It is good to be reminded of the range and reach of LAMB's services to the poor. It is difficult to measure and count the difference we make in the lives of the poor. The brochure may only show our efforts but I hope you will be encouraged to continue being part of LAMB's work by reading the brochure available here.
Christian In Bangladesh
Personal blog from Bangladesh
বাংলাদেশে আছি খ্রীষ্টিয়ান
বাংলাদেশে আছি খ্রীষ্টিয়ান
Monday, 13 October 2014
Friday, 26 September 2014
Poverty and Hope
Most of my time is spent in the relative protected environment that is LAMB. Though we are here to ‘serve God by serving the poorest of the poor,’ the poorest are often far away. It may be that God has changed the situation for the ones who live near LAMB, a scarier scenario is that they do not have access to our services. Whenever I travel, often from the capital Dhaka to LAMB, the poor come much closer.
On one such recent trip, I was accompanied by a national colleague who was keen on being at the station early and so we had two hours to observe the life at the Airport Station.
The first people we noticed were a little family of four. As is custom in (rural) Bangladesh we engaged in polite conversation. The family was traveling the same way as us and both children were born at LAMB. The oldest, a daughter of four, was their reason for being in Dhaka. She had been diagnosed with a heart problem and they were now on their way home to raise the necessary funds for surgery. We did not ask what resources they have.
There was a steady flow of beggars passing by as we stood around our bags, some were old, some were disabled but a good number were young children. One old man with his mouth frozen into a kiss was selling soap bags. Convenient thread bags that would hold a bar of soap and could be hung around a tap so as to not fall onto the ground or into a drain. I didn’t see his stock diminish and when I bought one he informed us he would make Tk 2 for each bag he sold. He would have to sell 40 bags to make one dollar.
Many of the young children came by, asked for money or candy and went on their way, but one boy of about ten scooted past without stopping. On his leg was a big pink patch where the skin was missing, the leg was fixed straight and he used the other good leg and his two hands to push himself forward. My colleague commented that there was a syndicate abusing the children to raise funds by begging. If he hurried past in fear that I would get him medical help he is not the first child deprived of the kind of care that would reduce his ability to arouse sympathy when begging.
As we got on the train, the sense of helplessness that comes from not being able to bring any lasting change to these people’s lives was already there. The one bright spot was a perhaps 12-year old boy who, when asked why he sold water on the station at night rather than went to school, confidently said he was in 3rd Grade and worked at night to help support his family.
Before we settled in for the night, we discussed the recent open-heart surgery with one of the other people in the cabin, my colleague had a stint put into the coronary artery a few years ago and they had much to share. Another occupant and the young girl in the bunk above him did not share as much. In the morning when I asked the girl, who was probably not even ten, what grade she was in, she told me she didn’t go to school. The old man with whom she was traveling assured me that she, as his work-girl, did go to evening classes. I know she didn’t go to classes that night as we were on the train, but perhaps she does get some informal education. I have to ask myself, “What are her alternatives?”
LAMB School serves God by providing education for the children of some of the almost 1000 staff; in doing so we are part of bringing the Kingdom of God to Bangladesh. Thank you for your fellowship in prayer to support this work. Coming back to LAMB, it was good to be reminded, as our new brochure does so well, that LAMB is making a difference in an area with over 5 million people. In 2013 almost 60 thousand patients received care at the hospital and over 45 thousand in our health care clinics, (This doesn’t include the over 250 thousand seen in government clinics that we support). In the training centre there were over 25 thousand trainee days last year. You can find more statistics and stories on the LAMB Website.
At LAMB we thank God that we can be part of making a difference in so many lives; we thank donors, prayer supporters, partner organisations and the government for working with us to bring lasting change to people in Bangladesh.
Thursday, 30 January 2014
Good going
My parents have visited again, I think it is the seventh time since I moved to Bangladesh in 1995 that they have come to spend time with us here at LAMB.
It is common for people in Bangladesh to have their parents stay with them for months on end, so it is no surprise that they come every other year. What is more surprising is that they do not stay in my house.
I have been blessed with being able to have them stay at Bashundhara compound with me and am thankful to the people who have let them use their houses.
What also surprise some people is that my parents were born so long ago, and yet are not very old. There are many much older people here who were born after my parents.
My parents have spent time helping and sharing with staff, students, neighbours and patients all over LAMB. I count it a privilege that they are able to come and that when they do, they are accepted as part of our community.
God has been with them in many ways; when they arrived there was a break in the otherwise pretty consistent transportation blockades which allowed them to travel from Dhaka to LAMB. At Christmas we were able to visit friends further north in Bangladesh because of another break in the political struggles and my father just made it to a Dhaka on a train that was three hours late, and got seen even though he was fifteen minutes late for a dentist appointment.
I am thankful for their time here, I praise God for his faithful protection of us all and pray for all those who are in need of safety, peace and parents to come give them time.
It is common for people in Bangladesh to have their parents stay with them for months on end, so it is no surprise that they come every other year. What is more surprising is that they do not stay in my house.
I have been blessed with being able to have them stay at Bashundhara compound with me and am thankful to the people who have let them use their houses.
What also surprise some people is that my parents were born so long ago, and yet are not very old. There are many much older people here who were born after my parents.
My parents have spent time helping and sharing with staff, students, neighbours and patients all over LAMB. I count it a privilege that they are able to come and that when they do, they are accepted as part of our community.
God has been with them in many ways; when they arrived there was a break in the otherwise pretty consistent transportation blockades which allowed them to travel from Dhaka to LAMB. At Christmas we were able to visit friends further north in Bangladesh because of another break in the political struggles and my father just made it to a Dhaka on a train that was three hours late, and got seen even though he was fifteen minutes late for a dentist appointment.
I am thankful for their time here, I praise God for his faithful protection of us all and pray for all those who are in need of safety, peace and parents to come give them time.
Monday, 30 December 2013
Christmas 2013
Dear Friends,
Looking back at 2013 it is hard not to notice the blessings
of a year in England – studying, of the opportunity to come back ‘home’ to Bangladesh,
of my parents being able to visit amidst the political unrest and perhaps most
of all the blessings of seeing so many former students who, while often facing
big challenges are doing great.
It is the time between Christmas and New Year when focus, if
it is good, is decidedly on relationships and remembrance. Remembering that
Christ came with a not just a message of, but to establish a peace that is for
all people is very relevant for us in Bangladesh at this time. The country is
preparing for a change in government, but there is no agreement on how that
change should happen. The main opposition party is not taking part in the
elections scheduled for 5 January 2014 so there is no question as to who will
win.
The last two months have been filled with strikes and road
and transportation blockades so many days that it has been difficult to get
essential resources for the hospital. It has also been difficult for patients
to come to the hospital so much that the number of critically ill patient
admissions have fallen by app 75%. Peace may literally mean the difference
between life and death for some patients.
Others have died too; activists have had an affinity for
setting vehicles on fire killing passengers and staff on-board. This has mostly
been far from where I have been, but the other day when travelling in
Thakurgaon my parents and I passed a group of riot police who were walking
towards a fire on the road. It was encouraging to see how a number of people
made sure an approaching truck did not proceed into potential danger. While not
exactly messages of peace, the intent was clearly to save the driver in the
truck.
My parents arrived during a few days of respite when a
visiting UN peace negotiator was trying to help the parties find a peaceful
solution to the impasse. This break in strikes and blockades allowed my parents
to come, and it allowed the LAMB Board to meet.
It was encouraging to have the opportunity to sit in on the
board meeting and listen to the reports from all the varied parts of LAMB’s
work. To hear about how our Community Health and Development Department is
working with the health authorities to run 414 clinics in two districts and to
hear that many of them are increasingly independent of outside (our) help.
At the hospital our staff continues to work to offer medical
care that is both appropriate and accessible, including to the poorest of the
poor in our catchment area of perhaps 1.5 million people. Making decisions
about what treatment not to offer in order to ensure the greatest benefit to the
most people can be very difficult. Decisions about whom not to treat are very
difficult, especially when some treatment is readily available elsewhere.
You can read more about LAMB and the work we do here: http://www.lambproject.org/
In church the most encouraging event was a farewell cum
Christmas party. The spontaneous dancing and praise around the bon-fire
afterwards was an encouraging testimony to the Spirit that is active in our
fellowship. Do pray for the teen group as we enter another year; for God to be
active in us and for the fire to spread amongst us.
The peace that we seek is often reflected in the children.
These three are from the youngest generation in our* village near Thakurgaon. I
don’t think they are unaffected by the turmoil around them, but perhaps the
fact that they don’t understand it helps them live in their childish reality.
To enter the Kingdom of God we must be like little children and live in a
reality that supersedes the political reality of the adult world of worries
around us.
Thank you once again for your prayers in another year,
* I call Kamarsenua my home village because our family had a
house there in the early eighties.
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