Sunday, February 25, 2007
Kukhany Okusha Zion Church
While in Swaziland, we spent a great deal of time with the members of the Kukhany'okusha Zion Church in Manzini. The cKukhany’okusha Zion Church (KZC) has thirty six congregations throughout Swaziland and we visited several of the outlying congregations where there is work being done to ehlp fellow Swazis. The Zionist Church in Southern Africa was founded in the late 1800’s in Othaka, South Africa by a Dutch Reformed missionary, Mr. LeRoux and an indigenous leader, Rev. Daniel Nkonyane. The Zionist Church is characterized by practices and rules which are unique. These include: A) the use of uniforms during worship, B) the removal of shoes inside the sanctuary, C) the carrying of crosses/staffs during worship, and D)prohibition of smoking, pork products, and fermented food/beverages. In 1983, after six years of discussion and dialogue, the Kukhany’Okusha branch of the Zionist Church of Swaziland was established under the leadership of Bishop A.M. Dlamini, the founding and present presiding bishop. In English, Kukhany’okusha means “new light.” We were blessed to spend time with Bishop and Make (pronouced Maagay) Dlamini while there. He is a gracious and kind man, who had taken his vision for the church and worked with the other leadership to establish numerous projects designed to improve the lives of Swazi's living in various states of need. The Kukhany,okusha Zion Church focuses on the spiritual Growth of the church, with an additional strong focus on the love and care for others. Church building projects, preschool education, feeding programs, and extensive HIV/AIDS education programs within congregations have all been a part of the work of the church.
Although indigenous and independent, the church is a member of the Council of Churches of Swaziland (the only Zionist Church that holds membership), the All Africa Council of Churches, and the Organization of African Indigenous Churches. It is also a partner church with Global Ministries of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) ad the United Church of Christ.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Mission Team 2006
In July of 2006, 10 team members traveled half a world away to Swaziland, Africa. The team members included Janice Wilson and her 9 year old daughter Clare. Amanda and Tracy Parker, along with Andrea Nielsen, Laura Seithers, John Johnson, Brenda Mann, Elaine Hacker and Brad Milner finished the team. Janice had traveled two years previous and felt called to return. She worked diligently to raise money and brought together a team that would forever be changed by their expiences. Here is your chance to meet the team..
Janice Wilson
Clare Wilson
Amanda Parker
John Johnson
Elaine Hacker
Brenda Mann
Laura Seithers
Andrea Nielsen
Brad Milner
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Laura's Siswati Lesson
You can brush up on your SiSwati with a list of words! Remember that c's make a click sound, the accent is typically on the next to last syllable, and the vowels are like Spanish (ah, eh, ee, oh, oo) when you are attempting to pronounce these words. Enjoy!
Greetings/ Farewells/ Important phrases
Hi- Sawubona Response: Yebo
How are you- Unjani
I'm fine- Ngiyaphila
Come here- Wofa Lapha
Stop here- Mani Laph
Sleep here- Lala Lapha
Please- Ngiyacela
Thank you- Ngiyabonga
Excuse me- Ngiyacolisa
My name is Laura- Ligama lami ngingu Laura
I greet you in the name of Jesus Christ- Ngiyakubingelela egameni Jesu Christu
Happy Birthday- Lusuku loluhle lwekutalwa
Congratulations!- Siyakubongela
Stay well/ Goodbye/ Goodnight- Sala kahle
Go well- Hamba kahle
Sit down- Hlala phansi
Yes- Yebo No- Cha
Give- Ngiphe
Drinks
Water- Emanti
Cold water- Emanti labanzago
Tea- Litiya
Coffee- Likhofi
Drink- Natsa
Tin/can- Sikotela
Bottle- Libhodlela
I am drinking- Ngiyanatsa
People
Person- Umuntfu
Jesus- Jesu
Lord/God- Nkosi
My friend- Mngani wami
Woman- Make
Man- Babe
Girl- Sisi
Boy- Umfana, Bhuti
Wizard- Umtsakatsi
Pastor/Reverend- Umfundisi
Thishela- Teacher
Body Parts, etc.
Ears- Tindlebe
Legs- Imibala
Feet- Tinyawo
Eyes- Emehlo
Face- Buso
Places/ Travel/ Weather
Let's Go!- Asam beni (my all-time favorite)
Go- Hamba
Stop- Mani
Quick- Sheshisa
House- Indlu
Home- Khaya
Church- Lisontfo
Hospital- Sibhedlela
School- Sikolo
Mountains- Tintsaba
Car- Imoto
Wheel- Lisondvo
Stone- Litje
Road- Umgwaco
Bride gift- Lobola
Sun- Lilanga
It's raining- Liyana
Wind/ Holy Spirit- Umoya
Strength- Amandla
Heart- Inhlitiyo
Hand- Tandla
Animals
Chicken- Inkhukhu
Cow- Inkhomo/ Tinkhomo (many cows)
Dog- Inja
Elephant- Indlovu
Lizard- Umgololo
Rhino- Bhejane
Hippo- Invubu
Giraffe- Indlulamutsi (means literally "above the trees")
Antelope- Umzansi
Miscellaneous/ Names
We dance- Siyadansa
hat- Sigcoko
Wedding- Umshado
Thembinkosi (meaning trust in God)
Vuyo (means happiness in Cosa)
Lavumisa
Mkhonta
Mhlanga
United Nations Report on AIDS orphans
SWAZILAND: AIDS orphans locked out of schools
IRIN/PlusNews
07/02/2007
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
MBABANE, 7 Feb 2007 (IRIN/PLUSNEWS) - Thousands of Swazi AIDS orphans risk being locked out of school at the start of the new term this week, after the government failed to make good on a promise to provide scholarships for all those unable to afford school fees.
"I don't know where to turn. The school said I must find someone to pay my fees, because the government money that was promised never arrived," said Anne, a secondary school student at St. Mark's High School, in the capital, Mbabane.
She comes from the impoverished Msunduza Township, in the mountains overlooking the city. Her mother, a former domestic worker, and her father, who made ends meet with odd jobs, left little behind when they died of AIDS-related illnesses, and she now lives with relatives who cannot afford her school fees.
Another AIDS orphan at the same school, who asked not to be named, said he was confident he could find sponsors to allow him into Form III, but only if he could prove he had passed the previous academic year. His dilemma is that "The school told me to go home at fetch the money owed from last year," before they will release his results, and the government has not paid his outstanding fees.
For the past four years the government has tried to make good on its assurance that the 80,000 pupils who had lost their parents to AIDS would have their fees covered, but each term thousands are overlooked. Acting Minister of Education Mtiti Fakudze urged a meeting of headmasters on Wednesday to hold off expelling students and give the government a chance to sort out the mess.
"The consultation has been prompted by the inability of the budget allocation to pay school claims in their entirety in the 2006 school year. It was resolved to review the method of selection of beneficiaries and payment," Fakudze told a press conference.
In 2003 the government allocated US$2.3 million to cover school fees, which has steadily risen and by 2006 reached almost US$6.4 million. But the increases have not kept pace with the growing number of orphans in a country with the highest HIV prevalence in the world: nearly 40 percent of adults are infected with the virus.
The United Nation's Children Fund (UNICEF) anticipates there will be 120,000 AIDS orphans by 2010, the equivalent of 10 percent of the population.
"This matter is not going away, and is going to get worse with the rise in AIDS orphans. But school principals cannot be made the villains - we are educators, that is our calling," a head teacher in the central Manzini region told IRIN/PlusNews.
"It is agony to expel a student because of his or her poverty; it is heartbreaking. Many of our orphans are actually subsidised by other parents. But all schools operate through school fees, or we shut down. Government made a noble promise [to pay for all orphans], and it must fulfil it."
To meet the growing need, humanitarian organisations like the Bhaphalali Red Cross Society have targeted orphans for special assistance. "Our goal is to pay school fees for 1,000 orphans. We do not discriminate - whether a child is orphaned by AIDS, or another cause, it does not matter - but most children we find are AIDS orphans," director Sbongile Hlope told IRIN/PlusNews.
Hlope said a better listing of eligible children and improved accounting for funds was required to put an end to the perennial crisis of orphans barred from school each year.
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