
hello!
i know it has only been five days but so much has happened we had to blog now so i dont leave tons out. We got into managua tuesday night around 8, where we were picked up by Anne and Danny Sharpe, a couple from north carolina who work with vida joven (young life) here in Nicaragua. We called them about midnight on monday and they did not want us to take a taxi into managua to find a hostel late at night so they picked us up. They are amazing people and gave us a great welcome into the country.
Wednesday morning we woke up at about 5:45 (everyone here does) and had great nicaraguan coffee and breakfast at the Sharpes. We got a ride into the city with anne who had a meeting and started walking around. We ended up walking about ten kilometers that morning into the city and around a really cool market place called Plaza Israel--it was like nothing i had ever seen. From the outside it looked like a row of store fronts on the street but soon we realized there were little pathways that lead you back through the stores leading to more shops, restaurants and stands. It was so packed of little shops that about 4 shops would squeeze into an average american living room. After exploring for a while and doing our best to smile, say hola and seem as little like tourists as possible, we sat down at a tiny restaurant for our first meal of beans and rice. for a plate of beans, rice, salad, chicken and a coke, eric and i spent a little less than 5 dollars together including a huge tip.
that first afternoon we met up with a woman named Amira who was a friend of Anne´s who works with the manna organization. Manna is an organization that has a clinic, multiple english classes and sports programs centered around the city dump and the surrounding barrios (neighborhoods). She gave us a general overview of their work, took us to an english class for little kids and offered to take us to a dump the next morning.
That night we had a great dinner with the Sharpes and went to a vida joven club in a poor neighborhood in managua. Since my name is easier to remember and pronounce than ¨eric¨ in spanish, they called on me for every embarrassing game and skit haha. we had a great time. It was really cool to see the young life model put to work in nicaragua.
Thursday morning we went to the city dump with Amira and Harrison, a young life summer intern. It was the most extreme poverty i have seen. People live as squatters in a shanty town right next to the city dump which stands out like a mountain and takes up the whole panoramic view of a camera. The streets are covered with trash and the people live in tiny homes made with scrap metal and wood. Not a single family home was as big as a dorm room. Only, recently have the people had access to water or electricity. Manna project has a feeding center, clinic, and english class in the neighborhood.
Thursday night, anne had organized for us to a homestay at a village near managua called ¨bello Amanecer¨-which means beautiful sunrise. Narcisso, the area director for vida joven nicaragua lives there with his family. He lives in a small home, about the size of my living room which has a curtain separating the living room and bedroom. He shared his testimony with us when we got there. He has an amazing story. He grew up in a broken home wiht an abusive father who came home every couple months only to beat his wife and children. when Narcisso was 14 he started doing drugs, joined a violent gang and eventually became the leader of his gang. He was stabbed in the chest in a violent gang battle when he was 17 and this eventually him to young life camp that summer. Beacuse he was such a hated member of the community and had so many enemies, he forced some lower members of his gang to go with him. At this camp, he felt love for the first time and he and the guys from his gang accepted christ. Now, almost everyone in his former gang has become a christian, his parents have gotten together and our living a healthy marriage, he is the area director for vida joven and his brother is a pastor.
Eric and I stayed in separate homes on the street with nicaraguan young life leaders our age and their families. We payed them each 15 dollars for the night to buy food and help out the families.The guys were awesome. we walked around the neighborhood in the evening to meet all the leaders in the area. As we walked the guys would point out who in the community were christians, who they were discipling through young life and where they did contact work. Lots of people invited us into their homes to talk and get to know us better. Julio, who is 19, married and has a daughter was erics host for the night. At one of the homes we went to he explained the gospel and the mission and purpose of young life in the most beautiful way i had ever heard.
I had a great conversation before bed with Gloria, the mom in the family i stayed with and did bible study the next morning with Adan, the father. They were incredibly humble, hospitable people. The four of them slept in one bed so that i could have the other to myself. Yesterday morning we played soccer in the street with a bunch of guys our age. It was hilarious. I though we were gonna go to a field, but instead we moved two small, makeshift goals to the middle of the street and played there. It was so funny to be running around this tiny dirt street, falling in puddles, avoiding curbs, trees and knocking each other over while trying to score. Eric and i, who are less accustomed to the conditions had huge wipe outs and got disgustingly dirty haha. it is the rainy season here, so the dirt streets are basically mud. The picture at the top is of eric and i and the leaders from bellow amanacer
After leaving Bello Amanecer we tood a taxi then cuaght a bus to the village of Masaya, about 40 minutes outside the city. Yesterday we walked around till we found a hostel (4 bucks a night for a room with two beds)and dropped off our packs. We walked all over the town to try to meet people but received mostly blank stares or scared looks haha. We went into a market last night where there were about ten open air restaurants with local foods and tables set up that we could eat at. (for anyone that saw ¨bizarre foods nicaragua¨we were at the same place shown in the show haha)We had wanted to eat with other people, but a really nice man grabbed chairs and a separate table for us and we couldnt refuse without being rude. All in all it was a frustrating and discouraging afternoon without really meeting people. We retreated to a bar near our hostel to have a beer and met an awesome guy who offered to take us around but works every day but wednesday.
However, just when we thought the day was a waste, we went back to the hostel to find the courtyard full of a loud, friendly group of nicaraguans from out of town who invited us out for drinks. We went to a small bar across the street and hung out with them for like 2 hours. It felt like hanging out with our friends back at school. They asked us tons of questions and were really open about themselves and also just loved joking around. Tonight we are gonna go out with them again when they are done with their meetings today. They are part of a group of indigenous poeple from different tribes from all over the country that come together in masaya a couple times a year to share culture, get to know each other and discuss issues having to do with indigenous cultures in nicaragua. I prayed last night that God would open doors for us here in masaya to share his love, get to know people, and that we would be welcome. We are getting all of their contact infromation which now opens doors to us in at least 4 cities. One woman who we met lives in San Juan del Sur, a surfish and fishing village near the Pacific and said we can stay with her brother for free, surf with him, and even go out on his boat to help him fish if we pay for his gas.
i´m excited to see what happens with these new friendships. None of the poeple we were with last night were christians, but by having a beer with them (which apparently christians dont do) yet talking about jesus it opens a cool ministry opportunity.
Today, we slept in (finally) and walked towards the central plaza for breakfast to have coffee, read our bibles and journal. However, we had not been there for five minutes before two middle aged men came in and asked to join us at our table. ONe was a lawyer and the other and economist. We talked with them for about 30 minutes and they told us about a couple good churches and a youth pastor that we could meet. There is an evangelical church with a service at 4pm today and we are hoping to meet some poeple there that we could get to know better.
We are learning that nicaraguans, for the most part are very shy and almost afraid of us and it is a little harder to get to know poeple than we thought. However, it is already a great exercise in faith as last night right when we started to doubt, God gave us an awesome night out with friends and then a great breakfast conversation this morning. It is so hard being in such a needy area, even i sit here writing my blog a woman and her 2 year old daughter who could barely talk came and asked us for money so they couild eat. Dont know what our response should be to that. We cant just give money to anyone who asks, but i feel guilty and selfish when we dont. Yesterday we had a cool chance to sit down in the park and get to know a man who had asked for money, and after talking with him for a while and showing him love, we gave him enough for a snack or small meal.
I know this is alot, but we have done a lot haha. I will try to keep them shorter in the future!