Thursday, May 6, 2010

Lake Nakuru in the Rift Valley...and heading home!

Had a great day at Lake Nakuru in the Rift Valley - amazing to see God's incredible creation! (http://bit.ly/aaYgIC)   There are some more pictures on this album: http://picasaweb.google.com/daryn.sutton/Africa2010#


Flying out to Doha tomorrow afternoon with a reasonably quick turnaround to catch the Doha-Melbourne leg home!  Yay...looking forward to getting home.  There's been a lot to consider and process in the last 3 weeks about a whole lot of stuff.   The children's home in Nairobi and Daniel Kawata's school/medical centre in Kinshasa are great projects that I'd like to see us continue to support.  We can take teams of people there to do all kinds of things from working with the kids themselves, to building and renovation-type works.  Exchange was amazing, to reconnect with a lot of people and see some real strategic initiatives be birthed for the future. DR Congo was challenging and exciting at the same time.  I do really love Africa - and there's so much potential to be realised!  


TIme to turn my thoughts to home now - need to buy another car when I get back (my Magna got written off due to hail damage!) and a new hard drive for my Mac (which means some rebuilding - not sure I backed absolutely everything up, so that will be painful!).  And I'm looking forward very much to seeing Jo, Kealy and Elijah at the airport to welcome me home!! :)


I'll try and write some more as I think of it and process the last few weeks of happenings...it's gone quick, but yet seems like I've been away a loonnnng time!!



Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Back from DR Congo.

Back from DR Congo... a busy and productive time.  I'm in a hotel in Nairobi now - nice to have hot water again! Nairobi seems very ordered and civilized compared to Kinshasa - amazing how our perspectives change.
Really quickly...
We arrived at Kinshasa on Saturday and went straight to a church Youth Conference where Melinda spoke and I sang a song I wrote a while back called "Holy is the Lord" which had been translated into French - I gave it a crack in French which went okay I think! 
I spoke at two services at a church on Sunday, and sang a few songs with them. By the way, I'm pretty happy with my little Cort travel guitar (Cort Earth Mini - a 3/4 size acoustic with a pickup) - I had to 'plug and play' quite a bit whilst in Congo, rarely a soundcheck - in fact, rarely got to meet the musos I was playing with beforehand - so I'm teaching the song completely on the fly - that's the African way!
We visited a couple of great projects that are initiatives of Daniel Kawata, who hosted us while we were there.  A school which comprises teaching of kids, and also adults, with some micro enterprise business opportunities for women, and a medical centre.  These are both in a very very poor area of Kinshasa and are excellent projects that we'd like to have continued involvement with.

A whole lot of other stuff - but I'll have to update some other time! 

Check out the latest pics... they're on this slide show:

Friday, April 30, 2010

Leaving Nairobi for DR Congo

Have had a great conference with African and Australian community and
church leaders, forming key strategic alliances and partnerships. Now
on to Kinshasa in DR Congo for a youth conference at the University
there. I won't be speaking - I'm travelling with some very learned
people who will do that, but I'll sing a song or two. Music is a huge
part of African culture so it's a great inroad. There's a children's
home there that I'm very keen to check out, so hopefully I'll spend a
day or two there next week. We really don't know what's happening from
day to day - our hosts probably have plans for us but from previous
experience we're generally not advised what they are!!

I'm at Nairobi airport at Java House enjoying a good coffee and free
wifi! :)
I'm not sure what access to Internet I'll have in Congo but I'll be
back in Nairobi on Wednesday night so hopefully will update then.

As previously advised, mac harddrive crashed so I'm glad I have my
iPhone!

Crashed and burned...

No no not the plane! My mac hard drive! So I can't post any pics til I get home. :(

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Exchange so far...


A few quality issues with this vid, but it will give you some idea for now!

Exchange - we need to learn from Africa!

Exchange conference has been amazing so far! A great time of African and Australian leaders getting together to create strategic partnerships that will benefit both continents. There are many things we can learn from Africa - the spirit and passion here is wonderful, and some of the things we have lost in our Western culture need to be restored. As Australians we have an inbuilt disrespect for authority; in Africa, there is a great understanding of hierarchy and authority, however this has been abused all to often by those in authority. Where there is understanding of authority, based upon mutual respect and trust in balance, there is power! This flows from the core family unit, right up to the highest levels of the political spheres.
Our life in Australia is good, but it's not like we've got it all nailed completely. How many depressed kids live in our cities? How many people struggle for happiness amidst the relative wealth in our nation? How many men and women are feeling unfulfilled and dissatisfied with their lives, searching for meaning and understanding. We have much to learn!