Jan 19th
AN
We
went off to Kijiji on Friday morning at 8.45. Kijiji is one of the slums that
are dotted across
We finally stop outside an unpromising row of corrugated iron shops and lock ups. We step over the stinking ditch, pass the vegetable seller and see a crudely painted sign for a church - right on the road. It does not appear attractive in any way, but we actually turn into an adjoining little alley. The door at the end is opened with a key and the four of us are surprised to step into a courtyard of tranquillity. The four sides are corrugated iron walls, on two sides are the backs of other buildings with no overlooking windows. Clothes lines full of drying garments criss-cross one section. There are three locked toilets at the top of some steps along another side, and finally a row of three painted rooms, with doors numbered 1, 2 and 3 fill the long side. We enter number 2 where the group of Christians meet each week for Bible studies. An old man welcomes us; he is one of the group and he actually lives in that room. He sleeps on a mattress on the concrete floor. He has plastic containers for his water and plastic bowls to wash in. He can sit on one of four narrow backless benches. There is a small barred window. That is it. There is no electricity, no chairs and no carpet; that is his home.
About
twenty people gather there including four children, one cute three year old sits
on Keith’s lap for the hours of the meeting; she is as good as gold switching
off her plastic mobile phone until we are finished. Though the Africans are all
Rendilles they do not all speak Rendille, they are a part of that tribe who have
lived with the Samburu for a century and have lost their language. So we begin
with some hymns in Swahili which most understand. They are translations of well
known ones such as “My faith looks up to Thee Thou Lamb of Calvary,” and
then I begin to speak to them on Hebrews 2:4, “How shall we escape if we
neglect so great salvation?” Christ is great in comparison to the
prophets, in comparison to the angels, in comparison to the creation, as
compared to God himself, and great also in his compassion. So “do not neglect
this salvation because there is no escape if you do that.” That was my message
for the next hour. It is first translated into Swahili, and then into Rendille
with searchings for the right words from all present, and little friendly
arguments about what is the correct word. No one is that fluent, but Keith’s
knowledge of Swahili has much improved. It is all painfully slow, but then after
ten minutes Daniel, the most proficient of the Rendilles, who has often
accompanied Keith back to what is his home area in the arid north, arrives and
he takes over the translating into Swahili and then Rendille, adding to and
explaining what I’m saying, talking more than twice as long as myself when I
make my statements. I finally finish, but the meeting is half over. Then one by
one they all speak, the women first and then the men, giving their testimonies.
They have all been converted in the past seven years through the witness of
We could not leave without spending some time receiving hospitality from the other leader Godana, the husband of Guguru, who lives next door. We passed his goat shed where two of those beasts are gazing through the half opened door and mutely examining these strangers. On the other side of the corrugated wall is Godana’s home; it is one room where seven souls live. He has cunningly insulated the ceiling and walls with opened up plastic sacks filled with cardboard so that it is not freezing at night or frying by day. In one corner is their bed, the five children sleep in another corner along with the ten year old step brother of Godana. He has had to have operations on his feet which had pointed side to side instead of straight ahead. That is why he was brought from the Rendille area by the congregation to have a series of operations on his limbs. His legs are thinner than a child’s wrists. We entered this family room and sat on some comfy chairs in a corner by the door. The children just have this thoroughfare across the stinking ditch on which to play. They do not have access to the peaceful lawn next door except on meetings’ days. Godana served milky tea to all, and Fanta and Coke for those of us who preferred a little luxury. We prayed before leaving and then at 12.45 we retraced our steps along the busy road, which is ripely smelling but not unpleasant as the day is cool. Again we are gazed upon by all - curiously but not threateningly. It was an unforgettable experience for Iola and me. It was, let me underline this, an indescribable privilege to be there, much more enriching than a safari park visit. I saw Iola’s face lighting up as we heard through an interpreter the quiet testimonies of lives enriched and elevated by the grace of God in Jesus Christ. In the midst of much that was materially poor was something beautiful for God. I had last been to Kijiji about seven years ago when the first stirrings of interest by some Rendilles was beginning; what progress has been made since that time with all the visits Keith has made to the north of Kenya where this scattered tribe lives as they have lived for centuries. Today there are even schools in that remote area which the local government has made over to Keith’s leadership and support.