![]() ![]() But living with less here has left my heart more lean and sinewy. I will never come anywhere close to the muscularity of this culture in its impressive ability to survive-with joy-on so little. It’s the one that none of us wants to do, but that once we realize it for its rugged, beautiful weight, can’t wait to hand down to our own children. It’s not unlike the gift of, say, work, I’d guess. ![]() It’s the gift of freedom from possessions as we trim them relentlessly. This month, as we pray for our homes, I hope to share with you Monica’s jewel: A form of fasting for our homes. If this motivates you to generosity, please have at it! Yet I tell you this to illustrate two pearls that Africa has folded into my hands with her own mahogany-colored ones: the gift-the sheer joy-of simplicity, perhaps with a side of global (―even historical―) perspective. I realize some of you will struggle with guilt as you read this-but that’s honestly not my goal. And not just the brimming bag full of cucumbers, spring onions, and lemons she packed me from her garden. She lives in poverty, but I always get something precious from Monica. “I never thought I would have a house like this!” she gushed. But as we stood in her living room with its two unvarnished benches and modest television stand, her delight was infectious. The floors remain unfinished, the whole thing could use a paint job, and I believe she had six pieces of furniture, counting the four beds. After years of cleaning larger homes, Monica has-wait for it-two bathrooms inside a modest, concrete, six-room house! She even cooks inside the house. My kids ran around with the neighborhood kids and a number of cheeky, waddling ducks.īut Monica’s new home, where she fosters various rescued street children for a local NGO, is clearly a bubbling little spring of joy for her. One of us held the large plastic jug of water in a steady stream, and the other sudsed the dishes. But we still laughed washing up after dinner. She didn’t have running water, of course she didn’t have a bathroom, save the neighborhood pit latrine. ![]() Her hand-grinder, for the peanut butter she made to survive, took up its own space it was a prized possession, purchased with money raised by a youth group in Canada. Their few belongings were stacked strategically beneath the beds and around the perimeter of the room. A sheet sagged from its string across the room as a divider between one set of bunk beds (where three grown women and Monica’s little girl slept) and their living space. And when I entered, I understood why.įirst, I should tell you about Monica’s last house I visited, a single room from which she was still as heartily delighted and grateful to host my family of six. I had to comply looking into the toothy ivory grin parting that smooth, ebony face. When I visited her shared compound on Saturday, she couldn’t wait to show me inside her house. But despite my college education, she has a lot to teach me. She learned to read and write in the last decade or so, when she moved to Kampala from her village in northern Uganda. I always learn something from my friend Monica. ![]()
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