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Lighting the Path- Swazi Journal

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Travel Journal

 Dear Ones across the continents,

Farewells, as greetings, are often emotional and full of surprises. Our closing week in Swaziland is no exception.

With that in mind, here are some tidbits and quotations we suspect will make you smile or make you cry.

  • As I write, Echo sits 7 feet from me talking to a 10-year-old girl and her grandmother who both just tested positive for HIV. Yes, they want to accept Jesus Christ right now! We're at home today, but "mini-clinics" and hospital trips happen all times of the days and nights.
  • We have started offering HIV testing here and at the clinics. The government recently began to offer anti-retroviral drugs for those with HIV, but the drugs need to be taken monthly at special centers. Swazis are not known for long-term planning, because it's such a struggle to get through today...
  • Six of the first 7 adults we tested have the deadly virus. Most are women who are wives.
  • "The doctors are here!" Swazis exclaimed as we drove into a clinic later than usual yesterday. We finished treating everyone at 1 AM.
  • An old man received his eyeglasses: "Now I can see a bee pass by."
  • "The glasses can see better than my eyes," said a young man.
  • When Goodwill addresses the crowds, educating them how to use their distance eyeglasses, he says: "Wear your new glasses. Do not put them in your pocket. Your pocket does not have the problem."
  • From an elderly lady: "I can see the sky and the sun and the mountains for the first time in my life."
  • "We can grow gardens if we have seeds," teachers often told us last September and October. Now they have seeds.
  • "Siyabonga very much for my new dress." This thank you was repeated for wraps, diapers, handbags, slippers, skirts, blankets, baby clothes loving made by many of you.
  • Harry to a family gathered around the bed of a pickup where their 39-year-old mother lay: "I'm sorry to tell you that your loved one is dying of cancer. All you can do is make her comfortable and make sure she's right with Jesus." The family was so appreciative that a doctor had finally told them what was wrong. The lady had been hospitalized for 3 weeks and then released with no explanation as to her disease or condition. "I can't believe how people suffer quietly and without any information."
  • Kal and I and the boys have visited the hospital maternity and pediatrics wards 24 times, giving gifts to more than 2,500 mothers. People thank us with smiles and handshakes and an occasional "God bless you" in English. Truly He does!
  • The healer (witchdoctor) lady who poisoned Big Sipho's 2-year-old daughter to protest his Christianity has been ostracized by her clientele. Sipho said, "Because of what she did, no one goes to her anymore."
  • "You are blessed by God. The white people are taking care of you," said the hospital roommate of a man who had cut his hand with a machete in the sugarcane fields. The injured man came to our clinic a month later. His hand was infected and 3 times it's normal size. He has since recovered and can return to his job.
  • One translator told us his mother keeps supper for him. One evening we unexpectedly saw that supper - 3 small turnips.
  • Another translator: "I am too blessed," when he was presented with gifts from The Luke Commission.
  • Still another: "I will not forget what The Luke Commission has done for me," as he tearfully buried his face in his baby son's new clothes.

To God be the glory! Great things he has done! Love in Jesus,
Jan for Harry and Echo and the boys, Grace, and Kalvin.

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Past Entries 

TLC – Stuck on 3rd Base, but Heading for Home

TLC Stories of Deliverance Start and End at the Cross

The Luke Commission Hits the Road – Once Again

Swazi Team Awaits Expectantly & Joyfully

2010 Vehicle Fund Update

So What about Swaziland? - Jake, Luke, Zeb, Zion

Faces Shine Forth in Idaho Gala Crowd

TLC Ohio Auction Inspires Young & Old to Get Involved

Students Serving in Swaziland Speak Out

TLC Spitting-Snake Week, Plus Three.

Wheels are Turning at Luke Commission Clinics

Alumni Spotlight: Echo VanderWal '00

Jesus' Sacrificial Love Seen in Mothers' Lives Here

On the Road Again with The Luke Commission

Swazi Leaders Review The Luke Commission

TLC Team Members Light the Path from Here to Swaziland

Laborers Here Produce for Swazis There

The VanderWal Boys Tell All!

TLC Makes-Do in Swaziland, While God Crafts the Outcome

AIDS Portion of TLC Bush Clinics Grows with Assistance from Afar

Seeing Beyond Statistics to the Heart of the Matter

Visiting the Sick in Swaziland - It's Like Anywhere Else and It's Not Like Anywhere Else

The Luke Commission Adds Surgeries and Chickens to Their Menagerie

Travel Journal: You are There - Experience a Luke Commission Clinic Firsthand - Manzini, Swaziland

Travel Journal: Too Much Work to Leave... Harry and Echo from Swaziland

Travel Journal: Amid Medical Clinics, Kids Receive Operation Christmas Child Boxes

Travel Journal: The AIDS Battle Brings Out the Best and the Worst

Travel Journal: Faith Like a Grain of Mustard Seed Grows

Travel Journal: The Luke Commission... It's a Puzzle with So Many Pieces

Travel Journal: Miracles Abound Amid the Clutches of AID

Travel Journal: Swaziland as Viewed through Children's Eyes

Travel Journal: The Gift of Sight Given Outwardly and Inwardly

Travel Journal: Running Swazi Pharmacies out of Medicine Turns to Blessing in Disguise

Travel Journal: One by One, the Young Come with Full-Blown AIDS

Travel Journal: A Boy, A Bus, A Spider... And Hope In The Midst

Travel Journal: When that white bald-headed doctor sings...

Travel Journal: From security lapses to sugared engines welcome VanderWals to Swaziland

Travel Journal: Humbled and Thrilled, the VanderWals Return to Africa

Ministry Update - Dear Luke Commission Friends

Ministry Update - Dear Ones in the U.S. and Canada

Travel Journal - Dear Luke Commission supporters

Travel Journal - Dear Ones across the continents

Travel Journal - Here's another update from Swaziland

Travel Journal - Greetings from The Luke Commission

Travel Journal - Dear Ones back Home

Travel Journal - Sawubona from Swaziland

Travel Journal - We look forward to these updates

Travel Journal - Dear Ones who love the Swazis

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland!

TLC NEWSFLASH!!! (Issue 2)

TLC NEWSFLASH!!! (Issue 1)

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland

Travel Journal - Dear Ones

Travel Journal - Dear Ones back home

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland on a Wednesday morning in early spring

 

"I want to thank The Luke Commission for giving me a second chance in life. When you found me in the bush I was like the man who had leprosy in Mark 1:40-42 and you healed me." 

Lwazi Lishaba

13 year old who was about to lose his leg because of a postsurgical infection.

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