all three tanks to a central location where the
purification unit will be housed in a box of its own.
The other half (I and the 5 women from Murray
State University) went to visit an orphanage in a very poor area of town. The
place was spotless on the inside, but very simple and poor. There didn’t seem to
be any area for the children to play outside, as far as I could see. When we
arrived they were lined up waiting for us. A fair number of these children have
disabilities of one kind or another.

The street outside the orphanage

They sang us a couple of prepared songs, which
made me really uncomfortable. I don’t think children like this should be made
into a dog-and-pony show. But this is their world and their country, and I
wasn't the one making those calls. So I listened to their sweet voices and
clapped appropriately.
We brought balloons and candy and crayons and
coloring paper. You’d have thought Santa arrived in person and gave them the
whole world. We sang and played and hugged and made balloon hats and flowers and
swords. I took pictures of the kids with my digital camera, then turned it
around and showed them their pictures. They were delighted by this and crowded
around, wanting me to take more pictures. Courtney got attached to a young child
and held her in her arms most of the time. We connected with this crowd of
children in a whirlwind hour of delightful chaos.
We just visited them and played. No big deal,
right?
Well, it was obviously a big deal to them. And
yet, I couldn’t help thinking, “Yeah, but what are we doing for these kids,
really?” And one answer to that is - not much. They need money and food and
clothing and parents. And we came with our resources and time dedicated toward
our two water projects. This was a quick side-trip that we put together because
we had some spare time and we were asked to go. I mean, what can you do? Not go
because you’re not going to make a full commitment?
So for this day, there was nothing we could do
except love them and play with them. And trust that when you love and play with
a child, it is a goodness that requires no explanation and no justification. You
don’t have to explain yourself to anyone.
Two sisters caught my eye, both in wheelchairs,
both terribly small for their ages. Stephanie is 11, the same age as my youngest
daughter Lillian. But she has the body of a two-year-old. Her older sister Clara
is not much bigger, though she is 15. That’s the age of Shelby, my practically
grown and healthy middle child. In very crude Spanish I tried to tell them that
my own children were the same age.
“Uh...Me Nina es (I tried to think of
the word for 11 but couldn't) eleven... tambien?" I’m really
embarrassed that I live in Texas and don’t know Spanish well enough to get out
such a simple sentence. That’s not correct, but maybe the idea got across.
Stephanie and Clara and Pauline each colored a
picture of Jesus, signed their names on them in crayon, and gave them to me to
keep.

Gave them to me to keep. Gave them to me to
keep. For a moment, it seemed like the whole world narrowed to that instant in
time. Gave them to me to keep.
Okay, just stop for moment. Stop your busy life
and think about this with me. What did it matter that we visited an orphanage
today? And what will it mean, ultimately, in the lives of these children? What
will this hour of fun mean to them? And what am I to do with these cheap,
coloring book pictures of Jesus? What value would you place upon them? Or what
would you give me in return for them? Wouldn’t you agree that in the eyes of
God, these pictures are worth more than the Mona Lisa?
Do I really believe that? Yes, I think so. What
am I to do with the pictures? I don’t know. It’s quite a dilemma, isn’t it? I
can’t treat them like ordinary pieces of paper, right? I can’t throw them away -
God forbid. And if I take them home and tack them to the wall of my office at
our church, what does that mean? Does that mean I’ve committed something to
these little girls? Will I look at these drawings sometimes and tell people,
“Oh, those are from two little girls in an orphanage in the Dominican Republic
that I visited once upon a time." Will people who see these pictures think I'm a
nice guy because I spent an hour in an orphanage one afternoon?
See, there’s no good answer to this. I ask you,
what am I going to do with these pictures?
Hurting children have a way of doing this to
you. Their presence demands some kind of response. I wish I could give them
enough to care for them for the rest of their lives. But I’m pretty used up
these days. Long on ideas and feelings but short on time and strength and money.
And my oldest daughter is talking about a trip to Moldova this December that
will likely end with our family making a commitment to a child or two for the
next decade or so. That’s the problem with the depth of the need in the world.
It is endless.
But listen to me now. You just CANNOT let that
get you down. Or at least you cannot let is stop you from giving yourself to
every small act of goodness that you can. Don’t worry about the big picture.
Just find something good to do for someone, and DO IT.
If enough of us commit ourselves to small acts
of goodness, the world really does begin to be a better place.
And if not, well, then the hell with the world.
Live in your small moments of goodness. Just live there and let that be your
highest reality.
Okay back to those pictures. I truly do not
know what to do with them. I've placed them carefully in my backpack with my
computer, in a place where they cannot be harmed. I'm going to carry them back
to San Antonio. And then, I'm going to figure out what to do with them.
Something about these pictures is bothering me. I can't figure out a decent
response to their obvious value and meaning. Maybe you'll have some suggestions.
Think about it, will you?
Oh, and I finally figured out what this day of
play with these children means.
It means everything.
rlp

January 9, 2008 - 9:28pm
Wednesday night
January 9, 2007
It's so hard for me to write
without a lot of planning. I'd like to put the events of the day into a
nice, linear package for you. But I can't. I'm tired and it's very
late. And I'm still in culture shock. Shocked by the poverty, shocked
by the crowds of people, shocked by the lack of privacy, shocked by the
loss of control.
Other people feed us. I
don't even have any Dominican money on me. I just eat what our hosts
provide. It's sort of nice to let go of the job of getting food, but I
don't think I realized how much the simple freedom to eat whenever you
want is something I take for granted.
Tonight I put together a
rather extensive Flickr collection of photos, all with descriptions.
You can follow along the day by viewing them.
The collection is here. Or you can view it as a slideshow here.
Today we learned about what
Edge calls, "fluidity." You have to stay fluid when you are overseas.
It would be easy to let today become frustrating, but it didn't. We had
hoped to get started with the two installations, but we had troubles
getting materials in both places. The details are unimportant - it just
turned out to take the entire day to gather the tanks and make some
rather complex plans for the hospital. The hospital was supposed to
have gotten supplies ahead of time but didn't because an engineer
wanted to talk about it first. Apparently it didn't occur to him that
we were going to be on a tight schedule. We ended up buying exactly the
things we asked them to pick up for us. We lost a day. No big deal.
Kurtis is sure we'll make it up.
We did get to see the
hospital, and I was once again touched and surprised. Touched by the
good that they do and surprised by the primitive nature of the
facility. It is a Care
Hospital; there are a number of
them around the world. Their water system is horrible, but
it's not their fault. The entire city of Santo Domingo has a water
problem. You can't get clean water from the tap. You just can't.
Everyone uses bottled water. This is extremely expensive for the
hospital. They use a fair amount of water, as you can imagine.
Their specialty is pediatric
surgery for children with birth defects.
Half our team worked with
Kurtis and an engineer from the hospital to plan our rather complex
system. Our three tanks of purified water will tie right into the
plumbing of the hospital. Usually our water systems are suited to
people coming up to the tanks and drawing water off of them. While some
of us went out into town to buy supplies, the other half of our team
folded bandages.
That's right. They don't buy
pre-packaged bandages here. They buy bulk bandage material and fold
them by hand.


Care Hospital Santo Domingo is a 6-story building

The Cistern at Care Hospital. The water is clear, but not
safe. Full of bacteria.

Typical traffic in Santo Domingo. One of the reasons it
took all day to gather supplies.
We
were also able to get the supplies we will need for the YWAM
headquarters install, the one you guys payed for.
Let me
mention YWAM. I didn't know anything about Youth With A Mission, and I
still don't know much. It seems to be a movement started by American
Christians that spread this way and has become an indigenous expression
of faith. This facility is run by Domincans for Dominicans. I
can tell that they are a very conservative group of Christians. Much
more conservative than I, certainly. And yet, here they are working
amongst the poorest people. And we are in their country. I'm called to
be as respectful as if I was dealing with Muslims in Iran or Buddhists
in China. Their Christianity is now an indigenous movement among these
people. They tend toward charismatic expression and are absolutely
passionate about their faith.
Tomorrow
night we might go to a worship service. I hear we might have two hours
of singing BEFORE the sermon. I'll let you know how that goes.
And
there is this. These guys take trips to Africa to help people
less fortunate than themselves. They who don't even have clean water in
their own facility. That seals the deal for me. So you guys are going
to make it possible for them to drink their tap water instead of buying
water, which they do for the hundreds of volunteer teams of all
denominations who stay here from time to time. Not too many Americans,
I wouldn't think. We're too spoiled and the accomodations are too
rough. But I'm glad I'm here. I'm glad I've experienced it.
Whether
you are a Christian or not, I can testify that you who donated money
would be happy to be giving clean water to these people. Absolutely.
On a
personal note: The food was very good today. There was something for
breakfast that I never did identify. Some kind of pasty, grits-ish,
puddingesque thing. Sort of sweet and sort of like Oatmeal. Whatever, I
ate every bite. Lunch at the hospital was fun and delicious.
Traditional Dominican food. (Pictures of both meals at the Flickr
site) We put in a full day, and I'm ready for bed. Check out
the flickr photos I mentioned. They tell the story.
Tomorrow
we begin the installation work in both places. One of our teams is also
going to spend some time taking care of children in a local orphanage.
We feel the YWAM install will be so easy that we can spare the time.
And the hospital has a solar water heating system that was installed
incorrectly. Kurtis the magic man feels we might be able to fix that
for them while we're there.
These Edge folks
are INTENSE. I kid you not. Do not try to stop them or get in their
way. They will find a way to get things done. And if something prevents
them from doing one thing, they'll find some other acts of goodness to
fill the day.
Tomorrow
I'll show you the work we do and introduce you to the team in more
detail. I can't wait to show you a picture of Kurtis.
peace,
rlp
January 8, 2008 - 8:38pm
January 8th, 2007 - Tuesday
Note:
I'm likely not going to have a lot of time for editing on this trip, so
you're going to get this stuff pretty much right out of my head. I'll
have to grab whatever time I can to write.
They say it is always
disorienting when you enter a new culture. I know this in my head but
have had few occasions to experience it at the level I did today. Santo
Domingo left me speechless.
Our team flew into the
airport during the afternoon at different times. There are 5 young
women from Murray State. One of them - Courtney - is a highly trained
Edge intern. She's 19 and fully capable of installing complex water
systems in primitive settings and doing water education. The other four
are friends of hers who have recently undergone the same training that
I did back in October.
Curtis is our team leader.
He and Stuart are experienced Edge trainers. Which is good because we'd
be lost without them. Then there is Marcia and Rick and I.


Courtney and I
Most of us had arrived by
about 5:30. We loaded the equipment in a small bus and left for the
YWAM (Youth with a Mission) headquarters here in Santo Domingo. More on
YWAM tomorrow. This is a Christian organization that has no connection
with Edge Outreach but is allowing us to stay in their headquarters.

Purification Equipment

Curtis
There is no way I can
describe the hour and a half journey through the heart of Santo
Domingo. This is the stuff you don't see in the tourist areas. The
streets were packed with vehicles and bicycles of every kind. The
entire center of the city looks poverty stricken, from my
point of view. But my point of view is meaningless here.
There were so many people. There seem to be almost no traffic laws;
cars and buses and bikes and pedestrians weave in and out following
some set of rules that they understand but I do not. I wish I could
have taken pictures, but it was already dark.
The YWAM headquarters is an
abandoned hotel in a very poor neighborhood. I wondered why an
official organization with a name and everything would need
fresh water, but that just shows how little I understand this world. We
are staying in the nicest accomodations available here. There's no hot
water and no one can drink from the tap. Everyone drinks bottled water
purchased nearby.

Our bedroom

Dinner - unidentifiable
hot dogs and huge buns.
Hey, you eat what they give you here.
We are staying with some
amazing people. Alberto just got back from the Sahara where he worked
with "the poor and underpriviledged." I tried to imagine what kind of
people Alberto would consider poor. Again I am having to come to grips
with how out of touch with reality my views of comfort and poverty are.
The money you gave is going
to install a purification system here at YWAM. Curtis and Courtney
scouted the facility looking for the best place to install one. These
pictures will give you some idea of the kind of place we are staying
at. It's probably the best place in the neighborhood.

Alberto shows us a lower
room, one possible location.

We settled on a corner
of the kitchen, always a nice place for fresh water.
Tomorrow we have to go to a
local hardware store and buy materials for the YWAM install and the
larger system we will install at a local hospital. Curtis told me that
the hospital's water situation is more primitive than they have here. (Note:
The Edge purifiers come with us, but the tanks and pipes and everything
else is bought "in country.")
Confession time:
Okay, I'm not proud of what
follows, but it is the truth. It's important for me to admit it
because, well, it's the truth. I don't really know how I'm going to
sleep here tonight. I have a top bunk with one sheet and no covers. I
won't get to shower until tomorrow, maybe. Tonight I'll brush my teeth
with a cup of bottled water. Windows are open to the outside, so I
don't know what kind of bugs I'll encounter during the night. And to be
honest, I had a hard time eating that hot dog. I could only finish
about half of it. I have no idea where it was purchased and how long it
was on that table. So I'm hungry, and I really don't know when I'll eat
next. I hear they are serving us breakfast in the morning, and I'm
afraid to see what it will be.
And I'm ashamed of myself
because this is as good as it gets here. Our hosts welcomed us and were
so delighted that we have come. They've given us their best.
And to think when I arrived
at the airport I took this picture because I thought it was going to be
a struggle dealing with the fact that you can't get real Diet Coke
here. You get Coke Light, which tastes like straight Coke. At the
airport, that actually seemed like an issue to me.

What a difference a couple
of hours can make.
I'll write more tomorrow.
Tomorrow we actually get started.
rlp
January 7, 2008 - 8:16pm
Monday night - January 7th,
2008
I know I've been scarce
lately. Well, actually totally absent. I'm not sure I remember a time
when I went this long without posting. I promised the family that I
would stay away from the blog for the holidays, and I have. And it's
been good for me.
Truthfully, I've been in a
less productive season with writing, mostly due to some pretty major
transitions in my life. I will tell you that a serious writing season
is coming after I get back from the Domincan Republic. I feel it
inside. I know when a writing burst is coming.
Speaking of the D.R., I
leave tomorrow morning at 5:45 am. I'll Fly to Atlanta and then on to
Santo Domingo. It is my intention to document our project in pictures
and words. I will post every day while there. I might end up staying up
late at night, but every day gets a post. If there isn't a post, assume
I had problems with internet access and will post that day as soon as I
can.
Worse case scenario:
Internet access is completely unavailable. If that happens, I'll write
my daily entries all the same and post them all when I get to someplace
with Internet.
Over 100 of you donated to
help with this water installation. We raised just a little over our
$4500 goal. That means the second water install we do was made possible
by you, bloggers and readers of real live preacher. This is our
project, you might say. That's why I'm so dedicated to documenting it
for you.
Next time you hear from me
should be Tuesday night.
peace,
rlp
ps - If you don't have
Google Earth installed, you might want to. I'll be including longitide
and latitude coordinates.

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