After 5 years, I returned to Kenya for seventeen days as a
chaperone with a high school group from my alma mater. We were a group of 23-
16 high school students, 5 teachers, and 2 elementary students. I hadn’t met
any of the team before the trip except for one of the teachers Dave Layton who
I had had when I was in high school 12 years before.
We departed from the Seattle
airport on July 19 and flew the fourteen hours to Dubai in the

U.A.E. Dubai was
a fascinating place to visit—built up from an obscure port village, it has
become the showcase city of the Middle East demonstrating Arab wealth and
power. There was a sense that it was trying a little too hard at times to outdo
the West. It also reminded me of a Las Vegas kind of city, built up out of the desert
with very little authentic historic culture there. Everything was new and
“modern” from their metro to their architecture. There was a lot of boasting of
uniqueness in Dubai. I am glad I visited, but wouldn’t want to ever live there!
We stayed in a hotel 10 minutes
away from the airport, and I enjoyed a room to myself with a view overlooking a
large construction site below. I fell asleep to the sounds of Muslim prayers on
a Muslim TV station showing images of thousands of pilgrims who had made the pilgrimage
to Mecca for Ramadan. I woke early to watch a hazy sunrise out my high rise
windows. After a buffet breakfast the following morning we all piled in a tour
bus that gave us a two-hour tour around the city. I think my favorite part was
getting out on the white sand beaches of the Persian Gulf (or as the tour guide
said the “Arabian Gulf”). The water must have been close to 90 degrees, and it
was amusing to imagine Iran just across the gulf through the haze.
Then after a four-hour flight down
into Africa, we arrived in Nairobi. We cruised through customs and reconnected
with all our checked luggage (something that

doesn’t always happen). We met our
contact at the airport, Maureen, who would be our main Kenyan coordinator for
our visit.

Somehow we were able to pack our 30
bags and ourselves all into a rented bus and we rumbled down the road into the
suburbs of Nairobi toward our guesthouse where we would stay that night.
Returning to Kenya felt very smooth and easy. Unlike one’s first trip somewhere
that requires new categories to be developed and everything seems so new and
different, returning to a foreign country that you have a familiarity requires
less processing.
We settled in our guesthouse and
ordered pizza and soda. Dave and I went out for a beer at a
local bar and
enjoyed catching up and talking about what we expected of the trip. The
following day we went out to breakfast at a very nice coffeehouse/restaurant.
It was the best breakfast I had ever had in Africa: omelets, fresh brewed
coffee, toast, and jam.

We finally got underway later that
morning on the 9 hour cross country bus trip from Nairobi in central Kenya to
Kisumu in the west. The bus ride was what was to be expected: vistas of the
Rift Valley, poor villages, children waving to our bus, clamoring vendors
whenever we slowed to a stop, and a herd of zebras.
Soon in grew dark and we entered
through the busy streets of Kisumu. I grew somewhat giddy at seeing the
familiar streets and buildings, and excitedly noted all the change and development
that had occurred in the past five years. Forty minutes later we had pulled
through the gates at the farm, and Marit (my friend from Bainbridge) and Shebby
(one of the boys who live on the farm who I had known from living on the farm)
came out to greet us. It was wonderful to be back and they led the way to a
newer building that I had helped while it was still under construction years
before but had never been in. They gave me the master bedroom in the house,
which was very kind of them.

The next day we began our
acclamation process: meeting our cook (who proved to be an excellent chef for
our whole trip), taking a tour of the farm, and meeting with the compound
pastor who talked to us about how to navigate through culture shock. That night
all the teachers in the group met at my house to what became a nightly
tradition of Gin and Tonics while debriefing the day. Those nightly meetings
became one of my favorite parts of the trip: good people, good stories, and
good jokes.

On day 3 we took a trip over the
high school beside the farm. Our hosts ushered us adults into the Headmaster’s
office to sign their guestbook and found my entry I had made when I had come to
speak at their chapel 6 years ago! We sat in on a math class with an excellent
teacher, and introduced ourselves to several of the classes. The whole school
assembled in the quad for a presentation of introductions and gifts. We gave
them some soccer balls and some school supplies, and they made some lengthy
speeches.
Later that day six of us from the
group walked over the school to play in a soccer match with the boys. We were
split up on each team and one of the American girls scored the only goal much
to the delight of the animated crowd.

The next day we took a visit to the
local primary school, where I had directed a rendition of
A Midsummer Nights
Dream 6 years ago. We were instantly
surrounded by dozens of Kenyan children all clamoring for the picture to be
taken and then to gather around the camera to see themselves in the picture.
The school also assembled for introductions and presentations. The school choir
was preparing to compete at the national level in the next few weeks and they
sang us several of their songs that were truly remarkable.

Later we went to visit an old sugar
cane factory that had been shut down for over a decade. It was full of rusty
columns of smoke
stacks and old conveyor belts. There were some moments of
walking along darkened sheet metal planks 60 feet in the air, hoping that the
old beleaguered flooring would withstand the weight of our group’s crossing. At
one point we had to trek through a floor the stank of bat droppings. It felt
like a set from Indiana Jones or some apocalyptic movie. I kept thinking, there
is no way a school group would be allowed to go a derelict factory like this in
the States fraught with danger, but it sure is exciting to walk around this
place!

For the next three days the group
went out to survey in surrounding villages in the vicinity of
the farm. We
worked for at least eight hours a day going from house to house speaking with
residents about their health history and access to medical care. The survey was
developed by two doctors, one an American and one a Kenyan, to develop the
medical mission of the farm. Since 90% of the peasants we interviewed didn’t
speak English, the Americans in our team mostly sat patiently in the homes as
the Kenyan leader spoke in Swahili or one of the local dialects. Then when the
verbal questions on the survey were complete, we would take the measurements of
height, weight, blood pressure, and dental observations of everyone that lived
in the house. It was a great way for these American students to get a sense of
life in rural Africa. We spent hours in mud huts and walking along red dirt
paths through maize fields, forests, and pastures with cows, goats, and sheep
grazing contentedly.

One of the days that the rest of
the group went surveying, I went into Kisumu with a smaller group to do some
errands. I went to the Anglican cathedral tailor who took some measurements of
me for a robe and a clerical shirt. Then we had a delicious lunch at a top
notch Indian Restaurant, and walked across town to wait for our ride home.


At the end of our first week, we
took a hike up the Nandi escarpment to the Nandi Rock. It is a beautiful but
grueling hike straight up maybe a thousand feet. After resting at the top and
enjoying the views over the whole valley where the farm is, one group went on
for another four hour hike while the rest of us took a 45 minute walk through
the gorgeous landscape of Nandi—green rolling hills, huge exposed granite rock,
red dirt, herds of cows, and small rivers all untouched by roads or
electricity. It is the quintessential idyllic pre-industrial lifestyle that we
sometimes picture.

The next day I rose early and ate
breakfast in the dark with a group of eight. We had two taxis
waiting for us
outside to take us into Kisumu. We drove through the vacant streets as the sun
slowly crept over the horizon and we soon arrived at the Anglican cathedral just
after 7am. I had been asked to speak at the early morning service to the young
adults. This week the Anglican Archbishop of Kenya was visiting so they had set
up an outside service that could seat 700. The first service was about a third
full, just over 200 people. I changed into my robe and the officiating priest
and I processed to the altar. A worship band composed of college students were
singing earnestly some Kenyan choruses in Swahili. We proceeded through the
Morning Prayer service and I preached a sermon on the future of global
Christianity coming to Africa and challenging the youth to choose wisely in the
decisions that would shape the character of African Christianity.

After the youth service we went to
take an hour break at a hotel restaurant and had breakfast. When we returned I
arrived just in time to slip into the procession before the bishop and
archbishop. I found a seat amongst the priests of the diocese in the back row
and settled in for the four hour service. The archbishop’s message was remarkably
similar to the one I had given at the first service, which several of the
priests noted to me later. After speeches by all the VIP people present
including a politician running for office, we processed out. I briefly met the
archbishop and greeted the bishop that had confirmed me 6 years ago. The rest
of the group had left a couple hours before the service had ended and I
accompanied a group of 60 VIP folks from the church to a pool side hotel
restaurant for lunch. Even before everyone had finished eating there were more
speeches made in honor of the visiting archbishop, and gifts were presented to
him. I left and went out
to chat with one of the younger priests who had been
studying in theology in Pittsburg. When all was said and done I spent about 10
hours that day at church events. I was exhausted the next day.

The following week was made up of
more surveying days. On the last day I went surveying, my group surveyed the
factory housing for the brand new sugar cane factory. It felt like I had gone
back in time to the industrial revolution of the 19
th century in
Britain or the US. These little one room concrete apartments were built by the
factory and lived in by the families of the workers. I didn’t meet a single
person over the age of forty. I saw very few religious pictures or posters
(which was very common in the rural villages). And many of the apartments
didn’t have sofas or chairs to host visitors. Here was an example of a group of
young people “de-contextualizing” from their village life. For the sake of a
better paying job (factory workers were making about $80 a month), they were
leaving their values of hospitality, spirituality, and connection to their
elders behind. It was a rather depressing place.

Midweek the group loaded up into a
bus and drove a couple hours north to the Kakamega rainforest. We went to visit
a youth correctional facility and played a game of soccer with some of the
boys, which we promptly lost. As were taking a tour of the site, a huge rain
storm came sweeping through stranding us in one of the dorm rooms (remarkably
similar to the bunkroom in
Cool Hand Luke).
It was one of the most wild rain storms I had been in with close to hurricane
strength winds and lightning striking just a couple miles from where we were
huddled. Eventually the storm passed and we had the rapt attention of 450 boys
who had been sent there for theft, murder, and rape. We literally sang and
danced for them, and then presented a gift of soccer balls and other school
supplies.

As we dispersed and were loading
back into the bus, dozens of boys began shouting and
running across the field.
I hung out the bus door and asked what was going on. “Escape! One of the boys
has tried to escape!” Our group grew a little nervous as the chaos of hundreds
of convicts swarmed the field all yelling and running, without even a hint of a
guard anywhere to be seen. I promptly closed the door and we sat watching the
excitement brew around us. Soon we drove over to the prison gate, but were
notified that the guard with the key was out on the manhunt. We waited for
another 15 minutes, the key finally appeared, and the bus slid up the muddy
road back to the rainforest.

We all slept in little bungalows
that night and the next morning we got up early and hiked out to a look out
over the entire rainforest to see the sunrise. It was stunningly gorgeous—the
low lying mist hanging in the treetops like water swirling around tiny islands.
The sunrise was one of the most beautiful I’ve ever seen.
The rest of the day we hiked through
the rainforest and saw lots of white-faced monkeys and a roaring waterfall. One
of the teachers, Brad Lewis, had been feeling rather sick for the last couple
of days, and while we were off hiking he was getting tested for malaria. When
we returned he announced that indeed was had malaria. When we returned to the
farm the rest of the team got tested and it turned out that two other students
had malaria as well. That would have meant that all three had been infected the
night we arrived in Nairobi since it is a two week incubation period!
Later that week we took a tour of
the brand new sugar cane factory. It was quite impressive with its massive
efficiency and high productivity turning thousands of tons of cane into bags of
sugar to be sent all over Kenya each day. It was much larger than the old
defunct factory we had seen the previous week, but much less character. This
was a demonstration in modernity’s capability of raw
power.
The last full day I spent with the
team we went into Kisumu and I went out to lunch with Maureen’s parents who as
it turned out knew a couple from my church in Hawaii! We had plenty to talk
about and had a great time together. I really liked Michael, Maureen’s father.
The last day I spent on the farm I
got up and was surprised to find one of the high school boys at my doorstep. “I
didn’t get to say goodbye last night,” he said, and we said our goodbyes there.
Later Solomon and Shebby, two of the orphan boys I had known from my prior
trips, came to see me off. The only way that I had found to get into town from
the farm was by a tuk tuk (a little three wheeled bike) that delivers milk from
the dairy all along the road to Kisumu. The tuk tuk ride was one rough ride, let me tell you. No shocks—squeezed in on the
small seat with Austin the driver, crashing through two foot deep pot holes. My
shoulder was bruised the next day from slamming into the side door for two and
a half hours.

I was dropped off at the Cathedral,
spoke to the college group, attended a energetic service at the Cathedral, had
lunch with the college group, and was taken to the airport by my friends
Joshua. 48 hours, 5 planes, 2 buses, 2 cars, 2 trains, and 1 tuk tuk later I
was back in Hawaii!
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