Monday, 03 July 2006

GREETINGS FROM CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA

Wow, it has been a long time. I don’t even know where to start! First of all, I want to thank the Worley family for sending me a new camera to replace my stolen one. It is so invaluable to have a way to document the lives here and my involvement in them. Thank you Dennis, Karla, Seth, Arley, Matt, and Ben for recognizing how important a camera is for my life and work here. Also, thank you to Meredith Macguirk, Amy Jenkins, the Hoppes, Beth Harris, and all of you who contributed to buying and sending me a new computer!!!! God has abundantly blessed me by replacing what was stolen in Cape Town a few months ago. I am excited to be able to communicate with you all again and more importantly, to share the amazing work God is doing in Cape Town!!


While most of the photos are of the chilren I work with, I am quite involved in the ministry of Fish Hoek drug crisis center. The growth of our little ministry is exciting as different communities are inviting us in! Most recently is the invitation from Ocean View, a community that has been quite closed to anyone helping improve the drug problem there. It is estimated that ¾ of the Ocean View high school population is using Crystal Meth, known as “tik” here. Last Friday was Youth Day in South Africa, a day set aside to remember those youth killed in the Sharpeville uprising during the apartheid era. Fish Hoek Drug Crisis Center joined with our satellite branch in a colored community known as Lavender Hill (similar to the housing projects of 8th or 12th avenue in Nashville) and marched down the main road singing hymns in Xhosa and Afrikaans, dancing and carrying signs against tik use. Keaton and Ricky (two children living on the streets) joined me and we had a great day. I was asked to speak alongside John Roberts, my “boss” in the Drug Center and my African father! We had a moving experience as we saw the community join together and fight against the drug crisis spreading through the communities known as the “cape flats”—a term used to describe all the squatter communities and housing projects set aside for blacks and coloreds during apartheid. Sadly, the end of apartheid did not mean the end of such communities and 12 years later, many people live like they did during white rule. I love being in these communities and find them to be so welcoming. Sometimes I spend hours in Capricorn (the township my boys are from), visiting families and meeting people. Here are some photos from our day in Lavender Hill…





PARTNERS IN CRIME: I'd like to introduce you to some of the people i work alongside...
melissa.

john roberts.

jenny.

katarina.

ryan.

Melissa is my wonderful roommate and fellow worker with the kids. In the mornings while I am at the Drug center, she is working at the hospice writing policies for Living Hope. Jenny is from England and works with Youth With A Mission as a youth outreach worker in the schools of Cape Town. She also lives in Muizenberg and knows the kids we work with. John Roberts is my “boss” at the drug crisis center. He spent 20 years as a drug addict, living on the streets and in prison. He has been sober 22 years and now does amazing work with recovering addicts in the communities. Katharina is from Germany and works for Beautiful Gate Muizenberg, a branch of YWAM. They are a children’s home for former street kids from Cape Town. She is greatly involved in our boys lives also. Ryan Dalton worked for Beautiful Gate from 1999-2005. He is now finishing his degree in social work at the University of Cape Town and spends most of his free time either on the streets of Cape Town with the street children there, or in Khayelitsha, the township most of the Cape Town kids are from.
STORIES TO SHARE
I was visiting Capricorn (the township my boys are from) the other day and a man from the community asked me the infamous questions: “What are you doing with these kids? What is your aim?” I answered him by saying “To make some positive impact in each child’s life. To leave their life better off than it was before.” This question/answer got me thinking about how that looks so different for each child, and how that is such a fluid responsibility considering the constant needs and issues in their lives. I am more than ever convinced that these children are constantly preyed upon by various people and issues, from pedophiles to gangs to drugs to broken homes. They come from such devastation, and it is exciting to see God carve a way into the stone-like hearts they have developed in order to survive in this life.
Andrew (we call him poem, pronounced “poom”). Andrew is 13 and has been on and off the streets for a year or so. When I met him he was developing an awful case of scabies. He’s a cute kid and is important for the others because his face makes money, meaning he evokes more sympathy in the average passer-by than an older or less attractive child. At first he was adamantly opposed to taking us to his home. Each day we would drive into Capricorn and visit friends or take kids to see their families. As time passed, Poem finally decided we’d go to his house, whereas before he would react violently to such an idea. We met his mother Janet and his 2 little sisters and his niece. We began taking Poem home each afternoon and now he’s been totally staying at home for about 3 weeks. He comes to Muizenberg from time to time but overall he is back at home and we are so happy about this reunion!!! Here are some pictures of Poem and his family...



Neil is turning 16 this week! His older brother died on December 22, 2005. The other older brother is heavily into drugs and gang life and wants Neil to join him. Neil dropped out of school 2 years ago because “there were too many guns there”. His mother is an alcoholic and his father, who he's seen only twice in his life, is in Joburg. His stepfather is a drug addict and regularly beat Neil with anything he could get his hands on. Neil lived with his aunt in Lavender Hill for a while but eventually moved to Muizenberg because it was safer. However, he is now living on the streets and is starting to really experiment with hard drugs, specifically tik. He is a hypersensitive child, extremely malleable, and incredibly gentle. I find that the more I pour into him the love and truth of Christ, the more spiritual warfare he experiences in his daily life. He falls as we all do, but he longs for something more. God has deeply burdened my heart for this boy, and God uses Neil to keep me very focused on what I can do or say to make a positive impact. Here are a few photos of Neiltjie…

trying to talk neil through a bad drug binge (something i find myself doing all too often with these kids).

a few days of sobriety later.

FUN TIME
These are just some random photos of our life from day to day. We like to give the kids some sense of life outside of the streets. Maybe that is a drive to cape town or a meal at mcdonald’s. Maybe that is a movie night with hot chocolate or a hike up the beautiful mountains around us. We try to use our time productively, but also spend a significant amount of time in THEIR world so that we can get the best assessment of the battles they must fight and how we can equip them. It is in these times “on the streets” that we learn the most about a child’s past, and what they love and think and dream, and what characteristics of God they have been given. I love that part of this work!





SPECIFIC PRAYERS REQUESTS AND PRAISES
1. More funding for the Fish Hoek Drug Crisis Center. We run solely on donations and we want to do so much more than we can because we do not have proper funding.
2. The dynamics of Living Hope. Much is changing in the structure of this organization. Pray that the staff persevere and feel valued.
3. The persecution we face. So much of the Muizneberg community HATES us (literally) for being friends with the kids. I have been accused of awful things and the kids feel anger at the injustice of it all. The community has chosen to outcast these children and me as well. Pray that we can all be an example of Christ when we are attacked, that we could walk away from angry people, and that we could speak truth when it is helpful to do so.
4. Winter. It’s cold here. Pray for warmth as the kids sleep outside and dryness because their blankets were all stolen recently by the security guards that roam the city. Yes, the security guards stole their blankets. This was after they threw stones at them. It’s a sad thing.
5. Melissa goes back to America is 2 months, and Katharina goes to Germany 3 days after Melissa. Pray God would begin preparing them for what lies ahead and preparing the boys for their departure. It won’t be an easy time for any of us.
6. Clarity for my future in South Africa. I believe God has brought me here for a long term commitment and I am praying through what that means, how to start fundraising for another year, and getting a new visa.
7. Bala and Russie are hanging out with an older gangster, Mano, quite regularly. I see a very sad change in both of these children. I don't want them to follow Mano. We pray that Mano either repents or gets removed from the situation. He is a powerful force in their lives.
8. Brontino has been in a form (boarding school/jail) for the past few months. He gets out this month. Please pray for his transition. It's not exciting for us to see him come back out because he has been through a lot in the past year and he returns to a much less safe environment.

Thank you to all of you for making it possible for me to be in South Africa, to work for Living Hope and John Roberts in the Fish Hoek Drug Crisis Center, and to spend my free time with the street children of South Africa. All of these things richly bless my life and show me so much of God’s love and his desire for us to pour out our lives as living sacrifices. Thank you for praying for me and financially supporting me and I ask you to continue that support however you can.
Much love to you from South Africa!!! Don’t forget the blog at www.reflectioninwater.blogspot.com, or my email at Ashleyinafrica@gmail.com

Further up and Further in,
Ashley.

3 comments:

Amy-Jo said...

Ashley...it's so good to have pictures to match with the places I'm praying for. It was so good to see you on the BIG screen during SACK week...
Love ya...AJ

Anonymous said...

Hey sister!
So good to see God on the move! Thank you for your stories and for the encouragement you give to me in your everyday life! Love you.

Anonymous said...

Wonderful and informative web site. I used information from that site its great. Cingular wireless ringtones free phone Hills cosmetic surgeon Clomid and pregnancy signs Own label supplements uk Isuzu npr gas quiet or loud Toyota fork truck remanufactured hp inkjet cartridges wholesale restail bath faucets Black dentists premier model 22 cal. rifle with octagon barrel Box fuse toyota Plotters de corte mimaki Honda vfr 800 2004 Market abuse and foreign currency trading medical malpractice girls for matures dvd 1997 cadillac catera reviews