Showing posts with label eastern DR Congo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eastern DR Congo. Show all posts

Monday, September 17, 2012

Odd

A few weeks ago, we went to a civil wedding ceremony in Beni... Well, not only did we go, but Noé drove the new couple after they were married. I was his date :)

Anyway, during the very long ceremony... the "official" who married them, had a phone call. And he stopped talking and he answered the phone!

Here's a little proof :)
To protect his identity - we've blurred it a little... But you can still see the back of the groom's head, fairly clearly! And the official is hard to miss, on the left, with his hand to his ear (I promise he's holding a phone!) hehe

A few minutes later, he resumed his duties and married the couple... eventually. But we all heard his conversation - which, was weird. 

Saturday, September 8, 2012

August Update

Hello dear friends,


If you follow the links below, you'll find some information from us, at last!

The first one is our recent report, here: August Update

As well as our prayer card, here: Prayer cards

Please check out the links to these documents above, read them, share them if want, and remember us in your prayers. We long for God's people to be united in prayer... Not just over us, but together in prayer in all things.

If we're united in prayer, then we'll see the power of the Lord moving in and through and for his people. 

And although students aren't in class right now, we've still been working the last month and a half. But we hope that for the next few weeks we'll be able to have a little time off... We'll still be online occasionally, just not as "regularly!" 

Thank you! 
With love,
Noé and Bethany

Friday, August 31, 2012

UCBC Graduation 2012

Enjoy a few of our photos from this year's graduation ceremony!

Ready to leave home and go to the graduation ceremony

Students ready for the ceremony to begin!

On the way down to the ceremony - students were so happy!!

Family waiting for the graduates to arrive

Music with Mama Hulda as a prelude

Noé on the keyboard

The graduates getting closer to the stage!

Guitarists


Serious (or anxious?)graduates

Applied Science students waiting to receive their diplomas. 

The Rector and leaders handing out the diplomas

Graduates celebrating (during the ceremony) with friends and family

Lots of flowers, photos, and laughter!

Noé and Bethany - during the ceremony

A proud new graduate!

Young family members enjoying the celebration with a cold Coke!

Some of the new grads with President, Dr. David Kasali

A young son looking hungrily for the food - where is it?!

At the reception with  Noé's Mama

A great photo opp outside the Lyn Lusi Welcome Center at UCBC


Congratulations to all of the UCBC Graduates!! We are so proud of you! :) 

Thursday, May 3, 2012

More clashes in North Kivu (but not Beni)

UN: Nearly 5,000 people displaced after clashes in Congo’s North Kivu province
Just so you know - this is nowhere near where we live in Beni.

Profile: Bosco Ntaganda the Congolese 'Terminator'
The title just screams, "fear mongering," to me.

The Congolese radio stations are reporting not just about politics in Congo... But also in the US. It was surprising to hear Mitt Romney's name this morning on the radio... Seems like a lot of people are interested in whether Barack Obama gets re-elected in November!

Thursday, April 26, 2012

A few headlines

Some of the news for the day.


On World Malaria Day, UNICEF distributes mosquito nets in DR Congo
The last time nets were donated to the country, a man made a lot of money off of the free nets - at least in Beni. 
And probably elsewhere around the country.
Noe said he's still in prison and also (others have reiterated this) - that however these nets make it to Beni, you can be sure that someone is going to profit in a big way, from these "free" mosquito nets.
So this problem isn't instantly "fixed" by this attempt of UNICEF to help people... At least not yet.


Freeport versus the People of Fungurume, DRC 
"The sad fact is that TFM could be the driving force behind economic growth and sustainable development in the area. In 2010 alone, the mine produced around 115,000 tonnes of copper and 8,000 tonnes of cobalt in 2010 – and an income of nearly US$1 billion. And with reserves estimated at 119 million tonnes, the mine should be transforming the lives of everyone in the area for the better."


Congo's "Papa Machete" sculpts life out of death - Reuters 

"People are asleep here," he said. "We have to shock them."

Monday, March 19, 2012

Lyn Lusi

We are mourning Lyn Lusi... And asking ourselves, "what next, Lord? How will we manage without Lyn?" We will miss her. We still don't know the answer to those questions, but believe and hope that Congo, the women, children and men that she served, will not suffer any more, as a result of the death of their champion, as that is what Lyn really was - to so many people.

The funeral will be in Butembo, tomorrow morning. Please, pray for her husband Jo, daughter Nadine, son Paluku and his wife and child - as they mourn the loss of a remarkable woman, wife and mother.



In memoriam, Lyn Lusi - Texas in Africa

It is a sad night in Goma, and it will be sad there for some time to come. I'm trying to think where they will hold the funeral, and how they will accommodate the thousands who will turn up to honor Mama Lyn with songs and dancing and talk of the deep, deep love that motivated her to care for so many. Lyn Lusi is irreplaceable. And, oh, she will be missed.









HEAL Africa mourns the loss of Co-founder Lyn Lusi

Lyn Lusi was the heart of HEAL Africa. Everybody called her “Mama”. She was like a mother for to  the 400 employees of HEAL Africa and to the thousands and thousands of women, children and men whom HEAL Africa was and is providing care for. Lyn passed away in Goma, DR Congo on the evening of March 17th. “We are missing her so badly, but we know she is now on a better place. We will never ever forget what she did for us and for our country”, says a patient at the HEAL Africa’s hospital in the eastern Congolese town Goma where HEAL Africa is based.
She came to the Congo (formerly Zaire) from England in 1971 as a teacher with the Baptist Missionary Society. In 1974, she fell in love and married a Congolese physician, Dr. Kasereka M. “Jo” Lusi. They founded together with American friends an organization which trained young doctors in Congo and worked in it for the next 19 years. After earning her master’s degree in Human Resource Development and Training, Lyn and Dr. Jo founded HEAL Africa, bringing her formidable administrative, program and people skills to the survivors of violence and rape in the DRC.  In 2002, when a volcano destroyed the original hospital, the couple rebuilt HEAL Africa’s medical facility one wing at a time. The work which  Lyn started has helped many, many people to survive and rebuild their lives. HEAL Africa will keep on going, continuing her work and her legacy.
Lyn Lusi was 62 years old. She passed away from terminal cancer. She leaves behind her loving husband Jo, son Paluku and his wife and son, daughter Nadine, her sisters and thousands of friends and colleagues who loved her. She will find her resting place and last home in Butembo, North Kivu in DR Congo where the Lusi family is from. One of her last words before her death were: “Tell them not to cry”. Her love and her full heart will carry on – forever.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

ECI delegation's visit to UCBC in January

Hi Friends,

In January we welcomeda team from Eastern Congo Initiative (ECI) at UCBC. ECI is an advocacy initiative working with organizations in Eastern DR Congo.

Please go to my colleague Chelsie's blog to read all about it! 


Eastern Congo Initiative and Ben Affleck Visit UCBC

Delegation from Eastern Congo Initiative visits UCBC
On Monday, January 23, 2012, Congo Initiative (CI) and Université Chrétienne Bilingue du Congo (UCBC) had the pleasure of hosting friends and partners from Eastern Congo Initiative (ECI). ECI is the first advocacy initiative focused exclusively on working with community-based organizations (CBOs) in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

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/

24 hours in: Kasenyi, East DRC

by  on JANUARY 12, 2012
We’re not in Fort Portal anymore, Toto.
Photo by Richard Stupart, the author
YOUR FERRY will dock, late in the day, at a nondescript pier straddled by the dark carcass of a crane that was likely born in the time of the Belgians. Realise you have already used the word ‘dark’ in describing part of the Democratic Republic of Congo and curse. Promise not to do it again. Damn you Conrad.
Your cameras stay in your bag. Despite smiles from people you pass, you set out convinced that the Eastern DRC is the country-sized equivalent of Pyongyang. Worst place in the world to be a child. War. AK-47s. Underage soldiers in flip-flops. That sort of thing. Not that you’ve seen any.
They must be around though. You saw documentaries.

Please go to