Saturday, August 22, 2009

My days in Africa have been flying by, and an update is long overdue. The internet connection that I regularly use is too slow to allow for blog updates, so today I set out determined to find an internet cafe with a better connection. 


Random excerpts from my life the past month and a half:

  • I spent my first week(s) back in Cape Town in bed, thanks to a bacteria I picked up from some sketchy drinking water in the TransKei. 
  • I have snagged three illegal first-class train rides, all of them accidents
  • I have grown accustomed to sleeping in four layers of clothing, hat, and mittens
  • I've forgotten what it feels like to be consistently warm
  • I eliminated peanut butter as the core of my diet (and my existence)
  • I've visited the place where the Indian and Atlantic oceans join
  • I've discovered the best banana pancakes in the world
  • I've determined that my hair, at its current stage of growth, resembles a shaggy dog
  • I've learned that being a missionary doesn't miraculously transform you into some sort of "Christian Superhero"

Since returning from the overland trip on July 27, I have been staying at a hostel near the YWAM base in Muizenberg. Getting "plugged in" has seemed like a rather long process--there are so many needs and opportunities to get involved with various ministries in the larger Cape Town area that it has been overwhelming at times.  My daily activities have varied widely and taken me to all different parts of the city, whether it's to do street ministry, interview fishermen about pay inequalities, speak to a youth group about sexual purity, sort bags of donated clothes to be distributed to the community, or tutor students at an orphanage. 


The other day I was thinking about my last-minute decision to do the DTS and my preparation to leave for Hawaii. It is crazy to find myself at the other end now, with only ten days of ministry left and the six months almost gone. The past months have seen times of learning and growing, ministering and having fun, challenges and triumphs. The most valuable thing that I will take away is a new depth in my relationship with my Creator, and I hope that out of that, I will have left something behind in Africa, as well. 

Saturday, August 15, 2009

At the beginning of the month, our team split into smaller groups, based on the areas of ministry in which we wanted to be involved. My group has been focusing on raising awareness about human trafficking, which is a huge issue in South Africa and is becoming an even bigger one because of the 2010 World Cup. We have spent numerous hours researching, talking to organizations that deal with trafficking, hanging awareness posters around the city, and talking to people to raise awareness. As we have delved deeper into this issue, it has been heartbreaking to see the dark reality of trafficking in this country...

  • Most human trafficking is done for the purpose of sexual exploitation
  • 27 million people have been victims of human trafficking
  • Most trafficking victims are girls between 5 to 15 years of age
  • 1.2 million children are trafficked annually: 1/2 of those children are African
  • Trafficking is a $33.9 billion industry
  • The U.S. State Department estimates that 100,000 people will be trafficked into South Africa for the 2010 World Cup
  • Between 28,000 to 30,000 children are currently being prostituted in South Africa: 1/2 of these children are younger than 14
  • Children as young as four are prostituted


I cannot look at these numbers as just statistics; each number has a face, a name, a life.  Not a single one goes unnoticed by the Creator. "Slavery" is often talked of as a thing of the past, but there is more slavery in the world today than at any other point in history. I wonder, in our modern world that boasts of freedom and equality, how has this been allowed to happen?