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(written far too many months afterwards)
Warning: This is very long, but I hope it'll be worth your time. This whole idea to go to So, you can imagine that this couple needed a little break, having had no vacation together since living here. In November, a guy they bumped into (who happened to work for Thai Airways) offered them a steal-of-a-deal package to go down to When Jim dialed up his internet connection on December 26 and first beheld the devastation where he and his wife just were, he immediately felt the urge, almost a duty, to go down there to help. Unsure of the capacity in which he was to serve (should he go alone or with a team?, help rebuild infrastructure or do more counseling/ministry?), the next few days, Jim searched to figure that out. A few days later, Jim woke up one morning to read an email from another foreigner living in These two, along with their daughters and some high-schoolers and college kids from Bo’s international church in another city in The second act of kindness was from a 13-year-old girl who lives upstairs from us in a one-room apartment with her mother. [I have also written about this girl before.] She’s the child prodigy pianist. She is from south Okay, on to the part about our time in This was our first introduction to It was lunch time by then. Bo and Chris couldn’t wait for us to meet someone that they’d all grown to love during the previous week. During the first week, Bo, Chris, and daughters got to stay for two nights free of charge at the $500-a-night Marriot Resort Club. Yep. One of the local church ladies worked in management there, and since it was nearly completely vacant, she pulled some strings for them (after Jim and Bo had been sleeping in a humid, mosquito-laden, single-bed hut for a couple days). One morning they were all looking for a cheap place to eat. Jim noticed out his back window a hut about a hundred meters away in the middle of a bean field. They went on foot, through the field. The owner’s name was “Granny” (her Thai name sounded similar, though she was only in her late 50s). They all sat down for a meal fresh out of the ocean. Over the meal, Bo talked with Granny and her two sons (both in their twenties) about their tsunami experiences. Jim and Bo noticed that one of Granny’s sons’ arms and legs had open-flesh wounds. As the first wave (there were two) was edging back into the ocean, he was ‘lucky’ enough to grab onto a palm tree and hang on for dear life while the next wave engulfed the area. Bo, because of his incredible fluency in Thai, got to be the one to talk with Granny and her sons about the possibility the God has preserved their lives for a reason. That day, Granny and sons professed to be believers upon hearing the Good News. The team gave them New Testaments in their own Thai language. When Frank and I arrived at Granny’s hut, we first saw her plodding through her bean field with a towel wrapped around her. She’d just come from bathing somewhere in the back of the field. She unexpectedly gave me a big hug with a beaming grin across her face. She got dressed and then made us some Thai tea and cut a fresh pineapple for us. I looked around her restaurant/shop/home – which was an open-air bamboo hut – to see that her all-plank wood bed had on it a pillow, a folded-up blanket, a pair of spectacles, and a New Testament, opened and faced down to mark a page. Besides serving us up the best tea I’d tasted in a long time (besides my Mamaw’s & Aunt Tammy’s, of course), she asked us if we could come share with her friends the same Good News that she’d received. “Of course,” Bo replied. Bo contacted the local church there that we were working under and lined up a Thai lady, ‘Ad’, who had just moved from Late that afternoon, our team arrived at Granny’s. When we wheeled around the curvy road and pulled up in the gravel driveway, there were more Thai ladies there than local fire laws permitted for such a small space, I’m sure. Standing room only. After going around and introducing ourselves, ‘Ad’ began to share and relate to these ladies in a way that only a local Thai person could. Bo was translating for the non-Thai speakers there. I really admired the way Ad shared her faith. Nothing about it was manipulative or out of sheer emotionalism, yet it wasn’t dry and trite. It conveyed her love and sincere care for these ladies. So much was her care for these ladies that after most of them professed to believe that day, Ad brought them along side her and has been discipling them in the faith. Right afterwards, one of the few men that came to that meet-up told Bo about the fishing village where he and his wife come from. It is a “sea gypsy” village. This group of people doesn’t really historically belong to either the Thai heritage or to next-door-neighbor Though their village and huts went unharmed, their lack of fishing boats were a major problem, as they lived as subsistence fishermen. More major, though, was that – according to what was translated to us – these sea gypsies had recently been involved in satanic worship (including all of the horrors of such – like incestuous births and even child sacrifice). And before that, they were practicing Buddhism. They seemed to be searching for something not-of-this-world. We agreed to go with the couple back to their village, but only to initially survey the scene. Knowing the task ahead of us and before going to visit there a while, we wanted to make sure that we went in there prepared – and by that I mean two things: 1) that we had thoroughly prayed over the situation, and 2) that we had something to give them – either some songs in their language or games for the children, etc. We loaded up in our rental vans, where you drive on the left side of the road with the steering wheel on the right side, and headed over to their camp. It’s hard to describe the kind of welcome we received. Mind you, our group of foreigners-living-in-China were staying in the resort area of Phuket, but there are definitely places that you can drive to from there where few foreigners have been before, and this had to be one of them from the looks on these peoples’ faces. We were giggled and laughed at a lot by the children (mostly in a good way, we think), with some younger ones hiding behind their mother’s/big sister’s legs. I had my digital camera out, and the children got so excited seeing themselves in the display after I took some shots. They began to pose and then gather in huge groups, drawing a crowd of others from around the camp. No one seemed to want to be left out. The next morning, we started off the day with a longer-than-usual group devotional time. Then we went to the local version of Wal-Mart and bought up all the little plastic toys they had. On the long drive out to their village, we tried to learn the Thai version of some oldies-but-goodies Sunday school songs to share with the kids. When we finally drove up (we were running late, but on “Thai time”, that’s not such a big deal), they were all standing there waiting on us. More people than were there the day before. A lot more. Some kid shouted out that we had arrived, and then more people came out. They must’ve called the other nearby huts beforehand to join them in hanging with the foreigners. They just kept on coming. Ever heard the expression, “Coming out of the woodwork”? This could be where it came from. Literally I saw a guy climb out of a tree. I think he was considered the outcast (he had a very serious facial deformity). Our team didn’t know where we were going to hold all these people in one big meeting place. It was such a sight to see the pure excitement in these people, especially in the children. I’m pretty sure that these kids don’t go to a formal government school, so this could’ve been the most amusing entertainment they’d had in a while. Long story (made) short: Well over 50 children that afternoon (and into the evening) said that they believed in Jesus and prayed to accept Christ. A few of them had had some volunteer teachers in the past who had shared with them the same message, so this wasn’t all that new to them. The kids who had heard before were even helping teach some of the other kids by the end of the evening. Though a little less receptive, several adults in the sea gypsy village also made the same decision. Update: More adults since then have also decided that Jesus is the answer since we were there the first day. The local church has also since then planted a church there, and the sea gypsies seem to be flourishing in the truth, worshipping sea-gypsy style, if you can imagine! Among the people that Jim and his wife met on their anniversary to Phuket in November 2004, one Thai family that he Jim wanted to check on owned a beach-side barbeque dive. Or so they used to. It was all washed away, even the down to the palms trees that provided shade for their livelihood - the sand surrounding the roots was gone, and the tall coconut trees were quickly dying. The mother, father, and their two school-aged sons were, like almost everyone else there, in serious need of getting their business (and tourists) back. Before we arrived, another group of foreigners befriended this family and personally helped them build an even better hut restaurant than before. Then along came the Thai government, who tore it all down and hauled it off because they didn’t have a permit. I’m not blaming their government; I understand the need for having those things regulated and controlled, but this seemed a little too swift-and-severe after such a devastating blow had just hit their people. Before the whole team went to visit them, Jim and Bo walked over just to make sure they were even still there. When they came back, they warned us about what shock the wife was in. Jim said that she was just off in a daze the whole time, a very marked contrast to the sprightly little woman who’d served up some fine fixin’s for them months earlier. When the whole team arrived, we saw that they’d set up some lounge chairs that they’d found washed up, put up a stringy tarpaulin over a large ice-chest, and had a sign set up that basically said, “Take what you want, pay what you will”. On the first visit, we saw that they were in need of some clothes. We knew just where to get some for them. In our hotel we met a couple from somewhere in middle America – the husband a pilot for United and the wife who’d just recovered from breast cancer – who had just flown over and brought some hand-me-downs collected from their neighborhood. On our next trip, this American couple came with us and brought their bagsful of stuff. The little woman’s face was just starting to light up towards the end of our time with them. When we left, she was smiling and hugging us and telling us to come back again soon. Walking away, we actually prayed (among other things) that God would bring the life back to those trees for that family. Bo brought his guitar on our second visit. He walked up to the hut singing Paul Simon, which attracted the younger beach bums and European retirees lounging there. It was a Sunday, and we had just come from church and still hadn’t changed clothes yet. Our clothing puzzled some of the foreigners there, which opened us up to share with them why we were in Claudia kept thanking us for coming and telling us that our eyes were so beautiful. She had a few other interesting stories about the tsunami – like about her Swedish friend’s husband who was told that his wife was seen in the undertow and was actually happy because then he couldn’t be found out about on his affair with a local girl, only to see his wife walk in the room alive three days later and catch them together. I got to meet this lady, Lizzy, and she was a wreck. What could I offer these people? It’s sometimes incredibly frustrating to not be able to speak every language in the world at my own command, and then sometimes it makes it so much simpler just to smile, hug, look into their eyes, listen, and watch hand and body gestures. Sometimes so much more is communicated when languages differ, especially in times of crisis. But for children, I think that may be a different story. When our team went to visit a temporary school complex where many of the children had lost a mother or a father or a sibling or all of them, they all seemed so joyful. Really, they did. That day we teamed up with the Marriot and brought huge barrels of ice cream to the school. We served the world-wide favorite snack to the youngsters during their afternoon break. The team made three visits to this same school throughout the week. Upon the first visit, most of the children were wearing hilarious clothing. All of their belongings were gone, so they were just wearing whatever they found that washed up on the side of the road. Little boys in only BigNTall button-up shirts down to their knees; girls in men’s overhauls (as Jerry Clower called them); junior high boys in frilly pink pants. You could tell that they thought it was a little awkward, but probably just because they were used to wearing their white buttoned-up shirt and plaid pants/skirts as their uniform. They weren’t embarrassed. Everyone was doing it. They had set up makeshift tents outside. I have one picture of a table full of boys doing their math studies and right next to the table was a washed-up ski boat. On the other side of the lot was a green little compact car that looked like it had been wrapped around a palm tree about three of four times, limbs and debris sticking out of every crevice. After our team ate some lunch that was served up by the Thai military (chicken fingers sent directly from After the school had emptied out their ice cream barrels, we re-stocked and went to another site – the DNA identification and forensic center. Heavily guarded by friendly Thai soldiers, the entire area was boarded in. On these walls were all kinds of tsunami memorabilia. Drawings, paintings, letters, flowers, flags, and signatures were sent from places around the world to let the Thai people know that others out there cared. I got to read some of the sweetest letters from an elementary school in On into the taped-off area, we served ice cream to workers coming out of refrigerated storing trailers, covered from head to toe in bio-hazardous materials suits and masks. They had come from all over the world. Many of them have been there for the world’s floods, earthquakes, fires, train derailings, plane crashes, mine explosions, and hurricanes in our recent history. These are the people that are there before others come and stay after others leave. I knew nothing about these people and yet I admired them in so many ways for their service to the global community. I think, though, that the real continuation of service will come from the local people. And the Hope of Talong Church is definitely on the ball with this one --- seeking out people that would otherwise be overlooked for government aid, digging in and meeting these people’s material needs firstly, maintaining that relationship at least on a weekly basis, and then bringing them into fellowship with other believers. Our team went with this local church group to a temporary housing complex for an afternoon. The church came armed with electric fans, snacks, and the Good News of hope to bring to these very devastated people. One five square meter room – with concrete flooring and unfinished particle board walls – served as places of residence for about 100+ families. Passing by handing out some cold water, I noticed some rooms filled to the brim with kids and other family members and all their stuff and lots of noise. In some, there would just be one person, sitting alone surrounded by nothingness and silence. I was glad that a lot of the new church members were there with us, the ones from Granny’s. One of the new believers partnered with me, and she and I went into one of these single-person rooms to assemble a fan for a man. My partner spoke in Thai to him and shared with him some things (I can only guess what). His expressionless face and blank-staring eyes were hauntingly like the lady’s from the barbeque beach hut. I’m pretty sure that he’d lost everything. Wife, young children, house. The next group of about seven people that we talked to was in a pretty similar situation. This time, though, Jim and Bo and one of the local church pastors were on hand. Frank and I just got to stand there and marvel at their openness (both toward talking to us about their experiences and losses, and toward listening to what the young preacher was sharing). We were standing right outside one of the buildings, and the whole time, we heard someone weeping and moaning. We just assumed that it was the old man sitting off to the side on the edge of the plank with his head hung down. But as we were walking away, Jim saw that it was actually an old lady sitting in the corner inside the house. I thought a bit about this lady afterwards, whom I couldn’t even look at, just had listened to her crying. She got me wondering about the grieving process of different people / people groups all over the world. With the international church that we go to in Our last day of service was spent repairing a temporary schoolhouse in a very predominantly Muslim district. Directly across the street from our worksite stood a mosque complete with a minaret, and all around the neighborhood atop telephone and light poles were megaphones bellowing out static-y incantations of prayers at certain periods throughout the day. I painted shutters inside the schoolhouse with the other women while Frank lay concrete flooring outside for a playground area with the men. Our ‘ Right after that, one of the teachers grabbed me by the arm and took me over to her motor-scooter (as my dad calls them), asking me to go for a ride. I hopped on. We winded up and around hills, passing eagles and monkeys along the way. We arrived at a little hut community and parked at one of them. I hopped off and followed her down to where her four-month-old baby boy was hanging from an all-cloth Thai-style baby holder (for lack of a better description). Her sister-in-law and niece, who live with the teacher and her husband, were watching the baby for her. They asked me if I wanted some oranges and then pointed to an orange tree and a ladder in the backyard. They laughed the whole time I struggled to keep my balance while tugging them loose from their branches. The teacher took me on a tour all over their home, pointing out the line of mud all around the walls where the water had risen so high. It was at least up to my chest. The bottom floor was bare; everything had washed away. They didn’t even have kitchenware to cook. She took me upstairs to their bedroom and showed me wedding pictures and baby pictures. From the looks of her at special events and upon seeing other veiled women in their family, it seems that she was Muslim. I wondered what her husband was going to think, how she was going to tell him… Earlier in the day I had complimented her on her hot pink pants. Little did I know that in Thai culture people are willing to just give it to you on the spot. Most all of her clothes were washed away, too, but did that stop her from giving me those pants AND a tropical wrap skirt? I couldn’t refuse them; that would be rude. Every time I wear them, I think of that sweet lady and pray that she will continue to seek the one true Lord. Update: The team returned to the school the next week. After telling Jim that this teacher had no clothes and with some leftover clothes donations from the American pilot and his wife, Jim went back to give this lady the rest of them. When Jim opened the van door, the first thing the teacher saw in there was a baby stroller. She giddily said (in Thai), “Is this for me?” No, it actually wasn’t bought with her in mind, but for one of the sea gypsy villagers whose baby boy had a severe case of cerebral palsy and had to be carried in his mother’s arms everywhere. But Jim certainly could get another one. The teacher apparently was far more thrilled about the baby stroller than her new clothes. On our way out of the country on our long layover in the |
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