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Showing posts from June, 2009

Thanks Grandma!

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Jakob was very happy to finally receive his birthday present from America. He is now 7 years old and one month... he has lost 3 teeth within days of his birthday. Isn't he handsome? What a big smile! He was just as happy with the present from Sweden that came on his birthday, but my camara battery was dead... oops!

Back today

We have had a relaxing few days off in Malawi. Very nice to stay with friends and explore the lake. We have done what we wanted to do and now it is time to get back. Our plan was to leave on Wednesday, but we would be getting back in the afternoon... and Thursday is a holiday in Mozambique, so... Why not stay another night and get back for work on Friday anyway? Mikael squeezed in a haircut and the kids were invited to take part in a music class with friends. We are so thankful for a chance to visit and relax in relative luxury from what we have been living in Tete for the past months. Thanks, Christina! Thanks supporters! Thank you Jesus for giving us friends who care!

A day at the beach

After Lilongwe, where we stocked up on things that are less than ncessary for life, we headed to the Lake for a couple of days of R&R. We are staying at the Wheelhouse Marina at the suggestion of a friend who grew up on vacations at Lake Malawi. Driving onto the property we were reminded of Kenya's Lake Naivasha... where Mikael and I started our "Safari" training course for Wycliffe missionaries in Africa. A canopy of African trees shading a patchy lawn that slopes down to the lakeshore. The difference is that at Naivasha you tent-camp with hippos munching grass all night... here we sleep in a thatched "chalet" on beds with a bathroom to ourselves. Having spent my youth in Florida, I'm not very into swimming in lakes... The water is cristal clear and Lake Malawi has a high concentration of tropical fish to see, but shallow and waveless beaches with golden sand and black silt fall short when compared to the white sugar sands of the Gulf of Mexico. On the

Mozam-every-other-week?

Hi. Been awhile, hasn't it? Glad you didn't give up on me completely! The second seminar/workshop went as well as the first. Actually, they each had unique challenges and benefits, but the outcomes were equally well-received. From May 26 to June 5 we were involved in writing the Nyungwe Primer in Tete. A Primer is a book that teaches reading and writing... the alphabet, grammar points, etc. This one was for adults, but I have a feeling it will end up being used for kids as well. 60 lessons in 1o days. We invited writers from the first seminar, but didn't get much participation from outside the churches. Apparently we don't pay well enough. BUT the ones who did help us seemed to enjoy it in the end and I think they learned something. They also see that the simplest writing needs the most thought and preparation. It is a real stretch of the mind and immagination to write a comprehensible story with 5 vowels and the letter "n". We could only include taught letter