Saturday, June 5
Heathrow Airport, London
Jim Oakes and I are in Heathrow Airport a day earlier then expected. We had planned to leave Saturday night arriving on Sunday but because of the British Airways strike, we were to be diverted to Philadelphia and take the train to D.C. Instead, we were able to book a flight Friday evening that will get us in to Dulles at about 6 p.m. EST.
Yesterday, at this time, we were in Wau having final meetings with our partners before heading off to the airport. Since then, we have taken three planes, stopped in four cities and seemed to have cleared some sort of security or immigration a dozen times. In Wau, the airport has one room to check-in and then another room to sit to wait. The landing strip is packed dirt and is used primarily by small prop planes. We first flew to Aweil to pick up passengers and then flew to Juba, the capital of South Sudan, arriving around 3:15 p.m. We met Erin Bricker from World Concern, who gave us a briefing on how to go through customs, which was helpful. It isn’t a complicated process but one needs to know that the guy stamping passports is also collecting the exit tax and then you have to go the person who makes copies of all your documents for 10 Sudanese pounds.
At 4:30, we left for Nairobi. We arrived about 6:30 p.m. cleared customs on a transit visa…checked in very early for the 11:50 p.m. flight to London and had dinner before once again going through security at our gate. I happened to sit on the plane with a man from St. James in Richmond, who had been with a team near Rumbek. Small world.
Overall the trip has been amazing and inspirational, and we clearly see that the Sudanese have a desire to make a better life for themselves. They don’t seem to have the same type of entitlement mentality we sometimes see in our type of work. They understand the need for training and they are eager to learn so there is this hopeful optimism for the future that definitely surfaces when engaged in conversation with the leaders in the church and the communities.
Yet, it is a complicated society that is still literally shell-shocked from the war, and the learning curve is steep in a country that has few roads and with illiteracy rates in some places are 85 to 90 percent. There is a tension underneath the surface in which violence might erupt without warning. The clan-fighting over cattle and property continues to plague the smaller towns and villages and keeps life unsettled and slows progress.
There is a need for people to go over and train in business planning, leadership development and especially in managing accounts. The church is in desperate need of help in training their staff in accounting, basic management and organization not to mention building the theological foundations of the clergy and congregations.
Craig Cole
Saturday, June 5, 2010
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Empowering the Young and Old
Wednesday, June 2
Wau, Sudan
We are currently in Wau having finished the training! One of the key findings during the leadership training was the idea of having the leader train a small group first. We used Jesus as an example. He taught his 12 disciples and spent a lot of time with them so they in turn could train others, etc. The local priest was really inspired by that idea and sees Wau becoming a training hub for the diocese. We take these ideas for granted but not here, not after so many years of war.
Also, we we able to visit a first grade class at the church school with Rev. Thomas Anei. During Thomas' visit to the U.S., he vistied my daughter's first grade class. During his visit, the class read these wonderful prayers for Thomas and for Sudan. So, at the class we visited in Wau, we had the children and the teacher read the same prayers in their class. We also gave them soccer balls that were donated. This was really memorable.
The closing ceremony of our training was also memorable as the 40 or so participants each received a certificate and many of them gave a yell and held it up above their heads as they took it from our hands. At the end, two of the leaders in the church said a prayer for us and gave us a small gift. Jim’s words from earlier in the week, “Never Give Up” were our rallying cry!
We are now at lunch and in a few minutes we will be leaving for two other villages and back Thursday night. Then, on Friday, off to Juba to Nairobi. Saturday night we will head home.
Craig Cole
Wau, Sudan
We are currently in Wau having finished the training! One of the key findings during the leadership training was the idea of having the leader train a small group first. We used Jesus as an example. He taught his 12 disciples and spent a lot of time with them so they in turn could train others, etc. The local priest was really inspired by that idea and sees Wau becoming a training hub for the diocese. We take these ideas for granted but not here, not after so many years of war.
Also, we we able to visit a first grade class at the church school with Rev. Thomas Anei. During Thomas' visit to the U.S., he vistied my daughter's first grade class. During his visit, the class read these wonderful prayers for Thomas and for Sudan. So, at the class we visited in Wau, we had the children and the teacher read the same prayers in their class. We also gave them soccer balls that were donated. This was really memorable.
The closing ceremony of our training was also memorable as the 40 or so participants each received a certificate and many of them gave a yell and held it up above their heads as they took it from our hands. At the end, two of the leaders in the church said a prayer for us and gave us a small gift. Jim’s words from earlier in the week, “Never Give Up” were our rallying cry!
We are now at lunch and in a few minutes we will be leaving for two other villages and back Thursday night. Then, on Friday, off to Juba to Nairobi. Saturday night we will head home.
Craig Cole
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Men, Women Gaining Business and Leadership Skills in Wau, Sudan
Tuesday, June 1
Wau, Sudan
We have spent the last two days teaching basic business planning alternating with leadership skills training. The group of 40 men and women who meeting in the church are comprised of women leaders in the local savings groups in Wau and also the church leaders. So, we were asked to do some leadership training as well.
The idea behind the business planning is to have them come up with an actual business plan that covers choosing a business, marketing and record-keeping using biblical values. We split them into groups of six, and tomorrow they will present the finished plan.
As far as leadership skills, we have talked about the traits of a good leader and again had them come up with leaders within the country of Sudan and the world they think met those characteristics. Today, we talked about how leaders mobilize followers. We used the example of Jesus spending most of his time preparing the 12 disciples to be leaders who in turn would train more leaders.
Everytime we do these trainings, I’m always struck by the intelligent questions and how committed the people are to learning. I shouldn’t be so surprised but that is the bias we carry with us into developing countries that people can’t do things on their own. But, time and again, we are proven wrong.
Pray for safe travel tomorrow as we leave in the afternoon to visit Kuadjok and Lietnhom returning Thursday night and then taking a plane to Juba then to Nairobi on Friday before leaving on Saturday for home. Thanks for the prayers!
Craig Cole
Wau, Sudan
We have spent the last two days teaching basic business planning alternating with leadership skills training. The group of 40 men and women who meeting in the church are comprised of women leaders in the local savings groups in Wau and also the church leaders. So, we were asked to do some leadership training as well.
The idea behind the business planning is to have them come up with an actual business plan that covers choosing a business, marketing and record-keeping using biblical values. We split them into groups of six, and tomorrow they will present the finished plan.
As far as leadership skills, we have talked about the traits of a good leader and again had them come up with leaders within the country of Sudan and the world they think met those characteristics. Today, we talked about how leaders mobilize followers. We used the example of Jesus spending most of his time preparing the 12 disciples to be leaders who in turn would train more leaders.
Everytime we do these trainings, I’m always struck by the intelligent questions and how committed the people are to learning. I shouldn’t be so surprised but that is the bias we carry with us into developing countries that people can’t do things on their own. But, time and again, we are proven wrong.
Pray for safe travel tomorrow as we leave in the afternoon to visit Kuadjok and Lietnhom returning Thursday night and then taking a plane to Juba then to Nairobi on Friday before leaving on Saturday for home. Thanks for the prayers!
Craig Cole
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