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Sunday, January 7, 2018

Celebrating the Holidays in Mattru Jong

In this blog we want to share a bit about the holiday season in Mattru Jong.

Our own holiday season started early as we received visitors from the Netherlands: Jan & Woutera Vierhout. Woutera and Heleen have been friends for over 20 years and Woutera has visited Sierra Leone multiple times. Woutera & Jan are also board members of the Kushe Foundation which helped us raise funds for our X-ray machine. We had a very good time of catching up and were able to take some time off while they were here to enjoy the beauty of Sierra Leone!

Shortly after our friends left, we celebrated our first Christmas party with a very special group of children. Through her work at the hospital, Heleen has come to know children with various disabilities. The caregivers of these children don’t have an easy life as they try to take care of their children while often being shamed and blamed by the community. Children with disabilities are commonly seen as demonic and their parents are suspected of witchcraft. The nurses who are volunteering with Heleen at the Psychosocial Unit embraced with enthusiasm the idea of organizing a Christmas party for these children. Fourteen of them attended with their caregivers and listened with appreciation to the clear message that God has created all of us unique and that He honors those who take care of the vulnerable. One of the caregivers who attended the party commented: “When you have a child like this you think you are the only one, but now you see there are many others.” We are praying for discernment on how to further serve these children and their families.
 
Signing Children in for the Party
Games
Enjoying a meal together.
A few days later, with support financial from former missionaries, we were able to organize a Christmas party for all hospital staff. It had been years since this last had taken place and everyone was very appreciative! As soon as the music started, people were dancing! We sang some Christmas carols and the Chaplain shared a message. Sadly we don’t have many good pictures of the party, but that is for a good reason: everyone was moving/dancing with so much enthusiasm that the majority of our pictures is blurred or has people dropping out of the screen!
Our midwife (left) and two of the nurses at the party.
 
Chaplain giving a message.
Just before Christmas our friend Janet Nickel arrived from Freetown. She has been a missionary in Sierra Leone for several decades and used to share a house and later a compound with Heleen. Her visit was a big blessing as we missed our friends and family extra over the holidays! It was also nice to have Matt’s new fiancĂ©e Rebecca around. Christmas eve we spent playing games together and Christmas morning we attended the church service near the hospital. In the afternoon we cooked a meal together and invited the Peace Corps volunteer who is teaching at a local school. After lunch Jon did a C-section and delivered not one but two babies - Christmas twins!
Christmas Day with Matt & Rebecca.
Christmas cooking was fun with lots of ingredients that Janet brought from Freetown!
New Years Eve and New Year’s Day we spent quietly at home, playing more games and working on the 1000 piece Van Gogh puzzle that Woutera & Jan brought us! To treat our homesickness we had “stroopwafel” from the Netherlands with our coffee!



In the first week of the new year we celebrated the birth of the first baby of 2018 and the wedding of Jon’s colleague Michael Josiah (Surgical Tech) and Fatmata Sesay.
The first baby of 2018 with his mother, a nurse, Jon and Dr. Harrison, Jon's colleague from Nigeria.
Josiah and Fatmata getting ready to cut the cake.
And so we start a new year in Mattru Jong. Over the holidays we have reflected repeatedly on our ministry here. One quote that spoke to us came from Henri Nouwen (Bread for the Journey; January 5): “Patience asks us to live the moment to the fullest, to be completely present in the moment, to taste the here and now, to be where we are. When we are impatient we try to get away from where we are. We behave as if the real thing will happen tomorrow, later and somewhere else. Let’s be patient and trust that the treasure we look for is hidden in the ground on which we stand.” Please pray that God will give us patience, the will to be present with the people we meet, and to bring His hope and healing to this place.
At the wedding, wearing our first "Ashobi" (matching outfits).

2 comments:

  1. Thank you for taking the time to share a glimpse of your holiday in your corner of the world!! So glad you were able to spend time with friends and make special memories. What a challenging quote from Henri Nouwen...what a daily prayer! Blessings to you as you continue to serve our Savior! Randy & Eunice

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  2. Hi dear friends! I absolutely love reading your journey. I must admit though, I'm a bit jealous of all the birth miracles Dr Jon gets to be apart of! The pics are wonderful and help us see life through your eyes. I especially like the last one in your matching outfits, you both are adorable! New year blessings and love from the Hoover Crew

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