Welcome to the Kenya Pilgrimage Fall 2011 Blog

Welcome to the Fall 2011 Kenya blog. The Kenya team from First Pres Norfolk will be at Nazareth Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya, October 22-November 5. They will be preceded by Kate and Rudy Miller, our Kenyan missionaries, who will be on the ground in Kenya paving the way for the team earlier in October.

Whether working in and around the hospital and Holy Family Clinic, doing home visits to HIV/AIDS patients, visiting the Joy Home Children's Orphanage, or walking the beautiful tea fields down the lane, the story of their journey will unfold here. You are invited to step into their story through these daily blogs.

May God's blessings be upon these 12 pilgrims in their mission work in Kenya and upon all the children of God they encounter while there:

Valena Hoy, Sally I'Anson, Cheryll Johnston, Don Johnston, Dan Magee, Kate Miller, Rudy Miller, Betty O'Garr, Jeanne Perin, Bill Robinett, Iva Robinett, and Jim Wood.

Monday, September 26, 2011

A Bumpy and Dusty Road by Rudy Miller


Every sunrise finds Mary, 32 and a mother of four children, fearful.  Mary is a widow who lives with HIV along with two of her children. A glance around her small plot in Mutomo, Kenya, tells it all. Stunted, wilted, devoid of rain the hardened soil testifies to Mary’s fears.
Kate and I were first invited to visit Mutomo in 2008. We knew very little of that area in East Africa. We do remember our host’s warnings…."please bring water and cabbages…..dress lightly and be prepared to eat dust"! Quickly we discovered Mutomo was a five hour drive, by a four wheel drive vehicle, from Nairobi. Did I say…..a bumpy and dusty road?
In the midst of crippling poverty and a four year famine stands Mutomo Mission Hospital. The hospital serves a population of 50,000 people within a 15 mile radius. Because of the lack of transportation and poverty most folks are extremely ill on arrival to the hospital. Mortality rates are high.
Yet, Mary is a “Poster Patient” for the hospital. We have visited Mary for several years and find that her and her children’s health have improved. She loves to greet us with a dance and many hugs. Something about that human touch draws us together and validates our relationship as God’s family. Tree of Lives has been able to supply her children with nutritious supplemental food and we were able to help with tuition to allow her daughter to remain in school.
When we think about seeing Mary in a few weeks we are reminded we cannot cure her of her disease. We cannot guarantee it will rain this season. But, we can offer her the one thing we have the power to offer, the gift of our very self.






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