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STEVE AND SUSAN'S BLOG

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What memories!

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

 

 

 

Steve & Susan Vinton

Village Schools International

Box 1929 Tomball Texas 77377

www.villageschools.org

 

 February 1, 2010

 

We had been in the boat for nearly an hour before someone pointed for me to look far off there on the shore to see the new metal roofing glistening in the sun.  There it was -- the new school that had been built in the remote fishing village of Kazovu.  And as we got closer and closer to landing, I could not help but marvel at it all.  This place that could not be reached by road, the village where every sack of cement and every piece of metal roofing had to be transported by boat, the place where no one could imagine that a school would ever be built -- there it was for us all to see.  Godfrey was sitting up at the front of the boat -- as the Director of Village Schools Tanzania he was coming to officially open this new school -- our seventeenth here in Tanzania.  Emmanueli was sitting at my side -- he didn't know how to swim and it had taken an awful lot to convince him to get in the boat and to make the trip all the way to Kazovu -- but I was glad that he was there with us because I wouldn't want him to miss this for anything.  And it was good that Hadji was in the boat with us -- he had brought the boat from Kazovu to Kirando to pick us up and was returning with us -- because he was the man we had sent to this village to organize the community and to build the school.  And I knew my role -- as the Mzee it would be my job to give the big speech to all those who would come the next morning there to the school.  The school that would be a magnet, drawing young people from all of the other fishing villages up and down this coast.  I would have the whole night to let my thoughts percolate in my mind and in my heart.
 
But as I looked out at the building, and marveled at its true beauty, I was suddenly sad for the one person who wasn't in the boat with us.  A young man named Francis.  I had seen him again the night before, a good two hundred miles away in the village of Komba where we had shared a meal together.  He had come from the village of Myomba to bring us a report of how the work was progressing on the school that he was in charge of building.  He should have been here with us.  Kazovu was, after all, his home village.  He was the young man God had used to bring us to this village in the first place.  I got off the boat, we walked up the beach, they ushered us into the freshly built teachers' house.  I knew we had to eat first, but as soon as all of that was over I had to get out my laptop. I knew it wouldn't be hard to find the email that I had written about Francis.  It was from the week before Christmas 2008.  And sure enough, it only took me a few minutes of searching through the emails of that week to find the email about Francis.  What memories it brought back to read it again!
  

 

December 17, 2008

Maybe it was because we were so close to Congo that I decided to tell the people of the fishing village of Kazovu more of my history than I've ever shared with people in any of the other villages we have visited. Maybe it was because there was so much time on that hour-long ride in the boat on Lake Tanganyika as we went past one fishing village after another until we finally reached Kazovu. Maybe it was because I spent most of that time staring out across the water, looking out over across the huge lake to the hills of Congo, my mind remembering so many things from my past. Maybe it was because the guys in the boat were telling Godfrey and Anyisile the stories of the war that had come to the towns and villages on the other side of the big lake. And while they were telling their animated stories of bombs they had heard and of a war that they happened far across the lake in a world they had never visited -- for me, it was a war I had lived through, a war that I had survived, a war that seemed like it was so long ago to them, and sometimes like it was only yesterday to me ...

... The bay in which Kazovu was located was nothing short of beautiful. I could imagine Jonathan swimming in the beautifully clean water. The beautiful white sandy beaches one day will probably be discovered by some tour company, but for now the place is a hidden gem. And unfortunately for the folks who'll be looking one day to put in a resort at this place, the village has chosen positively the most beautiful place on the whole bay to build the school. I could see from the boat the brick kilns of already burnt bricks. I could see the huge pile of stones for the foundations. And so I knew before we ever came ashore that the meeting we would have in this village would be a good one ...

... The town meeting was held in the shade of several huge mango trees -- mercifully -- because it was indeed hot. They clearly already understand the gist of our program for partnering with them. It had all obviously been explained to them by someone who knew the details and who had hidden nothing from them. They knew that there would be no silliness that we were going to come build a school for them. They would build it with their hard work, they would build it for their own children, they would work for months and months, hauling stones, making bricks, carrying sand and water, it would very definitely be a huge effort that would involve the entire community ...

... I spoke of my grandfather who eighty years ago had left America because he was not content to know the true and living God himself alone, to have good health himself alone, to have a good education himself alone, to have clean water himself alone -- he wanted to make sure that the people in villages in Congo also had those same blessings! I told them that my grandparents had lived their whole lives in a village, that my father was born in a village and grew up in a village, that I first met my wife in a village, that she taught school in a village, that we now lived in a village and that our sons were growing up in a village. I spoke of how it was thirty years ago that I came to see for myself that while it was wonderful that I knew the true God, that I was educated, that I had good health, that I had clean water and everything else that made life good, that it was not right for me to have all of those blessings and to not share them with those who did not yet have them. I told them that I believed with all my heart that it was wrong to be blessed and to not care if others are not blessed with those same blessings.

And then I paused. And even though there were probably more than a thousand people there it was dead silent. And I let us soak up the silence for a few important seconds.

And then I spoke of Francis.

Francis, the boy they all knew who had grown up in the village. The boy whose father had sent him hundreds of kilometers away to a school, who had traveled first by boat as I had traveled to day, then by bus, and finally on foot. The boy from the village who got to go to school. Who clearly also believed that it was wrong to be blessed and to not care if others were not blessed with those same blessings. That's why he returned to the village with the news that if you made bricks and carried stones that he would take a letter from the village elders to us to ask us to come so that one day there might be a school in this village.

And then in front of everyone I turned over and asked Francis how much it has cost his father simply for the boat fees and the bus fees for him to get to school. 37,000 shillings. The crowd gasped. Now I know that 37,000 shillings (about $35) is not a fortune to me, and probably not to you, but for those in the village it clearly was. Just for him to go far away to go to school. His father didn't know when he put him on the boat and gave him that money to travel far away, where he would sleep that year he would be away at school, or how he would eat, and paying for school fees was a burden, but still he had saved money and sent his son far away so he could get an education.

I looked out at the hundreds of kids in the village and asked the obvious question -- who would ever have the money to pay 37,000 shillings for each of these children to go hundreds of kilometers away to go to school.

Francis could have simply taken his blessing and kept it for himself. He could have smiled at his good fortune, studied hard, made something of his life, and forgotten about everyone else left behind.

He certainly could have done that.

Instead he refused to be blessed alone.

And so he was the one who returned to the village, brought news of what we are trying to do in this country, spoke to the village leaders, encouraged people to make bricks and haul stones and for the village leaders to write to us and invite us to come.

As I got back in the boat with the sun setting I looked over across the lake to the hills of eastern Congo and I was glad that I had spoken to these people of my grandparents. I was glad I had told them about my wife and my kids. But I was so glad that I got to tell them about Francis. The boy who refused to be blessed alone. They'll forget the stories of my grandfather.

They'll probably soon forget about me. But for all of the hundreds of students who will study at the school that will soon hopefully be built on a beach on Lake Tanganyika I hope that they will always remember about the boy named Francis, the boy from their village, the one who purposed in his heart not to be blessed alone.

 

 

That day in Kazovu I saw in Francis a young man who cared enough about all the kids in his village who would never get to go to school that he would actually do something about it.  I never dreamed back then that Francis would be the young man who Godfrey would send hundreds of miles away to the village of Myombo to build a school so that all of those kids in that village would also get the chance to go to school.  I closed down my laptop.  I can't wait until Francis sends word to tell us the school he has built is finished and that he wants us to come officially open it as well.  And then I see us sitting around a table, eating good food together, and discussing which will be the next village we'll send Francis to.  Francis.  The one who purposed in his heart not to be blessed alone.

 



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Archives (PDF format)

2008 Letters from Steve and Susan
04/25/2008:  Just Perfect
04/24/2008:  You can't eat stones
04/17/2008:  The happiness in the Sound of Jonathan's Voice'
04/16/2008:  Many Thanks from all of us
04/15/2008:  April 15th
03/29/2008:  As I Stood there in the Drizzle
03/28/2008:  The Queen of Mbinga
03/16/2008:  Details are Still Sketchy
02/19/2008:  69 New Teachers
02/12/2008:  On February 11th, VSI opened its 11th school in Tanzania
02/07/2008:  A New Day is Dawning
02/02/2008:  On January 30th yet another school was born
01/30/2008:  Our ninth school in Tanzania
01/27/2008:  The meaning of seven verses
01/21/2008:  Huruma's name is particularly fitting
01/20/2008:  James
01/13/2008:  A bit too improbable

2007 Letters from Steve and Susan
12/18/2007:  Some old pictures
12/02/2007:  We must be clever
11/30/2007:  In more ways than one
11/23/2007:  I felt like this was the Thanksgiving that passed me by.
11/12/2007:  I missed out on more than goat meat.
10/18/2007:  Pictures of the roof of our new dorm for girlss
10/17/2007: The results are even better than all the rumors.
10/15/2007:  No way we can explain away what has happened.
10/13/2007:  Attending their children's graduation.              
10/09/2007:  What was my strategic plan for the future of schools in Malawi?
09/29/2007:  I hope so
09/28/2007:  This awesome priviledge ...
09/27/2007:  The best underdog story I've ever lived
09/13/2007:  What in the world Jonathan was up to!
09/09/2007:  Pictures of the beginnings of the first Girls Dorm at Madisi
09/06/2007:  The willingness to fail
09/04/2007:  Using a capital or a small letter h
08/21/2007:  No offense to you Steve ...
08/17/2007:  No surgery needed for Jonathan!
08/16/2007:  Update on Jonathan
08/15/2007:  Two needs
07/26/2007:  Jonathan's check-up
07/20/2007:  Looking beyond the next 30 days
07/17/2007:  Makuzani was a concept
07/14/2007:  The girl who remembered
07/05/2007:  He just can't stop smiling
07/04/2007:  I knew what he was saying when he said that
07/01/2007:  Many children will surely tell their story different than mine
06/27/2007:  Fantastic news
06/26/2007:  Images of my grandfather
06/24/2007:  Thoughts from both of us
06/21/2007:  Teetering on the brink
06/15/2007:  We got it, we got it, WE GOT IT!
06/14/2007:  Rachel, Hawa and their sodas
06/14/2007:  Sawala
06/13/2007:  Nothing new under the sun
06/06/2007:  One last load
06/04/2007:  Janelle didn't have a degree in theology
05/22/2007:  Disappointing news
05/20/2007:  Tamara and Maggie's long journey to Lugoda
05/18/2007:  "The bestest luck ever"
05/14/2007:  We've got a problem
05/09/2007:  What it's like living in the village
05/05/2007:  I, like you, just got Susan's email in my in-box
05/05/2007:  "What will happen to them if I die?"
04/21/2007:  I will miss him
04/17/2007:  32 to be exact
04/14/2007:  The only Monica I knew
04/13/2007:  Three special families
04/09/2007:  In awe at their generosity
04/05/2007:  Jonathan's heart
03/29/2007:  We win again! Wow!
03/27/2007:  Nicolas
03/22/2007:  The signature
03/19/2007:  Textbooks
03/14/2007:  Would you please do me a big favor this week?
03/08/2007:  It's time to kill all of our goats ...
03/07/2007:  Our new website
03/06/2007:  And some of them are going to be just like Godfrey ...
03/04/2007:  A priest, a grandfather, and an agricultural extension officer ...
02/26/2007:  Sharing her secret
02/26/2007:  The lifting of the fog...
02/01/2007:  Roina's mother
01/30/2007:  Mama Kambanyama's 473 kids
01/20/2007:  Chuckling with a sense of excitement
01/20/2007:  Now I have my team ...
01/14/2007:  Joyce
01/03/2007:  He said he just couldn't.
01/03/2007:  I didn't want to be the last one.

2006 Letters from Steve and Susan
12/22/2007:  Letting go of John
12/17/2007:  Rain and Mud and 270 kids!
12/15/2006:  One of mine was chosen!
12/10/2006:  Sometimes the best food doesn't come served on the nicest plates ...
11/29/2006:  "My little brother is in the fifth grade"
11/28/2006:  Kids in a Candy Shop!!!
11/26/2006:  The meshing of our lives ...
11/21/2006:  Thanksgiving
11/04/2006:  Glimpses of VSI in Tanzania
10/31/2006:  "I know now what I want to tell them when they come"
10/26/2006:  Julius and Netho
10/20/2006:  Where could they have taken Luti to?
10/17/2006:  Saida's Grandmother
10/15/2006:  Eliza's Momma
10/09/2006:  Mwanume in Kising'a
09/30/2006:  Luti
09/30/2006:  Saying goodbye to Baba Hezroni
09/27/2006:  Hezironi's Dad
09/25/2006:  The "poor"
09/22/2006:  For such a time as this ...
09/18/2006:  Upendo
09/17/2006:  Might as well be REALLY late...
09/16/2006:  8 Days from Now
09/15/2006:  Urbana
09/08/2006:  Sifa and Lucia
09/06/2006:  Off to the Heart Hospital!
09/05/2006:  Struggling
09/05/2006:  Peas from Anastasia
09/01/2006:  A wonderful morning!
08/12/2006:  The stars are shining brightly in Igoda tonight ...
08/10/2006:  Excellent news!
08/09/2006:  Susan's note ...
08/02/2006:  We can not close our eyes
07/25/2006:  I had been wrong
07/20/2006:  Bouncing off the wall!
07/18/2006:  Take a guess where I am!
07/15/2006:  Ziada
07/12/2006:  Off to Parliament ...
07/05/2006:  What a woman!
07/04/2006:  Grace
07/04/2006:  Eleven months ago I didn't know even one of their names
06/19/2006:  Yea!
06/19/2006:  July 25th
06/19/2006:  Just let me do this ...
06/14/2006:  Not all of life is just work, work, work ...
06/05/2006:  Wow!
06/03/2006:  I hate wearing ties!
06/03/2006:  Forms
06/03/2006:  The opportunity presented itself
05/27/2006:  Lucky me!
05/23/2006:  Sweet Icing
05/20/2006:  A real reason to smile!
05/18/2006:  Up to our Eyeballs in Mud
05/18/2006:  Susan the Queen!
05/10/2006:  A need we have ...
05/04/2006:  So we're all happy
04/28/2006:  The right color ...
04/25/2006:  A nice email
04/18/2006:  Names
04/18/2006:  Glimpses of my travels ...
04/01/2006:  Heziloni's great day!
03/31/2006:  Heroes and more heroes
03/29/2006:  From Godfrey Hiari
03/29/2006:  Good things
03/24/2006:  A hero in Kising'a
03/20/2006:  A gift from Esther
03/20/2006:  Falling asleep when you're not supposed to ...
03/20/2006:  One more reason ...
03/11/2006:  Good bye!
02/24/2006:  Godfrey's great and wonderful day (and mine too!)
02/13/2006:  Jonathan's check-up
02/13/2006:  No need for those parallel bars!!!
02/08/2006:  0ff to America!!!
02/08/2006:  The timing of things ...
02/07/2006:  Only 51 to go ...
02/03/2006:  Emmanueli's Turn
02/02/2006:  The joys of going home ...
01/29/2006:  Five and half years later ...
01/26/2006:  The gift of anther goat ...
01/21/2006:  Great News!!!
01/21/2006:  Old Enough to Travel
01/18/2006:  Josh and Jonathan's Goat
01/14/2006:  A Start
01/07/2006:  Hope
01/04/2006:  The Best Part

2005 Letters from Steve and Susan
12/17/2005:  Trading Dollars for Shillings
12/12/2005:  Great News from Kising'a
12/06/2005:  December 12
11/29/2005:  First Steps & First Smiles
11/09/2005:  The rest of the story ...
11/08/2005:  Victory!
11/08/2005:  Phone calls in the night ...
10/31/2005:  Electricity!
10/17/2005:  October 27th
10/15/2005:  Doto
10/04/2005:  Update from Sawala
09/26/2005:  Teachers Training College
09/19/2005:  Matthew 5:14-16
09/19/2005:  3 A.M.
09/10/2005:  A lifeboat in an ocean
09/02/2005:  Eliza
08/11/2005:  260,307 Tanzania Shillings
08/09/2005:  Great news!
08/06/2005:  Rwanda Prayer Team
08/05/2005:  A Gift of Stones
08/04/2005:  Great news from Kising'a
07/30/2005:  Thanks!
07/30/2005:  July 28th
07/26/2005:  They're here!!!
07/24/2005:  Back from Rwanda
07/22/2005:  Rwanda
07/18/2005:  Wilfred's email
07/14/2005:  The best house we've ever lived in
07/06/2005:  Great things happening in America too!
06/26/2005:  32 days!!!!
06/07/2005:  Great news!
05/30/2005:  Messages from Tanzania
05/27/2005:  He is at work through people

April 5 - May 18, 2005 Steve's second trip to Tanzania
05/18/2005:  Almost home!
05/17/2005:  Susan's okay and all's well
05/15/2005:  In that brief moment
05/14/2005:  Tomorrow
05/10/2005:  Pictures from Tanzania May 10, 2005
05/03/2005:  Do I have doubts?
05/03/2005:  Pictures from Tanzania May 3, 2005
04/30/2005:  I took a deep breath and decided to tell him
04/26/2005:  The birth of a second school
04/26/2005:  Pictures from Tanzania April 26, 2005
04/22/2005:  It doesn't mean that someone becomes Santa Claus
04/19/2005:  Pictures from Tanzania April 19, 2005
04/16/2005:  Doing something that a teacher probably should never do
04/09/2005:  Can't wait for Monday!
04/06/2005:  I'm bound for Igoda!
03/17/2005:  He took the time to write to our son
03/12/2005:  When I did a rather crazy thing
03/04/2005:  Only 40 days left

January 6 - February 18, 2005 Steve's first trip to Tanzania
02/17/2005:  I could not have said it better myself
02/17/2005:  Pictures from Tanzania February 17, 2005
02/11/2005:  That beehive of activity
02/08/2005:  Pictures from Tanzania February 8, 2005
02/04/2005:  And that one little sentence
02/01/2005:  Pictures from Tanzania February 1, 2005
01/31/2005:  But I am a very fortunate teacher
01/25/2005:  Pictures from Tanzania January 25, 2005
01/21/2005:  A second chance is now theirs
01/17/2005:  I will never forget yesterday.
01/15/2005:  Now I see daylight

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