Our New Friend Patrick
I got to know Patrick – on Facebook, of course – through another organization, U-TOUCH, a non-profit started in Scripps Ranch which is using computers to bridge the education and opportunity gap in Gulu, Kitgum and Paday Uganda. We amped up our correspondence in the weeks before our trip, with Patrick offering ground support (lining up a few supplies for VBS), offering encouragement and heartfelt prayers for our group.
So I was extremely anxious to meet him in person and share him with everyone. Our kids embraced him, his joy, warm heart and “yahhh-yes-Wazzup?”. He fit right into the pack, and willingly joined us for our first day in Guru-Guru…..and every day after. What a great addition to our team! A patient and able translator, who was willing to step up and take on crowd control occasionally, working and sweating right alongside us. Observing all of this, you would never know, you could hardly believe what Patrick’s life has been like. On Wednesday evening, Robert asked him to share it with us.
We had been told that this part of Uganda had been through 22 years of Civil War in which tens of thousands of kids have been abducted by the rebels to be soldiers, their parents killed. When Patrick was 13, the rebels came to his hut one night around midnight. They called the parents outside and when they could not give them the foodstuffs they demanded, the Rebels brutally slaughtered them, in front of their children, and then took Patrick away. He told of his experience with the Rebels before escaping and how he found his sister and brother again. At each crisis point in this experience—being taken, being caned nearly to death, hiding from the Rebels, trying to find his brother and sister -- he shared his prayers to Jesus for deliverance, and most remarkable to me, thanksgiving. He had lost his parents and then, one by one, every person who could have helped him -- every relative, his neighbors who took care of his siblings, his teacher who paid for his schooling, all killed by the rebels. And yet he loved and thanked God.
I think those who have a lot, expect a lot. Maybe you have to have nothing and expect nothing to learn to see all the ways God works in our lives. I tend to look always at what is not working and wonder where God is. But God specializes in guiding our path through the center of those difficult or even hopeless situations.
Labels: New Friends



