A Buncha NunSense

Friday, March 26, 2010

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Sunday, February 21, 2010

My return to Zambia!

I finally received my work permit to return to Zambia...and will be flying out on March 30th. I will be returning to live in the small village of Kalomo in the Southern province. The plan is to begin posting to this blog again on a regular basis.

Monday, January 19, 2009







The photos above are of Presentation Sister Numba's widow farm near Kalomo. Numba is a young Zambian Presentation Sister living with us in Kalomo. She is a teacher and teaches in one of the local schools. When she first arrived in Kalomo 4 years or so ago, she started a grief support group for widows in the parish. There were a good number of them. This grief support group gradually talked about their needs and one of them was how to get land to plant maize and vegetables so they could feed their children. Over the years Numba has purchased land to create a farm, and together the women work the land and then share the produce. They call it Numba's widow farm. It is amazing.

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Friday, December 19, 2008

ST. THOMAS MORE PARISH, BROOKINGS, SD HELPS ZAMBIAN FARMERS







THANK YOU ST. THOMAS MORE!!!!!!!


When I left my ministry as Youth Formation Director at St. Thomas More parish in Brookings, SD...the parish gifted me with a donation of several thousand dollars to help the people of Zambia. Right now the greatest need for the people is food. Everyday people tell us that they have nothing to eat, so a portion of the STM donation has been used to purchase maize (corn) seed and fertilizer for some of the local farmers in Kalomo, Zambia. The maize seed is ground into mealy-meal (flour) and from this they make nshima, which is the staple food of the Zambian people.
This is part of a sustainable farming project that was begun to help local farmers produce enough food to meet their needs. This group of farmers in a a small village near Kalomo have had poor crops the last two years because of drought the first year and floods the second year of the program. However, they still returned 100% of the seed they owed back to the project to keep the program going. I was saddened to discover that even though they returned their full share...there was no seed or fertilizer available for them. They had plowed their fields by hand and were waiting with much hope that some how they would get seed to plant. And thanks to the generous people of St. Thomas More the people of this small African village have planted their crops! The people were overjoyed when we went to them and announced that we brought seed and fertilizer for them.

All of the farmers benefiting from this donation of maize seed are living with aids. They are part of a support group that gathers regularly with Home Based Care workers. They support each other in their illness and in life survival skills. Sr. Teresa Malloy, PBVM is a nurse and gathers with several support groups each week to consult with them about their health and survival needs. I've been going with Sr. Teresa to meet with the support groups around Kalomo for several weeks.
A large portion of the STM donation will go to the village of Kaoma to build a mill for grinding maize seed. This will create a new business in the community and the people can grind their maize seed locally.

Monday, December 8, 2008

LIFE IN KALOMO

I've been living in Kalomo for a couple of weeks and really like this spot in the world! I'm living with two Presentation Sisters. Sr. Teresa is an Irish nurse and works with homebased care. Sr. Numba is a Zambian in temporary vows. She teaches in a school and has helped some widows begin a farm project. Both sisters are involved in various projects to help the people become sustainable.

I've mostly been going around with Teresa to the huts of people living with aids, TB and various other illnesses. She checks on their health, gives out some meds, checks to see if they have something to eat. The hunger situation right now if very bad and many are struggling to find something to eat everyday. Some have plowed their fields by hand for the growing season, but have no seed to plant.

One of the women we visited in a compounds was so sick that she was unable to stand. She was on the dirt floor of her hut crawling to get around and she had two young children. Her husband abandoned her when she got sick.

We also had a young woman stay at our house for a few days. She traveled with her severely handicapped sister and her little girl from the home for disabled children in Mongu. She was so sick when she arrived that we couldn't take her out to the village. She slept on a mattress on the floor in our house for several days and Teresa treated her. When she was well enough to go to her family's village we drove them much of the way. At one point there was no more road so she had to walk the rest of the way a long way into the bush. She had bags, her four year old daughter, and her 10 year old physically disabled sister (who had to be carried the whole way). Some family members walked from the village to help her carry her load.

There are two Zambian priests in the parish and they have persuaded me to help out with some youth programing while I'm here, so I'm helping with advent retreats, etc. The youth are beginning to drop by the house now looking for me to visit with them. The ability of even the younger children to sing, harmonize, go into parts, dance, etc...is amazing!!!!! They lift the rafters off the roof!

Monday, November 24, 2008

NEW HOME IN KALOMO, ZAMBIA


At 7:30 tomorrow morning I'm taking a bus about 5 hours south to Kalomo where I will be living for the next part of my stay. Kalomo is a small village in southern Zambia, situated on the main road between Lusaka and Livingstone. I'm looking forward to getting out from behind the walls of Lusaka and living a little village life again! Internet and other forms of communication will be harder to come by, but will work to keep the blog as up to date as possible!

VIDEO OF THE ZAMBEZI RIVER - ZAMBIA

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VIDEO OF THE ZAMBEZI

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Sunday, November 23, 2008

THE ZAMBEZI RIVER - ZAMBIA









You can see holes in the sides of the cliffs where birds make their nest.

















Sunset over Zimbabwe.


















Hippos swimming in the Zambezi.
































On our last night in Livingstone our immersion group took a river cruise up the Zambezi...above Victoria Falls.

Pictured are Brother Mike Burke (South Africa / Zambia), Adrian White & Don O'Leary (Ireland), Ruben Comotto Basanta (Uruguay), Sister Deb Nelson (USA) & Mariela Pilar Uberti Serrat (Uruguay)

VICTORIA FALLS - ZAMBIA CENTRAL AFRICA







The immersion group in front of Victoria Falls.














In this photo you can see people standing on the Zimbabwe side of the falls. They get a better view this time of year.



























We visited the falls during the very dry season, so there isn't much water flowing right now. After the rainy season the whole wall to the right would have water flowing over it. Now there is only water on the Zimbabwe side.











The bridge between Zambia and Zimbabwe.





Victoria Falls or Mosi-oa-Tunya (the Smoke that Thunders) is on the Zambezi River between the countries of Zambia and Zimbabwe. The falls are, by some measures, the largest waterfall in the world.

Victoria Falls is neither the highest nor the widest waterfall in the world, the claim that it is the largest is based on a width of 1 mile and height of 360 feet, forming the largest sheet of falling water in the world.

The unusual form of Victoria Falls enables virtually the whole width of the falls to be viewed face-on, at the same level as the top, from as close as 200 ft, because the whole Zambezi River drops into a deep, narrow chasm, connected to the long series of gorges. Few other waterfalls allow such a close approach on foot.

VICTORIA FALLS GORGES































These are photos of the gorges below Victoria Falls. The walls of the gorges are nearly vertical and generally about 400 ft high.

Over at least 100,000 years, the falls have been receding upstream through the gorges eroding the sandstone-filled cracks to form the various gorges. The river has fallen in different eras into different chasms which now form a series of sharply zig-zagging gorges downstream from the falls. Some of the gorges each represents a past site of the falls at a time when they fell into one long straight chasm as they do now. Their sizes indicate that we are not living in the age of the widest ever falls.

GAME RESERVE NEAR LIVINGSTONE





Our vehicle got stuck in the sand very near this rhino, so we all had to get out and push. Once the vehicle was unstuck it couldn't stop until it was out of the deep sand and we had to run after it. I kept my eye on the rhino the whole time...luckily it stayed put!!!!

Two girafts eating leaves from the trees. They are hard to see because it was dusk and the light wasn't very good anymore.


Head of a wild bore peeking from behind a bush.

Baboon photos

















A mother baboon holding her baby along the roadside near Livingtone

Monkeys