Friday 18 October 2019

National Prayer Day — Zambia, 18 October




Today, 18 October, is the annual National Prayer Day in Zambia.

Citizens will gather at churches, arenas, sports grounds and schools to give thanks to God, to pray for rain, and to share in the joy of being a free nation.

Please hold the Zambia in your prayers today — the people, the animals, the land, the water, the air.





Friday 11 October 2019

The Mighty Baobab

Muli shani! Greetings!

The road approaching Siyavonga and the Zambezi River from the north, travels through mountainous terrain and valleys full of baobab trees.

Thank goodness it is the fruit and not the wood that is currently in demand as a new 'superfood.'  Maybe this will help save trees.

The pulp of the baobab fruit contains:
       vitamin C
       calcium
       phosphorus
       carbohydrates
       fiber
       potassium
       protein
       lipids

The Guardian writes: 'In more than 30 African countries, the mighty baobab tree thrives. Parts of the tree are used to treat malaria and infertility.  Now, the rest of the world is catching on to the benefits of the baobab fruit, which health food companies are trumpeting as the newest “superfood”.

'According to the Grocer, Ocado has reported a 27% increase in weekly sales since the start of 2018, thanks, in part, to the rise of “liquid breakfasts”. Baobab, in its white powder form, is used predominantly in smoothies and porridge. It was approved for European markets only 10 years ago, but thanks to its purported levels of antioxidants, potassium and phosphorus, high level of vitamin C, calcium and fibre, it has seen its uses expanded into gin, beauty products and yoghurt.' 

Click here to read the full article on the Guardian's website.










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Click here to enjoy more photos and the videos I have posted.
Ana's Zambia Journey blog link: https://zambiajourney.blogspot.com/

Tuesday 8 October 2019

Praying for rain!

Muli shani! Greetings!

One of the last weekends I spent in Zambia, we traveled to Siyavonga, the town near Lake Kariba and the Kariba dam.  I traveled with Mrs. G Chomba, wife of Bishop Chomba, and Mwanza who works for the United Voice Radio station in Lusaka.  After the Sunday morning service at Siyavonga Main United Church of Zambia, we managed a quick visit to the Zambezi River and the Kariba dam and hydropower plant before traveling back to Lusaka. (I'd seen the structure once before, from the Zimbabwe side.)

The water level is shockingly low in both the lake and the river sides of the dam.  Lusaka and Kitwe boath have been experiencing daily 'load sharing' blackouts, and we had heard rumours that the dam/lake is low, but the sight is ominous.

October rains are expected, hoped for and prayed for.  Please join the people of Zambia praying for rain, and enough rain this year.

An article from Bloomberg News on-line, with assistance by Taonga Clifford Mitimingi, provides a sense of situation (written in August):

'The Kariba dam (lake) that straddles Zambia and Zimbabwe, the world’s biggest man-made reservoir, is emptying fast, sparking fears the countries may have to cut hydropower production there completely.

'For the two southern African nations already suffering daily blackouts and growing economic pressures -- Zimbabwe’s inflation rate surged to 176% in June, while the International Monetary Fund at the weekend warned Zambia could be on the brink of a debt crisis -- a total shutdown at Kariba would be crippling. Zambia gets about a third of its supply from the dam, Zimbabwe almost half.

'A severe regional drought has cut water levels at Kariba to 23% of capacity this month from 85% a year ago, prompting the two nations to trim output.

Zambia... has enough allocated water to continue feeding its turbines at a reduced rate until the year-end, according to Energy Minister Mathew Nkhuwa. “So if by the end of December, we don’t get enough rains, then that’s when we can think of having the problem of shutting down the generation,” he said by phone.

'Regional rains that replenish the reservoir usually start around October or November, but have been arriving later. For much of the Zambezi river basin that feeds Kariba they barely came at all in the past season. River levels at Chavuma, near Zambia’s border with Angola, are similar to 1996, which was the worst year in half a century of records.

'The drought has also hampered food production in Zambia and Zimbabwe, fueling inflation. In Zambia, output of the regional staple corn fell 17% to the lowest level in a decade.

'There is good reason for Chizengeya to fear a total shutdown at Kariba. During the drought of 2015-16, water levels were about a meter (3 feet) higher at this time of the year, and the dam bottomed out at 11% before rains refilled it. If higher temperatures this year cause more rapid evaporation and rains are delayed, the risks rise. Even so, at its trough in 2016, Kariba was still more than a meter above the minimum operating level, when turbines have to be switched off.'

 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-08-05/power-starved-zimbabwe-zambia-face-further-drought-induced-dark —

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Click here to enjoy more photos and the videos I have posted.
Ana's Zambia Journey blog link: https://zambiajourney.blogspot.com/

Sunday 6 October 2019

Where our treasure is, there our heart is

Muli shani! Greetings!


From England to Zambia and back again.
From home to a new home and back again.
       Thus far God has brought us.*
Sent by family and friends.
Received by friends who have become family.
Returned yet held.
       Thus far God has brought us.
A heart with a new piece beating in the land of Lusaka.
Joining pieces still beating in Chicago, New Hampshire, Mfanefile, Plumtree, Cleveland, Melbourne, Washington.
       Thus far God has brought us.
My heart, in all its pieces, sings with joy and gratitude.
How blessed I have been to share in your lives.
       Thus far God has brought us.


3rd year Bachelor of Theology students,
United Church of Zambia University

2nd year Bachelor of Theology students,
United Church of Zambia University

1st year Bachelor of Theology students,
United Church of Zambia University

*'Thus far the Lord / God / has brought us' is the 2019 theme of the United Church of Zambia.




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Click here to enjoy more photos and the videos I posted during my 11-week visit to Zambia.
Ana's Zambia Journey blog link: https://zambiajourney.blogspot.com/

Friday 4 October 2019

Psalm 46:1-11 – Zambian revision

Evening service, Men's Christian Fellowship Conference at Kasaka
Psalm 46:1-11 – Zambian revision*

God is our shelter and hiding place
Always with us to help us.
Regardless of hard times, God’s assurance is with us.
Even if challenges overwhelm us,
Or chaotic things are within us,
There is a place of peace where God is in control.
Because God is with us, we can be safe.
God’s rod shall reign forever.
The mighty one of Israel is our stronghold.
When we consider great things God has done,
the earth becomes silent.
God provides solutions to the economic and political struggles.
We are assured that God reigns forever.
The God of our ancestors is our shelter.

* Written cooperatively by a group of Ministry Students at United Church of Zambia University: Charles Mwanza,  Francis Muleta,  Alinani Peter Chitalu,  Fannie Juliet Kamenga, Mulindwa Mutale, Elijah Cholobo, Alice Kaonga  (First year in the Bachelor of Theology course)

Wednesday 2 October 2019

Looking ahead from a UK-perspective

Muli shani! Greetings from Salisbury, United Kingdom!

I arrived safely in Salisbury last night after a 24-hour trip via Dubai.  Gratefully, the sun has been shining today -- rain forcast for tomorrow.  Tod and I both have left part of our hearts in Zambia.

This Sunday we celebrate World Communion Sunday (started in 1938 by the Presbyterian Church) with a Zambian version of Psalm 37, a United Church of Zambia table cloth on the communion table and Zambian baskets for serving the bread.

Salisbury URC
Andover URC
I will be sharing a story from Zambia as I preach on the environment and the urgency of our response to the disastrous state of so much of our beloved world.

I'll be continuing with posts in the weeks ahead.  Spending 2 weeks at Westminster College in November will make sure of that.  I would be interested to find out who has been reading the blog, just out of curiosity.  So, if you have time, please drop me a line through the form in the right-hand panel.

Now I look forward to the arrival of Thandiwe and Cora on Sunday.  The week ahead will be filled with playing in our garden, walking to nearby Victoria Park to swing and slide, and swimming at the local leisure centre.  Life's rhythms alter and change, but gratefully are always filled with those we love -- family and friends.

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Click here to enjoy more photos and the videos I have posted while in Zambia.
Ana's Zambia Journey blog link: https://zambiajourney.blogspot.com/