3.19.2011

...but what will the pigs eat?

In the Spring of 2009 I graduated with a Bachelors of Science in Nursing from Waynesburg University. I soon started my first job as a nurse in the hospital and there was no doubt in my mind, I had received a quality education. I am very thankful for the nursing program at WU. 
However, today I feel the need to sit down with Dr. Mosser, Dr. Small, Dr. Morris and the rest of the gang. I would like to review some areas where I am fairly certain they failed to cover. Nausea, shortness of air and fever… I know these. There is a whole set of symptoms out there that I was never taught. Here are a few I have faced here in Africa:
-          “I have a worm crawling in my arm”
-          “The pigs don’t eat my feces”
-          “The bottom of my feet are hot”
-          “There is a small animal in my stomach”
-          “I have pain in my entire body” (85% of patients)
It has been said that over 80% of the sickness and disease here in Africa is preventable. Upon my arrival I have been excited about education. I love explaining to my patients how babies and pigs living together leads to skin problems and other sickness. I love explaining the importance of a balanced diet. I love going to the different compounds and explaining how to live better, healthier lives. Unfortunately I am finding that these problems run so much deeper than mere lack of education.
Upon explanation of why it is so important to have a latrine, and how these can greatly improve their lives, one compound politely refused stating “We could use latrines… but what would the pigs eat?” (Pretty certain I will never eat pork again) There is an astronomical number of various fungal and bacterial skin infections; many of them carried by the numerous animals that live in and around the mud huts. I try to explain that as long as the animals are kept with the children, they will continually be sick. A simple pen would solve this problem. They then explain how they cannot fence the animals or they will have to feed them (they currently are scavengers) and they will get stolen.
Guinea Bissau is one of the most undeveloped countries in Africa. With zero industry, no university, no electricity, no healthcare; people here survive. It is not uncommon for government workers to go months to years without being paid. This results in many of them not showing up to work including teachers. Education in GB is a travesty. Many people have speculated as to why there is this extreme lack of development. The rest of Africa has given up on them and refuses to accept immigrants from GB.
Community Health Evangelism (CHE) is a highly successful program that has taken on the task of solving these problems. This week from 8:00am-5:00pm you will find a group of young men and women sitting on hard wooden benches with no backs in the heat of up to 120˚ eagerly learning how to be educators in their own villages. CHE has prepared thousands of lessons ranging from health and hygiene to family relations to money management and agriculture. Each lesson is Biblically based and introduces Jesus to the community. Ultimately, He is the only one who can truly free these people from the bondage they are held in that is preventing development.
We have had the great privilege of having Dayo Obaweya with us from Nigeria to lead this seminar. CHE not only teaches the problems and solutions. This program has a unique way of addressing worldview and explaining the difference between relief and development. It encourages the people of Africa to stop simply wanting handouts. Dayo has truly motivated and empowered these young men to make a difference. He taught that God has given them the ability to think and to solve their own problems. He taught that they need to stop looking at the white man as the solution to their problems but to instead look to Jesus. He showed them that they do have the ability and intellect to bring about change.
There is a noticeable change in an African once the truth is revealed and believed. The bondage here is so real. They believe that they are simply impoverished and incapable of change or good because they are African. This fatalistic attitude has stunted development.
Each man has a village that he will go to and speak with the village leaders, discover the top four problems, (catel = no food, clean water, no latrines and lack of agriculture) form committees and solve the problems using the resources available. The program’s success is based on it being locally led and implemented. Once the community claims this as their own, real change happens. How different this is from white people coming for a week, building latrines and digging wells that no one cares to maintain or use and soon break. Jon and I are beyond excited about this program and how God is going to use these young men and women to spread the Gospel and aid in development.
Please pray for these CHE participants. That God would continue to work in and through them. That this excitement they have will not fade.

1 comment:

  1. So excited about how God is woking through you and this organization to further His kingdom!You are in our prayers!
    -LaDonna

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