Sunday, January 20, 2008

Work Permit

George Faile left me just now with a “work permit” to return to the hospital, an admonition to not get over-worked and a few days more treatment. I am no longer coughing as badly although I still have “a few crackles” on my left chest.

Let me first thank you all for your prayers and our God for his mercies. I am not well but I am better. I work from one treatment to the next and sleep well.

I went to church with Elisabeth Faile today at “First Baptist Church of Nalerigu” a mud-brick and wood affair with a steeple and cement floors, quite the architectural accomplishment. The congregation and worship are, I think opposite what I grew up with. In my youth, I attended a beautiful gothic style church in Philadelphia, all carved wood, stone, carpet and stained glass. The people were in muted colors and the music (although I love it) sedate. Here, all is “sepia-colored” says Tomas, an Argentinean born doctor, working for a now-defunct project in rural-health care north of here. The church is sepia, a quiet painted river-scene behind the baptismal pool; all the color of the place is provided by the people: chromium-yellow head-scarves, lime-green co-coordinating prints of dress, headscarf and infant blanket, burgundy-red evening dress, t-shirt with an incongruous print of Christmas stockings front and back, primary colors, gold threads, large-men in equally large prints, many in Arabic.

Choirs perform with gusto and volume; music provided by an over worked sound-system, an indifferently tuned piano, a drum set, tambourines, and an electric organ. The wind is blowing up another “hamartan” and the fans overhead are not running. Children wander in an out, are tracked-down, captured and kept hostage or escorted out by mothers, older sisters or “aunts,” babies asleep on their mothers’ backs, oblivious to the commotion.


Offerings are provided for with a whole church “march” for want of a better name. Everyone comes to the front to deposit their gifts in a box. However, the joy expressed is nothing regimented. Grandmas shuffle along shooing children from under un-steady feet, girls dance up and back, hardly touching down; matrons demonstrate dance steps I would have coveted in a previous life. All is joy and hub-bub. The service is in English and Mampuli, the local language. The sermon was on “building good relationships” Romans 12: 9-21. It was a nine-point sermon, in English; I saw many people taking notes.


I was the only volunteer attending; there were three gun-shot wounds, 3 stat cesareans (one mother who coded on the table), an acute abdomen laparotomy over-night and a morning of ultra-sounds to do. Everyone had slept in, woken, rushed out and was already back at work when I was collected. And I have a work-permit starting tomorrow.

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