Monday, September 14, 2009

14 Killed, Hundreds Injured as Riots Encompass Kampala!

(Picture taken from front page of Thursday, September 10, Daily Monitor newspaper) Uganda made international news this past week as riots, looting and violence encompassed downtown Kampala and the surrounding areas. The riots started as tensions between the Central Government lead by President Museveni and the Buganda Kingdom reached a boiling point. Buganda is the largest cultural people group (tribe) that is located in Kampala and the surrounding counties. Buganda has their own cultural leader, King Kabaka Ronald Mutebi, as well as their own form of governance, land, radio stations, etc. Politics seem to be at the heart of the latest confrontation as both parties feel threatened by the power of the other. Crowds were dispersed by tear gas and rubber bullets by the police, but they were soon overwhelmed. The military was brought in to squelch the unrest and real bullets began to fly. Praise the Lord, things have quieted down but the fall out still continues and nothing has really been resolved.

All of us serving here in the Kampala area stayed secured in our compounds. The riots took some us by surprise. There was a power blackout for several days prior to the riots so many of us were unaware of what was happening right away. Things can change so quickly here. Many of our friends had children in school when the riots expanded outside the city center to the surrounding suburbs. There were some pretty scary moments as parents received emergency calls from the school to pick up their children as gunfire, unrest, and fires were burning in the streets blocked normal travel. Sunday was really the first time many of us ventured out since last Thursday when the rioting began. Calvary Chapel Kampala is located right at the heart of the unrest in downtown Kampala. We were unsure if services were going to be held until we passed by the entrance and saw the doors to the building open.

Unfortunately, most of the property damage and injuries have been caused by the idol youth which took advantage of the situation. The news recently reported that the youth make up 50% of Uganda’s population and that unemployment is 83% here, the highest in the world.

I thought a writer from the local newspaper, Daily Monitor, today summarized the real roots and heart of the riots and unrest. The writer said that “The war, however, is ultimately economic. The divide-and-rule policy of sponsoring tribal identities and alliances may create short-term political gains and keep national issues from emerging but it cannot paper over the cracks of poverty, high unemployment, corruption, and the growing gulf between the rich and the poor.” The writer went on to say that “for many rioters the violence was a vehicle to vent against the regime. Tribal identity can be used to divide the masses but nothing unites them more than poverty and a sense of disenfranchisement – and that is one war that cannot be fought with bullets.”

Please pray for:
  • Continued safety and security of all of us living and serving in Uganda, including the nationals who have been innocently plundered or injured.
  • For the leaders of Uganda to deal with the real issues underlying the recent spread of violence such as poverty, corruption, unemployment and the gulf between the rich and poor.
  • For peace between and within the cultural groups and the cultural groups and the Central Government.

In Christ,

Luan

Friday, September 4, 2009

MAF Aircraft Hanger Arrived!

The containers have finally arrived safely from Houston, Texas! Four, forty-foot open top containers arrived this week containing the pre-fabricated aircraft hanger building. The containers have successfully cleared customs and now sitting at the Kajjansi Airstrip awaiting the decision to move forward with the site preparation and construction phase of the project. Please continue to pray for unity and wisdom for the project and the team members.

Blessings,
George

Settling In & Pressing On

We have finally completed our move into our new house! George is staying busy fixing things here and there to get us settled. The Lord has really blessed us with a perfect house to meet our needs and to enjoy. Pray that we would use this house to glorify Him.

We have completed our short journey through the Bible this summer discovering and studying the stories of various women used by God. Through studying their stories we were able to see aspects of ourselves in these women and through their testimony learn timely lessons for us today. God’s very nature and character shined through as we saw His mercy, grace, longsuffering, goodness, power and love continuously extended toward us. Our God is alive and intimately active in each of our lives today!

We are now diving into a new and exciting study through the book of Daniel together. Although many of the stories about Daniel and his three friends are very familiar, we don’t want to miss out on what the Lord has for us to learn and practically apply to our lives today. Not only are we living in the very times Daniel describes, but we too are in a way “living in Babylon”. It is our prayer that we like Daniel and his three friends can resolve to stay undefiled in the midst of opposition, trials and a culture which in many ways is like Babylon during Daniel’s day and have faith and confidence in the Most High God! Pray for wisdom and understanding for me as I continue to prepare and lead the study. Pray also for the Lord to prepare the hearts and minds of the ladies coming to the study.

We are also beginning a new weekly lunchtime Women’s Bible study for the ladies that work in the MAF Office. We are very excited to begin our study of various Women of the Bible. This will be a good place for us to start our journey together. Pray that we would be of the same mind and have a sweet time of fellowship together. Also pray that we would be encouraged and discover practical application of the living Word in our lives though our study together.


Maranatha,
George and Luan