The couples from the mission
gathered to Kinshasa for a conference. Half of the couples will be in another
mission come July 1st when they change our boundaries. Two came from Cameroon, one from
Pointe Noire in the other Congo, and one from Gabon. Names are Baileys, Colemans, Moodys, and Gates (the same one that is serving here; they were sent to Cameroon to fill in some gaps
that exist with couples coming and going.)
Officially, July 1st the
Brazzaville, Congo mission will take half our mission, all the countries outside of
Kinshasa, DR Congo; leaving only Kinshasa and surrounding areas in the DRC for
President and Sister Cook. The Cooks have been and are still on the road almost
all the time trying to get things ready for the division. There will be no
North Americans in the Kinshasa mission after July 1st except the senior
couples.
We hosted the couples for meals
that weekend and all three couples used the Bybee's recently vacated apartment as the
"hotel". The official agenda started Monday morning, but all the
couples were here from Saturday. Sunday we went to church together and then had
a family home evening with all the couples.
Monday "the Smiths" were
asked to discuss the topic of strengthening companionships. Since it was a
rather short outline, we want to share the main bullet points: 1. "It is easier
to love someone than to live with them." 2. "Love is a fantasy, living is work."
Both of these quotes are from a movie called "Reversal of Fortune". The
rest of the time was a discussion of how can one teach or help others to learn to
work as part of the gospel. Enough of that.
Great lunch at Mission Home!
In the afternoon we were
entertained by the Humanitarian missionary couple showing how to organize a
maturation project. That evening was a "Family" meeting. A brother in
the Church named Da Tarr shared his story of conversion and his life in
Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and Kinshasa. He is an inspiration of
faithfulness and dedication to his beliefs. He went through imprisonment, loss
of jobs, family, death threats, etc. and remained faithful. He is suspect here
in Kinshasa because he isn't a local and since he won't play the
"sharing" mentality so expected here (the sharing mentality is if you
have something - I want it - and you are obliged to give it to me).
Tuesday was mostly for the "out-of-towners"
because the area support offices are here in Kinshasa and if the couples have
concerns about the branches where they live/work they have to deal with a
Church employee, so they needed to work things through with a real person not an
email.
Tuesday afternoon we went out
shopping for fabric, church distribution items, groceries, art at thieves market, and whatever
could be fit into a short time. The evening we had movie night in our apartment
with popcorn.
Wednesday morning we went to visit
the Bonobos. We left about 8:20 am and arrived after 10:00 am. The trip is one
of those experiences that is typical here but not enjoyable in any way, trust me
on this. These singes are considered the most "human" of
all apes, but they still look like an ape and smell like animals. (The babies were cute, though.)
I never liked
going to the zoo because of the smells there, so you might understand that this
marathon was not my favorite "field trip." And to add insult to
injury we have dozens of mosquito bites to prove the point.
We finished the day at the Mission
Home and Thursday we returned to our assignment in the PEF office.
Frère Mutombo, our director, was in South Africa
the week before this so we had a lot of catching up to do in the office. Not
much was done while we were away so we have to dig in again.
We will be seeing big changes in
PEF coming "Soon" - just like the shipping container that has many of our requests, needs
and loving gifts from family expected in March is still "coming
soon"!!! It is on a truck but they are demanding more money (again) before they
will release it.
The ward we attend here in
Kinshasa is called the Gombé Ward in the Kinshasa Stake. Missah Tarr was
directing the choir and asked me to play the piano, it was a great experience,
the choir sounded great, so each Sunday since I have been able to or asked to
play the organ for Sacrament meeting. The only problem is that the chorister
chooses the songs during Sunday School and lets me know 10 or 20 minutes before
the meeting. It can be interesting.
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