Christmas Giving


One of the greatest joys of Christmas is gift giving. In Tanzania Christmas time is not full of materialism, with advertisers filling your mail box with flyers and TV stations running ads for things you or someone you know must surely “need”. Christmas traditions here center around Christ and family. It is refreshing!

Families go to church on Christmas morning and sometimes Christmas Eve also. Gift giving is limited to children. When their parents can afford it, children get new clothes and school supplies for Christmas, not toys or gadgets. Adults may give a friend a Christmas card.

The traditional Christmas meal includes rice, either plain or prepared as pilau, rather than ugali (a thick corn meal mush), which is the staple of the Tanzanian diet.

Had I not known these traditions, I would have thought that the Christmas gifts given by Food for His Children were rather insignificant. But by giving our project families rice and school supplies we were “making” their Christmas. That was fun!

On Dec. 23 and 24 we delivered, in Jesus’ name, the following gifts to our goat recipient families:

            ¼ kilogram (about ½ pound) of rice per person in the family

2 exercise books, one pencil, and one pen per child in school

The gratitude I could see in the eyes of some of the parents brought me to tears. It also made it well worth spending long hours on roads that were rocky, muddy, and sometimes imaginary.

Thank you for your participation with Food for His Children in ministry to families that have so little. May you be blessed as you give a blessing!
 
-Dr Margaret Thompson, DVM

Serving Christ in Tanzania



Just as her peers are slowing down, dipping into retirement funds and preparing to spend more time with the grandchildren, Margaret Thompson has traveled to Tanzania, to be a missionary and serve Christ through veterinary medicine.
“It’s a calling” Margaret says.  “It’s something that God has put on my heart.  Like for Jeremiah who wrote that there was a burning in his bones if he didn’t speak for God.  When I am in a developing country serving in veterinary medical missions I feel God smile; like that is what God made for me.
If you’re fortunate enough to spend any time with Margaret, you get the overwhelming impression that nothing is going to slow her down.  Determined and driven with a rich and adventurous spirit, Margaret has selflessly spent the last 37 years of her life serving her two loves: veterinary medicine and the Lord Jesus.
This devotion has seen her travel the world, both as a child and as an adult, learning three languages and ministering to unreached people in Central America, Africa, and the Caribbean.  Raised in an Air Force family, Margaret felt like she was always traveling. She remembers the family packing and moving almost every few years –France, Philippines, and multiple posts in the United States. While this would be unsettling for many of us, Margaret embraced the changes.  She reflects that in hindsight, God was preparing her for this very moment.
“God used these experiences to mold me into the vessel He needed for Tanzania.  In His wisdom, I believe He wanted me to experience life in all these countries while I was young.  I’m so grateful because today I feel comfortable away from home and immersed in other cultures.  I fee drawn to them.”
Margaret has long felt a strong calling to the mission-field.  As a young Christian, and first year veterinary student, she was active in Christian Veterinary Fellowship and was familiar with the work of Christian Veterinary Missions (CVM) in developing countries.  In the years that followed, Margaret pursued long-term opportunities with CVM but the Lord knew that Margaret\’s mission-field, for now, was a little closer to home.  With a young family to care for, the time just wasn’t right.
“I was confused and dare I say angry at God for repeatedly closing what had appeared to be an open door.  I had thought that within 5 years after graduation I would be in a developing country, but looking back, I can see that He was simply a wise father who knew that I wasn’t quite ready.”
Margaret now set her mind to raising her two children and building a veterinary practice in Texas.  But the flame once lit by the Holy Spirit, still flickered.
Decades later, that smoldering flame reignited when Margaret was some opportunities to go on short-term missions with various organizations, including CVM.  Her children were now grown, so Margaret excitedly followed God’s call to her in Honduras, Uganda, Mozambique, Benin, before finding Food For His Children in Tanzania.
“Finally I saw God’s plan for my life beginning to unfold.  It all happened in His perfect time.  Yes, the wait had been worth it, but that was just the beginning!”
Today, after 32 years, Margaret is serving Christ with CVM’s in-country partner, Food For His Children, a holistic community development organization that uses hybrid dairy goats to show Christ’s love and provide sustainable development opportunities to the world’s most vulnerable.
While Paul prayed for abounding love for his brothers and sisters in Philippians 1:9, he also prayed for knowledge and discernment.
Margaret waited over 35 years for God’s calling in her life to be realized, but in that time God was building her knowledge so that she would be well prepared for the journey in front of her.
Reflecting on Margaret’s remarkable testimony, truly we can see that “…he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 1:6)


"Can you give this to the kids in Africa?"

Cora holding her bank for the kids in Africa
I took a call from my niece the other day.  She's 4.  She said in Sunday school at her church the kids each saved money and put it in a bank they got to decorate.  She did chores for her mom and last week she brought the money in to church to help other kids.  She said she wanted to do it again and asked if I could give it to the kids I knew in Africa.  I said that was a great idea and of course I would.  "Thanks" she said. 

I thought she'd forgotten about it, but after about a month she brought me her special piggy bank.  I'm not sure she could have smiled any bigger, she was so excited to be able to help other kids.  Inside her bank was about 25 coins.  My sister explained that Cora did chores at home and then got pick a coin from their family coin jar.  As a 4-year-old, she didn't know how much the coins were worth, most were dimes or pennies, but each one represented an act of kindness from a little one with a big heart.  She believes she can change the world- how about you? 

                                                                                 Visit www.FoodForHisChildren.org to learn more

Written by Joni Hoffmann, FFHC Board Member


An update letter from Dr. Margaret Thompson who will be serving along side the veterinarians in Tanzania for 3 years.  
 
Greetings from Tanzania! I have completed half of my language lessons! It is recommended that language learners take a break about half way through their classes. So I took a few days off (at my own expense) to travel to the north and east of here to a couple of national parks.
Here are some thoughts on my experiences here:
About travel:
I have gotten very used to being crammed into a dala dala (mini bus) with 24 or so other people in a 14-16 passenger vehicle.
I’d rather be in tight quarters in a dala dala for 40 minutes at a cost of about $0.70 than take a taxi and not be crammed at a cost of $12.00 for the same trip. (It costs Tanzanians $6.00)
One day going into Iringa there were 32 (!!!) passengers crowded into a 14 passenger dala dala. I wondered if the “conductor” was trying to set a record. I was smashed up against a window. I was glad it was a short trip.
About being different:
Though I’m sure I appear odd to the Tanzanians (I have met only two other white skinned women my age or older), I feel quite comfortable walking through the market and other streets in town.
A really cute little Tanzanian girl about four years old tried to engage me in a conversation, which was drowned out by the music in the church. She settled for feeling my hair.
About shopping:
 It is no big deal to go to town and to market alone.
The cost of most things in shops and the street market are not marked. So the price varies with the color of your skin and perhaps even which way the wind is blowing at the time. (OK, so I’m being facetious.)
About learning Swahili:
There are at least seven “noun classes” in Swahili, each with its own demonstrative &  possessive descriptors, adjective prefixes, subject prefixes, object infixes, words for “of”, “both”,  “all”, “any”, “many”, “another”-all of which depend on whether the noun is singular or plural.
It’s hard enough to remember the vocabulary without having to remember the class of each noun.
The easy parts of learning Swahili are that the letters are all pronounced just one way; I don’t have to learn a new alphabet or characters; and so far I’ve encountered only one sound that is foreign to the English language.
Its fun when, outside of class, I say something correctly in Swahili.
About fellow ex-patriots:
It continues to be quite interesting to meet and visit with campers and language learners from other countries.
Among the resident ex-patriots I have met, a frequent topic of discussion is how wastefully money is spent by churches and NGO’s. For example, the money spent on a building could have been used to help the poor nationals learn about nutrition or health care or to start a sustainable agricultural project.
Sometimes development projects are successful; sometimes not. Sometimes the funds for projects get diverted (disappear into someone’s pocket).
About living conditions:
Laundry service is available here at the campsite. But they iron everything, even socks and underwear, to kill any mango fly eggs that might have been laid on the clothes while they were drying on a line. Because I don’t like to iron, most of my clothes are made of material that should never be ironed or must be ironed on a low setting. When I was in TZ last year, the household helper tried to iron one of my camp shirts and put a few holes in it. So I choose to do most of my laundry by hand in the sink. I dry my clothes indoors so the mango fly shouldn’t be an issue. The camp owner says that there shouldn’t be any mango flies down here by the river because there are no mango trees here. Nonetheless, she has her clothes ironed.
The culture dictates that underwear should never be seen when out to dry. If you do put clothes out to dry, underwear must be put under another item so that the underwear isn’t seen by passers-by.
About my study break:
I traveled with another Swahili language student to Mikumi. . The first day after arriving in Mikumi, we went to Udzungwa National park and hiked to the top of the tallest waterfall in TZ national parks. The next day we took a half day safari in Mikumi National Park. Sadly, the next two days I spent in the motel dealing with GI issues. Now it’s back to more Swahili lessons.
I will try to attach a photo of the pregnant lioness that approached our truck and stood about 15 feet away looking at us for an uncomfortable (for us) few minutes. There were four of us sitting on an open platform at the back of the truck. I took the photo after she decided to walk away.



What is "Argoforestry Farming?"

That's a good question!  It's something new that Joseph and Marusu taught a group of 31 new families during agriculture and veterinary trainings in December. 

Joseph described it for families like this during the training:
These are the techniques which involve the intercropping of trees and field crops on the same piece of land.  The trees are grown to provide timber, firewood, fruits, and fodder for livestock.  An indigenous pesticide, trees end up improving soil quality.  The trees provide additional nitrogen for corn and other annual plants.  The main benefits from agroforestry are in terms of soil and water conservation. 

Families have already been taught to contour the land, that is make rows of hills and valleys with the soil, so that rain water collects in the valleys and crops are planted on the hills.  The trees would be planted along the contour lines.  In time, this practice would allow families to get timber, firewood, possibly fruits, and crops from the same plot of land.  Argoforestry also recommends using organic fertilizers such as from goats, which families are already doing.  This practice could open up many hours that are currently lost as families go in search of good land to find feed for their animals or collect firewood.  This time could be used in other income producing activities for families that already have several demands on their time and energy just to survive.

Another topic that was covered during the training was the planting of alternative crops that are more resistant to drought.  Sorghum and Sunflowers are 2 such plants. They don't need much rain and are prolific plants that are ready to harvest about 3 months after planting and offer high yields.  Lab lab plants also are high producers and are a good cover crop that play an important role in soil conservation measures.  Seeds for all 3 of these plants are distributed to families during their training time.