E-Mail Elder and Sister Bean at:

ugandahuman@yahoo.com

Friday, December 21, 2007

Merry Christmas from Uganda!



Ron and President Okut (local district president) at Borehole Ceremony



The Village Children at the Handover Ceremony



More Children at the Ceremony



Dancing with the Children (Nana and Sis. Huskinson get down and get funky)




Speaking at the Handover Ceremony with Interpreter Ssymbwa


Dear Friends and Family:

The Christmas Season is upon us, but it doesn’t feel much like Christmas here. It is very warm. We have had a District Christmas Party at the Kololo branch and that was fun. The Primary put on a nativity skit, which was very good and very funny. They had a real African baby for the Christ child and Joseph said to Mary “So Mary you are going to have a baby, well then, let’s get married, so let’s go get the certificate”. The little angel was dressed in a baptismal jumpsuit and ran around the stage flapping his arms. It was so very cute and funny and we laughed and really enjoyed it. The kids here are so cute and they love to touch us, very softly on the arm. I think they just want to see if our skin feels the same as theirs. The primary also sang some songs and the kids here have very nice voices. It is fun to hear them sing the same songs as our Primary kids. The couples and the young missionaries sang some carols and then all went outside and stood in a very long line for an authentic African dinner. The ladies in the district had prepared Matoke (cooked green bananas), some mystery meat (we didn’t eat any) and posche and vegetables. They cooked the food outside the Church and it did smell delicious. We are always just a little afraid to try some of it because of the consequences. So far we have not been sick and we want to stay that way. Santa Claus even came. One of the couples, Elder Nye, found a Santa suit at one of the local stores. He is about six feet five in height and very thin, so he didn’t look like the typical Santa, but the kids didn’t seem to mind. Santa Clause isn’t a big thing here.

We have a small Christmas tree in our apartment and we decorated it in African décor. The ornaments are handmade by the ladies in the villages. They are small zebras, elephants, giraffes, lions, etc made out of banana husk and tied on a red ribbon with a green and crystal bead threaded on the ribbon. We also have some small red beaded baskets and some little brown huts hanging on the branches. Although it is small, it reminds us that it is the Christmas season. We have a missionary Christmas party at the Mission home this Saturday and a couples Christmas dinner at the Mission home on Christmas day. So we are experiencing an African Christmas this year. Except for missing home and family, it is very wonderful to share a Christmas with the African church members, as well as Kami and Brent.

Most of the people in the Church are very poor and so Christmas is not like it is in the states. The chapel is not decorated and Ron and I have to insist that we sing Christmas carols for our opening and closing hymns. The district president gave a talk last Sunday and told people not to spend money on Christmas and then go without food the next week. One of the traditions here is to buy your wife a Christmas dress and husbands save up all year to buy it. This is very important and Ssymbwa told us that she can use it as a reason to get a divorce. She just needs to tell the judge that he did not buy her a Christmas dress and then everyone understands why she wants to get rid of him.

We are anxiously awaiting Kami and Brent’s arrival. They arrive on December 24th at 8:30 a.m. We will pick them up at the Entebbe airport and bring them to our apartment for a few hours of sleep and then we have many plans for them. We are going on Safari at Murchison Falls for three days and then to the Source of the Nile and other attractions. We have three official project handovers arranged for the time that Kami will be here and we think she will really enjoy going with us. Two of them are way out in obscure villages and the houses are mud huts with thatched roofs. One project involves seven villages where the women have been organized in groups of 30. The Church is providing them with farming equipment, seeds, fertilizers, plants, etc., which is designed to provide them food as well as some agriculture to sell for their medical and school needs. The handover of this equipment will be held in the poorest village, but they want to provide a program in appreciation and we understand that as a part of the program, they will dance and sing for us. So this should be very interesting. Ron has strong-armed the water district to rehabilitate the water sources for the people in that village. One is broken down and the other one is contaminated. Since we are going to rehabilitate 46 boreholes in the district, it was fairly easy to get the district to agree with our request to also help this poor village.

We recently held the handover ceremony on completion of 15 boreholes in the Mpigi water district. There were two ceremonies held at two of the boreholes. There were over four to five hundred people in attendance. The boreholes were decorated with banana leaves and flowers and they even had Ron plant a tree by one of the boreholes to commemorate the occasion. They had us cut a ribbon and then pump the first water out of the borehole. It was very stressful because we pumped and pumped for about a minute, it seemed longer, and no water came out. Finally, at last, the water came out, we were so relieved. Ron spoke a couple of times and I said the closing prayer. Loud speakers had been rented and so even people living far away from the area walked up to see what was going on. We were fed African food and soda and were treated so very nicely. The kids sang and danced for us and many dignitaries were in attendance. Special songs had been written and dances performed for the occasion thanking the Church and us for the clean water. The school kids would sing “Good Job, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints” and then put their thumbs up. They would dance a little more, then stop in front of us and sing “Thank you so much, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints” and give the high sign. They would then use our names and thank us. What a great day. Most of the time, the long name of the Church is not pronounced correctly or part of it is left out, but this time, it was correct. The Church got a lot of good publicity out of this handover. It was wonderful to see how appreciative these people are for clean water. Even though some of them still walk many miles morning and night with a jerry can on their heads to get to the boreholes. The kids also help carry water. We were told later that this was on the TV evening news, so the Church gets a lot of good publicity out of these handovers.

We also did the official launch of the banana project. The mission president and his wife came with us. We toured the laboratory where the disease free banana tissues were started and saw how the whole process worked. Bananas mature from a little four inch tissue to actually producing bananas within a nine to twelve month period of time. After visiting a few of the twenty model farms the Church has funded, we drove to the ceremony site and Ron and the Mission President spoke, as well as a few other authorities and the head of the organization we are working with. We are always amazed at how beautiful the women are dressed. Their clothing is very traditional and very colorful and they have elaborate hairdos or tied turbans on their heads. Sister Christensen and I were admiring all the dresses, when a lady, whose husband was a former ambassador to the UN from Uganda, approached us and told us she wanted to make us a traditional African dress. She asked us the colors that we liked. We are going to her home on Sunday to receive them. We are excited about that.

We are very proud of Ryan, who is still at the MTC. He has been made zone leader for his group. He loves the MTC and said that he has learned more Spanish in the month that he has been there than he learned in a whole year in high school. He is happy and excited about the work. We are very proud of him.

We also need to inform everyone about the change in procedure in mailing letters to the pouch. They no longer will accept a letter in an envelope. They want a single sheet of paper, folded in three parts, with the address and a stamp on the back of the sheet, with a piece of scotch tape holding the fold together. We dislike this new rule as we cannot receive any pictures or anything extra in an envelope. This also goes for greeting cards that require an envelope.

We wish all of you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year and next Christmas we get to tell you all in person.

Love, the Beans

Friday, November 16, 2007

Update from Kampala, Uganda
















Dear Family and Friends:

Another update on what is happening here. Uganda is preparing to host CHOGM (Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting) in November and the Queen of England and Prince Charles will be coming to Uganda. There are 53 commonwealth countries and all of the heads of those countries will be coming. Consequently Kampala is in a state of disruption and restoration. They are fixing potholes in the streets, planting flowers, putting in sidewalks and even painting lines down the middle of some streets that are along the route, the roads that are not dirt that is. The government also is telling the people in the area of the meetings, that they need to bathe and wash their clothes and look presentable during the time that the dignitaries are here. We even heard that some of the people will be removed to other parts of the city because they are not a good advertisement for Uganda.

All this preparation is causing a lot of headaches in driving for us. The government has been sealing off Kampala’s major roads forcing hundreds of people to abandon taxis, and vehicles and walk home. Police closed the roads in a mock demonstration of its readiness for CHOGM a few days ago and even the alternative routes were impassable because of the ongoing roads repairs around the city. All of us missionaries will be glad when this meeting is over. We don’t anticipate civil unrest or trouble, but we all are planning on stocking up on food and essentials, hunkering down and will stay off the roads until it is over. Ron and I plan on working on some of our projects far from Kampala. The District President has already been in our office with a form for us to fill out. The government has asked him to account for all of his people, names, addresses, why we are here, etc.

There is a big helicopter airstrip across from our church in Kololo. They normally have some security there, but the street in front of the church has been completely blocked off several times in the last little while. We have had to talk our way past gun toting military people to get to our humanitarian office in the church. We think during CHOGM that we will be unable to get to our office at all, so for a while we will be working out of our apartment. This presents a little problem because we do not have the internet at our apartment.

A few weeks ago we were working on some projects in our office and Ron and I were the only ones in the Church. We noticed, as we drove into the church parking lot earlier, that the airstrip across the street was full of military people marching in formation and practicing drills in preparation for the queen’s arrival. They were President Museveni’s personal military attachment, “Uganda’s Best”. All of a sudden the sky got very dark and a huge black rain cloud settled over the church, the wind begin to blow and we knew that any minute buckets of rain would be coming down. We heard running feet and shouting and we looked out and saw what appeared to be the whole Ugandan army streaming into the church for refuge. We looked at each other and wondered if we were under siege and the church was being taken over. It was a little unsettling. We went out in the hall and spoke with some of them and they just wanted to get in out of the rain. So we showed them into the primary room and some other rooms and they laughed and talked and waited out the storm. It was quite a sight, the president of Uganda’s army taking cover in the Mormon Church.

We are almost finished with one of our water projects in the Impigi District as far as getting the bore holes repaired and working. We have attached a picture of Ron pumping the first clean water out of one of these bore holes. This one hadn’t been working for several years. As you can see people are gathered around us in anticipation of this event. The people in the blue overalls are part of our contractor’s crew and they are very efficient and knowledgeable about their work and we feel fortunate to have this crew working with us.

A few days ago we went to visit another potential project. This project is located outside of Semoto, which is about 40 miles northwest of Kampala, way out in a village. The road to Semoto was brutal and probably the worse road we have ever been on. It was about 35 kilometers of unpaved red clay road with deep ruts and pits in it. If you count the bumps up and down it was probably 80 kilometers, but the countryside was gorgeous and the air smelled clean and wonderful. It was a beautiful warm day and the reception on our arrival was well worth any discomfort we felt getting there.

We were met and shown a building where they want the Church to help establish a grain mill. We visited some of the people’s homes and gardens and they talked about some of the diseases that have infested their crops. They then took us to the local school, which the Church had built several years ago. It serves 14 parishes or small villages and is really a wonderful asset to that area. There is a plaque on the outside of the school that said “Donated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints”. The school children were awaiting our arrival and were lined up in about eight or nine lines in front of the school, each had one hand on the shoulder of the kid in front of them. It looked very official. They opened the ceremony with a prayer, then we all sang the Ugandan National Anthem and a welcome speech was given by one of the students.

The head master gave us a tour of the school and we were taken to a reception room where the student’s parents, as well as all the board members of the organization wanting us to establish a grain mill, were awaiting our arrival. They were dressed in their very best clothes and our chairs with covered with beautiful hand embroidered cloths. They had an agenda written on the board and a prayer was offered and several people spoke and then Ron and I spoke. This was all done through an interpreter. We hoped that he didn’t tell the parents that we were going to buy desks and other things for the school because we hadn’t even heard about that until we got there. We went there thinking they just wanted a mill, but from the applause we kept getting from the parents and other people, we think they were told it was not only a mill, but also desks for the school and other supplies that the Church was funding. We also felt that they thought it was a done deal. They closed the meeting with another prayer and then led us into a small room in the school where they had a nice lunch for us. They had prepared all kinds of African food and their best cloth and dishes were being used. It is always a little risky to eat in the villages, but it was such a nice thing for them to do, that we said another prayer and ate. Although we had to drive back to Kampala on those terrible roads, we had really enjoyed the visit. We think that we will provide the desks.

We called home early on Monday morning to wish Ryan good luck and tell him how proud we were of him. He leaves for the MTC on Monday. He will be there for two months learning Spanish. Aunt Darcy and Cousin Connor flew in from Wisconsin for the farewell and Aunt Kami and Uncle Brent flew in from California, Uncle Matt and Aunt Pam and Torri and Ryan and all of Matt’s kids were there. We spoke with all of them and even the grandkids. Ron thought it was great until Jake told him that they were going to see the Seahawks play the Forty Niners on Monday night without him! It was so wonderful that they were all together and supporting Ryan, but made us a little homesick. We at least got to be a small part of the get together. Matt (President Latimer) had just set Ryan apart for his mission when we called. He had also set us apart six months ago. Ryan’s missionary picture and plaque will hang by our plaque in the hall at the Harbour Pointe Ward building. We think that is so wonderful. We feel that we and our families continue to be blessed and we are very grateful. The work is going well and we enjoy our little branch in Mengo. We love going there and feel we are really needed. Senior couples are so needed in these pioneer missions. We are appreciated and feel that we are the ones getting the benefit.

We were excited to hear the news that Roger’s musical won the Los Angeles Ovation award for a musical in an intimate theater. This is his musical that will be opening off Broadway soon – congratulations are in order.

Love to all. The Beans

P.S. Happy thanksgiving to all – we are worried about the turkeys here because they are really scrawny looking and scrounge around for their food on the trash dumps that are scattered around the city. We will enjoy our dinner at the mission home with the rest of the couples but will certainly miss being with the family.

Monday, November 5, 2007

School Supply Handover

Below is an email from Elder and Sister Bean to Caroline Kline, humanitarian specialist and the Harbor Hills Ward Relief Society in the Newport Beach Stake. The e-mail reports on the distribution of school supplies collected and shipped by the Ward and included the attached pictures.














We took the school supplies out to the orphanage last week and it was a wonderful experience. I just wished that all of the people who contributed these supplies could have seen how really needed and wonderful it was for the kids living there. I have asked the head master to write a thank you letter to the people in your ward.
We took pictures of the hand out and it was very heart warming. We will send them to you.

We drove out to the Orpanage called Good Hope and pulled up into the center of the yard. We lucked out because the kids were all outside taking a break. They had mugs in their hands that were about one-fourth full of some very thin white liquid. I think it was a root of something they grow in the yard of the orphange. It didn't look very filling to us. They have a school at Good Hope with three different classroom for kids of different ages . Some person or organization contributed school uniforms. So you will see in the pictures some of the kids in uniform. They may look good in the pictures, but the uniforms are pretty shabby, missing buttons, etc. but they are uniforms just the same. The kids were all excited to see us and ran and stood by our truck. We found the person in charge and told him that we were delivering some school supplies for the orphanage and asked if he would bring some tables out to to put the things on. The teachers also came out to help and were very excited.

We unloaded the boxes from our truck and put them on the two tables in the yard. The kids gathered in front of the tables and they were told to be very orderly and they watched while we opened the boxes. WOW ! I don't think these kids or their teachers had ever seen anything as nice as these school supplies in their whole lives. We were all impressed. There were so many things and of the quality you don't even see in the stores here. The boxes were loaded with the best of notebooks, pens, crayons, markers, etc. etc. etc. It was a wonderful experience. I am sure that most of these kids had never had or maybe ever even seen things like crayons, pens, markers etc. We laid them all out on the tables for all to see and I wish everyone who contributed to these supplies could have been there to see how much this contribution meant to this orphanage.

I am sure in their class rooms that the kids share a pencil. I have seen the blackboard and it is just small and leans again a chair and can hardly be seen by all the kids. There was one piece of chalk the day we visited the classroom and I didn't see that any of the kids had anything of their own to write on or with. It was a much needed and wonderful generous contribution from your ward. A lot of the kids do not speak English and so we did not know exactly what they were saying, and the kids brought in from the north where they have experienced terrible things connected with the war, usually do not show a lot of emotion, but we didn't have to speak the language to understand and see that these kids were happy and excited.

We told the headmaster and also the founder of the orphanage that in addition to the school supplies, your ward had also given us a generous amount of money to buy additional things for the school. We asked them to give us a list of what they needed and we would buy it for them. We did not want to give any of the adults the money because we wanted to ensure it was spent for the kids. People are so poor here that to give them money would have been too great a temptation. They called the next day and said they would like us to buy some desks for the school with the money. So we are going to buy some desks if that meets with the approval of your ward. We have asked Ssimbwa to help us find some desks and purchase them for us. He is a Ugandan so we will get a better price. We will let you know how many we were able to buy, and we think it should be quite a few. We will take more picutres when we deliver them.

Love, Elder Ron and Sister Sandra Bean

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Update On Humanitarian Projects and Truck Wreck



ELDER BEAN OR MONKEY? YOU BE THE JUDGE.



BANANA CARRIERS


BOYS IN THE VILLAGE


PG-13 SOCCER GAME


Dear Family and Friends:

Just an update on what we are doing here in Uganda. The last few weeks have been very busy, but very rewarding. We drove out to a village to check on our pineapple project. This is the village where we promised a bunch of little boys that we would buy them a soccer ball. As we drove down a bumpy lane to the project manager’s house, the boys saw our truck and two came running out to meet us. They were about six or seven years old. They were stark naked, but they were so excited they didn’t seem aware of it. We handed them the soccer ball and they just went wild. They immediately started kicking it and running around our truck and then Ron joined in the game and pretty soon even their mother was out kicking the ball around. It was very funny to see these little naked African boys playing soccer. No one seemed to mind or notice. They were so excited and happy we couldn’t stop laughing.

The weather is very stormy. Almost every day it rains and sometimes it rains several times a day. These are very noisy storms. First it starts out with a very black sky, then a strong wind and then rain, hard like hail. The rain is accompanied by very loud claps of thunder and a lot of lightning. This of course does not help with the flooding problem up north. We are impatiently waiting for ten containers of clothing, food, blankets, hygiene kits and plastic sheeting that we have asked the Church to send for relief aid to the flood victims. Many thousands of people have been cut off from the rest of the country due to bridges and roads under water. The United Nations are dropping food into villages by helicopter and the UN is now asking for more food and donations from any and all organizations that can help because they are running low on provisions. We sent another E-mail today to SLC asking them to send the aid ASAP. The Department of Defense is flying it into Uganda at a cost of $140,000 for transportation. We are hoping to get help from the missionaries in unloading when it arrives. We would also like help in distributing, but will see what we can arrange when it arrives.

We had zone conference last Saturday at the Kololo branch, which is the district center of the Church here. It is very touching to see these young men and women line up outside the chapel and greet the mission president and his wife as they walk down the line and shake hands. We just stood back and watched. Thinking how proud the parents should be of all these fine young men and two sisters in white shirts and blouse standing in line to show their respect to the Mission president. About half of the full time missionaries are native Africans. They are from Kenya, Sudan, Tanzania, Congo, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Zaire, and other African nations. All have different accents and speak different languages and some have had to learn English. Most of the white kids have African companions and in spite of the different cultures, it seems to work. This is a pretty hard mission and they walk many many miles every day and put up with a lot of hardships and challenges that are certainly here. As we arrived at the conference we were all greeted with a bottle of water and a small box of worm medicine, which contained six pills. We were instructed to take two tablets immediately and four tablets the next day. It was a humbling experience, but we were all in the same boat so we took them. We take a daily malaria pill, eat food that has been washed in bleach, dishes that have been washed in bleach and breathe in all kinds of dust and pollution daily, we wonder what it is doing to our stomachs and lungs. So far we have only had a head cold. The senior missionaries are so very important to a mission like this. The young missionaries get sick; sometimes hurt and from time to time discouraged or home sick and we are their parents, grandparents, friends, and counselors here

Our grandson, Ryan, has just recently received his mission call to McAllen, Texas. It is right on the border of Mexico. He will be in the MTC for two months learning Spanish. We are so proud of him He just recently went through the Seattle Temple for his endowments. His aunt Darcy and cousin Connor will be flying in from Wisconsin for his farewell talk. His Aunt Kami will be flying in from California and his mom and uncle Matt and Aunt Pam and five Latimer cousins will also be there. It is wonderful to have the whole family on his mom’s side there to support him. We wish we could also be there, but he will be in our thoughts and prayers.

We are busy with many projects. We are in the middle of our first water project, which is rehabilitating 15 deep bore holes and providing pit latrine slabs, sanitation training and some mosquito nets for the Impigi District. We have also submitted plans for our second water project in the Jinja area that is quite a bit larger, with 46 water sources being rehabilitated. The wheelchairs have been ordered and we are just waiting for custom clearance before shipping. Along with these major projects we have a piggery project, a malaria repellant candle project, and have recently visited six potential new projects in the Jinja district. One of the projects involves women being organized in seven very remote villages. They are asking for help with agriculture needs. One of the villages consisted of only mud huts with thatched roofs and we met with the women under a big tree and talked about their needs. As we were leaving this village, Ron got in the truck with a tight turn around and asked me to stand behind the truck and direct him out. I was distracted by a cute little baby and some of the other kids and he pulled forward and went into a deep pit. The truck was almost standing on its nose in the hole. This provided much merriment among the villagers. A bunch of the older boys and men had to help push him out. He is still blaming me for this mishap, but my job was to keep him from running over the children and I didn’t know he was going to go forward and fall in a hole. We both see the situation differently and blame the other one. At one of our new potential projects, after we had met with the board and were leaving, they gave us some wonderful local sugar cane, at least six avocadoes, the biggest jackfruit we have ever seen, and some huge paw paws (papaya). They were so generous and we shared this with the other couples.

We continue to monitor the rice, banana and pineapple projects. So you can see we are very busy. We are really enjoying the varied types of projects and the different locales of Uganda and the wonderful people that we are working with. We are really seeing what Africa is really like out in the villages and countryside. We love our branch and have grown to really appreciate the people here. They are still very new in the church and don’t always understand the procedures. I play the keyboard for the branch and teach Relief Society and give a piano lesson before church. Ron teaches the Gospel Doctrine class and provides much needed experience to the whole priesthood organization. We love our branch, the only problem is that most people are very very poor and think that all whites are rich, so we get asked to provide money and other things very often. Handling these situations is very uncomfortable for us. All in all we are enjoying the work. We are attaching some miscellaneous pictures.

We are looking forward to Kami and Brent’s visit here at Christmas and hope to take them to see many interesting sights and with us to visit some of our projects.
Love to all.

The Beans

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Safari and Flooding








Dear Family and Friends:

It has been a very busy time for us in Uganda. We have been busy with water projects and sanitation needs in several of the Districts. These projects take a lot of time because the sites have to be visited and analyzed. We then have to approach the appropriate water district people to have permission to provide or fix any wells etc. in their area. This of course gets into the political arena, which has to be handled carefully. We then submit a request to the people in charge of water for the Church in Salt Lake and explain why this project should be approved and funds spent. We have to show how many people would benefit from clean water in the area, who owns the land, along with permission from the owners and the particular water district. If this project is approved then water contractors have to be contacted, people lined up to do the work, materials purchased and the last step is actually doing the work, which we then monitor along the way. There are a lot of steps. We were happy to have Salt Lake approve the first water project of fifteen boreholes and our second one of forty six will be submitted shortly. We have combined making pit latrine slabs for the villagers, training in water and hygiene sanitation measures, and as an inducement to come for the training we are bribing with some mosquito nets. We do have our work cut out for us in the clean water area. Along with water, we have our usual area projects that are not as expensive, under $15,000 each, but still we have to go through the procedure of submitting a request to our bosses in South Africa, having it approved and then making it happen. All of this is so interesting and we spend a lot of time driving around checking on potential projects, but it is also paperwork intensive.

Since we are the Humanitarian Directors for the Country of Uganda we have been involved with the major flooding problems that are going on in the northern part of Uganda. Uganda is among the nations hit hardest by floods that have swept across 17 countries in Africa in recent weeks. The government has declared a state of emergency, which prompts international help. At least 200 people have died so far and many farms have been destroyed and crops lost - so the next problem, when the floods recede, is a strong possibility of famine and water related diseases. We contacted Salt Lake and asked what would be an appropriate response as representatives of the Church in this situation. We were given permission by the Church to provide aid and they asked us to find out what was needed and to find a suitable partner to bring this aid into the country. The Church said the Dept of Defense in the U.S. would transport the aid to Uganda, but we would need to find an organization on the ground here to get it into the country. We spent an afternoon on the phone and computer trying to find out names and organizations that could help us in this area. We contacted UNICEF and they were very appreciative of any help from the Church. UNICEF is providing the on ground coordination for the relief efforts and have arranged for food for 6 months to the area and said that blankets, clothes and mosquito nets were in urgent demand. They also agreed to partner with us in getting these items into the country. The flooding has rendered most roads impassable, so the UN is using a helicopter to drop some supplies. We are impatiently waiting to find out how we can arrange for our supplies to be delivered and when they are coming.

So we have a few things to do. We have also moved from our compound into an apartment. All the senior missionaries have had to move before Oct. 1st due to leases running out and rent being raised and new people arriving. This was not a good time for us to move, but we did it. We are on the top floor of a new apartment house. There are 70 steps to climb to get to the penthouse and moving and carrying boxes and things up was a test of sheer endurance. We hired two guys from the street to help carry things up and they worked very hard and really earned their pay. We do have a nice view, but the construction here is terrible and many things are not working properly. We have electrical, plumbing and things just not completed problems. We have a pizza sized hole in the wall under one of the bathtubs that goes straight out to the outdoors. We leave the door closed so that creatures and mosquitoes will not fly in. Anyway we are slowly getting settled and there are three senior couples and one set of elders that live here also, so we have more than each other to complain to.

Now the good part -- all the senior couples, even those in Ethiopia, along with the mission president and his wife went on a Safari last month. We drove way up north to a place called Murchison Falls. It is about an 8 or 9 hour drive from Kampala. We all met at the mission president's home early in the morning and piled into the trucks and drove in a caravan all the way. It was so much fun and the drive was very beautiful and the roads not too bad. We had all packed a lunch with a lot of treats to eat and stopped along the way, bought soda and shared food. In order to get to the park we had to ferry across the River Nile and our lodge/accommodations sat on a bluff overlooking the river. The ferry boat was very small and could carry only 5 or 6 cars at a time. As we loaded our trucks on the ferry, we could look across the river and see a hippo grazing right where the ferry boat landed. When we got off the ferry we all had our cameras ready to take pictures. Along with the hippo there were many baboons with babies on the road and in the trees watching us. We drove to the lodge, which is called Paraa Safari Lodge. It was very nice. The staff met us in the lobby with hot towels to wash our hands and trays of cold juice. We unloaded and put our clothes away and went to the dining room for a lovely dinner. We walked around the grounds and took pictures and watched a beautiful sunset over the Nile. Early the next morning we went on a boat ride up the Nile River to the bottom of Murchison Falls. The boat ride was wonderful. We saw dozens of hippos with their young on the banks and in the water. We saw all kinds of crocodiles and many varieties of birds and elephants coming down to the water for a drink. The trees and bushes were very lush and looked like pictures you see of Africa (wonder why?) We had a guide on the boat and she kept us informed of what we were seeing.

We returned to the lodge for lunch and then piled into our trucks, each with a guard with a gun, to do an animal drive around out in the savannah. We also did a drive around the next morning. It was one of the most thrilling things to see giraffes, elephants, and all different varieties of antelope, water buffalo, and even a lion in their native habitat. Some of us stood up in the back of our pickup trucks and just took hundreds of pictures. Everywhere you pointed your camera was a picture. In the afternoon of our last day there, we drove to the top of the falls and looked over the mighty Nile being funneled into a small gorge. It was noisy and very beautiful. It was hard to get in our trucks and return to the lodge knowing we would be leaving for Kampala and to our real life the next morning. It all seems unreal now. We hope to go back and do it again, when we have family and visitors come to see us. Hope this inspires some of you to visit.

Thanks for your prayers and your support and your E-mails. We are so far from home and it is wonderful to turn on our computer and see a message from a friend or loved one. We print them out so I can read them again and again. We are healthy and happy, but we miss home also.

Love to all.

The Beans

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Kyaka II Uganda Refugee Camp Handover -- Slide Show!

Here's an interesting slide show from Elder and Sister Bean covering the final handover of clothing and food supplies donated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to the Kyaka II Uganda Refugee Camp on June 25, 2007.

The camp is 30km from Mubende, Uganda and includes 16,651 refugees from the Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Sudan and neighboring countries. The handover was a joint project between the United Nations and the Church.

Notice Sandra's shoes in some of the pictures . . . . "Your not in Kansas anymore, Dorothy!"

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Update from the African Bush

Dear Family:

We are back at home after a long day with a water expert that we requested through Church headquarters in Salt Lake. Elder Garth Green and his wife Wendy are from Cedar City, Utah. They are called short term specialists. They live at home and only become active when someone requests them. He owns several plumbing supply companies in Utah. We have quite a few water projects in several districts, so he is here for 10 days to give us advice on bore holes, shallow wells, spring wells, and deep wells. See I even know the lingo. We have had them out in the various villages and districts looking at some of the possible clean water projects that we want to do here.

We were in a village in the Kumuli district a few days ago. It was a beautiful drive to get there. It had rained all that morning and the field and tall grass that we were hiking through were very wet. I asked the man from the village who was leading the way to this water source, if there were any snakes in this grass. His answer was “oh yes”. I said, “what kind” and he said, “Cobras”. I said, “I am sorry I asked.” The water source was very dirty and had water lilies and algae, along with bugs growing on the surface. The man from the village told us that 8 or 9 people a month die of water related diseases in their village. We then met with the Chief of the village and some of the village elders and talked with them regarding their water problems. This all still seems unreal to me. There we were , four senior Mormon missionaries, sitting outside in an African village, around a primitive table with a thatched hut in the background, and part of the village looking on and we were discussing the village’s water problems with an African chief. It felt like we were in a movie.
Anyway just a little update on what is going on here.

We are enjoying the Greens and they have brought us many goodies from America. We have chocolate orange sticks, mixed nuts, raisins, Vienna sausage, deviled ham and all kinds of candy. His wife brought little tablet like candies to give to the little kids and they love it. She also brought stickers and some baby clothes. They will be leaving on Sunday to go to Kenya to assist and give advice to the humanitarian couple there. We might request them again after we have gotten underway here. This is the couple who went to Brazil about six years ago to pick up their missionary son and Elder Green and his son were shot by a gang of guys who forced them off the road and used a rapid fire handgun and shot elder Green in both arms and his son in the stomach. Elder Green was driving and just pressed on the accelerator and took off and the gunmen fired many shots into the car. Sister Green was on the floor in the back seat and did not get shot. It got a lot of international press coverage and they were flown home in the Huntsman airplane (President Hinckley'’s jet). It was quite a story. We saw the wounds on elder Green’s arms. His son is now married and doing well, but what a scary missionary story.

I have changed quite a bit with the white hair and such. I tell Ron, it is not white it is platinum blonde. We are both well and are really enjoying this unique mission. October general conference should be interesting. You will have to let us know the news regarding the new member of the twelve. We will be watching last April’s conference at the district meeting house, since we cannot get the current one . We are always one conference behind.

Our new apartment is now ready to move in to. The Moore’s, who lived next door to us, have already moved and we are alone in the compound. We still have the guard, but it does seem lonely here. We are used to looking out for the Moore’s and they would watch out for us. We checked on one another when we thought it was a little late and our cars were not parked where they should be. Since we have had the Greens here, we have not had the time to pack and arrange to have our stuff moved. Since we are on the top floor of the new apartments, it will be a hard move, hauling things up. We are without a washing machine and I have had the hard task of washing things by hand. We do have a washing machine in the new apartment, but it is not connected yet.
Next week, Tuesday to be exact, all the senior missionaries in this mission are going on safari to a place called Murchison Falls. It is a big game park. The mission president and his wife are going and the couple in Ethiopia is flying here to also attend. We will be traveling by caravan in our trucks to Murchison Falls and it is about a full days travel north from Kampala, so it is quite a distance. The Moore’s went last year and said it is spectacular. We are staying at a very nice lodge and the guides take you out twice a day to see the animals. I will tell you more about this trip after we return. We will be gone for four days. In case anyone thinks this comes out of a church fund and they are paying for it, it does not. Each couple will be paying their own way. I am excited about this.

Also honey, you mentioned that we should get our computer cameras set up and arrange for a family conference. We have been so busy planning for visitors, having visitors, planning to move and arranging our schedule for this trip, and doing other projects, that we have not done this. We really want to do it, but will wait until we return from our trip and are moved into our apartment. Your idea about asking for help from the young missionaries is a good one and we will do so.

We were so pleased about Ryan’s mission call. We called to talk with him, but he was not there and Torri told us the exciting news. We looked McAllen, Texas up on the map and it really is a border town. You could put your toe in Mexico from there. We were thrilled that he will go to the MTC’s language training classes and learn Spanish. This should be a very exciting mission. He is a great young man and is setting a good example for his little brother and his cousins to follow.

We miss our families, friends and all the wonderful things about the United States, but Africa is pretty exciting. Love to you all.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Sister Bean Disarms Gun-Toting Soldier!

















Dear Family and Friends:

It is a very lovely day here in Kampala. I am waiting for my washing to finish so I can hang it out before the rain comes. It is usually very sunny and beautiful in the mornings and by afternoon a very black cloud blows in, thunder rolls out of this cloud and then the drenching rain starts. This storm lasts about 20 minutes to an hour and then blows past. It is pretty remarkable the amount of water that falls from the sky. You cannot make it from your car to your porch without getting soaking wet. So I try to get my washing done in the morning and a few hours of drying on the line outside before this happens. When we leave for the day, I ask the guard to get my washing in because I know this will happen. It is truly a tropical storm leaving the roads looking like rivers, but the interesting thing is that the wet doesn’t stay around and things dry out pretty fast. The trees are also blooming again. It is a beautiful sight. The tree behind our compound is laden with beautiful pink blossoms, especially on the top and the birds love it. The neighbor has a banana tree and two days ago it was so heavy with bananas that a big clump fell over the fence and landed in our yard. What were we to do? We did the only thing possible, we divided them up between us and they are ripening on our porch at this time. This truly is a land where fruits and vegetables grow without much assistance. The avocado trees are unexplainable. They produce the biggest avocado I have ever seen. Think of the size of a child’s football and that is how big they are. You peel them, slice them lengthwise, take out the stone/seed and fill them with chopped tomatoes, peppers and onions and put on some Italian dressing and you can’t imagine how good that is. Also the pineapples are the best I have ever tasted. They are very sweet and grow everywhere. They are very cheap to buy and all the roadside stands have them for sale. When you stop in traffic, little kids tap on your car window and want you to buy one. They cost about 1,000 schillings or .60 cents each. We eat a lot of fruit for breakfast, lunch and dessert at dinner.

This weekend was our first district conference (stake conference). It was very very good. We went Saturday for two sessions. Since people have such a hard time with transportation, they stayed for both sessions and were provided with food in between. The church had been thoroughly cleaned and we have new upholstered benches like the very nice chapels in the US. The choir was beautiful. The African people have beautiful voices and they had practiced for weeks. There were about 40 people in the choir and they were very serious about the music. Then the best part was the Primary choir. The kids sang “Follow the Prophet” and then six or so of them sang solos about the different prophets. I so wanted to tape it, but Ron said it wasn’t appropriate in the chapel, It was so sweet and darling I could hardly listen without thinking I wish someone was taping this, and why didn’t I do it anyway. They have the wonderful African accent and so the words had a little different sound then the kids back home and it was wonderful. I had tears in my eyes when they finished and I wanted all of you to be there to hear it. Kids are the same all over the world. It was fun for me as a former primary teacher to hear the song I have heard our little kids sing in the Harbour Pointe ward and to hear the little African kids sing it.

The members here do not have much, but when they come to church they look, as they would say, “very smart”. The women and little girl’s hair-dos are very fancy with yarn, feathers and beads braided in their hair. Some wear the colorful turbans that match their dresses. One darling teenager, that is in our branch, came up to me and handed me a small sack and said “here Sister Bean I bought this for you at the market, you had told me last Sunday how much you liked mine”. It was a comb for the back of my hair and was made of brown silk flowers, sparkles on the leaves and feathers and silk streamers. It was very smart. It was so sweet of her and I insisted on paying her for it. It was extra nice because I know how poor they are. I put it on when I got home, but somehow it loses the beautiful African effect on my hair. It is the kind of thing that would be very fun to wear. Maybe I will dare do it for some occasion. The little girls also have beads entwined in their hair and it really is fun to look around at the very wonderful clothing, very colorful and very African.

At the Sunday session of conference, we had approx. 800 people there. This is remarkable because they either walked a long distance to get there, or they took a boda boda or they came by taxi. What a sight. We had excellent speakers and the desire here is to become a stake and to have a temple nearby. We think this desire it quite a way off, but we are sure it will happen someday. The members here are first generation and struggle with a lot of family traditions and culture issues, but there are some strong remarkable leaders also.

We had an adventure last week in one of the villages. We asked Elder and Sister Huskinson, who are fairly new missionaries here and are from Rexburg, Idaho, if they would like to accompany us out to a village to deliver some hoes, rakes, nails and fence material for a pineapple project that the Church is helping with. They said they would like to go. The village is very remote and you have to drive down a very bumpy narrow lane, not even a road, to get there. We found the lady in charge of the project and dropped the stuff off by her house. She asked us to come and see the field that they were clearing for the planting. She said they had hired some men to help clear it. As we approached the field, we saw a bunch of men swinging pangas, hoes, etc and really working hard clearing the thick underbrush. We got out of the truck, with our cameras in hand and I took a picture of a little boy with his baby sister tied on his back standing in the field. Just as I snapped the picture, a man in a military uniform, high black boots and a AK47 machine gun in his hands, ran up to me and grabbed the camera out of my hand. He then turned around and grabbed Elder Huskinsons’ camera out of his hand. He was yelling at us and was so very mad. He appeared out of nowhere and must have been back in the bush. He yelled you can’t take pictures of prisoners, it is against the law. I am taking your cameras; this can’t get in the newspaper and was yelling all sorts of other things. I thought he was going to smash our cameras. We have a very nice camera and it had all kinds of wonderful pictures on it. I said to Ron, "he has our camera, he is not going to give it back" and Ron said, "Oh yes he is." The man was storming around and waving his gun and I said to him, "I did not take any pictures of the prisoners; just a little boy and his sister" and he kept yelling something like, "I saw you and you can’t have these cameras." I pointed to our missionary badges and said we are missionaries from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints and we would not lie to you and I just walked up and took our camera out of his hand. We again explained that we did not take pictures of the men. He gave Elder Huskinson’s camera back and just kept being very excited and waving his machine gun around. People tried to explain that the Church was funding this project. Things settled down then and Ron and Elder Huskinson walked around the project and then we all got back in our truck and left. It was pretty scary. Ron is so funny after we had left, he reached in his pocket and pulled out his little pocket knife, it is just little and about one and a half inches long and he said to me, if he hadn’t given our camera back, I was going to take care of him. We all laughed and the crisis was over. Later we found out why this man was so excited, we were told that it is against the law here for prisoners to work for money and they can only work within the prison grounds. So this guard had taken them out to the village illegally and was charging for their labor and pocketing the money. The village is so remote, he probably couldn’t believe his eyes when four muzungus’ (white people) pulled up in a truck and started to take pictures. It is funny now, but not so much then.

We hope all is well at home and love to hear from everyone. Brent and Kami are coming to spend Christmas with us and that makes us so happy. We love this mission and all the wonderful blessings it provides. Love, Elder and Sister Bean.

PS: we have made CDs for our family, but can only send them in the pouch each Tuesday, two at a time, so kids expect them in the next month or so.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Update from Uganda








Dear Family and Friends:

It has been a couple of busy weeks here with two of the top humanitarian people from SLC and our big boss from South Africa visiting with us. Sharon Eubanks has responsibility for the wheelchair projects worldwide and Robert Hokanson has responsibility for the water projects worldwide. John Elks from South Africa also came with them. He approves, or not, all of our area projects. We write them up, submit them to Elder Mills in South Africa and then if he approves they go to John Elks for the final go ahead. They visited with us for four days and we arranged for them to meet with all kinds of organizations to evaluate and talk with them. We also took them out in the villages to look at water projects and to talk with water district people. They were wonderful to work with and to be with. Brother Elks is from England originally and has that wonderful British humor. We were in our truck following behind some water people on our way out to look at a borehole. Ron was lagging behind and we were losing our guides, so brother Elks said to Ron, “put foot”. I guess this is an English saying meaning to hurry up. I loved that and now I get to use it. They were very helpful and even treated us to some very nice meals. We have been green lighted on water projects now so we have as much to do as we can produce. We met with the water district bureaucracy folks on two projects of over 200 wells and boreholes to either refurbish or to drill new water sources. The water districts are like most everything else here, very limited funds and very political. The Church bears most of the financial costs, but we do require that they contribute and do what they can to help supply clean water to the people in their districts. They are required to supply labor, land and various other things. We require them to have a water committee in each district, so that someone is responsible for the well after the Church has completed the project.

We have also ordered three containers of wheelchairs from SLC and took our visitors to meet with the organization those partners with the Church to bring them into the Country. Each of the 52 districts in Uganda will get a portion of this order. We were told the last time they were brought into this country, the missionaries helped unload them, set them up and were there and helped hand them out to the people who were listed to receive them. We understand it was a pretty emotional time for all.

We have now bought all the tools for a pineapple project that we had approved a few weeks ago. 95 women, out in a very remote village, have banded together and have bought five acres of land and the Church (through us) is providing what they need to prepare the land and to plant. We took two trucks out to deliver all the things they need to first clear the land. These women work very hard and clear the land by themselves, sometimes with the help of very small children and babies tied firmly on their backs. The land is thick with bushes and undergrowth and I am imagining plenty of critters, like snakes, etc. When we first went to visit and walk the land, I was very cautious about where I stepped. They clear all of this by hand. We delivered hoes, pangos, fencing material, rakes, nails, pineapple tissues, fertilizer, etc. I have attached a picture of Ron shaving with one of the pangos. He thinks he looks like Crocodile Dundee. After unloading our truck, the woman receiving the material did a little dance for us as we pulled away. She was so thankful and just kept saying over and over again, thank you Elder and Sister Bean and we said this is from the people of our Church that contribute to the Humanitarian Fund, we are just the buyers and delivery people and get the fun of seeing how much good it does. There is a lot of polygamy in the villages and men are not around very often. Women are the ones that contribute mostly to the family needs, so we were very happy that this project was approved.

We have also submitted the paperwork for a piggery project for one village, and a pilot banana project that we really think will turn out well for another. We love this part of the calling – but, the driving is a nightmare of very intense concentration and trust. This is hard on both of us, Ron doing the driving and Sandra very nervous seeing all the potentials for disaster on her side of the truck We experience big trucks piled high with sugar cane or matoke with three or four guys sitting on the top, passing four or five other trucks and coming straight for you in your lane and you are sure it is going to be a head on. At the very last second they find a way to get out of your lane and zip into theirs, or we are run off the road, it does cause your heart to stop for a moment. We are usually very tired when we return home. Then add a drenching downpour to this and it is very very tiring, we also try not to drive at night.

We took our visitors to the airport in Entebbe and really hated to see them go. They were on their way to Kenya to visit the humanitarian director there. They were very helpful with good ideas and suggestions and were also a lot of fun to be with. We hope before we go home that they will visit again. On the way back from the airport we stopped at the Entebbe botanical gardens. There were beautiful trees and jungle foliage and monkeys chattering and sitting on branches There were tropical flowers growing on many trees and bushes and jungle flowery smells, birds, long vines for swinging on, thick undergrowth, we really felt we was in a movie in Africa and that somehow our tree house was close by. We understand that the 1930 movie called Tarzan was filmed here. We were waiting to hear his famous yell in the distance and we would not have been surprised. It was a great photo opportunity. This area is located on the shores of Lake Victoria and is very picturesque.

We will be moving from our first home here in Kampala in about two weeks. We are moving to a new apartment house with eight units. We (sisters and elders) have rented four of them. It has advantages and disadvantages. We like where we are living presently, but the rent has gone up and the extra $400 to $500 more each month is prohibitive for all of us. We will be on the top floor of the new unit so we will have a wonderful view, but the floor space is much smaller and it doesn’t have the beautiful yard with avocado trees and flowering bushes that we have now. The construction here is very poor, so we see a lot of flaws, but overall it will be nice and it is new. The place we live in now use to be part of the mission home and the distribution center, so there are closets full of stuff and it is our lot to go through them and toss or give away. The good part of the move is that the Church is buying us a new washing machine. Such luxury. Ours has not functioned properly since we have been here and now it has died completely. I am using Elder and Sister Moore’s machine for the time being. Our washer is also a beautiful shade of rust on the outside and you can only wash about three things at a time and absolutely nothing heavy, sometimes it doesn’t spin, so you wring things out by hand. So we are excited to see a new white one and you can even wash towels in it.

Kami called a few days ago and said they will be coming to Africa to visit us. It will be around Christmas and maybe even during Christmas. She said she has had all of her shots required to come here. Brent just finished climbing Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania a few weeks ago, so he is already prepared to come. We want to congratulate him for that accomplishment and understand that out of 14 climbers, he was the only one that didn’t get altitude sickness. We are looking forward to visits from our family and hope that more will come to visit. Our mission is such that they can go with us on our projects and we think they will find it interesting. We spoke with Darcy on her birthday and she said she and Mark will be coming in June or so. We will have fun showing them around and taking them with us on our various Humanitarian visits. We hope to have more of our children come before we go home. It is a wonderful experience, but does require some pain on their part – shots and all. You will get to see Africa in a very intimate way. See the people and how they live and visit with them. We will have an extra bedroom in our new place and it is waiting to have guests.

Roger sent us a newspaper article published in the Los Angeles Times about his successful long running musical. It has been long playing in Los Angles and has gotten great reviews and is now going off Broadway. Roger’s dad has mentioned it to almost all he sees. Congratulations Roger, we are very proud of you and hope when we return home that it will come to Seattle.

We are doing well health wise, although a lot of people in our branch had and have malaria. Our branch president has been in the hospital for 17 days and is now home, but not doing so well. It is a terrible disease and we have been surprised how many people here have had it again and again. Thank goodness for mosquito nets and malaria pills. We are truly blessed and realize it every day.

We understand that Torri’s son, Ryan, our grandson, is getting ready for his mission. He has his paperwork done and his interview with Uncle Matt is all that is left to be done and then the paperwork goes to SLC. We are proud of you Ryan. Keep us updated. We remember how hard it was to wait for that letter. We miss our family and friends and home and love to hear from you.

Lovc,
Elder and Sister Bean (Sandra and Ron)

Monday, August 6, 2007

Rainstorm at Jinja; Dental Clinic Handover


Dental Equipment Handover


Wet Missionaries


Children Filling Water Buckets


Children Dancing


Rainstorm in Jinja (What they'll put up with to shop!)


Dear Family and Friends:
An update on what is going on in east Africa.

We are in the rainy season and most every day we have a very substantial downpour. It comes equipped with thunder and lighting and buckets of water pouring from the sky. The roads turn into orange rivers and in some places we have to drive carefully through a running stream of water. It is really fun when another car or truck passes you and covers you with orange water.

Two new proselyting senior missionary couples have now arrived in our mission. Both couples are wonderful and really fun people. A sense of humor helps here. Last Tuesday we all drove to Jinja to pick up some furniture for their apartments. Ron and I went with them because they needed our truck. President and Sister Christensen also went along to help. Jinga is Uganda’s second largest city and is located on Lake Victoria It can be a pretty interesting drive. There are a lot of big trucks loaded with bananas, sugar cane, petrol and such. We wondered how the new missionaries would fare on that road. In fact, upon arrival, Elder Nye, new missionary, was sick and had to stay in bed at the home of the missionary couple. Before shopping we took our three pickups to show the new missionaries the source of the Nile. There is an entrance gate where they charge admission and of course being white, it cost us a little bit more to get in than the locals. We tried to argue that we were residents of Uganda, and ended up paying a little less. We rented a boat and our guide was wonderful. We sailed along the shoreline and saw all these monkeys playing in the trees. They were swinging on vines and chattering and were very curious about us and came down very close to the boat and peeked out through the foliage. I was thinking how much fun it would be for our grand kids to see this. We then saw a crocodile sunning its self along the bank and a monitor lizard lying in the water. They use the lizard skins for the top of their tall drums. There were hundreds of different species of birds of all kinds and colors.

We noticed a huge black cloud forming a little way off and the guide said we better head for shore. We nearly made it. We were just pulling up to the dock when the rain hit. By the time we got out of the boat and up the bank, it was raining so hard we could hardly see. We ran for cover in a small restaurant, without sides, just a roof and there was a craft booth set up by the side of it. The women ran for the craft booth and the men to the restaurant. The men made the better choice because it rained so hard and the wind blew so hard that it nearly took the tarp off the top of the craft booth. There was no way to stay dry. We were all soaking wet, but what was really fun, we took pictures of the soaking wet women shopping and looking at paper necklaces and debating about colors during the worst rain and wind storm they have had this year. We are a hardy bunch. We ended up helping the craft people cover their things and put away their stuff. They were very happy to have us there. When we saw rivers of mud and water coming down the hill sides, we decided rain or not we had to run for the trucks and get out of there. By the time we left, we were as wet as if we had fallen in the Nile. You see, missionaries do get to have fun along with a lot of hard work.

This week Ron and I visited a couple of water projects and an organization called “Invisible Children”. It works with and helps the families and children that are up north in Gulu and other villages that are caught in the war zone. The organization works with these people in helping them with a little business. They are helping these displaced people make bracelets, which are made out of reeds and some kind of sturdy straw like material. The people gather these reeds out in the fields and attach them together with colored wire to make bracelets to sell. The colored wire comes in White, red, green, yellow, brown and black and each has a child’s name on it and signifies something. There are a lot of children who have seen their families killed and are found hiding in the bush. A lot of the little boys are kidnapped and forced into the military service and made to fight or be killed themselves. Little kids like 5 years old and older. There were quite a few people who had escaped from the northern area, and were in the back of the building making these bracelets. They make part of them and then send them up north for the people there to put them together. They are then shipped to San Diego to be sold in America and the money is sent back to the people that make them. The people running this organization took us into the back room and told us we could select a bracelet free and would only let us buy 5 more. There is also a video about these kids. It was a very interesting tour and we asked them if there was anything the Church could help them with. They seem to be a well run organization and keep wonderful records of who make the bracelets and how many. They are doing much good here. We took the man from BYU Idaho with his cameraman to visit this organization with us. We then took them to an orphanage. We have decided that this orphanage should be helped with the Humanitarian Fund. They need beds, mattresses and mosquito nets and a water tank.

After leaving the orphanage we dashed home to change our muddy shoes and meet President and Sister Christensen for the formal opening ceremony of the Mulago Hospital Dental School. The Church contributed the X-ray equipment in partnership with the Canadian Rotarians from Alberta Canada, who in turn got a large grant from the U.S. Rotarians for all the dental chairs for the school. We were invited to represent the Church. Sixty-eight percent of the adult population in Uganda has oral health problems and there is only one dentist for 150,000 people presently. It was a wonderful project and we got to listen to a lot of speeches and it was covered by the media. I guess Ron and President Christensen were on TV, but since we do not have a TV, we never get to see it. We only hear this by word of mouth. We have also ordered 750 wheelchairs from Salt Lake and are hoping that it won’t take long to get them.

This is a wonderful assignment and we just want to thank everyone who contributes to the Humanitarian Fund. We receive the blessing of seeing what this money accomplishes in a very poor country, it eases a lot of suffering. I think all you senior couples should put your papers in right away. This is a wonderful mission experience. There are hardships here, but the blessings outweigh the sacrifice

Love Elder and Sister Bean