“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.” Deuteronomy 6:5-7
To continue the narrative of our mission experience in Africa:
After living in Bumbuli, Tanzania (then Tanganika), we came home for furlough. After a month in Washington DC while Bob worked at Walter Reed Hospital, Bob left to raise funds for a hospital in Tanzania and the children and I went to live with my parents in Miami. We put Annie into a school there for first grade.
The children and I stayed in Miami for nine months, but Bob needed to be in Africa because he was in the process of working with the Tanzanian Minister of Health and the Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Tanzania, Northern District, Stephano Moshi, to plan for a referral hospital in Moshi. Therefore, we returned to Africa and spent our next four years in Moshi, a town on the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro. We had a nice enough house with a spectacular view of the mountain. Mt. Kilimanjaro is 19,341 ft. high, and the top is covered with snow year-round. The most beautiful place I have ever lived.
My job in helping my husband was to be his secretary, entertain government and church officials, architects, and host missionaries. We very rarely sat down to a meal without guests in our house. I was also able to watch and help Bob go over hospital plans again and again until they were perfect. By the end of our time in Moshi, Bob had raised over six million dollars (a huge amount in those days) and had a beautiful plan for a 450-bed hospital named The Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre (KCMC). To this day, this hospital is the finest in Tanzania, and serves all East Africa. It truly is a Christian hospital that shows Africans God’s love in concrete.
Something that was very painful for me was the loss of both my parents while we lived in Moshi. My mother died of cancer at age 67 and my father from a heart attack at age 72. I was not able to be at the funeral of either of them. My consolation is that they were both faithful Christians and I know where they are – waiting for me.
What God made clear to me in Moshi was the need for good education for children. When we first arrived in Moshi, I was told that we should send our seven-year-old Annie to the mission boarding school because that was the only place where she could get an
English language education. The problem was that Kiamboi was ten hours drive away! I cannot tell you what a difficult decision we faced. I struggled and prayed to God that he would not make us send our little girl away. In the end, I surrendered to what I thought was God’s will and sewed name tags into every piece of her clothing. We talked non-stop to Annie about how wonderful it would be for her at that school and how great it would be for her to come home every three months for school vacation. Just two days before she was to leave for school, someone told me that the little Kibo International School in Moshi would need to close for lack of a teacher. What?!!! I was a teacher and so I went to work! Furthermore, the Kibo school was within walking distance of our house. I taught there for four years and one of my students was Annie. Kathy and Tova went to a kindergarten/early grades school started by some Americans in Moshi. God always does what is best for his own children.
Bob and I had gone to Africa as missionaries to help in the ways that the people needed. Bob was a doctor, and he not only healed the sick, he founded a large hospital. That effort put us in contact with church leaders and national presidents. We watched East Africa gain independence and were introduced to the presidents of Tanzania, Kenya, and Uganda. All this would be used in later years as Rafiki was established.
During those nine years, I learned why God sent me to Africa. He was preparing me for how he would someday enable me to help Africans know him and to raise their standard of living. Two things stand out:
1. In Bumbuli I learned to know God more fully, and for Africans to know him fully they needed Bibles and good Bible studies.
2. In Moshi I learned that to raise the standard of living for Africans, they needed quality education.
I am a slow learner, so God had to not only tell me, but show me, what I was to do with my life. Otherwise, I would have had no idea! And there was still a lot for me to learn before Rafiki was even a thought. But God is patient, and he knew exactly what he was doing.
He knows what his plans for you are too and I love it when you tell me.
P.S. I will not be writing my blog during the Christmas holidays, but God willing, will be back with you in January.