Monthly Archives: December 2014

Week 14 – YWAM Kona, At the Crossroads – Hanoi Christmas

We are losing track of time, I am quite sure we missed a week blogging as we got caught up with timezones and got synched with our new life, so I called my last post 12+. We have now calculated that in less than 6 weeks we will be debriefing back in Kona, Hawaii, followed by our return to Okotoks. So this post must be Week 14! The lack of 13 really has nothing to do with triskaidekaphobia.

Metro Cash & Carry is a very different shopping experience in Hanoi, it is a bit like Costco, or perhaps Real Canadian Wholesale, but there are noticeable differences.The fish section really stood out for me, it was larger than the meat department, with all of  its beef, lamb, chicken, duck and…

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The fish is fresh, very fresh. Some as fresh as it can be, we have seen lobster and crab in live tanks at the stores in Canada but here there are many more live choices in large aquariums and row upon row of ice trays displaying many varieties of fish that I didn’t recognize. Many of the small stores in peoples houses must get there supplies here, so it really isn’t our first choice to support, but it does have the advantage of being able to purchase many items in one place.

An easy walk from where we live, in Tay Ho District, is the Donkey Bakery. As a bakery and cafe this business is a socially responsible company. The owners hire people with disabilities to perform the majority of tasks; 80-90% of the staff are blind, deaf or missing limbs, although the owners are quick to communicate that we are all handicapped it is just not so visible in most of us. The bakery has European style breads and pastries, and all of our team have enjoyed lunches and delicacies and even ministry times with the staff. On Christmas Eve when Glenda and I visited with a couple of others from the team, we were surprised to see that there were Vietnam TV cameras in the shop. They were filming for a news story for morning TV.

We went to the Christmas Eve service at Hanoi International Fellowship that meets in the Hanoi Club Hotel every Sunday. It is a registered Christian church and has two campuses in Hanoi. The congregation is made up of english-speaking ex-pats, from many countries, and a growing Vietnamese contingent. The Christmas Eve service was very well attended with extra chairs having to be brought in. We were very surprised to see the Vietnam TV cameras were in the room, then we realized that the staff from Donkey Bakery were performing two of the carols, they were amazing, one of the blind workers played a đàn bầu, one girl led the singing and many others performed a liturgical dance. Part of Silent Night is in my cellphone video here.

The TV station was filming this for their news documentary and part of Israel Houghton’s Jesus, at the Center was broadcast on national television, and… one of our team leaders, Marjo from Finland, was interviewed for the broadcast. Here is the english version of the clip that went out on national TV, see if you spot anyone you know.

IMG_5957We have to say in all our riding buses and taxis and walking around, even walking across theFullSizeRender road between speeding motorcycles, we have never felt unsafe. We feel Hanoi is one of the safest places we have ever visited. To our western eyes activities like these young men riding a cement mixer down the street at about 50kph (30mph) with a front wheel that was very buckled, or the guy delivering rebar on his moped to the concrete workers cutting and installing it in flip flops would cause a safety inspector to have a heart attack.

We are settling into our role as volunteer English language coaches with a couple of post-secondaryIMG_5944 schools, some of the classes have little English yet which is a bit challenging, but the more advanced classes are becoming a lot of fun as we develop relationships with the students and begin to exchange some of our different cultures and worldview. Of all the university students we have met so far, only one had parents that are not still together, it seems that the divorce rate is really low. On Christmas Eve we were blessed by a surprise delivery of cards and cake gifted to us by the staff and students of one university which we show off in the picture above.

IMG_5969Glenda and I found a Christian coffee shop a few days ago near where we have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings. We arrived a few minutes before closing and bought Ca Phe Sua Da whichIMG_5902 came with a glass of green tea, not unusual, but we did say “Goodnight and God bless” to all the staff as they left except for the one who stayed late so we could enjoy our drinks. This is typical of the way we have been treated since being in Vietnam. Our new favourite dish Bún chả is just 25,000 Dong ($1.25), it is grilled (BBQ’d) pork in a tasty broth with bamboo shoots and carrots and sides of vermicelli noodles, and fresh green herby plants that vary day by day, lettuce, mint, marjoram, nettles, cress, beansprouts, etc.

That’s all for this week and this year, our next post will be in 2015! Until then, be blessed and be a blessing, A&G



Week 12+ – YWAM Kona, At the Crossroads – this ain’t Kona, Toto!

This ain’t Kona, or even Kansas, Toto! It is Hà Nội, Việt Nam. The pace of life has changed, 7.1 million live in this city. It feels like the busiest place we have ever been, but I was surprised, when checking Wikipedia, to discover that the population density is only 1/4 of that of Santiago, Chile. Ha Noi is very different from our own life experience, almost everything is new and our senses are being stimulated by the food, the traffic, the people, the red and yellow, and our eyes and hearts are open to all it has to offer.

DSC_0816IMG_5728Our first morning, waking up in our rented apartment/, provided us with a view across West Lake, Tây Hồ locally. The sunrise rivalled many sunsets in Hawaii, the beautiful colour due to the morning mist. Work begins early and ends late, construction starts at about 5 a.m. and can continue late into the night, seven days a week, lots of manual labour and no sign of a 40 hour week for many of our neighbours. Almost every home has a business operating out of the  ground floor rooms: coffee shops next to granite cutting, next to moped repair and Phở restaurants, mini-Marts and vegetable shops. There are areas ofDSC_0913 town that seem to specialize in one thing so you will find Camera Street, Toy Street and Shoe Street in the Old Quarter.DSC_0863 All over the city, mopeds and bicycles, pedestrians and cars, buses and taxis all compete for space on the road. After the first week the initial sense of total chaos is fading and it is interesting, as the patterns become clearer, to observe how well the traffic really flows. We have seen up to 5 people riding one moped, mopeds towing trailers full of sand and dragging hundreds of pounds of rebar behind them. Mercedes, BMWs, Lexus, three Bentleys and an Aston Martin crawl by in stark contrast as they push their way through the traffic; the buses are an awesome way to get around town, just 7000 VND (U$0.33) and they come every 15 minutes.

The city feels very industrious and yet many take time to sit with friends at one of the many places along the street to enjoy a cup of Ca Phe or green tea and people watch. Everyone we have met has been very friendly, there is a great national pride

In many ways we are experiencing a lot of freedom and lightness of spirit, there is genuine openness to Tây, westerners. There is a growing middle-class in Vietnam, we regularly see joggers and recreational cyclists passing our home on their way around the lake; many tourists are visible in the Old Quarter; and there is a sense of hope and power.

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Lots of Power!! 

That’s all for now, until next time be blessed and be a blessing, A&G.

Some pictures from around town…

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Anti-smoking campaign?

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Girls waiting!

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Flower patch

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Construction site

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Cardboard re-cycling 🙂

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Our tree!

 

Week 11 – YWAM Kona, At the Crossroads – Worldview and Kingdom

Running a week behind…

Going into the last week of the lecture phase seemed unreal. This last week of lectures by Don Stephens covered Worldview’s and the Kingdom of God. To introduce worldview Don began by describing glory as “God’s invisible character reflected in the visible world.” As humans we are created to reflect that glory, to understand glory, to hear glory, to see glory and to speak glory; God loves beauty, harmony, justice, romance and grace, and so we love them because we are made in his image to reflect him. He went on to teach how the Christian life is Grace, emphasizing that grace and legalism means life and death. We looked at worldview and how it has changed and we compared world views from different cultural and religious backgrounds and the influence they have on our thinking and actions. With these teachings in place the last day was spent on the Kingdom of God and what it looks like now, (or should look) “may your kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven.” and what it will look like.

Takeaways are many but here are a few to ponder…
* we live to reflect God
* the law is a widower, the dead spouse is me, being under the law is like a woman married to a husband who expects perfection.
* Conversion is the miracle of a moment, sanctification is the labour of a lifetime.
* Worldview is like a story that organizes your beliefs about the world, but we all view the world through the distorted lens of sin.
* many Christians have a “born-again spirit, Babylonian brain.”
* The Kingdom is a story written in your heart.
* The Kingdom is a culture of power Luke 10:9 Heal the sick, and as you heal them, say “the Kingdom of God is near you now.”
* The Kingdom is a culture of radical inclusion and hospitality. xenophilia love of strangers, hospitality. A culture that values people, not just converts.
* The Kingdom is a journey – disciple-making is a process, not a one-time conversion event. When did Peter get saved? or Matthew? The scriptures don’t say, Jesus invited them and loved the “hell” out of them.
* Jesus had no circles, he hangs out with all the wrong people, it was all about relationship.

DSC_0701Joy to the World! Thursday evening at Ohana Court , at YWAM Kona, 54 teams representing 50 nationalities were commissioned and sent out to 39 nations to make a difference in this world. Loren Cunningham led the commissioning of the teams.

Before leaving Hawaii we watched the Big Island Christmas Parade

DSC_0748DSC_0750it was held on Saturday evening, somehow Santa on a sleigh,DSC_0773 withDSC_0760 his bright red suit with white fur trim being pulled a long Ali’i Drive with a backdrop of Palm trees and the Pacific Ocean seemed a bit surreal. St Michael’s RC youth group had the tallest Wise Men I have ever seen in their walking nativity scene.

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DSC_0716One last Hawaiian sunset. Our days have been full and time has passed very quickly, if it wasn’t for our journals and the weekly blog post we would have argued that we had only just arrived. We sent our first team off in true YWAM style, they boarded vans heading to the airport and Fiji.

Many of our fellow Crossroaders and other friends, came out at 5:30 a.m. to send us off! We piled into 15 passenger vans for the short trip to Kona airport and a long day of flights to Hanoi.

I began writing this about the time we crossed the dateline, as we sat in an Asiana A330-300  we gained 24 hours, and Sunday had become Monday. The fabric of the seating on Asiana is a light brown, rather than the blues and purples that I am used to, the lighter colour makes the inside appear larger, but in reality the seats are wider and there is more room between rows than I recall having experienced in a long time. The cabin crew is very attentive, regularly offering water and juice, and lunch was Grilled Beef Tenderloin with a marinated shrimp starter, the dinner menu has Chicken Cacciatora with steamed rice or mixed seafood pasta. We even got to watch “Good Morning Vietnam” as one of the many free in flight movies on the way to Vietnam.

Arrival in Hanoi airport, these are my flatmates – Sophie, Glenda and Leslie.
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Seems like Vietnam has excellent internet, wifi everywhere and we can communicate with you all quite freely. So until next time, be blessed and be a blessing! A&G

S.D.G