The Daily Life of a Family Volunteering at Neema Village
Ever wondered what it could be like for your family to volunteer at Neema? Let Tammy Burns from Bastrop,Texas tell you:·
As Christmas 2018 was approaching, our family (Ed, Tammy, Nathan, and Denise Burns) were eagerly preparing for our trip to Neema Village in Arusha, Tanzania.
Our flight out of Houston left on December 27 and we arrived on December 28 and were warmly welcomed by Neema Village staff at the airport. After an hour drive from the airport we arrived at Neema and, exhausted, immediately went to bed. We woke up on Saturday morning to the beautiful and breathtaking view that is Neema Village. All those that stay and work at Neema get to enjoy this beauty from God every day. God is amazing!
Safina, the cook at the volunteer house always has a wonderful breakfast of biscuits and gravy, or pancakes, or French toast ready for the volunteers to enjoy.
Our first day Dorris gave us a tour and we got to see the homes where the children live, the vegetable garden, the flower garden, the chickens and cows, and the new Mothers Against Poverty home. The large vegetable garden is producing food for Neema Village to use, and they are getting large supplies of milk from the cows, as well as many eggs from the chickens. Fifty-five Tanzanians work here and keep everything running smoothly, which is so wonderful to see. Those are beautiful strawberry plants Tammy and Ramah are checking out below.
We got to spend a good part of the day playing with the children. What a treat for us! The children love to spend time with the volunteers, and we love to be with them, as well.
Late in the afternoon on our first day, we had a concert by our son Nathan Burns and McKenna Walton, another volunteer here at the time. All the children and nannies attended the concert which included violin and guitar music. Mckenna is a yodeling performer and Nathan plays the violin. Surprisingly it went together very well. The children were entranced by the beautiful sounding instruments. They had never seen a violin before. After Nathan and McKenna played, the nannies led us in some Swahili songs which was so beautiful. Another day the whole family got to play and sing with the children.
On Sunday, we attended a Tanzanian church and took a number of the older children with us, and we had the privilege of worshiping God in another culture. The Tanzanians LOVE music and LOVE to sing!! After church, Dorris and Michael took all of us out for lunch, and we had a great time of fellowship. Later in the day, we spent several more hours holding babies and playing with the older children.
Monday, we did a craft with the children ages 3-6 with some craft supplies that we had brought along with us. It was so much fun to watch the children working with the beads, and they were so proud of their work. We spent some time in the garden, picking vegetables and transplanting some plants. There is such a variety of things to participate in here at Neema Village. That is Mercy with stars on her head below, or is that identical twin Mary??
Tuesday, we watched Sophia teach music class to the children ages 3-6, while the toddlers observed and the volunteers held babies. Music is such a big part of the culture here in Tanzania. Tuesday was New Year’s Day, so some of the workers were barbecuing a goat. We had a fun lunch in town instead, but when we arrived home to play with the kids, we stopped in the kitchen and had a sample of the goat meat. It was delicious. So many great cultural experiences!! That is Bryan, an abandoned baby pictured below with Tammy.
During the rest of the week, we spent time leading Bible time with some of the children, feeding the babies, asking children to teach us some Swahili, visiting with nannies, getting to know some of the other workers here, playing on the playground with the children, reading books to our assigned children, eating meals with Dorris and Michael, getting to know their daughter Bekah, eating African food made by the cooks, doing a little gardening, putting babies to bed, and taking kids swimming in a local pool on Friday. On Thursday, Ed and Nathan joined Safina in the weekly trip to the market to purchase the large amounts of food needed to feed all the workers and children here. Wow! It was amazing to watch all that goes on in bartering and purchasing all the food and supplies.
Friday we went on a safari to Tarangire National Park and saw so many different kinds of animals and birds, including a lion chase of a wart hog. There were lots of elephants!
On Saturday we took Malikia to her school for the blind in Moshi, where she attends several semesters every year. It was good to see that she was happy to be there and to start school again. She, of course, sang for us almost the whole way there!
On the way home from Moshi, we took an adventurous ride through some villages in a couple of tuk tuks, an unsafe cloth covered tricycle of sorts. We swam at Magi Moto (Hot Water), a pond fed by a thermal spring, which was quite refreshing on a hot day.
On another day, we journeyed a couple of hours out to a Maasai village to pick up Joshua, one of the Neema babies grown up now and attending school in Arusha. What a privilege to spend an hour in a Maasai village, where they welcomed us and showed us around their homes and their chicken business which Neema helped begin for them. We were excited to hear that they are now making money from selling eggs!
Before we left the women wanted to pray for Joshua and for Neema Village. It was so touching to hear these women who have so little thank God for their lives and see the impact Neema Village is making on so many lives.
As we prepare to leave in a couple of days, we know we will miss this place, where there is so much love, constant activity and fun times! It will be hard to leave.
The Burns Family has promised to return, we will hold them to it!! Love you guys!
It is not too late to sign up for one of the most challenging, exhilarating, and rewarding experiences of your life. Mount Kilimanjaro is the tallest mountain in Africa, 19, 341 feet (5895 meters.) All of our previous climbers will attest that it is one of the most exciting things they have every done! Our success rate for the Neema Village Charity climb is that 28 out of 29 climbers made it to the summit! That is almost 97% success! You can do it! Plus, you can help raise needed funds and awareness for Neema Village, a rescue center for orphaned, abandoned, and at-risk babies.
Factoring in travel and a day or two before the climb and/or after the climb to visit Neema Village and/or take a great safari, climbers will need to block off the first two weeks of July.
This Charity Climb will benefit Neema Village. Climbers from the 2018 Kili Climb were able to give Neema Village over $20,000 by soliciting donations!
Costs for the climb are $2350 for climb fees and three nights at Moivaro Lodge (food and lodging included, based on 10 climbers), about $2000 for airline ticket, plus your incidental expenses which vary depending on the climber’s tastes.
Itinerary
July 2019
1 Monday Depart Home
2 Tuesday Arrive Tanzania
Overnight Moivaro Coffee Lodge
3 Wednesday Day at Neema Village
Overnight Moivaro Coffee Lodge
4 Thursday Travel Moshi
Day 1 Climb
5 Friday Day 2 Climb
6 Saturday Day 3 Climb
7 Sunday Day 4 Climb
8 Monday Day 5 Climb
9 Tuesday Day 6 Climb
10 Wednesday Day 7 Climb
Summit
11 Thursday Day 8 Descend to base
Overnight Moivaro Coffee Lodge
Option 1 Option 2* Option 3**
12 Friday Visit Neema Village Visit Neema Village Visit Neema Village
Depart Tanzania One day Safari* Two day Safari**
13 Saturday Arrive Home Visit Neema House Safari
Depart Tanzania
14 Sunday Arrive Home Visit Neema Village
Church
Depart Tanzania
15 Monday Arrive Home
*For a one day safari to Tarangeri National Park, add about $225
**For a two day safari to Tarangeri and the Ngorongoro Crater, add about $550
***Longer stays can be arranged for either a Safari to the Serengeti, or more time to volunteer at Neema House.
If you are interested in signing up or receiving more information, please contact Michael Fortson by email at: [email protected]
If you are ready sign up, please open this document link, print, complete, and return the reservation form. Reservation Form
Please pass this information on to others who you think might be interested in climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, East Africa.
With three days left in this year, today we were called to the hospital to receive this little one, a one month old pre-mature baby boy who weighs just 1.7 kg ( 3.75 lbs). But the year is not quite done and we could be called again before the end of the year. This is what we do. We rescue abandoned, orphaned, and at-risk babies!
2018 has been a quite a year here at Neema Village. We started the year with 46 babies and children under our roof and have ended with 60. Remember we only take babies under the age of two years. We began the month of November with 64 babies! And of that number, 25 were under the age of 6 months! Can you imagine? This year we received 30 new babies into our care from Social Welfare. We saw 4 adoptions, and we were able to reunite 29 children with their extended families. To help with all the babies, we had 205 volunteers stay in our volunteer house! We love volunteers; maybe 2019 will be your year to come and help!
Our new MAP home, “The Koala House” has been used countless times for classes and seminars for the women. And 23 women have been set up in new businesses through that program!
We have been busy this year! And all of this has been done by the Abundant Grace of God; Praise His Name!
God has used many people to donate their time and money to help Neema Village in 2018. Neema operates only by charitable donations. To the many, many people who have generously given financially this year, we say Thank You! Many have made special gifts just in the last few weeks. Because of your generous and faithful hearts, we have finished the year in the Green and not the Red!
Perhaps you have not made your year-end, tax-deductible, donation. It is not too late! We count on end of the year donations to have a good start in the next year. We pray that you will consider gifting Neema Village with an end of the year donation, if you haven’t already. You can make the gift on-line through our website: www.neemavillage.org or go directly to: https://swp.paymentsgateway.net/co/default.aspx?pg_api_login_id=KKuhXavq14
Alternatively, you may mail a check to:
Neema Village
P. O. Box 21553
Waco, TX 76702
You may wish to sponsor one of these babies who are still needing sponsors: Abigael, Baraka #4, Baraka #5, Bryson, Christopher #2, David (twin), Dennis (twin), Ebenezer, Edward (triplet), Elcram (twin), Elham (twin), Eliah, Elisha (triplet), Esther (triplet), Josephine. Majaliwa, Nammyaki, Ruth, Sasha. Sharon #2, Yohana, Zablon (twin), Dorcas
We pray that you had a wonderful Christmas and that the New Year will bring God’s abundant blessings!
What do you get someone who already has the perfect Christmas gift?
You see, we really do… already have The Perfect Gift. It came over 2,000 years ago, wrapped in starlight and hay and in one of those shockingly expensive, one-of-a-kind singing gift cards.
We can’t top that! The Perfect Christmas Gift has been done! And it’s one of those gifts that can’t get broken, or lost or stolen or rusted. And it feels new every time you open it!
And the really good thing about it is that it’s mine, all mine… and it’s yours, all yours too for the asking. Don’t ask me how they do that, they just do!
There is a gift that The Perfect Gift would love, I’m quite sure of it. Another little baby, and this one too is a little rough around the edges, it’s been through a lot, it might be bruised and definitely messy. But precious beyond words to The Gift. Yes, He would love it, I’m sure.
So if you’re pondering this Christmas what to get someone who already has it all, here’s a thought!
Sponsor a baby in Africa for a year in someone else’s honor, in their name, so they get the picture for the fridge and the progress reports through out the year. Then just send them a Christmas card that says,
“I’m sending you a baby for Christmas!” That will get their heart bumping, I’m sure of it!
You can pick out your gift to give at www.neemavillage.org under “Neema Babies.” Let me know if the instructions are not clear or if you need help with assembling. [email protected]
No wrapping needed. Happy Shopping!!
Below is an example and a complete list of precious gifts whom no one has chosen.
“It’s my first lamb!” Mariya Halapi was quite touched yesterday when Mama Iddi gave her a little lamb. I think we were all touched by yesterday’s events when one of our MAP widows, Mama Iddi and her handicap granddaughter got to move into their new home. It was quite a day.
Mama Iddi has been keeping her 12 year old abandoned granddaughter in her home where part of the wall had fallen in and she had hung an old tarp over the hole. There were large cracks in the back of the house and so many holes in the roof that she walked in mud inside the house when it rained. It was unsafe to say the least.
We had been out to visit Mama Iddi with some friends in August and were so saddened by her living conditions that we decided Neema, through the generosity of friends and the MAP program, could help.
We had planned at first to shore up the house, patch the cracks, put on a new tin roof and paint the house. But when our builders got started they realized none of the house was worth saving. So they bulldozed it and started from ground up. We took Mama Iddi and her granddaughter out yesterday to see the completed house for the first time. I realize this may not look like much to you but to this widow living in extreme poverty it is a mansion.
While the builders were working on her house for a couple of months, we had moved Mama Iddi and her granddaughter to a room down the street from Neema. We had also started her in a chicken/egg business through Neema’s MAP program. So the first thing we had to do yesterday was move the chickens. That was fun, feathers flapping and all!
All the neighbors came out to help including this handsome young man. He said he remembered a bible class we had done at his house a few years ago. Emily Broadbent, look how he has grown!
After getting all the chickens together we loaded up the trailer and our car along with the squawking chickens, the chicken coop, volunteers and Mama Iddi with everything she owned in the world and drove to her new home. She had not seen it painted nor the inside of the house, so we were all pretty excited for her.
She looked around at the metal windows, the creamy yellow walls and the smooth cement floor and all she could say was Wow, Wow! I felt like we were on that TV show where they blindfold people and reveal their remodeled house and everyone cries!
After the Wows! were over, we prayed with her and asked God to bless the house and her family with peace and that no harm would come to her while she lived there. Then the builders and volunteers all gathered round and sang, “Mungu ni Pendo”, an old African song that means God is Love.
We got the hugs yesterday from Mama Iddi but we know those hugs and blessings were really for those of you who made this new home possible for her. We love for our volunteers like Sophie Line (pictured below) and Linda Johnson, (she was helping with the chickens in one of the pictures above), to see the Goodness of God at work in Africa.
Thank you dear hearts for your loving care of widows and orphans. I think surely nothing is closer to God’s heart than these. We are so grateful that every day we get to be Administrators of His Abounding Grace.
Details of the climb are still being worked out, but if you are interested in joining us as we climb the tallest mountain in Africa, 19, 341 feet, you need to begin planning now. It is a fantastic experience and challenge.
Factoring in travel and a day or two before the climb and/or after the climb to visit Neema Village and/or take a great safari, climbers will need to block off the first two weeks of July.
This Charity Climb will benefit Neema Village. Climbers from the 2018 Kili Climb were able to give Neema Village over $20,000 by soliciting donations!
Costs for the climb are about $2170 for climb fees (food and lodging included), about $2000 for airline ticket, and your incidental expenses which vary depending on the climber’s tastes.
If you are interested in signing up or receiving more information, please contact Michael Fortson by email at: [email protected]
Please pass this information on to others who you think might be interested in climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, East Africa.
With sixty one babies and big kids at Neema Village now, I Imagine it is a loud and messy place. It is also quite wonderful. Two new babies came to Neema a few days ago. Emily says they are very tiny and fragile. The top one is named Rachel and the little one pictured below doesn’t have a name yet. I’m sorry to show you the pictures but this is who they are and I want you to know them.
I know this is hard to look at but they look like skeleton babies, don’t they? It is even hard to write that. Our hearts break for them and I wish we were there to hold them and keep them warm and safe and tell them they will be okay.
We will love them until a new family member can be found to care for them or they can be adopted. It is never our goal to keep these little ones. “No baby belongs in an orphanage” is our motto, even though I continue to stress that we are not an orphanage. We are a rescue center.
Until the babies have their forever families they will need sponsors. Please go to www.neemavillage.org and sign up to care for these little ones.
Pictured below, Baby Baraka #4, came to Neema on Thursday.
He was born at home and shortly after the birth the mom developed complications with the placenta. She died on the way to the hospital. I sigh with deep frustration each time this happens. Did you know that the biggest killers in Africa are all preventable; Malaria,Typhoid and Childbirth complications.
Even though we now have a large monthly give away program of formula through our Outreach Program to keep babies in their homes, there was no one at this home who could care for this little one right now. African culture will not allow a single woman to live in a house with a single man so hiring a live in nanny for them is not possible. We will care for him until his father remarries or a grandmother or aunt can take over.
Christopher, pictured below is an abandoned baby.
October 2018. Christopher came to Neema a few days ago. He was abandoned in the back of a taxi. His mother said she was going to get something and would be right back but never returned. He is assumed to be about two days old. He was taken to a hospital, where they named him and cared for him. Neema was then contacted. He is not very interested in the bottle right now, but we are trying. Please pray for him and his mother. If you would like to sponsor baby Chris while he is here we could certainly use your help. Sponsorships start at $30 per month.
We are continually asked what makes someone abandon a baby? We have had babies left on roadsides, on porches, in latrines, in a gravel pit, in a house alone, anywhere. You ask why? It’s a hard one to answer. We don’t usually try.I have been visiting with family for a few weeks and we have a pretty spirited granddaughter who loves to argue American politics. She says there is too much greed, corruption, hatred and a lack of respect for individual life in America. She is right, any is too much.
But those things are not an American “place” problem, they are a heart problem. Governments or Politicians can’t make people be good, love their wives, or share with the poor, or take care of their families, says author Phillip Yancey. Our granddaughter thought she might like to move to Sweden but I would guess the Swedes have their share of mean and selfish people
I told her don’t get discouraged with us humans, there are more good ones than bad ones. Just watch any tragedy unfold on the nightly news. To the few perpetrators of any tragedy there are way more good people rushing in to help.
“Keep your eyes on the helpers” is a good way to not be discouraged about life.
In our work in Africa where we regularly see babies who have been thrown out, discarded, starved and women used, abused and left destitute, yes, it is easy to become cynical and want to move to Sweden.
That may be one reason we are so in love with our volunteers. They help keep us grounded, a regular dose of goodness every day!
They are like the helpers rushing in to help clean up the mess and might I say with 61 babies at Neema that is a lot of mess to clean up!!
I also told our granddaughter that politics or governments don’t change people’s hearts. Only God can do that. But she is young and idealistic and also very passionate which is a good thing.
I’m proud of her.
Neema Village is right where God wants it, helping the helpless, the discouraged, the down and out, the abandoned and the hopeless. So don’t get discouraged with life and remember there is way more good than bad in Africa and yes even in America. I would imagine in Sweden too.
May God bless you with great faith in the goodness of man.
Psalms 27:13 “I am still confident of this: I will see the goodness of the LORD in the land of the living.”
All our Neema babies have a story or we would not have them. These four new ones who came to Neema this week have a story as well and it breaks my heart. Bryan, sleeping peacefully now at Neema Village was left on the side of the road, the placenta and cord were still attached.I cannot imagine the heartache this mother must have gone through before she put her baby down. We do tell our nannies this does not just happen in Africa, it happens in school bathrooms and dumpsters in America too. It is not an African problem, it is a heart problem. Many of these women are poor and desperate and feel they have no options. Thankfully our Neema Village MAP program is giving many women options today.
This sweet little 2 month old pictured above, lost his mom last night. Sylvia Pape, Angel, our Social Worker, and Mama Musa, our Director, drove out about an hour and half late yesterday afternoon to pick up baby Johanna. The house was already filled with mourners while the mother lay in the back room. This Maasai village was high up in the mountains with no clinics or hospitals and so hard to get to they probably had been unable to get her to the hospital in town. We will be trying to find a family member to keep him.
Newborn, Joshua above, is abandoned as well. His mother is a drug addict and abandoned him but then she was found and put into a drug help program. She ran away again and has not been found again. We are not sure what is the matter with his eyes but we think he has a problem. They are swollen and he will not open them.
Sweet baby girl Hosiana, lost her mother too. I love her name. It reminds me of “Hosana in the Highest” and how often we praise God for allowing us to do this work of saving babies in Africa.
I was able to cuddle little Hosiana for about an hour yesterday afternoon. She is precious and melts in under your chin. When I hold these new little ones like this I am always crying inside for what they have lost.
“Orphans are easier to ignore before you know their names. They are easier to ignore before you see their faces. It is easier to pretend they’re not real before you hold them in your arms. But once you do everything changes.” David Platt
If you knew your mom and had a good mom, Thank God for her for me would you! I never really knew mine.
This is just the coolest thing! One of our MAP moms has started her business, Upendo’s Internet Cafe and Fresh Juice Bar.
Upendo’s husband left her owing back rent, little food and a two year old handicap child. She was destitute when she came to talk with Mariya, our MAP director.
After talking with Mariya about what she could do to help herself and her baby, Upendo thought she could start a food business making mandazi (like a donut). We began to look for a small shop and found a great spot on a busy corner. But when we interviewed the neighbors they said we have a food business here, what we really need is an internet service.
Upendo had never used a computer so we hired a couple of university students to teach her for a month.
We bought a small fridge to keep the fruit fresh, a blender, some glasses and Mariya, Jennifer, Ashley and Emily had fun experimenting on juice combinations. Upendo always works with her little boy on her back.
Mariya had brought some laptops from Germany so she put two in the shop for Upendo. We bought a printer, some paper and ink cartridges and Wallah! an internet service is born!
We love taking volunteers down to the shop to get a fresh juice, my favorite is orange, pineapple, mango. Yummy!
Now really, how cool is that! An Internet Cafe and Fresh Juice Bar comes to Arusha! Turning hopelessness into Hope. Love it!
You can help us keep this MAP program going by sponsoring a business. Please remember the IRS won’t let you deduct it for taxes if you put a specific person on your donation. Just put MAP program on your donation, we will see that it goes to the right place. I promise.
It’s been another one of those days when you don’t know whether to laugh or cry. So you do both!
Five years ago we got a call about a little girl who was found living in a shed where they had kept chickens and goats behind the house.
She had been abandoned with her grandmother who is an AIDS patient. The grandmother had to work in the fields and was leaving the baby in the shed while a neighbor was supposed to come in to feed the baby. She wasn’t and the baby was emaciated and starving.
Her name was Gloria.
Gloria has been our big girl at Neema for a long time. We thought she would be with us until college age. But lives change and grandmother has been taking her meds, is healthy now and in a better place emotionally and physically. She showed us the shed behind her house and I think was truly sorry about what she had done.
Her son has now built her a shop on a good road and we have put grandmother into our MAP program and helped her with the capital to start a shop selling flour, potatoes, oil, tea, etc.
Our big girls all came to tell Gloria bye as she left Neema.
Gloria makes 36 Neema children we have been able to return home! We are excited about that. We have had 183 babies helped through Neema, there are 54 currently in house, we have had 36 adoptions and 57 in our outreach program. Yes, you can be sure we will be going out to check on our girl!
It’s what we do but it doesn’t make it any easier.
Watch Gloria singing “Jesus Loves me this I know” for a great lift to your day!!
Thanks Hannah Huddleston Key with “The Freckled Key” for a great photo at the top!
The Big News is that all our Mt. Kilimanjaro climbers made it to the top of the tallest mountain in Africa!
Our second charity climb was a great success as Dr. David Vineyard, leader of the group, took Mariya Halapi, Emily Broadbent, Hayden Liebl, Tina McCormack and Dr. Jeff McCormack up to the roof of Africa to raise money for the Neema babies. You can still give on their behalf, just go to www.neemavillage.org and on the purpose line put “In honor of the Awesome Kili climbers.”
We have had lots of great volunteers this month.
Above, the Aggies for Christ from A & M University along with Elaine Carter, a retired school teacher and Jeff McCormack from Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond walked down to the village to support a couple of our MAP moms by buying Saturday morning breakfast from their little food shops.
Below is the Mark and Kelle Samsill group of young people with Neema babies.
Our policy has been that Neema Village only takes in babies two and under. There are lots of orphanages that will take older children but Neema is the only home in the city limits of Arusha that takes only babies. But what could we do when Social Welfare called one evening and said, “The Police have just picked up a little twelve year old girl in a wheel chair begging on the street and we have no where to put her for the night. Can you take her?”
That was almost two months ago and Social Welfare still has no place to put her. Little Miss Personality Plus, Sophia, has scooted her way into our hearts and after meeting with Social Welfare this week, we think we will keep her. We have come up with a plan. It took three days in doctors offices to certify her handicap so we could get her into school. She had never been to school, cannot read or write so last Monday she started to school in the first grade.
We got a call Friday that a new mom had died and there was no one to care for the baby so three of our volunteers along with a Social worker took off in the red Prado to go up into Maasai country below Mt. Meru to pick up the baby. The red Prado had other plans and decided to break down with three or four miles left to go, so Emanuel walked back to find help. The girls decided to walk in and pick up the baby. Gulp!
They took off over fields and through the banana groves trying to find the right house to pick up baby Lightnes whose mom had died. Emily Moe below telling baby Lightnes its going to be ok baby girl.
I love the “Mama Bear protecting the baby bear” picture of Lindsey Vineyard on their way out with the baby.
The next day we got a call about another baby needing help so we picked up baby Ivan. The mother had abandoned the baby and the father was not able to care for the baby. Ivan is beautifully sweet and precious.
Custom here will not allow a man to have a live in woman in the house so for now there seems to be no solution other than keep the baby at Neema until a family member can step up. Ivan is a smiley baby and doesn’t cry a lot. They said he was about three months old but Bekah thinks more like six months old.
Below is a cute picture of new baby Lightnes.
These three new ones, Sophia, Lightnes and Ivan at Neema Village need sponsors. We have 55 babies along with our big kids living at Neema today and many of them do not have a sponsor. It costs us over $300 per month to keep a baby but you can begin with $30 a month. That pays for nanny care, food, formula, petrol, and utilities. It doesn’t pay for buildings or the MAP program. Only Tanzanians are paid a monthly salary at Neema Village.
Please go to www.neemavillage.org to set up a monthly sponsorship with your credit card or through you bank. It’s easy to set up and we really need your help. Bless You!
It took two interpreters, one from English to Swahili and one from Swahili into Maasai to get the message out. But with Anna and Halimah interpreting, Dr. David Vineyard, an OBGYN, from Nacogdoches, Texas was able to teach some safe birthing techniques and how dangerous FGM (female circumcision) is for young women during childbirth.
David and Lindsey Vineyard, Jeff and Tina McCormack, Mark Samsill and niece Riley, with Anna, our MAP interpreter, and Michael and Emmanuel the group traveled three hours to a remote area of Tanzania yesterday to help women who are often at the greatest risk of dying during childbirth. Many of our Neema babies over the last six years lost their Maasai mothers during their birth.
Probably for the first time the women got to see pictures of how their body looks on the inside. I’m not sure it looked like they believed it! Maybe a little shock and disbelief in the picture below.
Dr. David and Anna, the interpreter showed the women pictures of how the baby looks inside the tummy.
The women got to ask questions from the doctor.
David and Lindsey pulled the older women “baby deliverers” out from the group and gave them instructions on how to use the safe birthing kits designed by Sharon Bonogofsky Parker. The pill that stops hemorrhaging is an important part of the kit.
They also gave out some “Days For Girls” kits to the young girls who are just becoming women (pictured below). They were pretty excited since I’ms sure there are no maxipads available out there and these are completely washable pads for young women.
These beautiful Maasai people are always excited to see us and so appreciative of anything we can do for them.
We usually take lollypops and it’s always a good day with a lollypop.
Thanks to Mark Samsill who brought a bee suit for the village’s new honey business. Michael said the bees were swarming in the new hive.
And Thank you to Riley O’Pry, pictured below, for some great pictures.
And Thank you to all of you who stay with me to the end of my rather long blogs! I do love sharing this journey of saving babies in Tanzania East Africa. Bless you for coming along on the journey.
In all that we do may God be Glorified and Jesus Lifted Up!