Thursday, December 21, 2006

if my sister was reporting from Iraq...

...we would win the war on terror.

Here's an opinion post. I connected a few dots, and came to the conclusion that--were my sister a reporter in Iraq, we would be winning the war on terror. Or at least the morale of the US citizens back home would be greatly increased.

A couple of years ago I had the opportunity to go to Iraq and help out with the reconstruction going on over there. I had many Iraqi co-workers and came in contact with other Iraqi locals. Every single local person I met was glad that the Americans (and British et. al.) were there doing what they are doing. I worked for a company called GRC and one of our employees, whenever Saddam's name was mentioned, would get so mad at him and would tell horrible stories of when Saddam was in power and he would be so glad that we took Saddam and his regime out. One time I was working on an install (GRC installed VSAT [satellite] dishes for NGOs etc) for a company called DAI. They had a guard for their compound. He was sitting in a place that I passed many times as I went back and forth carrying equipment from our van to the roof. He was an Iraqi and couldn't speak much english at all. But when I first met him he shook my hand very affectionately and said the only english words he knew "Hello, hello meester, hello." And each time I walked by him he stood up and bowed to me, smiled and said, "Hello, hello meester, hello." I could tell he was very glad we (the Americans) were there.

A big problem, in my opinion, with the war on terror and the issues going on in Iraq is the focus of the media, the focus of the reporters. They focus on the negative things going on, they focus on the amount of citizens killed, soldiers wounded or dead, the plans that aren't working. And because of this, the morale of the American people declines and they want to pull out of Iraq. And they express such sentiments to the President and congressmen etc. The focus is not on the people of Iraq who are glad that we are there--and there are many Iraqis who are thankful for what we have done (at least there were back in 2004 when I was there). The focus is not on the improved development and improved economy where it should be.

Well...that was one thought I had. That thought really materialized in my mind because I recently visited my sister in Haiti and the orphanage she manages. I got there and saw all the cute, playful kids about whom my sister had told me. I also saw them pout and cry. My sister had told me about that before...like all kids, they cry and get in fights etc., but she had only told me once. The rest of the time she focuses on all the cute things and fun things they do. And that's the important stuff, the positive stuff. Why would you want to focus on the bad stuff? Of course you acknowledge and understand that it happens, to not do so would be ignorant. But to focus on it and complain about it would be negative and pessimistic. That's how the reporters in Iraq are: pessimistic. But my sister is altogether better and amazing. She's not ignorant and she doesn't paint a bleak one-sided picture of what's going on over there. Of course she realizes the kids pout and cry, but that's not what she's interested in, that's not what she focuses on or wants to magnify.

My sister disciplines those kids and doesn't ignore or let them get away with the bad things they do. She doesn't spoil them and give them anything they cry for. She deals with what needs to be dealt with. But she focuses on the good and promotes that.

Let's focus on what is good and amplify it. But at the same time not ignore the bad things that are going on. They need to be dealt with.

Life is a balancing act.

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Thursday, December 14, 2006

i made it


i'm putting this picture up first and laying claim to it. this kid is cute.

had a great trip, though didn't get as much sleep on the planes as I wanted to. so i'm really tired today. but i hope to get a good night's sleep tonight. i'm excited to get an idea of what life is like for my sister. i got a glimpse when i took a "shower" earlier today with her camp shower that she hangs on the shower head 'cause they don't have running water. the water was warm 'cause she leaves the bag out on the roof/patio during the day. that was interesting 'cause the level at which the water would come out of the bag was above my armpits :) which means i had to do a lot of acrobatics...it was an adventure!

then we went to st. joseph's and ate dinner and watched 'dance theater' which was incredible. now we're back here and the electricity came on! so i was able to post this. now i'm going to post this, spend some time with my sister and go to bed.

gnight.

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Monday, December 11, 2006

haiti, m'ap vini!


that means "Haiti, I'm coming" (at least I think i got that right).

I'm going to Haiti in 2 days to visit my sister! I'm so excited! I get to see the place she calls "home", Three Angel's Orphanage. If you haven't looked at her blog you need to: http://angelainhaiti.blogspot.com/ and the blog for the orphanage is great too! http://threeangelshaiti.blogspot.com/ And, of course the website for the orphanage itself: http://www.threeangelshaiti.org/ (Note: if you have ever considered adoption, or even if you never have, your heart will be strongly tugged by the pictures, stories, and videos that can be seen on the aforementioned webpages. A very high percentage of people who have viewed these webpages have strongly desired to adopt one or all of them!)

My sister's favorite verse is James 1:27 which says, "Pure and undefiled religion in the sight of our God and Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their distress, and to keep oneself unstained by the world." This is what my sister is doing! She is "visiting" and caring for and providing for orphans, "the least of these" (and also the cutest of these).

Please pray for my trip, I hope to post pictures upon my return.

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Thursday, December 07, 2006

trough or spring?

I read this amazing quote today:
God has no needs that I could ever be required to satisfy. God has no deficiencies that I might be required to supply. He is complete in Himself. He is overflowing with happiness in the fellowship of the Trinity. The upshot of this is that God is a mountain spring, not a watering trough. A mountain spring is self-replenishing. It constantly overflows and supplies others. But a watering trough needs to be filled with a pump or bucket brigade. So if you want to glorify the worth of a watering trough you work hard to keep it full and useful. But if you want to glorify the worth of a spring you do it by getting down on your hands and knees and drinking to your heart's satisfaction, until you have the refreshment and strength to go back down into the valley and tell people what you've found. You do not glorify a mountain spring by dutifully hauling water up the path from the river below and dumping it in the spring. What we have seen is that God is like a mountain spring, not a watering trough. And since that is the way God is, we are not surprised to learn from Scripture...that the way to please God is to come to Him to get and not to give, to drink and not to water. He is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied [by] Him.

hi dadMy hope as a desperate sinner, who lives in a Death Valley desert of unrighteousness, hangs on this biblical truth: that God is the kind of God who will be pleased with the one thing I have to offer--my thirst.
[John Piper, The Pleasures of God, pp. 215-216]
emphasis mine

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