Tuesday, 30 November 2010
Pucallpa November 2010 Part 4 Observations and Thoughts
We finished our time in San Juan by having a tour of the village in the hot baking sun. (I remember noticing the temperature increase several degrees while preaching in the morning). We saw all the different things going on, business teaching, free hair cutting, and also fruit picking, It was amazing to have fruit picked off the tree and eat it there and then. One interesting observation I made was that all the people there that were teaching were not Shibipos. This is something that needs to be addressed. It is great and really important to help those in need and the Shibipo people are certainly a poor, disadvantaged people, but they also need to be equipped to sustain themselves. At the moment they have a very dependent mentality, which I do not believe is God’s plan for them. Therefore we need to be helping them as much as possible to help themselves. As the Arab proverb says, and as the charity Oxfam has shown in their adverts in the UK ‘if you give a man a fish he can feed his family for a day, but if you give him a net, he can feed his family for a lifetime’. This is my desire to give people tools that means they are not relying on outside support, but are relying on their own resources, and more importantly God’s resources. I want to be a facilitator and not the answer. Too many times I have seen indigenous people who rely on missionaries, or other NGOs which I don’t think is a healthy or sustainable model. I also heard of tribes that still have yet to be reached in the jungle and are still very wild and not used to other human contact. The Shibipos are starting to realise that they are called to be missionaries as well to other peoples. What is our role in this? We will see in time. I have a fondness for the Shibipo people, people who were reached with the gospel only 40 years ago. What is God calling us to do in the future?
Tuesday, 23 November 2010
Pucallpa November 2010 Part 3
We spent 2 days there teaching, sharing, eating, and doing community. Mark teaching
This was a really blessed time as we received a very warm welcome and it felt like we had a new family. Free hair cutting.
At the end of our time there the leadership confirmed that they wanted to work with us and be advised and overseen by myself, and our church. The busy main street in Nuevo San Juan!
This is an exciting prospect as we have a large heart for the jungle. There is great need, financially, emotionally and spiritually in Lima, and the needs are even greater in the jungle and the Andean mountains, which make up most of Peru's landmass. We are now in a process with the church in Nuevo San Juan to discover whether it is God’s will that they are part of us. We finished our two days by trying out restaurants that we may well use in the medical campaign in April. The food we ate was really good and certainly a possibility for April. Are you called to come on this trip? Please let us know as soon as possible.
Sunday, 21 November 2010
Volleyball Church
By the time the game started the sun had come out and it was very hot. Daniel borrowed Joannah's hat because we forgot his cap. (Well, the sun wasn't out when we left!)
Pacifico shanty town, and where we live 7 minutes down the road, are both in the district of Chorrillos, which is home to the military. Recently we have had many fighter planes flying overhead in different formations. The children loved seeing 4 planes flying over all together whilst the game was going on!
Monday, 15 November 2010
Pucallpa November 2010 Part 2
Pucallpa November 2010 Part 1
John Mark, myself and many Shipibo children and young adults.
My trip had 3 main aims; to visit and teach the church in Nueva San Juan (New St John), who would like to be overseen by our church and myself, to visit the river community that we visited in June, and to do research for the medical mission/campaign in April 2011.
This is where they grow!!!
The trip was a real success and I felt that God is growing my passion for the jungle people, and especially the jungle tribe of the Shipibo people. We set off on Monday night. It was incredible that I was able to take Bibles with me as I had forgotten/didn’t have time to buy them before Monday, which was a public holiday and all the shops were shut. However I went to Miraflores (tourist destination) with the boys on Monday morning and there was a book fete there, and I was able to buy both Bibles and Sunday school materials fairly cheaply. Isn’t God good!
Bernado, a Shipibo pastor and his wife, our hosts for the 2nd day, with Wes
We arrived after our 45 minute flight, expecting the normal 10-15 degrees difference in temperature from grey polluted miserable Lima, but we actually arrived in the rain, having missed the very strong thunder storm earlier in the day. It was cold for Pucallpa, only mid 20s (mid 70s)!!
Whilst being greeted by our Shipibo contacts, our free airport pick up decided we hadn’t arrived and went back to the hotel. It must have been difficult to stop 3 large tall white men in the crowd of 30 or so dark skinned Peruvians. We took a moto taxi and got to the hotel Las Gavilanes (which we will be staying at in April), which was very pleasant and received the apologies for being missed. We slept well ready for our river trip the next day.
Typical Shipibo smiling faces.
Friday, 5 November 2010
Light party
Daniel and Joel were Superlightmen. Daniel did not want to do the superhero thing and wear pants over his trousers. 'That would be silly, Mummy, and everybody will laugh at me.' Fair enough. Joel, however, did not mind the attention!
Superlightman saves the flailing Allison.
Butterfly Lili with Teago the clown
Nicole made a great little Amazonian Indian and won the girl's prize.
But it was little Jonqui who won the boy's competition with his cute outfit!