While preparing to move to Africa for several years, I asked, “What should I bring?” The answer came, “Whatever makes you feel at home.” Having always lived in the southern United States, I had no idea how to make that decision, short of taking everything I owned. Once I arrived in Africa, I adjusted more quickly than expected to the various places I lived. “Home” became more of a state of mind than a physical location or set of things.
“How is life in Sudan different from the USA?” • Waking in the middle of the night to find the house invaded by army ants • Realizing you are the only white person on a very full bus, and feeling comfortable with that. • Meeting someone at a shop and ending up in their home having breakfast • Spending an afternoon at the Sudanese ambassador’s house • Enjoying sheep intestines while thinking it is macaroni. • Entering the home of a stranger and being welcomed like a long-lost friend.
Life in Africa was not what I expected. It is fuller, richer, changeable, unpredictable, fascinating. The people are gracious, forgiving and hospitable. The tastes, sights, and sounds reflect a vibrant, determined, joyful richness that overcomes poverty and significant difficulties. I’ve been challenged and encouraged while learning great patience and the value of perseverance. I am deeply indebted, especially to the Sudanese, who have taught me so much.
Leoma worked in the Sudan for 20 years and came to know and love many Sudanese. When she returned to the US, she wrote about her experiences as well as the lives of her Sudanese friends and colleagues. While dealing with culture shock to the US, she wrote a devotional book and several books of prayers based on Scripture.
Leoma has a unique view of life, and that is reflected in her passion for connecting faith and the reality of life in the US and abroad.
At our house in Juba, Sudan (now South Sudan), we should have had running water. However, the system didn't work well, and we virtually never had city water. We depended on a water truck to come by or for a team from the SIL center to bring three drums of water and pump it into our water tank. So, when it rained, we hurried to collect as much precious water as we could. And when we got wet, all the better.
Book Excerpt
Launching Into the Unknown
Our metal roof had advantages and disadvantages. It was hot when the sun shone and loud when it was raining. But it caught an abundance of water. Just a few feet of guttering in a strategic place where several angles of the roof came together, and it filled a fifty-gallon drum in twenty minutes! But we couldn’t afford the luxury of just sitting around watching a drum fill. If someone were home, as I normally was, Paul and I grabbed buckets and dipped water from the outside barrel to fill up the inside barrels. We kept three barrels in the pantry. It rained so hard that with both of us removing several gallons of water every minute or two, the outside barrel still overflowed. When every available container in the house was full, we stood at the window to watch.
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