Showing posts with label Nhlengelo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nhlengelo. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Nhlengelo


Today I had one of the most powerful experiences of my life. I met a crowd of angels.

The story in brief:

In 1999, Pastor and Mrs. Mawela retired in Darsloop, in the far northeastern portion of South Africa. At the time, Paul Mawela's health was bad, but he had wanted to start a church in his retirement, and so he held a series of meetings. But hardly anyone came. All the other pastors in the town scheduled "revivals" for the same time! He began to hear that some other pastors were telling their congregants that Seventh-day Adventists were devil worshippers! (That sounds silly to us, but it is a measure of the ignorance and superstition in Africa that it is still a potent accusation here.)

Not getting anywhere with evangelism, he and his wife, Martha, wondered what to do next. He noticed that there were a lot of funerals in the area. When he looked more closely, he discovered that most of the funerals were for young people.

All Africans know about HIV/AIDS. There are roughly 42 million infected people in the world, and fully half of those, 21 million, are in the southern third of the African continent. He had retired in a particularly hard-struck community.

So Pastor Mawela went to the pastor of the local apostolic church, and told him his concerns. This was the first Christian pastor who was willing to talk to him. The other pastor realized two things: Pastor Mawela had identified a problem churches needed to address, and he also realized that Pastor Mawela was a true Christian man who he could trust. He gathered all the local Christian pastors, and together they determined to do something.

They started out with just a phone and an office. I'll skip the intermediate steps, and tell you that today Nhlengelo (the word means "fighting together against an enemy") is an interfaith ministry that employs 60 volunteer caregivers who go to the homes of people who are dying and minister to them. They visit the multitude of child-headed homes, where orphans live alone. They feed 70 children at the main center, and another 700 orphans at a local school. Here's a picture of some of the orphans who came for a meal while we were there.

In short, this is one of the most Christian activities I've ever seen Seventh-day Adventists do.

I must correct myself: Seventh-day Adventists were the impetus behind it, but it is an interfaith effort carried out by hundreds of marvelous Christian people. I'm more proud of that than I would be if our people were doing it all alone!

I wish you could meet the Mawelas. There is a power about them. It does not come from being right but from doing right. The other angels are the caregivers, who walk miles every day to minister to dying people. (And for these caregivers, volunteering is a real sacrifice; most of them live in poverty, too.)

And by the way, Pastor Mawela did start a church, and the town was so thrilled with the Nhlengelo center that the chief gave them the land!

If I can figure out how to edit my videos, I'll post them.

Monday, September 10, 2007

The Veldt

Yesterday was a travel day. We drove from Johannesburg to the Umbhaba Lodge, near Hazy View, on the edge of the Kruger National Park. I am seated in a cabana at the edge of pond, where early in the morning Nile crocodiles and hippos sometimes appear, just a few feet away from the room where I’m staying. We are here to visit nearby Bushbuckridge, where people come to a Seventh-day Adventist pastor and his wife to die of HIV/AIDS in the Nhlengelo hospice. More on that later.

It is a measure of the contrast in this country that while we visitors sleep in beautifully appointed rooms and eat in a fancy restaurant, a few miles down the road are impoverished people waiting to die, and having no one to turn to.

The heroes of this story are Pastor Paul and Martha Mawela (in the middle) known to their community as Papa and Mama. They are the good, Godly people who have devoted their lives to caring for those who have no hope. We'll be visiting their hospice on Wednesday