GUEST BLOG: “A Beautiful Treasure” by Danielle Iman

Posted by christine, January 21, 2010

Danielle Iman was on our Mocha Club Ethiopia trip from December 27th, 2009-January 9th, 2010.

Danielle Iman with Ambo boys

Danielle with Ambo street boys

The beauty of the Ethiopian people is found by observing their way of life. In this culture, there are no watches, nowhere special you must go next, and no one is more important than the person sitting directly in front of you. Relationships are key. This beauty is what brought me back to Ethiopia for the third time with Mocha Club this Christmas season.

One of the core goals on these trips has been working and forging relationships with the street boys of Ambo. These boisterous and sometimes unwieldy young boys have been orphaned or abandoned and are not culturally accepted by society. It would seem, at first glance, that these boys would be the last group of people with whom we could form relationships. But what we quickly discovered is that the boys were instead teaching us how to have true, meaningful relationships through their sacrificial acts of love.

What form did this take? It was Girma feeding me his injera when he probably hadn’t eaten all week. It was “Ceasar” teaching me his language, Oromic, so that I could teach English in an effective manner. It was Bronhu wiping my tears with the only tissue he owned. This is true beauty, which resembles that of Christ.

Lessons learned and remarkable experiences along the way, similar to those described above, are too numerous to count. We went with a heart to serve, but we ended up getting so much more. Their love, their faith and their hope is a beautiful treasure.

See Danielle’s other guest blog here.

GUEST BLOG: “A New Meaning of Thankfulness” by Cole Thomas

Posted by christine, January 12, 2010

Cole Thomas was on our Mocha Club Ethiopia trip from December 27th, 2009-January 9th, 2010.

My heart right now is in Ethiopia, although I am at home in Colorado. Here’s why I can’t take my mind off Ethiopia…

We spent the first part of the trip with the Women at Risk program. In Ethiopia, women struggle to make money, and they think that prostitution is their only hope. Women at Risk offers rehabilitation to these women and then provides job training so that these women can stay off the streets. It was amazing to serve these women and to share our love and faith. My favorite memory of working with these women was hearing some of their testimonies. After so many hardships in their lives, it was amazing to see how joyful they now were. They said that they had found shelter in Jesus’ love and that He completely changed their lives.  Although we couldn’t understand the songs that they sang to us in Amharic, I could see how thankful they were by looking into their eyes. I have never seen happier people in my life. I feel like I will never experience the type of thankfulness that they possess.

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photo by Cole Thomas

We spent another part of our trip with in the town of Ambo. In Ambo, there is a large population of boys who live on the streets. Most of their parents passed away, while some ran away from home. People in Ambo shun the boys, and they are not allowed in the local church. Starting last year, Mocha Club’s goal was to build relationships with these boys and show people in the town how much we care about them. It was amazing to spend time with them.  One of my favorite moments was when a couple of the boys offered me food from their plate before they even started eating. This was shocking to me because they make about 80 cents a day shining shoes, and they don’t get to eat much. Eight of the boys are now living in a small place that made me so thankful for what we have in America. They could barely afford what their rent is each month…just 6 quarters, which is what I use for one load of laundry. This made me really question the things that I spend money on in my life.

Cole Thomas

Cole in Ethiopia

Overall, it was amazing to see how people in such dire conditions can be so happy and thankful. We were able to learn a lot from the people that we served. As a believer in Jesus Christ, I was blessed to see how they put their trust in Jesus to rescue them from the hardships they had experienced in their lives. They told us how joyful they were and how that love had changed their lives forever. Whether street boys, women who turn to prostitution, college students, or anyone who feels alone in this world…I believe that Jesus is in the business of changing lives. Personally, I am so thankful for our experience in Ethiopia and am planning on going back next year if I can raise the necessary funds.

GUEST BLOG: “My New Acholi Family” by Amy Courts

Posted by christine, October 6, 2009

MC Sponsor Amy Courts was on our Mocha Club Uganda trip from September 22nd-October 2nd.  The team visited Action International’s projects Village of Hope and Home of Love orphanage in Gulu, Uganda that Mocha Club supports.

Amy with some of the girls in Gulu, Uganda

Amy with some of the girls in Gulu, Uganda

I can’t recall ever taking so long or expending so much energy and patience to write a blog. But what I want to tell about my trip to Gulu, Uganda – and more specifically about my experience and why I’ll hopefully never be the same – deserves more time, more editing, more energy. I want to give you the best of what they gave me, with as few errors or potholes of distraction as possible.

Or maybe I’m just an obsessively compulsive perfectionist. Wink, wink.

Either way, until THE blog is ready, I’ll share a few pearls I’ve threaded into a necklace I intend to wear daily.

The Acholi people (the largest tribe in the country, who occupy most of Northern Uganda, and who have for the past two years enjoyed the first tastes of peace after a 23-year civil war waged by Joseph Kony and the Lord’s Resistance Army) are eager and generous with their love and kindness. From daily half-a-block walks to and from the internet cafe marked by countless toothy grins and “How are you? I’m fine!”’s, to giggling children who are simply overcome with joy by the fact that “Mzungu’s” (white people) want to hear them sing their songs and dance their dances, their love is an effortless and unconditional kind unlike anything I’ve ever seen. They expect and want nothing but a genuine smile.

Having all lost so much and so many to terror, violence, disease, and disaster, they know how fleeting a moment can be and embrace each with ferocious joy. It’s hard not to define them as a dizzyingly happy people, because it’s rare to see anyone without a smile. Even when they’re feeling ill and asking for prayer, they do it with a smile.

But still, you know they carry the burden of recent history and understand in a special way that life can change or end at any second, so if this one is good, it ought to be celebrated. And celebrate they do.

For me, just being an observer among them for a week was liberating. It may be because the economy won’t allow for it, or more likely because they just know better than to waste time with such pettiness, the Acholi have little time and patience for vanity. Clothes don’t match and are rarely perfectly clean. Cosmetics are an expensive luxury, one most refuse in favor of covering their feet or feeding their families. Self-expression through fashion or hair style seems unlikely, as their clothing is either the “imported” castaways from America’s thrift stores or made from cheap materials; and most men, women, and children alike wear short or shaved hair. It’s better to keep away lice and other bugginess. And deodorant? What’s deodorant?

I can’t describe how freeing it was to be among people who aren’t silently analyzing my fashion choices or checking my legs to see if they’re shaved. It was nice to know that if, after a long day of painting, my Secret was all worn off, no one would notice, much less care. I’m white, so I’m going to I stand out. Any details beyond that aren’t worth following.

What’s more, I saw in them a desire simply to show us they’re kind and warm, forward-moving and modern; that they’re cheerful and can find beauty and humor in nearly anything; That they’re resourceful and creative, hard working, intelligent, and most of all good. They love and crave God and His goodness. They have much more to offer than war. They want to learn and teach. They want to create.

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Above all, they are a community-driven people. They’ve all lost family and friends to war, so they ferociously grip the relationships they now have as a life source. It was rare to see anyone walking anywhere alone. And in the evenings, when most Americans are holed up in their giant homes on acres of “private property” watching fake lives play out on flat screen TVs, safe from the annoying distractions of other humans, the Acholi are hanging out and enjoying one another. One evening, we saw a group of at least 50 people gathered around one small TV for a major soccer event! They don’t go home until the restaurant’s generator is turned off and they’re sent away. And whether they’ve known you for years or you’re meeting for the first time, they treat you as a kindred soul and intimate friend. Even the Mzungu’s.

The children are no different. Whether walking home from school in groups, navigating the market for dinner, giving you the tour of their school or orphanage, or selling sugar cane across the street, they’re quick to extend a hand to shake and even quicker to offer a wide grin to a stranger. I guess, to them, no one is a stranger.

Quite simply, they want to love and be loved.

They were concerned not with appearances – with impressing us with fancy clothes or fresh scents, huge hotel suites, or five-star meals (though they did an incredible job at making our stay as comfortable and upscale as possible within the context of their culture) – but with making us feel welcome, comfortable, and at home.

And I did. I felt as at home with them as I ever have in America.

Toward the end of the week I took a moment to sit down with Judith, one of the hotel staff who seemed to rather enjoy my silliness and my inability to speak their language correctly despite both our efforts. She thought my self-deprecating jokes were hilarious. She liked that I wore crazy-looking shirts. And, pulling me aside, she said, “Miss Ahh-mee, you are very down to ground. Most Mzungu’s don’t like us…they think we’re bad and useless, just full of war and disease. But you…I like you. And I like that you like me.” I told her she was quite easy to like, and she liked that too. We both decided we were soul sisters, and that one of us – most likely me – was just born the wrong color and on the wrong continent.

One of our team members later told me that Judith told him I’m actually African.

And recalling that makes me miss my other home, my other family, even more.

GUEST BLOG: “Life Restored” by Danielle Iman

Posted by christine, September 21, 2009
Women at Risk

Women at Risk in Nazaret, Ethiopia. The woman Danielle is writing about is in the front center, smiling, with two thumbs up! (photo courtesy of Indie Jane Photography)

As I sat staring at this tear-filled, yet smiling face, I was unsure of how to even respond to this woman whose circumstances were incomprehensible.  Her life had been surrounded by death, tragedy and rejection.  When she awoke each day, her choice wasn’t, “What am I going to wear today?” but rather “In order to live today, will prostitution be my only option to survive?”  My surprise came as she completed her story and offered her reason for the tears…pure thankfulness and joy. But how could that be?

In Ethiopia, women often think prostitution is their only hope because of lack of family support and income.   Through the Women At Risk project in Nazaret, Ethiopia supported by Mocha Club, this woman was being rehabilitated through a program for former prostitutes or “sex workers” and had completely changed her circumstances from hopeless, to full of hope and promise.

Danielle with Women at Risk

Danielle with Women at Risk

This genuine soul became a great friend in the one week we visited Nazaret during our month-long journey.  Obviously, I learned so much from this woman’s precious life: first, that what truly matters is not what I own or what I have achieved.  Second, no matter the circumstance, there is to still reason to rejoice.  Lastly, true joy is found when we look up rather than within.

There were eleven other women at the Women At Risk center whose life stories were similar to the one described above.  Each life restored one-by-one thanks to Mocha Club members all over.

Each life that our group encountered along the way blessed us in countless ways, whether it was a group of rehabilitated prostitutes or the one hundred street boys in the town of Ambo.  It seemed as if we had been given so much more than we could have ever attempted to give them.

Danielle was on our month-long Mocha Club Ethiopia trip from July 8th-August 9th, 2009.

First photo courtesy of Indie Jane Photography.

GUEST BLOG: “Where My Heart Feels At Home” by Amanda Keith

Posted by christine, September 16, 2009
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Amanda in Ethiopia

I’ve always believed that each person has a certain place in the world where their heart feels most at home. The world could be falling down around you and you wouldn’t even notice. There’s a comfort when you walk on certain territory, just knowing that there’s nowhere on this earth that God wants you to be rather than where you are at that moment.

Right in the midst of poverty and lost people and orphans and street boys and a language that I can’t wrap my mind around for the life of me…this is my heart’s home: Ethiopia.

This is where I feel most at peace…but at the same time, I’m still unsettled.

There’s so much to be done in Ethiopia. It’s one of those situations where I feel overwhelmed, because I want to fix it all, but there’s only so much I can do. I wish I could give all these kids a home and find an answer for all these street boys, but I have to trust that God has a plan for them and my job is to continue to follow whatever His will is for me.

Visiting Ethiopia the last two summers has completely changed me. I have a whole new view of what the word “hope” means. Africa is hope. Her people are not given the best situations, but they always find the best in whatever situation they are given. It truly rubs off on you. I was expecting to be incredibly emotional and prepared myself for the worst before the trip, but I found more joy that month in Ethiopia than I could ever find in America.

One of my teammates said it best when she said, “In America, I’m happy. In Africa, I’m joyful.”

There’s always going to be a small piece of my heart missing, and that piece is permanently planted in Ethiopia.

Amanda was on our month-long Mocha Club Ethiopia trip from July 8th-August 9th, 2009.  Check out her Indie Jane Photography website, blog, and Twitter.  Here are more of her brilliant photos…

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