Sunday, November 15, 2009

A Little Child Shall Lead Them--in the ABC's, too

I was incredibly encouraged by my visit to ECM's team of Americans and Ugandan nationals working in the Gulu District. I visited our sponsorship program in the Tegot village (formerly called an IDP camp, but the government now wants to call it a village in keeping with its policy of encouraging people to return to their home areas).



My job, besides seeing how the team was working together, was to visit with the guardians of the children in our sponsorship program. Only a very few have living parents. Most of the parents were killed in the war with the LRA or died of AIDS spread in the war. Many of the kids live with a very old grandmother.



I was supposed to encourage the parent figures in the kids' lives, but they did so much to encourage me! One of them was thrilled that her little grandchildren are coming home and showing her what they learned in school. She herself was never able to attend school at all because the war brought education to a standstill for two generations. Now her grandchildren come with their papers and say "Look, grandma. Today we learned the letter b. See, this is what it looks like. This is what it sounds like: bbbbb. This is how you write it. Look, Grandma."

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Pray for the Karimojong

I am in Uganda training our staff on ways they can recognize and fight child trafficking and modern-day slavery. Today I was talking with ECM's new National Director, Charles Obwoon.

My conversation with Charles started in a very ordinary way. He wanted to know if I would consider other sponsorship projects in other places in Uganda, besides the three we have now in Kamwokya, Gayaza, and Gulu. It was the kind of question people ask me all the time. Eventually, yes. As soon as what we are already doing is strong and stable enough and as soon as there is adequate support. Not immediately, but yes, certainly in the future.

His next question stopped me in my tracks. Would I consider a sponsorship project among st the Karimojong? Immediately he had my attention. In the past few weeks before coming to Uganda, I'd spent a considerable amount of my "spare" time researching the Karimojong. No one knew that--certainly not Charles. I had examined the Karimoja territory in northeastern Uganda on Google earth. I had read the reports of the very, very few missionary efforts there. I had even written a page on the Karimojong for a prayer guide I am compiling called "Prayer for the Dark Places".

An interesting people, the Karimojong. One of their central cultural beliefs is that God gave all the cattle on earth to them. Since they believe they have a divine right to all cattle and neighboring tribes have cattle, I'm sure you can see how this makes for a difficult life--especially since some of those neighboring tribes have similar beliefs.

The Karimojong are one of the groups I was planning to discuss in the staff training on child trafficking. You see, ECM has learned that Karimojong children are sold regularly in cattle markets along the border between Kenya and Uganda. We have learned that every Friday, certain cattle stalls are reserved for selling children!

Some Karimojong parents are selling their children, apparently out of desperation because of their extreme poverty. It is not yet clear whether they sell them to brokers who perhaps make false promises that the children will have a better life elsewhere and even be able to send money home (such false inducements are very common). Whatever the parents think, the children are sold at the markets and bought by slave masters. One common destination is Kampala. The masters beat the children to make them cry, then set them out on the streets to beg. Watching from a distance, the master's helpers quickly swoop up any aid given to the child. Little children commonly sit in the sun without food or even water to drink for long hours. At the end of the day they receive a skimpy meal just designed to barely keep them alive. The masters don't want them to look healthy, because they bring more money in looking sickly.

Yes, I was very much interested in the Karimojong project, and I considered his interest a confirmation of the burdent God had been growing in my heart. If ECM can successfully plant sponsorship programs in the home area of the Karimojong, it could dramatically decrease the number of parents who would try to sell their children, as well as those who would be vulnerable to the deceptive promises of the child traffickers. In addition, very little Gospel work has been done amongst the Karimojong, so such a project could help build the church of Jesus Christ there.

Here are a few ways people can pray with us: 1. The selection of a place. The Karimojong are a semi-nomadic cattle herding people. Sponsorship is nearly impossible where people don't stay in one place. But some of them do! Pray we'll find the right spot. 2. Connections with other Bible-believing Christians and preferably churches in the area. We want what we do to help build the church of Jesus Christ. 3. The selection of children and families. The Karimojong traditionally value knowledge related to their world of cattle herding. School type knowledge is little appreciated, yet this is causing their group to be scorned and left behind in the modern world. Pray we'll find some families who desiere their children to go to school. 4. The timing. Every Child Ministries is making significant strides at recovery following some difficult attacks in Uganda. We don't want to stretch ourselves too thin. Pray that we'll know when it's time to move forward with this project.