http://matadornetwork.com/trips/24-hours-in-kasenyi-east-drc/
It is not the magnitude of our actions but the amount of love that is put into them that matters. - Mother Teresa
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
24 hours in: Kasenyi, East DRC - Matador
I enjoyed this article... If you come to Congo with a certain set of expectations... You just might be pleasantly surprised!
http://matadornetwork.com/trips/24-hours-in-kasenyi-east-drc/
http://matadornetwork.com/trips/24-hours-in-kasenyi-east-drc/
Monday, February 27, 2012
The Mystery of Children: The Three Fools - a story
I read this posting from January, on my friend Soyon's blog and just loved it! She has posted a beautiful chapter from Mike Marson's book, The Mystery of Children. And I wanted to share it with you!
With Soyon, and other friends at ASP, in 2004! |
Please click here to go to her blog and read the whole (but quite short) chapter!
Chapter Two and a Half from The Mystery of Children by Mike Mason
The star they had seen in the east went ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the child was. Matthew 2:9
The three wise men (as everyone knows but likes to forget) did not visit Jesus in the manger as a baby. They found Him much later, living in a shanty on the outskirts of Bethlehem, when He was two years old. This is important.
They were looking for a child, and this was a matter of some awkwardness for them. They wondered: What sort of behavior would be appropriate in the presence of a child-king?
Labels:
baby Jesus,
children,
freedom,
three wise men
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Telling a different story - CI
Telling a Different Story - from Congo Initiative
For more information about Congo Initiative or UCBC, please go to the websites, below.
www.congoinitiative.org
www.ucbc.org
|
www.congoinitiative.org
www.ucbc.org
DRC - different from the what the news reports
http://matadornetwork.com/trips/the-drc-you-dont-see-in-the-news/
The DRC you don’t see in the news
Richard Stupart shares these journal entries and images from the Democratic Republic of Congo, without a single Joseph Conrad reference.
– Somewhere in the Epulu Forest, 26 December 2011
I WALK HALFWAY back to the okapi pens to make field recordings of the forest noises and the faint rushing of the Epulu River behind me. Watching the light change in the forest as I sit monitoring the recorder levels in silence, I am reminded — or perhaps realise for the first time — how strange this place can be. The different sounds in the trees as the birds sing, some acrobatic, mouselike creature leaping from tree trunk to tree trunk just beneath the canopy. The yellow and green of moss and damp leaves bundles between the giant buttress roots pushing out from the forest floor. If “fecund” ever described a place accurately, it’s here.
Normalcy is perhaps the most profound lesson of this place. Just how durable the fabric of human routine can be.
This is a neat article, with a great photo collection at the bottom... Hope you'll read the entire article and enjoy the pictures! love, Bethany
An NBA player without a country
http://africasacountry.com/2012/02/22/serge-ibaka-has-no-country/
NBA player Serge Ibaka has no country
FEBRUARY 22, 2012 BY SEAN JACOBS
Last year we pointed to the fact that sports commentators, statisticians and journalists can’t distinguish the Democratic Republic of Congo (the DRC) from its neighbor the Republic of Congo every time they talk about NBA basketball player Serge Ibaka. He was born in Brazzaville, in the Republic of Congo, normally referred to as Congo-Brazzaville, not the DRC or what used to be known as Zaire (until 1997) and now commonly referred to by its initials or as Congo-Kinshasa. The only thing the two countries share is a river: the Congo (yeh, that river which Conrad fictionalized). Earlier this week Deadspin, the American sports blog, pointed out that ESPN lists Ibaka’s birthplace as “Brazzaville, Zaire.” At least they know that Zaire still existed when Ibaka was born in 1989. But again it is the wrong country. Today I noticed they just deleted his country and his birthplace is now only listed as “Brazzaville.” So now he has no country.
Anyway, he acquired a Spanish passport last year and now plays for Spain in international tournaments.
Labels:
Congo-Brazzaville,
DR Congo,
nationality,
NBA
7 worst international aid ideas - Matador
http://matadornetwork.com/change/7-worst-international-aid-ideas/
7 worst international aid ideas
Like my energy drink or the kids starve. Image via Africa is a country |
Maybe their hearts were in the right place. Maybe not. Either way, these are solid contenders for the title of “worst attempts at helping others since colonialism.”
Check out the article...
It's good to help. It's good to be passionate. But we have to remember to think about how we "help." Is it really helpful? Can it create more damage, abuse, harm, in the community that we're trying to serve?
The article is worth reading!
Friday, February 17, 2012
Congo hydroelectric dam plans delayed - BBC News
The following article can be found at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-17056918
16 February 2012 Last updated at 13:13
16 February 2012 Last updated at 13:13
DR Congo Inga Three Dam: BHP Billiton withdraws custom
A huge Congolese hydroelectric scheme has been dealt a blow by mining giant BHP Billiton's decision to abandon plans for an aluminium smelter.
The foundry would have been powered by the planned Inga Three hydro project, providing it with a major customer.
The firm said it decided to pull out after a review of construction costs.
The Democratic Republic of Congo's Inga Three would add to two existing dams on the Congo River, making it Africa's largest hydropower dam.
The project is seen as crucial to providing sufficient power by 2020 and spurring the country's economic growth.
Mining boom
DR Congo's multitude of rivers offer enormous hydropower potential, but a lack of infrastructure and difficult business climate have made it difficult to find investors - leaving the vast majority of the country in darkness.
"The company has chosen to not continue the [smelter] project, which was still at a very early stage, following a review of its economics," BHP Billiton spokesman Ruban Yogarajah told the Reuters news agency, adding that the firm would not have been the only customer of Inga Three.
Correspondents say the pullout of the Australian-based multinational is significant because the mining company would have been a major - and solvent customer.
The dam would also have provided electricity for the Congolese national grid.
The DR Congo government says it is confident of finding other backing for the scheme - which has been considered for many years, but never received sufficient backing.
"The problem is real but there are alternative solutions," Energy Minister Gilbert Tshiongo told Reuters.
Inga Three, near the estuary of the Congo River, is estimated to cost between $8bn and $10bn (£5-£6bn) and would produce 3,500 to 7,000 megawatts.
The plan has been stalled for several years with the African Development Bank warning over the costs - but last year it received a boost when DR Congo and South Africa signed an agreement to build Grand Inga, another much more ambitious hydropower scheme.
World Bank studies show that project would cost $50bn and could take decades to build, but would produce twice as much electricity as China's Three Gorges dam.
A mining boom in the mineral-rich southern province of Katanga has put additional strain on DR Congo's inadequate power resources.
The government last year said Inga Three was planned to come on line in 2018.
DR Congo in figures
- Population: 70 million
- UN human development index: Bottom of 187 countries surveyed
- Life expectancy: 48 years
- Has 70% of the globe's coltan - vital for mobile phones
- Average annual income: $300
- With 13% of the world's hydropower potential, its network of rivers could power much of Africa
- Just 9% of the population has access to electricity
Sources: Estimated figures from the UN and World Bank
Monday, February 13, 2012
Kabila aide dies in plane crash - BBC News
DR Congo: President Kabila's aide dies in plane crash
12 February 2012 Last updated at 15:37
A senior adviser to the President of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Joseph Kabila, has been killed in a plane crash in the east of the country.
Augustin Katumba Mwanke died when the private jet came down near the town of Bukavu, a statement read out on national TV said. The pilot also died.
Finance Minister Matato Ponyo Mapo and a provincial governor were among other passengers who were seriously injured.
The crash happened when the plane overshot the runway, officials said.
"Unfortunately, I have to confirm the death of Katumba Mwanke and the pilot," government spokesman Lambert Mende told Reuters.
"It's a very big loss, he was considered a pillar of the presidential majority," he added.
The accident is the latest in a string of crashes in the DR Congo - a country which has one of the world's worst air safety records.
Last July, a passenger plane with 112 people on board went down at Kisangani airport, in the north, killing more than 50 people.
In April, a UN plane crashed as it attempted to land in heavy rain in Kinshasa, killing 32 of 33 people on board.
This article can be found at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-17004512
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