Friday, November 29, 2019

Medair Advent devotional and news of the week!

Greetings all,

Christine & I want to share with you an Advent devotional put out by Medair for this advent season. There is only one devotional per week. But you might find it significant as you prepare to receive anew this year the One who came as a refugee, only to become the Lord of all! Here is a link where you can find it: https://app.box.com/s/xxzbfxak3pkn9l0qa7xlfux514ezomj4.

Our international team here in BGD is again doing our Dietrich Bonhoeffer Advent devotional that we did last year as well. We are looking forward to preparing for Advent together.
The Rohingya  volunteers  role playing during training

We had a very productive work week this past week. Phil is so thankful for all the things that his team accomplished. The nutrition transition has presented a number of staffing and logistical challenges. But two logs staff created a spreadsheet yesterday to help us all think about some of these challenges in a new way. One of the nutrition officers, Saiful, brought his outreach supervisors from the 3 current nutrition sites to the project office to train them so they could in turn hold trainings with their Rohingya volunteers. That was a direct application of a training of trainers that he attended last week. It is always nice to see those applications.
More role playing

Praise:
  1. A very productive work week!
  2. Opportunity to talk with our kids on Thanksgiving morning!
  3. Significant growth in our Bangladeshi staff all across field office and our programs.
Prayer:
  1. Wisdom for negotiating with UN partners for health and nutrition programs
  2. Wide open doors for continued ministry to the Rohingya through our programs. 

Saturday, November 23, 2019

The complexities of refugee life

I have always been intrigued by the tendency of some media to paint things in broad strokes which tend to envision things in black or white. It is either total despair or absolute joy - there seems to be little in between these polarities. Obviously this is a broad generalization. But I sometimes wonder if remarks such as, "Wow, this trip made me realize just how blessed we are in the US," are born out of such a bipolar worldview that tends to only see the material realities of people's lives.

Saleem showing a picture of his
home in Myanmar
When Florian Ecuyer, a media employee from headquarters, was here in September, we talked some about this inability of media to nuance the realities of refugees' lives. And I think that Florian's photos from that trip do a great job of pointing to the nuances.

This first photo of Saleem is fairly neutral. He no doubt has remorse over not being able to live in his home, but rather has to live in the largest refugee camp in the world. But he is able to show people a picture of his home in Myanmar - maybe in some way this is healing for him. I don't know. But it also is probably part of his ardent desire to be able to return to his home country and the place of his origins.
The joy of Children

Children are often more resilient than adults. And one sees this in the camps. Kids will be kids.... There are kids playing everywhere in a camp of 1 million people. Florian did a great job of capturing that joy that children continue to feel - maybe wherever they are, in whatever circumstances they find themselves. And this is true of the Rohingya children!


This is not, however to deny that there is anguish and pain in the camps as well. Florian captured this well in this picture of a man carrying a woman on his back. Honestly, I don't know the story. It is hard to whitewash the fact that this woman has to be carried wherever she wants to go. But she was leaving a health clinic. And the fact is that she likely has access to better healthcare than she would back in Myanmar.

One of the ironies of life in this mega refugee camp is that life for the Rohingya here in the camps is, in some very existential ways, better than it is for their family members who have remained back in Myanmar. There are those in the host community here in Bangladesh who also contend that the Rohingya live better than they do. That is a difficult equation to work out. But the fact is that the life of the Rohingya here is not black and white. It is not simply a picture painted in the broad strokes of despair. And it isn't a portrait of people living an easy life either.

The sun setting over the rice paddies
surrounding our office/home
But isn't that life for all of us? It would seem, given the staggering number of refugees and internally displaced persons in the world right now, that none of us is all that far removed from a life of displacement. How would you respond if you were forced from your home? Would you be able to find joy? How would you combat creeping despair? What would be your strategies for resilience? These are questions to which the Rohingya work to find answers each day.

We are thankful to be able to walk alongside the Rohingya, in their delight and their jubilation, as well as in their desperation and their hopelessness. Isn't this what Jesus did when walked he on this earth? And we are asked to do no less.

Praise:

  • For a good R&R
  • For the Nutrition sector continuing to move forward in the plans to move partners to new camps
  • For the Gambia opening a case against Myanmar for the systematic injustice against the Rohingya - a real source of rejoicing for them!
Prayer: 
  • For ongoing work to be done for moving Nutrition clinics
  • For project proposals for Shelter and Health sectors
  • For the courage to continue to walk alongside the Rohingya in the complexity of their lives

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Changes in the climate for refugees

There have been significant changes over the last couple of months in the climate in which the refugees live. Some of these changes are almost inherent in the lives of long-term refugees. This article summarizes the challenges well: https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2019/nov/04/our-only-aim-is-to-go-home-removal-plans-raise-tensions-in-rohingya-camp

Praise:

  • For renewal of our visas in August
  • A time of refreshing as we are currently on R&R
  • A really positive review of the nutrition (NUT) program by one of the funders - WFP
Prayer:
  • The nutrition sector (which is made up of all UN agencies and NGOs) has decided to integrate nutrition programming by having one NGO responsible for all nutrition activities in a single camp. This means that we will be handing over our current 3 nutrition sites to other NGOs and taking on 4 new (to us) camps beginning next year. The transition process will be quite involved and we ask for prayers that it will have minimal impact on the children and PLWs (pregnant and lactating women) whom we serve. This is an exciting move but will mean a huge amount of work for the Nutrition team as well as support teams like logistics and HR. 
  • We have had 3 US team members who have failed to get visas from the Bangladeshi embassy - pray for breakthrough!
  • For a number of project proposals currently in the works for our Bangladesh program.