Thursday, March 23, 2017

Zone Conference Assignment

We were asked by Pres. and Sister Koch to talk in each of the zone conferences.  There are 4 events!  Some zones were combined.  2 zone conferences were in Maputo.  One was in Swaziland.  One was in Beira.

We taught the Welfare Principles.  I am sure the missionaries were surprised to hear how the Welfare Principles affect them and their investigators.  We shared stories.  One was from our visits to Moamba Hospital.  Seeing so much need, it was easy to be engulfed in our desire to give them what they needed.  However, at this visit, Stan had a thought.  "Do not let your natural compassion blind you to doing this in the Lord's way".  We ended up not doing a project there.  We could not find a champion.  Another story was of  some senior missionaries, not serving in the welfare department, who saw the need and started giving things away.  They would hand things out their windows from their car and from their offices.  When that couple went home, the next couple could not afford to do that.  The African people were furious and destroyed their car.  The church had to purchase a new car for the new couple.  Keep your services within the cultural rates. 
Some of the missionaries have been tempted to help couples pay for the necessary government documents to get married so they can be baptized.  The people here have many worries about the expense of marriage, more than just the lobolo.  Teaching the gospel and encouraging them to exercise their faith in the law of tithing and the fast is the best thing to help bless their lives.  The law of unintended consequences often comes into play.  We unwittingly may teach them that joining the Mormon church is the way to get money for marriage.  That is not the message we want to teach.
Lunch with the zone leaders and Pres. and Sis. Koch


We also had a visit from one our major initiative representatives from the US, Doug Mehr.  He works with vision.  We visited 3 hospitals in hopes of developing a vision project.  We are finding that the hospitals in Maputo do not necessarily want new equipment.  They mostly need training and materials to run the equipment they have.  We found they do not have means to keep antibiotics on hand for patients.  Many of the consumables cannot be replenished.  This is where they are in the most need.

At one hospital, we found 7-10 pieces of equipment that had something wrong with them.  Their technicians have not been trained to fix and maintain the equipment they have been given.  It is most frustrating.  One of the pieces of equipment we donated to them 10 years ago need new software updates to be used.  Another uses a light bulb a day and the ones they put into it are not the right light.  These hospitals were pleading for more training and capable technicians.
Doug Mehr with Pres. and Sis. Koch
Doug Mehr and the staff at Mavalane Hospital



We met up with the Kochs and had lunch with them so they could meet Douglas Mehr.  This phot was taken at the Polana Hotel, the hotel that Elder Andersen stayed at when he and his wife came to Mozambique last year. 
  
Elder Ellis eating with us at Lunamar
We stayed at the Lunamar Hotel in Beira, the same hotel Elder Ellis stayed at.  Elder Stanley Ellis is in the Presidency of the South East African Mission.  He was in Beira to form a new Stake.  Across from Elder Ellis is Elder Makasi, an area authority Seventy.  The Munga Stake was created.  We were able to attend because the zone conference was just days before the stake creation.  What an amazing time we had at this event.  The spirit was so strong.  These people were so ready for this splitting of the Beira stake.
Stake choir at the Munga Stake creation.
This choir sang with all their hearts.  They were beautiful and enthusiastic.  They had practiced for this event.  Done in truly African style.  I will tell you about that when I get home.
Beira Stake building
cuties at the conference
The kids in Mozambique are so full of life.  Cute!  Cute!! Cute!!
Kretleys at the airport
The Kretleys were the mission President and wife that we talked to when our papers came thru.  They went home just a month before we arrived.  They came back to be at the Munga Stake Creation.
idolizing missionaries
So, we are waiting for conference to begin.  We are sitting in the cultural hall so the microphone does not transmit well and there is lots of commotion all around.  After a few talks, in comes this little boy, maybe 6 or 7.  He is strutting down the isle with his hat turned backwards.  Two rows in front of us are a set of missionaries.  This young man spies the missionaries and immediately tries to sit close to them.  He does not push into their row.  That would be too obvious.  He pushes onto a chair that is already occupied and sits for just a few seconds.  Then changes to the other side of the isle still within view of the missionaries.  In this picture, you can see him looking at his idolized missionaries with his hat turned the right way.  He sits for about 5 minutes trying to do what the missionaries are doing and being reverent but decides this seat is not good enough.  He goes all the way up to the front row of seats and disappears from my sight for about 10 minutes.  Then he comes back down the isle and find this seat straight across from the missionaries and tries to be just like them again.  Pretty soon, he gets up and leaves the room. 

I wonder if these missionaries know the impact they are making on young people.  Missionaries are so visible and looked up to.  The image of a missionary carries a long way.
Love, Sister Petersen, Teril, Mom, Grandma

Dear All,
As Teril stated above, the last 2 weeks has been wonderful as we have had the opportunity to be with Pres. and Sister Koch at all the zone conferences and do a bit of teaching.  A few of the quotes that have impressed me the most:
Elder Christofferson - The end goal of welfare is not self-reliance; it is service.
Elder Oaks - The growth required by the gospel plan occurs only in a culture of individual effort and responsibility.  It cannot occur in a culture of dependency.  Whatever causes us to be dependent on someone else for decisions or resources we could provide for ourselves weakens us spiritually and retards our growth toward what the gospel plan intends us to be.
Elder J. Reuben Clark Jr. - The real long term objective of the Welfare Plan is the building of character in the members of the Church, givers and receivers, rescuing all that is finest down deep inside of them and bringing to flower and fruitage the latent richness of the spirit, which after all is the mission and purpose and reason for being of this Church.

We are working to finish up the projects we have started so we can close them all before we leave the mission.  There is one project we hope to still get in that we believe we can start and still finish it.  Mateque school is one of our previous projects.  The community has come together and is building 3 more classrooms all on their own resources.  They have the walls up.  If they can get the roof on and the floors done, we will help them with doors, windows, electricity, desks, teaching materials, and cabinets.  It is so exciting to see them work for this.  We have challenged all the schools we have worked with to do similar things because they all need more classrooms.  This one actually is doing it.  We found an Italian NGO that builds latrines and we introduced them to the Mateque school.  They will build them a new latrine.  We could do it, but feel we don't have the time to follow through; so this is really great because now this school will get 3 new classrooms with desks and materials and a new latrine.  They deserve it. 
I miss my family something terrible.  But for that reason, I would stay here for another 2 years and keep working on these projects.  The satisfaction of seeing the people take responsibility for their own situation and work to improve it with some help from the church humanitarian funds is marvelous. For those of you that can serve a mission, I encourage you to step out and up; have a bit of faith and find a way.  The Lord will reward you handsomely.
Elder Petersen, Stan, DAD, Grandpa

Sunday, March 5, 2017

Latest from Mozambique

Dear family,
We are growing!  Our stake has incorporated some interesting things to help the wards to grow.  This is a picture of the missionaries home in Boane.  It takes not quite an hour to get here from Maputo in our truck.  Most people coming to church must ride a chappa.  That takes much longer.  The stake President and councilors decided to have the Boane members meet at the missionaries' home.  We were told there are so many coming that there are not enough chairs for everyone.  Now this group is a break off of one of the Matola wards.  They are still members of the Matola ward but are meeting in Boane.  This change is to encourage people to come to church by making the way there easier.  This is working.  But of course!!  When it is inspiration, it will work!

This Catembe bridge has been under construction the whole time we have been here in Maputo.  It is scheduled to finish in Dec. 2017.  Now, the Catembe people must ride a ferry into Maputo for any dealings here.  We have many members of our congregation, the Polana Ward, that live in Catembe.  The Stake President and counsilors have a place for the Catembe members to attend in their area.  They will start meeting there in April.  They will still be a part of the Polana ward but will meet in Catembe.  This will cut our ward in half.  We will only have 45 attending in each area.  What a great challenge to increase our numbers even to fill the positions to run a ward.  Are we up for the challenge?  Yes!  We are.
 I have been enjoying my wheelbarreling!  This is a strange phenomena!  These pictures show the progress of the garden.  The first garden produced some vegetables.  However, these last two pictures, the fruit has not been set or harvested.  Strange!  What do you think is going on?




termites and lizard

The vine like thing growing up the trunk of this tree is not a vine like you would see in the Ozarks.  This is a protection for the termites to climb up this tree.  From what I understand, the termites don't like sunshine.  They build this protective tunnel so they can climb up during the sunshine and not get hot.  Not vines.  Yes!  Termites!
Isn't that lizard beautiful.  THey do a kind of dance too.  They push up to their own rhythm.
Isabel is the baby I am holding.  She is the daughter of our housecleaner, Teresa Guilamba.  Teresa passed away two weeks ago and left this newborn baby and a 6 year old and a husband.  She died of complications from Tuberculosis.  What a shock this was.  How we must rely upon the promises of our Heavenly Father.  She was a good member of the church.  Her six year old, during Teresa's convalescence, did not want to stay home.  He asked to go to church with his aunt.  Teresa was a good teacher of her children.  She was a good example of living the principles of the gospel.  The promises are sure.  There are many details and arrangements having to be made to fill the gap left by Teresa's passing.  She is missed.



 Some interesting sights.  A woman carrying bread she just bought at the grocery store.  She will take that out to people who can't get to the grocery store and sell it for pennies a loaf.  What a living.  There are lines down around the circumference of the store waiting for this subsidized bread.  When they finaly get up to the counter, they buy all they can carry.  AS you can see, they can carry a lot of loaves.
This last picture is a school boy playing with a top.  There are not many surfaces that a top could be played on but this school has a nice smooth cement pad that this top is twirling on.  So much fun!  School is a good experience.

Monday, February 13, 2017

Review of mission so far



What are we working on right now?
Mateque
Chalkboards for classes under the trees and blocks for building
bids for latrines
We have been considering another project with this primary school.  The first picture shows where our last project ended and where the new project without us has been engaged.  We helped secure 6 classrooms and provided desks and closets for these 6 rooms in the last project.  Since then, the school administration and the community have continued their goals to provide classrooms.  As it is, there are still 15 classes held outside under the trees.  Building these 3 classrooms will allow 9 more classes a chance to maintain consistent education even when it is storming outside.
The second picture is a view of the three classrooms under construction. 
The third picture shows the latrine that is positioned at the end of the long line of 9 classrooms.  The school plan was to renew this latrine to include the growing population at the school and involve better hygiene for the students.
We were so pleased to see this progress.  They told us their plan before we left the past project.  To see them really going forward with the plan they have in place shows real character.  There is a champion in their director at this school.  This is an ingredient we need in place for true success to be achieved from a Humanitarian Project.
We feel a way to teach the Welfare Principles in this area is to help them with part of the plan they already have in place. “Build from areas of strength”.  In this way, they may be able to achieve their goal a little sooner than expected.  It also may help inspire them to keep working hard.  “You can be rewarded for your efforts”.
Building from areas of strength was a hard one to get into my head.  The most needed were being left behind by looking for the ones with strength already.  However, those most needy will learn from those with strength much better than they will learn from a couple of white Senior Missionaries from the States.
We cannot come in with an Elder and Sister Petersen idea of how to make education for their children better!  We have learned letting the people of this area solve their own problems in the Maputo way of solving them and then helping them accomplish those solutions is the Lord’s way. These amazing people are “Children of the most high….lawful heir …all things are given you which are expedient for …”(D&C 86:9, Psalms 82:6, 2 Ne. 2:27) Trying to solve their problems for them is only demeaning, demoralizing, and condescending!
We have gotten three bids for the renewing of the latrines and have hinted that if they finish the 3 classrooms before we finish the latrines, we can help furnish these classrooms with desks, cabinets, chalkboards, etc.  Their continued progress on the construction of the 3 classroom is necessary.  We could still pull out and not do the project with them if their progress stops.
We are very hopeful and pray for their success daily.
Malhazine EPC

Here is a school in a district we have been impressed with.  The District Director has a grasp of the Welfare Principles and encourages his school directors to follow them.  The third picture is of the school director at Malhazine EPC and Elder and Sister Petersen in front of her school.  Her school was involved in an accident in the city where much of her school roofs were damaged.  She presented us with a plan of action she and the school council had come up for the next five years.  We were able to pick a few things on their plan that we thought we could help with.  One of them was repairing roofs on 3 classrooms.  Picture 1 is the before picture of the roof on classroom 7.  Picture two is the roof ripped off preparing to replace it.
This school was required to come up with 10% of the total money owed to repair these three roofs, and the water situation which includes their latrine.  It took 2 months but the community finally paid the contractor the 10% and he has started construction this week.  We are hopeful this project will be completed within the month of March.
This school is responsible to write a curriculum for hygiene training which will be incorporated in the curriculum at school right away in preparation for the renewed latrine to be finished soon.  They are actively working toward this goal.  We are hopeful the hygiene/maintenance plan will be successfully applied here.  This success can only be seen after time has passed.
Eduardo Mondlane EPC

This is a school we visited over a year ago and decided against working with them at that time.  This year, we discovered their plan of action and have decided thru prayer that we could help them accomplish their goals.  This is a school that sustained damage in the storm of November, 2016.  This school has 40 classes under the trees with 13 classrooms being used to educate 3900 students.  Their plan includes building a few classrooms every year until they can house all the students.  However, while trying to accomplish their goal, the wind came and blew off the roof of two of their classrooms and damaged another 4 classrooms roofs.  We looked over their plan of action and said we would work with them on repairing their roofs and providing some desks.
We presented their part of our partnership.  They needed to provide 10% of the money needed for the project.  They are still working toward this goal.  We cannot move forward until they at least do this part of the agreement.  If they cannot come up with 10%, we will have to cancel the project.
Malhampswene  and Lingamo Clinics

Working with the Matola Provincial Government has been good.  They had two clinic projects well underway.  We could see we could support them in their goals by providing them with furnishings for these two clinics.  They provided the list of items wanted and we delivered the furnishings to them.  “Turn over” ceremonies have not been scheduled yet. We are hopeful we can schedule them within the next few weeks.
Major Initiatives:
Vision
Mehrs, specialist in the vision department, are coming March 20-24.  We have appointments scheduled for them to developed a possible project in the vision department.
Helping Babies Breath
The Maputo Health Ministry will be running a class, specifically for Heidi McSweeney and her companion to teach the principles of Helping Babies Breath in April.
Water
Swaziland has yet to get us the date for the “Turn over” ceremony for the project finished there.  We provided material for 7 well refurbishings
that have been completed.


Outline of what we have done and what we are doing.
Things we are working on now.
I.                 Schools
a.      Marracuene District
                                                    i.     Eduardo Mondlane
                                                   ii.     Mateque
b.      Kumabukwana District
                                                    i.     Malhazine
II.               Hospitals
a.      Malhampswene
b.      Lingamo
III.              Major Initiatives
a.      Mozambique
                                                    i.     Vision
                                                   ii.     Helping Babies Breath
                                                  iii.     Wheelchairs
b.      Swaziland
                                                    i.     Water
Things we have completed.
I.                 Schools
a.      District Namaacha
                                                    i.     Impaputo EP
b.      Marracuene
                                                    i.     Mateque EP
                                                   ii.     Joaquim Chissano EP
                                                  iii.     Ricatla EP
c.      Kamabukwana
                                                    i.     Inhagoia EPC
II.               Water
a.      Swazi Water
III.              Major Initiatives
a.      Mozambique
                                                    i.     Vision
b.      Swaziland
                                                    i.     Helping Babies Breath
                                                   ii.     Water
Things we have worked on but did not find a champion.  We let them go with no project.
25 possible projects as close as I can figure were not moved forward.


This has been a good review for us to see what we have been doing for the past 19 months.  We hope to finish all we have started before we go home in 4 months.
Sister Teril Petersen