Sunday, 5 May 2013

Happy days and sad days...

Hello everyone from a bright and sunny Mzuzu!

Its been a few weeks since I updated the blog but that does not mean its been any less busy!  I have been all over the place!  A few weeks ago I was out in the city to visit a friend and on the way I had to cross a very deep ditch which was full of running water - it had been raining for a couple of days before this!  Anyway, I got through and this shows the road (yes its a road!!) that I went through to the house.  However, on the way back this is what I came across - this lorry was stuck in the ditch, and it had a load of bricks on so it was not moving anywhere fast!!

That meant I was quite stuck in here as there is only one road!  Having gone to assess the situation, the guys on the lorry plus the hundred spectators assured me that I would get through beside the lorry!  Well, what choice did I have??  Off I went but I was not too hopeful thinking I would probably get stuck too!  Indeed I did - not only did I get stuck but I skidded into the lorry and heard a loud crash of smashing glass - thought I had wrecked the back light!  As it turns out its only cracked thankfully.

With some pushing and shoving and the four wheel drive eventually I got out and went home in a filthy car, but I heard that the lorry was still there the next day, so am glad I tried!!



I had a meeting in Lilongwe to review the Early Childhood programme that the World Bank were doing in Malawi and so I had to travel down the day before.  I took my time and took a few pictures on the way.  There are fields and fields of sunflowers at this time of year - grown for oil and seeds and I just love them - they make me smile!!


Its always fun to drive through a trading centre on market day and here you can see the scene at Jenda - ox carts and people carrying their wares to sell.




In Lilongwe it was great to see how to change a wheel on a bicycle - you use a panga knife - not sure how the tube would have fared though!!!



And of course on the way back, the broken down tobacco lorries - the tobacco auctions have opened and lorries like this are travelling on the roads these days, most of them overloaded and many of them broken down!


Back to Mzuzu on a tuesday and back to Lilongwe on Thursday this time bound for Stellenbosch in South Africa with Nicolas for a conference!  We arrived on Friday and on Saturday we had a free day so we went to Robben Island where Nelson Mandela had spent 17 years in prison.  I had been there before some years ago but for Nicolas it was his first time in South Africa and he was so excited!  This is a view of table mountain from the boat.



The conference was a Southern African Montessori conference and the keynote speaker was Lynne Lawrence from UK.  She has published many books and is a fantastic speaker.  We had a great time - met many different people from all over South Africa and learnt about a project taking place in rural Kenya!  The conference was outside Stellenbosch so we had the privilege of having dinner with one of our Malawian minsters who is studying there!

Lynne Lawrence
 Nicolas was sitting at a table of all women and as you can see he was in his element!!  In fact there were only a couple of men there as is usual in early childhood all over the world!!


Coming back we left Stellenbosch at 4.45am to get the flight from Johannesburg to Lilongwe.  After having seen Capetown and Joburg from the air, Nicolas was really shocked to see Malawi - the thing that shocked him most was the lack of tarred roads.......we laughed a lot!


While we were in Stellenbosch I received a message that Rev Ted Mwambira had passed away very suddenly.  Many of you reading his met Ted - he was a very outgoing and loving person and well respected all over the world.  On our arrival back to Mzuzu, we found that the funeral service was the following morning.  St Andrews church is a large church and it could not accommodate the number of people coming to pay their respects to the family.  We were there all day and eventually the service began just before 5pm when the remains arrived from the mortuary.  Its a long story which I will not go into here!!

After the service, the funeral then proceeded to Karonga for burial the next day.  Rev Mwambira will be missed by many both in Malawi and abroad!


The ladies from Umanyano (womens guild) with the wreaths going into the church

Today I have some caregivers arriving from Karonga to spend the next two days in some of our centres in Mzuzu so that they can learn!  On Friday Nicolas and I went to various centres to see which would be the most suitable for them to go to.  We went to one centre where we found the toilet had collapsed in the heavy rains last week......



However, this did not deter children from coming and as you can see they were very happy and in fact kept pestering me to take their photographs!




So today, Sunday, I went to church and have been catching up with emails and other correspondence ever since.  Once the blog is finished and posted I am out for a walk!  Wishing you all a wonderful week ahead!

Blessings
Diane

4 comments:

  1. Thank you for your update. Life certainly has it's challenges in Malawi. Have a good week.
    Maureenx

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    1. Thanks for your comments too - daily we have challenges and I am finding them more difficult to cope with these day! Good week to you too!

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  2. You are a well travelled lady Diane and bearing in mind the lack of tarmac roads we are reminded of the need to pray for God's mercy as you get about! Lovely pictures of the children. If you have one, it would be interesting to see a map with the main centres you visit regularly marked on it...not that I want to add to your already busy schedule mind you. Always interesting.

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  3. Thank you for your message and for reading the blog. Its difficult to post a map of all our centres as they are scattered all over the north of Malawi and I don't really visit any one of them regularly. I have trainers to do that job! Thanks for the idea though - if I have time one day I might surprise you!

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