Walira Mvula, Walira Matope
God is our refuge and
strength, an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though
the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea, though its
waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging. (Psalm 46:1-3)
There is a Chewa proverb, “Walira mvula, walira matope” (he
who cries for rain, cries for mud). In a place where no rain falls from May to
October, the beginning of the rainy season means new life and a fresh crop of
food. Malawian farmers view rain as one of God’s greatest blessings; however,
the rainy season presents a significant challenge for city planners trying to
manage the flow of water through heavily populated urban areas.
On 10 January 2019 heavy rains in Malawi’s capital city of
Lilongwe led to flash flooding that killed two people and damaged the homes of
984 people. Several bridges were severely damaged. The hardest hit areas of the
city included the campus of the Lutheran Bible Institute, where we are training
the future pastors of the Lutheran Church in Central Africa.
The LBI campus is located on the slope of a hill and is surrounded
by a brick security wall that is about 10 feet tall. Although the wall has
several drainage outlets, several of them were blocked with trash and debris.
After three hours of non-stop rain, a portion of the wall collapsed. This
released a tidal wave of water that gushed down the campus slope towards the
homes of the people who live adjacent to our campus, including the home of LCCA
pastor Kesten Chinyanga.
At the request of the community’s traditional headman, LBI
faculty members visited the affected people and delivered gifts of money and
maize (corn) to people who had suffered the greatest losses. Our visitors were somewhat
surprised to hear accusations that someone had intentionally broken to wall to
cause destruction to our neighbors’ homes.
Three days later, representatives from the LBI met a second
time with the headman and members of the community. At that time we learned
that some members of the community threatened to hold a vigil in protest
against the LBI. Our representatives assured the community leaders about our
solidarity with them during this difficult time, and took them on a walking
tour around the campus to show them what steps we have taken to control the
flow of water across our property.
Working together with our neighbors in love and humility,
the LBI faculty listened to the community leaders’ suggestions on further steps
we can take to mitigate flooding in the future. One proposal is to construct of
a large drainage ditch that will shunt water away from our neighbors’ homes. In
fact, a drainage system has already been designed by Gary Evans, one of the
current CAMM staff members in Malawi and a civil engineer by profession.
Even in the midst of suffering, God continues to hold his
protecting hand over us and our community. This recent natural calamity has
given us the opportunity to demonstrate Christian love and compassion for our
neighbors, and to witness to them about the “fountain filled with blood drawn
from Immanuel’s veins; and sinners plunged beneath that flood, lose all their
guilty stains” (CW 112, v1).
Missionary John Roebke
lives in Malawi and is the Communications Director for One Africa Team
Please
pray for those working in fields that are ripe for harvest. Share their story,
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about our mission fields in Africa and how the Holy Spirit is working faith in
people’s hearts https://wels.net/serving-others/missions/africa