This Thanksgiving, we are especially thankful for the progress seen on the school building.
YCVM is amazed and thankful for what God has done in Kumi!
Youth and Child Visionary Ministries is a local Christian effort to care for orphan children of Kumi in Eastern Uganda. The vision is to establish a self-sustaining boarding school. Silver Omakenyi is the director of YCVM. Silver, who is also an orphan, is currently caring for 11 younger orphans on his own. YCVM is supported by the fundraising efforts of Chinese Community United Methodist Church in Oakland, CA.
This Thanksgiving, we are especially thankful for the progress seen on the school building.
YCVM is amazed and thankful for what God has done in Kumi!
A truck bringing iron sheets.
Iron sheets being off-loaded.
Beam filling is being handled by these men.
Men doing ceiling work.
Roofing work begins, these men are making trances.
We can see trances for the schoo
Traces are already up on the school.
Honorable member of Uganda’s Parliament of Ngora constituency Dr. Epetait Francis visiting YCVM site, with one of YCVM members Oonyu Emma.
The house ready for the eve ceiling.
We can see the eve ceiling has been put and now the house is ready for iron sheets.
These are photos from ongoing construction of the YCVM boarding school.
Men busy tying the iron bars for the beam
The beam has already been tied and put up ready for form work and casting.
Men at the form work.
This is the lintel that can be mixed with the sand cement for casting the beam.
We can see the house has acquired the beam.
We received great news from Rev. Martin Odi and Silver who wrote that the school construction has been going very well. The construction manager Patrick Olupot recovered from his motorbike injuries, and the building will have the roof on by the end of the month! Praise God! This is much faster than expected, so we anticipate that finishing work will be starting early next year, if not sooner. Pray that we can raise funds for the electrical work, plumbing, heavy metal doors, flooring, and interior walls.
Silver, who had a serious medical problem, is recovering, with the help of medication. He was missing
his computer adapter, which prevented his communicating with us sooner.
The orphans are making progress in school, which began in September when we sent money to cover their school fees. Your prayers are needed especially for one of the girls, Among Martha, who is receiving special counseling. Currently we are supporting 11 orphans. Silver and the team devote
countless volunteer hours to tend to their physical, emotional and spiritual welfare. Pray for God’s grace and wisdom upon them all.
The U.S. Mission team from CCUMC has been on the presentation circuit, and they recently met with their neighbors down the street in Oakland Chinatown. About a dozen people were there to share in the journey once again. The team never gets tired of telling YCVM’s story!
A light lunch was served afterwards. The team wants to thank the Women’s Group for inviting us to speak.
The latest word from Kumi is that the boarding school roof will be completed this week. Unfortunately, Silver’s laptop AC adapter broke, which prevented him from sending photos of the progress. Uganda’s electrical infrastructure causes frequent problems with computers and laptops, and power supplies and AC adapters are very susceptible to surges and low-quality power. If anyone has a laptop to donate to YCVM, Silver will put it to good use!
Construction of the boarding school has been coming along nicely. After YCVM received the funds raised from the Benefit Dinner in April, they have made progress towards completing 2 rooms of the school.
First, the site was cleared of growth that had sprung up since the previous construction activity.
Materials are then brought to the site.
The school has reached what is called the “beam level”.
There is also some sad news to report - YCVM’s construction engineer, Patrick Olupot, was involved in a motorbike accident while traveling to the work site in Kumi. He has significant abrasions on his hands, shoulder, and knees. Please pray for his recovery.
The fundraiser in Oakland Chinatown earlier this year was so successful, that enough money was raised to complete the primary school wing of the boarding school. During Aeri Lee’s mission trip to Uganda this summer, YCVM requested that the money be sent ahead of the rainy season, which is fast approaching. The rains cause road closures, so sending the funds now allows YCVM to purchase and transport materials to the worksite. The goal is to finish the primary wing construction by the end of 2010.
While we’re all excited about a finished building, there are other hurdles to clear before the school can begin operation. One significant requirement is that enough land be available for outdoor playgrounds, and YCVM will need to purchase some more land to satisfy this. Beyond that, the school will need to be furnished, and then staffed.
And this is Susan, who cooks all my meals for me at the guesthouse. She manages to churn out three meals a day using exactly what you see on the shelves for spices: salt, vinegar, soy sauce, red pepper flakes, and cooking oil. She looks like a young girl, but she is mother to 2 teenage girls and one 5 year old boy. She also happens to be from the same tribe as David Ofumbi.
I have not remembered to take pictures while I'm teaching, but I will send some your way when I can manage it.
Aeri
Tuesday, July 6th, 2010
Dear beloved community,
Classes began since Monday, and though it’s only been 2 days, it feels like I’ve been teaching all day everyday for a while. I taught advanced music theory and musicianship on Monday morning, choir and group vocal training in the afternoon. This morning was Christian worship: history, theology, and practice, and in the afternoon, Intro to the history of western music. Each session lasts from 3-4 hours, so I end up teaching the whole day and spend the evenings marking papers, and preparing for the next day’s classes. I have to get up extra early if I have to do laundry before classes. Hand washing all your clothes takes longer than one would expect. And right now, I am itching all over, I think because I did not wash all the detergent out of the clothes in order to save water. Hmmmm… maybe I should use less detergent next time. I have to use an old-fashioned chalkboard for the lectures, so by the end of the day, I am covered white from head to toe in chalk dust. So it’s a cold water shower every night, the kind where you use a small plastic hand-basin full of water and pour cupfuls on yourself. Even as I am shivering from cold, I am gratefully aware of the fact that it is a luxury and a privilege to have water available for me to wash in the midst of this dry season.
I have 8 students who are in their second year of study and 7 in their first, all together 15 in all. They range in ages 19 – 30. My students tell me that there are 2 more that are yet to come. I have a number of Rwandese students, 1 from Burundi, 1 from Sudan, and of course a bunch from Uganda. It’s remarkable to me that the students who came last year from Rwanda with almost no English skills can now communicate in English with impressive fluency. One of my Rwandese students, Modeste Nzabonimpa, who is on a work scholarship, was locking up the practice rooms late last night as a part of his work duties, when he took a misstep and cut the side of his foot on a sharp rock. Having no resources to get to a hospital or even a clinic, he simply washed it and put some salt on the wound. When I saw him this morning, he was limping and the cut seemed to me more like a large gash of scooped-out flesh about ¾ inch wide all around and just as deep. He persisted and sat in class all day, and by the end of the day, his foot looked like a balloon. When I suggested that he should get to a hospital, all the other students (Modeste included) just shrugged and told me he’d be ok. Please pray for him. Needless to say, I am more than a little concerned.
It looks like I will be visiting our YCVM friends in Kumi this weekend. I will take a bus that leaves Kampala at 7am on Saturday morning, and come back late on Sunday night. Please pray for journey mercies. Out of all of the times that I’ve taken the bus to Kumi, I think there were more times when the bus broke down in the middle of the trip than not. I’m sure I’ll tell you all about the trip and our time together after I’m back.
During this morning’s worship class, as I was sharing the African-American gospel song, “Anointing, fall on me”, Modeste, my Rwandese student, sang it right back to me in Kinyarwanda (Rwandese language), and the whole class had a blessed time singing it in the 2 languages and discussing the meaning of the song. Surely enough the song became the prayer of my heart; that God’s Holy Spirit would indeed anoint me , to empower me to do God’s will, both at RTC as I teach, and in Kumi as I meet with YCVM.
Until next time,
Aeri