A Reflection About an Interaction With a Resident of Masiphumelele, a A Community of Beautiful People We Seek to Serve - Written by a team member named Karen Strickland

“I’ve been living here on these wetlands for twelve years now. We have been forgotten and overlooked. People come in here and raise our hopes then we never see them again. More people come in later and the same thing happens. “

When I told her to not give up hope she agreed and then I told her that even if she feels that people have forgotten about them, God will never forget her. She agreed wholeheartedly with this. She said that us coming there today gave her hope again. I think the fact that we would even dare to walk the filthy, muddy maze was an indication to her that we cared enough to come and presence ourselves in their midst…

She also said, “Last week my whole house was under water. There’s nothing we can do about it, the water just comes up when it rains. But we have nowhere else to go. But there is hope, things will change. He will not forget us.”

How is it possible for this woman to still smile? She’s brave. Her life is a daily struggle yet she can agree that God will never forget us and that there’s always hope in him. Where does she get the strength and the tenacity to mop up time and time again in these cramped, awfully depressing conditions.

We prayer-walked these filthy, muddy pathways, networking through the flimsy, roughly made wood and iron or wooden shacks – mostly 2mX3m, hopelessly inadequate. Their front doors are about one and a half meters from their neighboring walls, or even at times the view from your front door is your neighbor’s bed. The children play in the dirt, the muck and the mire – they seem happy enough, there’s a lot of them around. I think disease must thrive in these unsanitary conditions.
May God’s grace and his blessing be upon these people. Lord show us what we can do to reach out to these people with your love and practical deeds.


One Response to “Reflecting on an interaction with a “Masi” Resident today…”  

  1. 1 Muriel Fritz

    Our hearts break! How can we have so much and others have so little?

Leave a Reply



Newsletter Archives

Calendar

July 2007
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031EC

Our Vision

Justice. Community. Hope. Discipleship: Our vision is to establish a training and outreach community in Cape Town that impacts Africa from Cape Town to Cairo. Our vision is for a multi-cultural community that exemplifies the kingdom of God and brings heaven a little closer to earth. read more

Books We Like

Starting a House Church

Starting a House Church
by Larry Kreider & Floyd McClung

Awesome Flicks

Amazing Grace

Amazing Grace
directed by Michael Apted

What Others Say

If we neglect what we have to grieve what we have lost, at some point grieving becomes an indulgence.

Anonymous

Why Africa?

It is Africa's hour: Africans are rising up in great numbers to take hold of the promises of God for their continent. The president of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, says there is an African renaissance in the making. Everywhere you turn you find a spirit of entrepreneurship and vision for new things. read more