Thursday, March 24, 2011

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/24/11, Pastor Jim

I keep thinking about yesterday and those three hundred deaf kids. Many of them were wearing the large hearing aids that hang down behind their ears like my dad wore. They were tied together by a cord that ran across the back side of their heads so they would not lose one of them while playing. However, most of them had total hearing loss. It was sad, but also comical to see them in an animated conversation with their little hands. They can really go fast, even the little ones.

As we were ready to say out good-bys some of them signed their feelings about our having been there to give them medical care. Their messages were touching to all of us. As we left many of them followed us us to street toward the waiting bus and gave us bid hugs and even a little kiss on our cheek. Very few had dry eyes boarding the bus. What a joyful reminder of what the Lord can do with the few fish and loaves we were able to give them yesterday! This was a powerful healing medication for both them and us.

Back this up with our clinic to the Youth Shelter today and you have the microcosm of the human struggle for survival and the victories that come when a community loves and serves one another. We treated two hundred and seven children today from about 8 years old up to about the 9th grade level. We were there from 8:30 am until 7:30 pm. It takes longer at the Youth Shelter because binh tries to get a short history from all the new arrivals. So many of them are there because they have been abandoned by their parents, sold into the sex trade by a guardian or even a parent or grand parent, kicked out for whatever reasons, etc. For example one of the 13 year old girls came to the shelter a year ago after being under the control of a pimp since she was 8 years old. The tragic stories go on and on.

Many of the kids have to have dental care. Some teeth are pulled, but many others are filled. Those who have arrived in the last two months may have some physical problems that need treatment, but for the most part the staff at the Youth Shelter take good care of the kids. This is like a night and day difference from what it was when COPI first started working with the shelter in 1993. At that time the staff carried sticks to beat the kids into submission and the living conditions were worse than bad. Now the kids go to school, are taught a trade and most important of all, they are given respect and love by the staff. For most of them this is the first time they ever experienced love or respect as a person. Pastor Jeff and I were walking around looking at the buildings etc. and got into a conversation with the shelter manager. She answered many of Jeff's questions, but she said something that brought a tear to my eye. She said, "I have worked here for 15 years, not for the small pay, but because I love these children." I don't know if she is a comrade or not, or even a Christian, but I do know she has the Spirit of Jesus working through her. "The wind blows through the trees and we know not from where it comes or goes... the same for the Spirit... The Lord always shows up in the most unexpected places.

In spite of the long day everyone worked well with each other and I did not hear any grumbling etc. The only thing I saw were some of the team members slipping out to the side of a building to shed some tears and recompose themselves before pitching right back into their ministry as best they could.

It has been a great team effort and a marvelous adventure into a new culture and the lives of it's people. We are not allowed to use a direct witness, but I have always believed that the love that sparkles through our eyes and the love that is communicated through our actions and touch carries the message of a loving Savior. There is a time and a season for all things... this is the time and season to open doors through our attitudes and humble gifts of love.

On the back of this years COPI t-shirt are these words: "If you don't stand up for children, you don't stand for much."

Jim

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/23/11, Pastor Jim

The medical team is now in Saigon and staying at the Rex hotel. Over the years the Rex has been very generous to Children of Peace. It is a wonderful respite for a tired and weary group of folks, it also highlights the contrasts that exists in so much of our world. Editor's note (Barbara Munter).

Begin forwarded message:

We were up at five, showered, dressed and ready for leading devotions at 5:45. Jeff read about Jesus feeding the five thousand. His devotion was about how the people were tired, the disciples wanted to pack up and go home, not enough provisions, etc, etc. Somehow it all seems to fit at 5:45 in the morning facing another big clinic day!

Then we walked the marble halls, carpeted steps, spotless lobby, perfectly quiet elevators, and found ourselves transported to this huge breakfast layout that would have made a king salivate and for sure fed at least five thousand orphans! No we had not died and gone to heaven, we had just gone up five floors at the Rex Hotel!

Thirty minutes later we were on a large bus heading for the oldest school for the deaf in Vietnam. At that time of the day more mopeds than have ever been made formed rivers of humanity on their way to build all the stuff we buy at Wal-mart, Target, Sams Club, Costco, etc. How a huge bus can thread its way through this incredible traffic is a wonder to behold. It is truly a dance with its own Asian rhythm to the music of restrained honking of the horns, and hugging one another with an intimate one or two inches to spare between cars, mopeds, trucks and buses. After a while we hardly notice the death defying moves of late to work moped riders trying to call the office on their mobile phones.

An hour later we arrive at the refuge for the deaf children. It is hidden on a narrow street. There are several large two story low profile buildings with large rooms, dormitory, school, etc for over 300 deaf children from all backgrounds in Vietnam. The Nuns are the usual kind, pleasant and very efficient people we have grown to love and respect in this country. They, like the children, have lived through tough times with only their faith and wits to chart a course into the future. Binh's mother used to come to this place many years ago, bringing binh with her to help care for the children.

It was the best place we have had so far to set up the clinic. The process starts with registration at a table with a nun filling in the name, age, etc. of the child and pinning it on the child's shirt. Next binh talks with them to see if there are any special needs or problems and of course set a safe atmosphere for the kids. At the end of this table is a dentist who checks their teeth and marks the result on the chart pinned to the child's shirt. A small courtyard nearby serves as space for the hygiene team to teach the kids proper tooth brushing, washing of hands, and to receive a pill for worms, etc. From there they walk a few feet to have someone check their ears. Next all their vitals are checked by the nursing students including vision checks etc. The child then moves a few steps more to see a doctor who expands the examination and writes prescriptions for any medication the child may require. Next, the child's chart is checked by someone like myself to see if they need to go to the dentist or on to pharmacy for their meds and a toy.

This process was repeated three hundred and seven times today. Along the way bottled water, coffee, snacks, and lunch are provided for the teams by helpers like myself and several others. There is always a smile and time to put a child at ease and let them know they are important to us and loved. When all is finished it takes a half hour or so to pack up all the equipment, portable dental chairs, drills, sterilizers, meds, and a hundred other things into the many large storage bins. From there they are placed on a small truck in the correct order for the unpacking at the next clinic.

At the end of all this there are heartfelt goodbyes, expressions of gratitude by the children and ourselves for a marvelous day etc. Then we walk to the main road to board the bus for the ride back to the hotel in the evening rush hour traffic.

I can't say enough about the marvelous team we have and how well everyone works together and enjoys each other. The interpreters are also outstanding individuals and become an extension of ourselves in all communication. We are blessed is so many ways, and we pray that we are a blessing to all we serve.

It starts all over again in the morning for those who choose to come to our room at 5:45 for Pastor Jeff's devotions...

Jim

Monday, March 21, 2011

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/16/11, P. Jim Munter

Subject: Good Morning


Dear all:

It rained steady all day. Not a hard rain, but just a steady rain. It was not much of a problem because we went to the leper colony (the one where Grandma Tiny lived before she passed on). It was sad not to see her waiting to see her friends come yet another time. This colony is such a blessing for all of us. It is a dramatic reminder that I do not have any problems that are worthy of complaint! Our medical providers (some of them students) did a great job with them. It is not an easy thing to scrape the dead skin from what is left of their feet or hands and put the anti-bacterial jell over their raw wounds and of course fresh dressings. For the lepers it is simply "the way it is".

But it is more than sad, it is disgusting to know that inexpensive medication exists that could stop further deterioration of what they have left. The official in charge of the colony is worse than mean, he simply does not care. No meds, no heat, poor food, little if any medical attention, etc. etc. These people are invisible. They do not exist. They are hidden in a small walled compound out of sight to rot away. Their families are also victims of this, because the children and grandchildren also live within the colony. The adults can only find work that no one else will do for little payment, even by Vietnam standards. The children are allowed to attend school, and even that would not be possible if COPI did not help them with tuition money. However, this year the first grandchild of a leper will enter college! This is a huge example to all the other kids who are looked down on in school and in the larger community. They are like the "boy named Sue" who become stronger because of their situation. If all of this were not difficult enough, the compound will be torn down next month to build a golf course and these people will be moved and hidden once again in a strange and unfamiliar place.

I know I am being blunt, but I know a man who was also blunt when he said "I was sick and you did not minister to me, I was naked and you did not cloth me." Then the dreaded words... "Depart from me into outer darkness." In some ways I feel more sorrow for the perpetrators than for the lepers.

Moving on to a lighter subject... We had a great dinner at a local fish restaurant tonight. We also understand that the weather will be better tomorrow when we travel to Hoi An, a small city toward the middle of Vietnam. Tomorrow morning we will have time to wander around Hanoi, then return to the Hotel by 1:30 to board a bus to the airport and fly to Da Nang. We will take a bus from there to Hoi An. Then a free day in Hoi An where we can order tailor made cloths if we choose! Apart from that it is a delightful town and we will have beautiful accommodations to rest up for the next series of clinics.

Jim

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/16/11, Raina Zeeh

Subject: SNOW in Vietnam

Yesterday we woke up to snow coming down. It has been 11 years since it has snowed in Sapa. Wouldn't you know it would fall on our heads? We're so ready for some warmth! A lot of people have had to buy coats to try to stay warm.

We did our clinic at a rural school yesterday. The principal thought we wouldn't come because of the snow. He said many kids would not come to school because of the snow but we were welcome if we wanted to come. Binh told them we'd see as many kids as would show up. We saw 160 kids. They were some of the dirtiest kids we've seen. They don't bathe much because it is too darn cold for them. We boiled some water to add to the water to wash their hands in hygiene. It was a very nice touch for them since it was so cold. Magel said one little boy, while getting one hand dried, slipped the other one back in the water to get it warm. It was some of the kid's first time to brush their teeth, ever! They had no idea what to do with a tooth brush. So there were a lot of good teaching experiences. Jeff did great teaching tooth brushing. He had some help from Tuyen to help translate.

We traveled on the night train to Hanoi. We went to a leper colony today for a mini-clinic. We could not bring all of the medical and dental equipment because all the supplies and luggage travel by truck to our next destination. We will go by plane to Hoi An tomorrow so have to pack light.

It is pouring down rain today and cold, but not snowing.

I'll have to tell you more later. Dinner is right now so I have to go.

Raina

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/15/11, P. Jim Munter

Subject: Good Morning


Today we traveled through rain and light snow to a mountain village where I saw many little kids that reminded me of Katie. Many of them needed the dirt cleaned out of the ear wax etc. Most of them had runny noses and problems that go with living in drafty houses and being outside much of their lives. The up side is the strong ties they have with each other and the adult world. There are no discipline problems. It snowed enough that the tops of the high hills (mountains here) were white. Some of the older women of the village said it was only the second or third time in their life that they had seen so much snow. As a result we only saw 160 children because they had canceled school and it was too wet and cold for parents to bring children down from the farms high up on the mountain sides.

It is a beautiful place. The terraces cascade down the mountain sides like huge green waterfalls. In some ways they were water falls today because they were filled to overflowing with the rain and snow water. It is hard to describe the contrasting beauty and hardship that somehow knits this country together. The people are beautiful in their struggle to pass this culture to the next generation. This can be seen in the priority they give to make education possible for their children. The school buildings are by far the best and largest buildings in the village. Some of the children walk as much as three hours one way to attend school and they are there every day! Some who are closer cook, take care of the family animals and other chores before and after school. The girls and adult women wear the colorful ethnic clothing of their area, which means they spend many hours creating the beautiful designs etc.

Our team is a wonderful mixture of people from Oregon, Idaho, Utah, Wisconsin, Colorado and one or two other states I can't think of right now. We all have a great time together. In fact as I type this page they are laughing and carrying on in the lobby behind me. We leave in about a half hour to head down the mountain to the train station right on the China boarder. We will ride all night on our return trip to Hanoi. We will just have time to check into a hotel and then jump on a bus to do a clinic at a leper colony. Again, this will be quite an experience for our young health providers.

We all laugh with Pastor Jeff who seems to be the target for all the ethnic women trying to sell their handicrafts. Jeff loves to talk with them and of course this means they are encouraged that he might buy. As most of you know, their handicrafts are beautiful and colorful. It is hard to say no, but in spite of the little group of ladies around him saying "you buy from me" or "you help me" etc. etc. Jeff has done very well to hold off. I know this sounds like a real pain, but really it is not. These people are gentle and in spite of their persistence it is not offensive.

The undercurrent of politics is always there and only binh knows that part. She did tell us on the way back from the village today that the principal of the school lost his job for allowing us to come and use the school as the place for the clinic (there was no other place). She said he knew it would happen but felt the welfare of the children was a higher priority. Think about that! His position as principle is not easy to attain and here he is willing to sacrifice it for the welfare of those 160 kids to came in the rain to let us Americans serve them. Binh said that she was nervous all day that the comrades would show up and order us to pack up and leave(it has happened before). The villagers begged binh to come back this summer or for sure next year. There is more to this story, but I will let binh tell it if she wants. With all the joy there is also the underbelly of sadness.

I am getting the message that it is almost time to leave for the trip down the mountain to the train station. I hope all is well with you.

Jim

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/15/11, Raina Zeeh

March 15, 2011 8:10:34 AM MDT

Subject: Boarding School Clinic

Hello everyone!

We are freezing, if you can believe it-in Vietnam. We are in Sapa which is in the mountains. The day started out with fog then the rain came in. It rained all day and was so cold. The wind blew right through you! We had our clinic at a boarding school for indigenous children grades 6-9. They are from several different tribes in the area. We saw 320 patients. Normally this clinic can last late into the night but we were finished by 6:30. I think that is a record. We were greeted at the clinic by the children clapping while lining the driveway. It is a once in a lifetime experience to be shown such honor by the children. At the start of the clinic we had the children waiting on benches outside to be seen by medical or dental. But as it got colder and colder, the children were shivering waiting outside so we invited them in the rooms with us to wait. The body heat helped all of us! We saw everyone without hypothermia setting in. After every patient had been seen, the children gathered in the cafeteria. We presented each of them with a gift bag. In the bag was a blanket, gloves and notebooks. They were very excited to receive such a nice gift The neat thing is they truly are grateful! They are very appreciative and sweet. They sang us a song that was beautiful. Another highlight is handing out reading glasses and this year we gave embroidery floss to the women who make beautiful handiwork. We invite them from the market to come to the boarding school so we can give them glasses. Several of them made their way there. They too are very appreciative.

We have another 320 kids to see tomorrow at a village school. We hope we have time to see them all because we will go on the all night train to Hanoi tomorrow night. Thank you for your prayers. Things have gone pretty smoothly so far!

Raina

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/15/11, P. Jim Munter

Date: March 15, 2011 8:56:46 AM MDT

Subject: Good morning



It is cold! SaPa is almost getting snow. I saw a few flakes in the air, but it has been raining most of the afternoon. Thankfully the clinic was inside class rooms so we were dry but had only body heat to warm the rooms! My job was to get the kids from one place to the other. Not too hard, but by the time the three hundred and twentieth kid was seen all of us were ready to head back to the hotel for some hot tea and good food. However, before heading back to the hotel all three hundred and some kids sang some songs for us. They really sang with gusto, and they never missed a note. Can you imagine what three hundred kids voices sounds like in a relatively small meeting room? We in turn gave each of them a blanket which had been made by women from a church in Denver.

Speaking of food: it has been very good. For example, tonight we were served Boiled vegetables; Kohlrabi bulbs with beef salad (very good); Sweet and sour fish (marvelous); Fried pork in iron plate (sizzling); Stir fried Sapa vegetables with garlic; Mushroom with mince broth; Steamed rice; Fruit; and Green tea. It's what I call "suffering for the children"...

Of course we eat everything with chopsticks (except the broth and tea) and have only a small bowl and a tiny saucer from which to eat. It takes a bit of "chopstick skill" to get the food from the serving trays into the little bowl or saucer, then dip it in the right sauce (without loosing it in one of the three or four sauce choices) and at last deposit it preferably in your mouth and not on your shirt!

Speaking of shirts: I had my laundry done today, two shirts and three pair of undies for only 56,000 Dong. It's fun to be a multimillionaire!

Tomorrow we go to a mountain village where we have not previously had a clinic. This means we will have about three hundred people from age one year to ninety. Few of them will have ever seen a doctor or a dentist let alone treated by one. I think our nursing students may be in for a real education. If I survive I will let you know how it went.

I think I will sleep well tonight.

Jim

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/14/11 (AM), P. Jim Munter

Dear All,

Jeff and I are having a good time and I think he is enjoying all the fun with the team. Binh seems relaxed and Raina is doing a great job with organization etc. As far as I know no one complained about the hotel in Viet Tri, which was a real test of the groups flexibility. The electric for the entire city went out for the whole day on Saturday (the day some of us went to the orphanage where Katie lived). The hotel food was OK, but not great. Mr P, the new director of the orphanage, took us all out to a nice place to eat on Saturday night. He has replaced Twit (the witch) and is a really great man. Interestingly enough, he is a Christian who was appointed by the comrades.

Yesterday morning, Sunday, we did a medical clinic at the Orphanage in Viet Tri. It was an easy one with only 110 kids and adults, but it was a great clinic for the team to start with. It went smooth and the team is working well together including the organization and repacking of the meds etc. Binh and Raina have worked out an organizational structure that has make it twice as fast and easy as before. We had all the medical bins organized in less than three hours.

After the clinic we loaded the bins (about 25) and our suit cases on a truck and "No Yo" and a driver left for Sapa. It is a long drive over some steep mountain roads, but it saved us the hassle of getting them on the train without any security to watch over them in transit. We left Viet Tri at 5:00 pm and arrived at the train station at about 7:00. We ate dinner in a fast food restaurant in the train station and then boarded the sleeper car after walking around other trains etc. Always an adventure! Our train was called the "Orient Express". It was a much improved ride from the last time I made the journey to Sapa. Even the rest room was clean and mostly odor free! What will they think of next! They must have greased the wheels etc. because it didn't even squeak around the turns like the one we had last time. All this to say that I slept most of the night. Binh and the girls had a great party laughing and carrying on wearing some comical animal masks that someone brought along to give to the kids. They even shared some of their wine with us.

We arrived in Sapa at 7 am and had two small buses waiting for us. We stopped to take pictures of each other on the border of China. Then the beautiful ride up into the mountains to Sapa. Everything is so green. The rice and garden terraces cascade down the mountain sides with the farm people working with their hoe and wearing their colorful ethnic clothing. We passed in and out of clouds as we climbed higher and higher. It is truly a beautiful place to visit. As always there are many tourists here.

Our hotel is nice. All our rooms have a balcony overlooking the mountains with the rice terraces and little farm homes. It reminds me of Switzerland. We enjoyed a great breakfast with dozens of things to choose from. The hotel staff would cook eggs, pancakes, omelets, Pho, etc. After breakfast we went for a walk around town. Of course we had plenty women in their colorful ethnic dress wanting to sell us their handicrafts. It is fun to watch our team members trying to be polite only to encourage more and more ladies saying, "you buy from me, I give you good price". The main market was complete with all the smells and interesting cuts of meat, fish, and other things I didn't recognize. Of course there are dozens and dozens of shops, restaurants, and beautiful small hotels with colorful French architecture. Many of them are quite new and others are wonderful older buildings with more ethnic style. Over all this area is much cleaner than Hanoi.

I am typing this from the hotel lobby where they furnish two nice computers for guests to use free of charge. In fact the hotel manager has offered to treat our whole team (28) to dinner tonight.

Tomorrow we have a clinic for the ethnic boarding school, and the next day to a mountain village new to us.

Some folks want to use the computer, so must close for now.

Jim

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/14/11, Raina Zeeh

Subject: Sapa

We took the all night train to Lao Cai and arrived at 6:30 AM. Most people said they were able to sleep okay on the train. It rocks a lot of people right to sleep. We laughed a lot before bed and had a great time. After arriving at the train station we went to the China border to look at China across the river. We saw an "engagement" happen on the bridge. The "bride" and several men from Vietnam met a group of other men from China at the center of the bridge. They all talked and shook hands (except the lady who stood away from the crowd) then walked back to the Vietnamese side. Binh said that it was probably an arranged marriage that was coming together. It was interesting to see.

We made our way up the winding road to Sapa which is high in the mountains in the North. It is actually sunny, making it very beautiful!! They have terraced farming along the mountains with red dirt in a patchwork with green. The clouds just nestle into the valleys and hang along the mountains. Our breakfast overlooked a valley that was beautiful. We have a free day in Sapa to shop and see the sights. Many people went on tours/hikes to visit the indigenous villages and a waterfall. Everyone who did that said it was wonderful. Some of us shopped at the market and bought a few new things for the COPI fundraiser and a few things for ourselves. At the end of our shopping day the clouds have rolled in and the fog is very thick. You cannot see very far at all. Hopefully the clouds will lift for tomorrow.

Tonight we will have a special dinner provided by the hotel manager. He loves the work that COPI does in Sapa. Last year when we had a change in plans for clinics he found us a new place to do a clinic. He is quite nice and very accommodating. The dinner should be wonderful.

Tomorrow we will have a clinic from early morning until late in the night. We will go to a boarding school for indigenous children and see 304 students. We will stay until we're done to not leave anyone out. We will provide each student with a gift of a blanket, gloves and writing tablets. This afternoon we folded and packaged the gifts we will give out. It will be a long but rewarding day tomorrow.

More later!

Raina

Vietnam Mission Trip, 3/11/11, P.Jim Munter

Vietnam Update, Friday, March 22, 2011

Pastor Jim Munter

Wow! I can't believe the change! We picked up our luggage and twenty some bins, loaded them on the carts and pushed them out into the lobby without one word or hassle from anyone! binh told us later that she went through the usual humiliation this morning with the comrade in charge of that part of airport operations.
The bus driver never used his horn once on the trip to Viet Tri!
The road is now a divided four lane (narrow) highway all the way.
I hear very few car or bus horns out front of the hotel (what a change).
And the hotel has a big Children of Peace International banner over the entrance to the hotel!
It's almost no fun without dodging the livestock and ducks on the road and the thrill of drivers daring each other to head on collisions. However it was fun to help Jeff see all the rice fields etc. It is an overcast day, but the temperature is mild.

I took 33 hours from SLC airport to our arrival in Viet Tri, needless to say we are all tired. I did sleep for about 4 or so hours last night. In a few moments we will walk to the orphanage and tomorrow is a rest day. I am going to see if I can find a ride to Katie's orphanage tomorrow. Not sure it will work out.

I have to get ready to walk with the team to the orphanage. Will write more tomorrow and let you know what happens.

Jim

Monday, March 14, 2011

Vietnam Mission Updates

Pastor Jeff is posting regular updates on the 2011 Vietnam Mission trip in the Pastor's Blog. Visit http://www.goodshepherdutah.com/pastorsblog/pastorsblog.php to read all about this year's trip.