Archive for the ‘General’ Category
April Newsletter
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A new school year!
Things are hopping at Angel Secondary School as the staff and students enter into their second school year in Gamasara Village! Changes this year include hiring additional staff to match additional two classes of students we welcomed this year, bringing the student body population up to just over 240. We are thankful for our new headmaster Mwita Samson, and thrilled to have our first woman teacher, Florence, as part of the staff team.
Angel Secondary School is currently offering over 50 scholarships to the secondary students who would otherwise not have an opportunity to attend school past the primary level, because of being orphaned or severely financially disadvantaged.
Our two new volunteers, Dee Ann and Carrilea, have their hands FULL with all the exciting tasks that it takes to help both the school and the orphanage run. Holly & Lawrence continue their tour of the United States, speaking to individuals, families, and community organizations about the orphanage and the school, in search of education sponsors and ways to continue the building expansion still to be done.
We are thrilled to report that the children of Angel House and the students of Angel Secondary are growing happier, healthier, and more knowledgable about the world around them every single day. Thank you, Grass Roots family here in the United States, for your continued support of this outstanding project.
September 2011 Newsletter
Grass Roots Ministries Newsletter September 2011
We are now posting Grass Roots Ministries’ newsletters on line. Please click on the link above to access the newsletter. If you are receiving a newsletter through the U.S. mail, please consider providing your email address. The ministry can be contacted at general@grassrootsministry.org.
Tipp City UMC UPDATE June 26th
Greetings from Tarime,
This is written on Sunday, June 26th, the first day we have had electricity since the last blog. There was electricity for a couple of hours on 2 days, but we were not home to write. The blog of last Sunday took 6 tries between outages to send.
Everyone on the team is doing fine considering a lack of sleep, hot showers, electricity, pasta for every meal, fish with the head and tail still on, riding in the back of a pickup on the wrong side of the road, toilets that are flat to the ground and a language we don’t understand. Probably the most serious problem so far is that Judy lost our camera, but there are many other pictures from other cameras. Beth has become the official photographer and has taken over 800 photos so far.
The hostel is ready to start the roof tomorrow (Monday) and should be about finished by the time we leave on Wednesday. Dave is having good success with the chimes. We have had dinner with 2 of the Secondary School faculty. Tomorrow we will have lunch with Anna (Angel House Supervisor ) and dinner with Lucas, Headmaster of Angel Secondary School. These meals have been extremely helpful in understanding the local culture.
After our trip to the Serengeti, I can attest that the pictures in the National Geographic Magazine are not fakes, but real. The roads are gravel with big stones and rough on passengers and the cars. We were able to see elephants, rhinoceros giraffes, lions, cheetahs, hippopotami, leopards, gnu, zebra, and many more. Judy and I opened the curtains on our bedroom window at 3:30AM to find a water buffalo looking back at us about 6 feet away. As we crossed from the Serengeti to Ngorngoro Crater we stopped at the Olduvi Gorge in Maasi Country. This is a branch of the Great Rift where The Leakys made great discoveries in the 1960s and 1970s of fossils and ancient footprints. The trip back from the crater began at 7:00 in the morning and after 2 flat tires, a leaky radiator, broken roof support, heater that didn’t shut off for 500KM, (300 miles), water temperature gauge pegged on H, headlights that lit up the trees, not the road, and numerous police road checks, we almost made it home about 9:00 in the evening. After the second flat tire and a jack that didn’t work, Eric was able to pick us up in the pickup truck.
Larry & Beth
TCUMC Mission Trip June 21, 2011
Greetings from Tanzania,
This is Tuesday night and the power just quit after being on for about 20 Minutes and I can’ see the keyboard. The team is doing well and having new experiences by the hour. Tonight we had dinner at the home of one of the teachers at Angel School. His enthusiasm and vision for an English speaking school was enjoyed by everyone.
The walls on the hostel are about 1/3rd completed. We hope tomorrow to complete another 1/3. Dave Pinkerton and his chimes have been a hit with the students. Some of them are doing very well.
Riding in the back of the truck on the road to Angel House is a challenge for those of us from the US. However, yesterday, the truck hauled 20high school students in back and 8 adults in the cab from Tarime to Angel House. The truck is a Toyota 100 extended cab with a small bed. The road is one long 2KM rut. The distance from the house where we are staying to Angel House is about 5 miles.
The weather has been similar to a summer day in Ohio. Heavy rain last night and thunderstorms in the area tonight.
Beth just emerged from her shower when the power went out leaving her in total darkness with a head full of soap. Our miners’ headlamps have seen a lot of use.
I had my first ride on a pikiki (motorcycle taxi) today. You hope he knows where he is going.
Judy, Beth and Dave were invited to teach at the Secondary Summer School Today. After the panic left, they set about devising lesson plans. They had a great time and were impressed with the faculty and students. The level of instruction was much higher than what we had heard is typical for Tanzania.
Tomorrow (Wednesday) we will work on the hostel, Dave is teaching chimes and we have been invited to lunch.
Larry Riesser
Tipp City United Methodist Church
Greetings from Tanzania,
This is Tuesday night and the power just quit after being on for about 20 Minutes and I can’ see the keyboard. The team is doing well and having new experiences by the hour. Tonight we had dinner at the home of one of the teachers at Angel School. His enthusiasm and vision for an English speaking school was enjoyed by everyone.
The walls on the hostel are about 1/3rd completed. We hope tomorrow to complete another 1/3. Dave Pinkerton and his chimes have been a hit with the students. Some of them are doing very well.
Riding in the back of the truck on the road to Angel House is a challenge for those of us from the US. However, yesterday, the truck hauled 20high school students in back and 8 adults in the cab from Tarime to Angel House. The truck is a Toyota 100 extended cab with a small bed. The road is one long 2KM rut. The distance from the house where we are staying to Angel House is about 5 miles.
The weather has been similar to a summer day in Ohio. Heavy rain last night and thunderstorms in the area tonight.
Beth just emerged from her shower when the power went out leaving her in total darkness with a head full of soap. Our miners’ headlamps have seen a lot of use.
I had my first ride on a pikiki (motorcycle taxi) today. You hope he knows where he is going.
Judy, Beth and Dave were invited to teach at the Secondary Summer School Today. After the panic left, they set about devising lesson plans. They had a great time and were impressed with the faculty and students. The level of instruction was much higher than what we had heard is typical for Tanzania.
Tomorrow (Wednesday) we will work on the hostel, Dave is teaching chimes and we have been invited to lunch.
Larry Riesser
Tipp City United Methodist Church
Greetings from Tanzania,
This is Tuesday night and the power just quit after being on for about 20 Minutes and I can’ see the keyboard. The team is doing well and having new experiences by the hour. Tonight we had dinner at the home of one of the teachers at Angel School. His enthusiasm and vision for an English speaking school was enjoyed by everyone.
The walls on the hostel are about 1/3rd completed. We hope tomorrow to complete another 1/3. Dave Pinkerton and his chimes have been a hit with the students. Some of them are doing very well.
Riding in the back of the truck on the road to Angel House is a challenge for those of us from the US. However, yesterday, the truck hauled 20high school students in back and 8 adults in the cab from Tarime to Angel House. The truck is a Toyota 100 extended cab with a small bed. The road is one long 2KM rut. The distance from the house where we are staying to Angel House is about 5 miles.
The weather has been similar to a summer day in Ohio. Heavy rain last night and thunderstorms in the area tonight.
Beth just emerged from her shower when the power went out leaving her in total darkness with a head full of soap. Our miners’ headlamps have seen a lot of use.
I had my first ride on a pikiki (motorcycle taxi) today. You hope he knows where he is going.
Judy, Beth and Dave were invited to teach at the Secondary Summer School Today. After the panic left, they set about devising lesson plans. They had a great time and were impressed with the faculty and students. The level of instruction was much higher than what we had heard is typical for Tanzania.
Tomorrow (Wednesday) we will work on the hostel, Dave is teaching chimes and we have been invited to lunch.
Larry Riesser
Tipp City United Methodist Church
Greetings from Tanzania,
This is Tuesday night and the power just quit after being on for about 20 Minutes and I can’ see the keyboard. The team is doing well and having new experiences by the hour. Tonight we had dinner at the home of one of the teachers at Angel School. His enthusiasm and vision for an English speaking school was enjoyed by everyone.
The walls on the hostel are about 1/3rd completed. We hope tomorrow to complete another 1/3. Dave Pinkerton and his chimes have been a hit with the students. Some of them are doing very well.
Riding in the back of the truck on the road to Angel House is a challenge for those of us from the US. However, yesterday, the truck hauled 20high school students in back and 8 adults in the cab from Tarime to Angel House. The truck is a Toyota 100 extended cab with a small bed. The road is one long 2KM rut. The distance from the house where we are staying to Angel House is about 5 miles.
The weather has been similar to a summer day in Ohio. Heavy rain last night and thunderstorms in the area tonight.
Beth just emerged from her shower when the power went out leaving her in total darkness with a head full of soap. Our miners’ headlamps have seen a lot of use.
I had my first ride on a pikiki (motorcycle taxi) today. You hope he knows where he is going.
Judy, Beth and Dave were invited to teach at the Secondary Summer School Today. After the panic left, they set about devising lesson plans. They had a great time and were impressed with the faculty and students. The level of instruction was much higher than what we had heard is typical for Tanzania.
Tomorrow (Wednesday) we will work on the hostel, Dave is teaching chimes and we have been invited to lunch.
Larry Riesser
Tipp City United Methodist Church
Tipp City UMC Tanzania Trip
We have arrived at the Missionaries’ house in Tarime. It was another long day of travel. The team members are pretty tired getting only about 6 hours of sleep since leaving Dayton on Thursday and it is now 11:00PM Saturday in Tarime. The ride was long (10 hours) and bumpy. We saw some zebras and monkeys along the road in Masai country. We saw Maisi tending their livestock and selling coal by the side of the road. The terrain varied from dry semi desert areas to gentle mountains and green crops which included tea, coffee, sugar cane, wheat and bananas. We had no problems at the border crossing from Kenya to Tanzania because Eric has made friends with a supervisor who made the entry go without any problems. We ended our day by eating a delicious meal outside and enjoying the balmy breezes at a local restaurant. Tomorrow, Bonita preaches in the morning and in the afternoon we will go to another local church’s music CD release party for the debut of their CD the church made. The Angel House Choir will participate as they made a CD last fall (which can be purchased for $10).
Addendum: This was written Saturday night as the power quit. Today, Tuesday is the first time we have had electricity at night.
Larry & Beth
Study Tour
Recently we finished mid-term exams and have been enjoying a mid-term and Easter break since then – during this time, the top 10 students in each class were presented with a Study Tour to Musoma, a town an hour away that is on the shores of Lake Victoria and has much of it’s industry based around the lake. The students spent their day studying Biology and Geography – trade, communication and transport, marine life, etc. Many of the students had never been out of Tarime, so it was very exciting even to board the bus and head somewhere new and different.
My Sweet Girl
Lawrence and I have talked a lot about Nossi and a few of the other children, and what might be the best way we would continue to be a part of their lives in the future. At this point, adoption isn’t an option for us, since we’re both foreigners here in Tanzania and not married yet. But what we know to be true is that she will continue to be our daughter in every other aspect – whether that means helping pay for her school fees in the future, having her live nearby when she finishes her education, or just simply praying for her continuous healing and growth from now on. God is so good to have granted me the privilege of knowing this little soul, and today was truly a happy Mother’s Day for me, getting to spend it with her. May we all be so lucky.
OH THE PLACES YOU WILL GO!
Sarah Sabai began at Angel House in 2005, she was only 12 years old. Her story is very similar to Cinderella. Her mother was sick for a very long time until she passed away and then her father died shortly afterwards. The Cinderella part is that they were living with her father’s second wife when he passed. He had left all of his property, and he was quite wealthy, to Sarah but the stepmother took it all and none of it ended up with Sarah. She was sent to Angel House as an orphan because her stepmother no longer wanted to care for her. Sarah was of the first class of Angels to graduate from secondary school in December 2009. This past year she studied in Dar es Salaam to retake her National Form Four Exam to get a better grade. Unfortunately, the school forgot to register her and she studied for an entire year without the chance to retake the exam.
In January, Eric began career counseling with some of the older kids and found out that Sarah wants to run a Children’s Home one day. So, he did some research and found this school in Mwanza. After a month of working on getting her into the school Sarah and I went to move her in. It was a wonderful experience as she prepared to say goodbye to the 47 brothers and sisters at Angel House. She had become a “mother” to many of the younger ones and a best friend to the others. Once in Mwanza, we did the last minute school supply shopping and got our hair “did.” Mine turned out absolutely hideous but the point was for her to enjoy it.
We are excited to see where she will go next. She is enrolled in a two year program but the possibilities for her future have more than tripled. Thank you to those that made her education throughout secondary school possible. And thank you to those that are now making her college education possible. She will be a changed woman and this project has taken a new step into the realm of possibilities for all the children of Angel House.
