Kickin it in Kampala

Well, work is officially over. It is very strage. Leaving everyone, and going on to something new and exciting. I am very torn, with ending all the crazy adventures i have just been through and moving on to the next. Adele will be here in 20 hours!!! Oh my. I am so so excited and blessed to have Adele come here to travel with me. It will be awesome i know it.

We spent our debrief time on bushara island on lake bunyoni, an dit was absolutley beautiful. I have all these pictures resized and ready for posting but i left my USB in Mbarara at Canada House. So i will post them in the next few days... would have been nice though cause the internet here, is almost as fast as at home. Almost. So, yeah, i didnt' get much sleep the last night on bushara, thinking of all i have been through, all i have seen, all i could go on too. I am really in a strange place, and i think it will take me a while to process. I think my culture shock coming back will be alot worse than coming here. I think i had a douse of it my last night on bushara. I keep having faces of people i have met flash in my mind. The baby with HIV that died, the young girl praise that died unexpectadely, all these people i have been working with who have HIV, the whole memory book team. I will never ever forget these people, I can't.
Anyways, I am in Kampala for the day, i went to the craft market today to buy some presents for all you wonderful people at home. And guess what, i am going for the big culture shock and am even going to the movie theatre in a few hours, to see the new Drew Barrymoore and Hugh Grant movie, Music and Lyrics!! Should be very strage, like the mall i am at right now. It's Garden City, a huge "mzungu"(white person) mall. I think the internet cafe i am in right now even has air conditioning!! PG!! (Praise God)

I went to Kampala Penecostal Church today, my first time seeing a white preacher since the international church i went to with Kristy. It was good, focused on the family, and children, they had all the children on stage to help lead worship, it was pretty cool. I stayed for a service and a half. They have 4 service at that church, with overflow rooms and balcony....CRAZY!! Did you know that Uganda is the youngest nation in the world, being that 50% of the population is below 15 years old!! It's also the 3rd fastest growing nation in the world. The average Ugandan Family has 6 1/2 children. And 4 1/2 times more money is spent on alcohol here than on education..... NUTS. Thats what I lernt today! It was really nice to be at a "normal" dare i say, church. But as i left, i was quickly reminded that i was in africa as i heard someone scream behind the front main lobby desk, i was alarmed, and there was a crowd. Some man was being beaten up. I peaked over the counter just in time to see the man kicked in the chest... It was really disturbing. I don't know why it happened, i didn't want to get involved so i kept moving.
Well, I am heading out to the Entebbe airport with Laura tommorow, to see her off, and to see Adele in! I am VERY excited!

Keep praying, and keep in touch.
Love Mellon

Pictures in the Paper!!

Hey yall, PS...my photo's of the returnee's camp are in today's hamilton spectator...so please feel free and check them out at the following:

http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/pdfs/20070317/D10.pdf

You all rock, and i miss you too much.
Mel

March 17th

This is from today!! Yay!!

Yesterday I left Rubingo for the last time. All my stuff packed and in the truck. It was a beautiful last day, the pineapple at chai time never tasted so sweet. I prayed the night before that God would help me to be not a total wreck when saying goodbye, as I was already feeling so emotional about leaving. I’m sure he helped me, because I did cry but I was able to speak, and communicate how much I love these people and how much they have genuinely touched my life. I am feeling torn, missing these people, and all the wonderful things I have experienced over the last 6 months, but also really excited about the next leg of the journey with Adele. I am in Canada House right now in Mbarara for the weekend, and will be heading to Kabale on Monday morning. It will be weird to be all together again, our Uganda team 2006-2007. We are all heading our separate ways, to our own new adventures. But I’m sure we will never forget our time together here serving with ACTS. It’s been the adventure of a lifetime that’s for sure.
My photo’s of the Ugandan returnee’s camp in kikigate will be printed in today’s Saturday issue of the Hamilton Spectator. I will go to the site and see if I can paste the page on here or provide a permanent link. I’m really excited about it. They may also be in the Toronto Star!! The story is still being pitched to them though. I will let you know for sure!
So Adele will be here in 8 days!!!!!! Holy crap, I am so excited. I honestly can’t stop thinking about it, and all the things that we can do and see. I am SO SO SO SO thankful that God provided a friend for me to travel with. It is a HUGE answer to pleading prayers! I know it will be an amazing unforgettable time. Please continue to pray for our journeys, our safety and all that good stuff. I’m sure we will continue to let you know where we are at and what the latest news is!
Thank you so much to everyone who has been reading and praying and supporting me, I could not do this with out you! I miss home TONS, Panago Chicken Club Pizza, WATCH OUT!!! Northgate Foursquare I miss you so much. My family, Danielle, Mom, Dad, Col buddy, Trev, Tash, Dennis, Sparky, Emma… I miss you all terribly. And I look forward to seeing you all again. I know that this last part of the journey for me will go the fastest, so watch out; I will be home before you know it!

TONS AND TONS OF LOVE EVERYONE!!! KEEP LIVING YOUR LIVES TO THE FULLEST. FOLLOW YOUR DREAMS, FORGET YOUR FEARS, RUN THE RACE THAT IS IN FRONT OF YOU AND DON’T LOOK BACK. IF CRAZY OL MEL CAN DO IT, IMAGINE ALL THE AMAZING THINGS THAT YOU CAN DO!! I PRAY THAT ALL OF YOU WILL BE INSPIRED TO MAKE A CHANGE, TO STEP OUT OF YOUR COMFORT AND DO SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR SOMEONE UNEXPECTING. LOVE YOUR NEIGHBORS. LOVE THE UNLOVABLE. GIVE YOURSELF, YOUR TIME, YOUR ENERGY, YOU’RE LOVE TO THOSE AROUND YOU. TO THOSE THAT NEED IT.

March 12th

Another old blog, cause i love you.

It’s my last night in Rubingo with Laura and Tanessa. Katie is gone to Nyakigera. It was a good day. I spent it organizing all my stuff, trying to figure out how I am going to fit it all into my two 50 pound bags. I never really realized how light 50 pounds is. It is light, especially when you have 3 seventy pound bags on the way here… yikes. Wish me luck on that one. Haha. So David Moore and Pippa are coming to camp tomorrow for a couple nights, Tanessa and Laura are leaving for Kikigate in the morning, and then I will be heading out on Saturday morning with David and Pippa to Mbarara. From there I will try and throw together some last minute typing and printing. Next I will be heading to Kabale en route to Bushara Isaland. I will have 2 days there to document all the happenings, and then there is de brief. On the morning of March 24th we are officially finished.
I am honestly in a very shocked state as I write this. It’s crazy how fast 6 months can fly by. It’s been such and adventure to be here in Africa. I summed it up quite nicely in my final report I had to write. It reads as follows:

“It is so hard to sum up all I have been through since arriving in Uganda. It has been life changing, heart transforming, soul moving and mind boggling. I have had some of my highest highs along with some of my lowest lows. I’ve been touched remarkably by so many Ugandan people and experiences. I’ve learned so many lessons on team work overseas, on myself, on God and most of which I am still processing. I will miss Uganda and its people in an overwhelming amount. I’m sure I will dream of Africa for a long time after I am gone. Maybe even waking up in Canada and wishing that I was waking up here in Rubingo. I can’t put words to my experience. I will never ever forget it as it will be engrained in my heart and my way of life forever. And, if God wishes, one day I will return, with my mom and sister.”

As I am still here in Uganda, and in the area of my posting and my job, I don’t feel like I can truly comprehend all I have learned and been through. Hindsight is 20/20 right?
It been one wild and crazy adventure and I will definitely be updating you on my after travels and as I am learning truly what I have gone through. Thank you so much for all your support and prayers back home. It means the world to me.

March 2nd

Sorry, i wrote this blog a while ago in camp and your getting it now!!

Can you believe it; I have 20 days left of my posting here in Uganda! I knew the time would pass by at an accelerated rate, but I honestly did not expect it to be this rapid. I think it is especially due to the off time that we have at the end of every month. For that off time I am very grateful by the way. We are supposed to have “free” or off time on Saturday afternoons and Sundays, but it is not always the case. There is always work that can be done. Speaking of work, I think my photo count is around 10,000! That is so crazy to me. But it is amazing too because, for me, it’s 10,000 moments frozen in time. 10,000 images of God’s beauty, majesty, creation, glory, grace, peace, emotion and oh so many other things that my feeble mind fails to put word to. I honestly shock myself every time I upload my photos. When there is this striking image, I thank God for what he has shown me, for what he has enabled me to portray. I could not do this on my own. If I tried, by myself, I think you would get better images from a blind woman standing on her head under a pile of hay. I’ve finally been backing up all my pictures and video onto DVD’s. I should have done it earlier because now it is a huge job, although, I am almost finished. I have a few project areas that I still need to complete photo documentation for including; the Rubingo AIDS Station, potential sponsorship people, agriculture demos, and a few other small things.
I have been hanging out with Andrea Huncar, this amazingly talented and beautiful reporter for the CBC. It has been such a blessing to meet her. To be able to talk to her about her career, and how she got to where she is, and how she writes, and everything I can think to ask her. It’s amazing how much we have clicked since the moment we met. She is doing my dream job. Moving around East Africa, most recently Sudan, researching and writing stories about amazing things. She is the one who is writing the story about the refugee camp in Kikigate. I tell you, that afternoon I spent moving around with her in the camp; I just knew that I wanted to do that. To help people get their stories heard. So, I was fortunate enough to take the pictures, and now, (I know I mentioned this in my last blog, but I wanted to spend more time to elaborate and really let you know what’s going on) they maybe published in the Hamilton Spectator! I am so excited! God is so good, and please just pray for me in this situation. Maybe the right people will see them, and you never know!
Side note: I just got a text from my friend Evans, the man I prayed for at the bible study for deliverance and breaking of generational curses. He said he messed up bad, and to please pray for him. So please, I pray that you would hold him in your prayers, that Satan’s attack on his life would not succeed, and that it would be broken to dust. Pray strong warring angles around him, fighting the battle for him. Pray against anger and aggression. Pray for healing of hurts. Please, this man has a huge calling on his life, I beg you as fellow believers to fight the battle with this man. Fight it on your knees for him!
So it was crazy being in that camp. It has grown from 220 to over 1300 in 2 months. And it consists of people who left Uganda during the 60’s and 70’s in search of land and a better life. Most of them were living in Tanzania for over 20 years. And now the Tanzanian government is kicking them out in not a nice manner. They are tied and beaten and thrown in trucks and shipped back to their countries. Left with nothing but any few small things they can scrounge together before they are shipped out having to leaving behind their land, their animals, their homes, their everything. Now they are all grouped in a small settlement area behind the town of Kikigate. They are not welcome in the trading center; two men were recently beaten severely by the Kikigate locals. They have no medical services and no money to seek help elsewhere. Children are dying all the time, due to the lack of medical attention, lack of nutrition, and poor living conditions. Mary, our guide from the camp, took us to see where the children are buried. She said they have lost count on the number of deaths, and the grass is already growing over if not totally covering many of the graves. She showed us an old blind woman, who had three different stories as to why her back was covered in scars; one being she died, and was resurrected and woke up with the scars; two she had TB and they gave her the wrong medication and she woke up with the scars; and three they were from bed sores. There was a pastor in the camp who was taken out of TZ, and doesn’t know where his pregnant wife is. There was the little orphan boy who may have HIV, and if he tests positive his only living relative, a grandmother, won’t care for him. They all live in grass shelters that do practically nothing for the rainy season that we are just entering.
But despite all these circumstances, they are joyous; they get together almost every night to sing praise songs. They were selling what little they could scrounge up, working together to survive, finding food and firewood to cook with, they even set up a school in their multi purpose room that teaches nursery to P6. One of the most beautiful things was, we asked if we could have their children’s choir sing for us, and when they told the kids, they all lit up and ran to the open field to get arranged and practice quickly. I have the singing on video tape and it’s just beautiful. The sad thing was, is there was a storm coming. And we saw it coming, and knew we had to leave to get shelter for our equipment or it would ruin. They wished we could stay forever I am sure, but we left. It was not a nice feeling, knowing that we were leaving to a warm, dry house, with a hot meal. And they were staying. Having no choice, because this all they have now, there families sold their little bits of land to go to Tanzania, and now they are forced to find their way out of poverty.
So, I am tired now, its 10:46pm on March the 2nd, and I think I need to get some rest. Thank you to all of you that are still taking the time to check up on me. It’s been a turbo 6 months, but at times, it was very long too. But all in all, I know that there has been huge growth in my life and in my heart. Probably things that I will never really be able to define, but I will try for my next blog to put it in words for you.

Good night, and God Bless you all.
Love Melanie

Pictures






1. Swinging good times
Ok...these are all pictures of my concieted self, i'm sorry.
The 4th one although is dedicated to the person i miss the most in the world, my beautiful sister, Poopsmith, ahem, i mean danielle. Also the very cute picture of the puppy is dedicated to you danielley smelly.

Pictures






1,2. The memory book work teams with thier books decorated.

3,4,5. Me and my beautiful sponsor child Fortunate Burungi.

Pictures!!






1,2. Candle Fun
3. Super cute puppy
4. Swinging good time
5. Rose our ugandan health worker and I

Recap and Candle Fun






1. Fun on bus ride with Acamba!!

2,3,4,5. Candle light fun times in my tent at Rubingo.

Recap Pictures






1. Christmas Day Dhow boating trip in Lamu.

2. Delicious fresh fish, fresh coconut curry lunch on the beach, ON christmas day.
3. Christmas Day on the beach, notice i am on the phone, currently talking to my family.
4. Chillin on the roof top on a lovely Lamu evening
5. Me in our room, after getting henna done, packing for and "exciting" journey home (to camp)





1. Boarding the train in Nairobi to Mombosa, that was 4 hours delayed.

2. Boarding the death Matatu from Mombasa to Lamu for our christmas "holidays"

3. Awesome wrapping paper from Bryony and Emily's gift to me on Chritmas.
4. Group Shot in Lamu, from left to right: Me, Tanessa, Laura, Bryony, Emily
5. Group Shot in Lamu, from left to right: Laura, Bryony, Me, Baji, Tanessa, Katie, Emily, Elaine

Recap Photo's






1. Me and Tanessa with our beautiful Super Suits (I gave mine to fortunate)

2. Classic "off" time, guarding bags and waiting for bus's (this one in kampala)

3. Tanessa and I on home visits.
4. Self Portrait in Rwanda.
5. Mel with Malaria...

Photo Recap






I found a bunch of pictures from other people that i havn't posted, and seeings how it's the end i thought i would give you a short photo recap of my journey!


1. Kayaking in Comox during orientation.

2. Leaving from the Comox airport.

3. Confused in Heathrow.

4. AIDS Testing Day fun.
5. Conquering the NILE!! (After rafting the Nile)

Just so you know.

When i upload a bunch of new pics they can't all fit on the same page, if you scroll to the bottom there is still more. You need to use the links on the right side of the screen, and sometime the archive. Sorry if you all know that... i just don't want you to miss out!

The end is near...

Can you believe it; I have 20 days left of my posting here in Uganda! I knew the time would pass by at an accelerated rate, but I honestly did not expect it to be this rapid. I think it is especially due to the off time that we have at the end of every month. For that off time I am very grateful by the way. We are supposed to have “free” or off time on Saturday afternoons and Sundays, but it is not always the case. There is always work that can be done. Speaking of work, I think my photo count is around 10,000! That is so crazy to me. But it is amazing too because, for me, it’s 10,000 moments frozen in time. 10,000 images of God’s beauty, majesty, creation, glory, grace, peace, emotion and oh so many other things that my feeble mind fails to put word to. I honestly shock myself every time I upload my photos. When there is this striking image, I thank God for what he has shown me, for what he has enabled me to portray. I could not do this on my own. If I tried, by myself, I think you would get better images from a blind woman standing on her head under a pile of hay. I’ve finally been backing up all my pictures and video onto DVD’s. I should have done it earlier because now it is a huge job, although, I am almost finished. I have a few project areas that I still need to complete photo documentation for including; the Rubingo AIDS Station, potential sponsorship people, agriculture demos, and a few other small things.
I have been hanging out with Andrea Huncar, this amazingly talented and beautiful reporter for the CBC. It has been such a blessing to meet her. To be able to talk to her about her career, and how she got to where she is, and how she writes, and everything I can think to ask her. It’s amazing how much we have clicked since the moment we met. She is doing my dream job. Moving around East Africa, most recently Sudan, researching and writing stories about amazing things. She is the one who is writing the story about the refugee camp in Kikigate. I tell you, that afternoon I spent moving around with her in the camp; I just knew that I wanted to do that. To help people get their stories heard. So, I was fortunate enough to take the pictures, and now, (I know I mentioned this in my last blog, but I wanted to spend more time to elaborate and really let you know what’s going on) they maybe published in the Hamilton Spectator! I am so excited! God is so good, and please just pray for me in this situation. Maybe the right people will see them, and you never know!
Side note: I just got a text from my friend Evans, the man I prayed for at the bible study for deliverance and breaking of generational curses. He said he messed up bad, and to please pray for him. So please, I pray that you would hold him in your prayers, that Satan’s attack on his life would not succeed, and that it would be broken to dust. Pray strong warring angles around him, fighting the battle for him. Pray against anger and aggression. Pray for healing of hurts. Please, this man has a huge calling on his life, I beg you as fellow believers to fight the battle with this man. Fight it on your knees for him!
So it was crazy being in that camp. It has grown from 220 to over 1300 in 2 months. And it consists of people who left Uganda during the 60’s and 70’s in search of land and a better life. Most of them were living in Tanzania for over 20 years. And now the Tanzanian government is kicking them out in not a nice manner. They are tied and beaten and thrown in trucks and shipped back to their countries. Left with nothing but any few small things they can scrounge together before they are shipped out having to leaving behind their land, their animals, their homes, their everything. Now they are all grouped in a small settlement area behind the town of Kikigate. They are not welcome in the trading center; two men were recently beaten severely by the Kikigate locals. They have no medical services and no money to seek help elsewhere. Children are dying all the time, due to the lack of medical attention, lack of nutrition, and poor living conditions. Mary, our guide from the camp, took us to see where the children are buried. She said they have lost count on the number of deaths, and the grass is already growing over if not totally covering many of the graves. She showed us an old blind woman, who had three different stories as to why her back was covered in scars; one being she died, and was resurrected and woke up with the scars; two she had TB and they gave her the wrong medication and she woke up with the scars; and three they were from bed sores. There was a pastor in the camp who was taken out of TZ, and doesn’t know where his pregnant wife is. There was the little orphan boy who may have HIV, and if he tests positive his only living relative, a grandmother, won’t care for him. They all live in grass shelters that do practically nothing for the rainy season that we are just entering.
But despite all these circumstances, they are joyous; they get together almost every night to sing praise songs. They were selling what little they could scrounge up, working together to survive, finding food and firewood to cook with, they even set up a school in their multi purpose room that teaches nursery to P6. One of the most beautiful things was, we asked if we could have their children’s choir sing for us, and when they told the kids, they all lit up and ran to the open field to get arranged and practice quickly. I have the singing on video tape and it’s just beautiful. The sad thing was, is there was a storm coming. And we saw it coming, and knew we had to leave to get shelter for our equipment or it would ruin. They wished we could stay forever I am sure, but we left. It was not a nice feeling, knowing that we were leaving to a warm, dry house, with a hot meal. And they were staying. Having no choice, because this all they have now, there families sold their little bits of land to go to Tanzania, and now they are forced to find their way out of poverty.
So, I am tired now, its 10:46pm on March the 2nd, and I think I need to get some rest. Thank you to all of you that are still taking the time to check up on me. It’s been a turbo 6 months, but at times, it was very long too. But all in all, I know that there has been huge growth in my life and in my heart. Probably things that I will never really be able to define, but I will try for my next blog to put it in words for you.

Good night, and God Bless you all.
Love Melanie

Pictures

On the boat cruise up the nile to Murchison Falls.
Two of the widows in the the new widow's garden group in Kikigate.
This is where they construct the Bio-Sand Filters in Kikigate, for clean water!!
I am sitting on the edge of a place i could die, the entie Nile flows into a 4 meter wide crevas and shoots through this small canyon to form Murchison Falls.
A widow from the Kikigate widows group.

Pictures

Wonderful Kids from the near by school in Kikigate peak through the gate to the compound.
Young boy leans against old Bio-Sand Filters in front of the Kikigate house.
Stella the leader of the Kikigate Widows group and I.
Thats me at Murchison Falls a WAY in the distance.
Me with the Nile in the back groud after our boat cruise to the Falls.