Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
Nine bombings in the capital of Ethiopia a week before the scheduled
trip sent the team scrambling for a new site, eventually finding
opportunity in Lesotho, a small mountainous country within the borders
of South Africa.
Getting to Lesotho took several days. The group left Chicago on
Thursday, May 18, spent a long layover in Paris that gave them a brief
time to tour, flew to Johannesburg, South Africa, and then took a small
prop airplane to Maseru, the capital of Lesotho, on Saturday afternoon.
The team began with some students visiting a local church while others
joined a hunger awareness march with about 1,000 other people. "Our
plans changed about every other day, but we laughed a lot in the midst
of the chaos," says Rachel Ekstrand, a newly graduated student who is
scheduled to serve as a short-term Evangelical Covenant Church
missionary in Cameroon.
The students were divided into two teams, one digging a foundation for a
house and the other digging pit latrines. The work was tiring as
students had to use pick axes to break up the ground of rock and clay.
"I think it's safe to say that if any of us never saw another pick-axe,
that would be just fine," wrote Paul Johnson, the adviser for the trip,
on a blog that kept people informed of their work. Johnson also is the
program coordinator for University Ministries.
At other times during the trip, students visited AIDS hospitals and
orphanages for children with AIDS. They spent several hours playing with
the children. "The orphans definitely took a piece of all our hearts,"
Ekstrand says.
Thirty percent of the Lesotho population has AIDS – one of the highest
rates of any underdeveloped country. The current life expectancy has
dropped from 51 to 37 years in less than a decade, according to the
World Health Organization.
"Most of us had never heard of this tiny little country two weeks ago,
and now our time in this place is sure to leave it's mark on each of us
in unique and special ways," Johnson wrote.
The team returned June 1 – learning yet another lesson in flexibility.
Flights had to be changed and all 16 bags checked at Lesotho arrived in
Chicago three days after the students had returned home.
In addition to Ekstrand, students who traveled to Lesotho include Bjorn
Amundsen (accompanying photo), Erik Anderson, Janey Blair, Erik Hjelm,
Lyndsey Hyatt, Evan Kolding, Tim Knight, Jessica Manning, and Alisha
Tillman.
To read the group's blog, visit Lesotho Blog.
Civil Unrest Introduces 'Lesson on Flexibility'
CHICAGO, IL (June 15) - A recent mission trip to Africa proved to be a
"lesson on flexibility" for a group of North Park University students
when political unrest at their originally intended destination forced
them to change their plans.
The group of 10 students and one faculty adviser learned of the violence
in Addis Ababa on Friday, May 12. After consulting with United States
government officials, the team decided to change locations. By Tuesday,
they made plans with Habitat for Humanity to travel to Lesotho
(pronounced Le-soo-too), where North Park students had worked the
previous year.
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