As The truck slid sideways through the turn I could see the last man in the chase slowing down. I'd better get moving if we want to catch this guy. At the corner I see others running through an open gate and through someone's compound. They wave to me that he is ahead. Got to get to Kiira Rd. before him! As we make the next right I see him jump the fence onto the road. I pull up and begin hooting my hooter (honking the horn) to attract attention then swerve right to block his path. Bystanders ask "Mzungu what is it?" I holler "Thief" then they grab him.
Lets back up a bit. June and Jenny moved to Jinja in December to run a street kids ministry. Jenny had recently graduated from University of Georgia and June is her mom. They and their "boys" come to Calvary Chapel. One night in January they called Bev at 2:00a.m. telling her that thieves were trying to break into their house. We quickly threw on clothes and raced to their house. The thieves left when we arrived and after making sure they were safe and the house secure we went back home and back to bed.
Saturday afternoon we received a call from Jenny that they had caught a man in their house who was claiming to be looking for Pastor Jesse. Bev assured them he wasn't sent by us and to take him to police. Then we realized they didn't have a car to take him to police so I went over.
As I got out of the truck the men holding the suspect eased their grip and the thief ran. He managed to get out the gate with five others chasing him. I jumped into the truck and now we are back to the beginning.
As the crowd started to form they began to beat the thief. Blows and kicks rained down on him and I tried desperatly to get him into the truck. Now as usual when you catch a thief you then have to protect him from being killed. It felt like dejavu. In 2010 we had caught a thief in our neighborhood and I had protected him as well.
Then I realized why it seemed so familiar. It was the same man! No it couldn't be, but it was.
After his release from his last arrest he had developed a new way to steal. He or one of his accomplices would enter a Mzungu compound and look to see what could be stolen. If they were caught they would tell the Mzungu that they were looking for Pastor Jesse. Then the trusting Mzungu would let him go and a few nights later the gang would come back and rob the place.
Two young missionaries in town had sent out an email about this gang after it happened to them. The memory of that email is what caused me to go to Jenny and June's.
Bev then called the young couple and sent them to identify the thief but they could not. But she could identify his shoes and sure enough they were the same shoes.
It is hard to catch a thief the first time. But the second time is easier. Just say you know Pastor Jesse!
Sunday, February 26, 2012
The Fire
On Friday the 17th our night guard Henry came to our door and said “There is a fire.” Now Henry is a man of few words so I should know that when he says there is a fire it must be a fairly large burn. But I went out the door expecting to see the trash pit smoldering and some small flames. I was stunned. One hundred yards away flames were rising twenty feet high. Works was on fire!
Works is an area owned by the Ministry of Works that for our first five years in Jinja was only an empty field. Then JB got permission to build a small shop to sell things (salt, sugar etc.) Soon there was a row of shops. Today there are over 500 people living there. Now their homes were on fire.
The homes are nothing more than whatever they can find to nail together. Scrap lumber, pieces of tin, plastic, and used discarded iron sheets for roofing. It is at best described as a shanty town.
The bars moved in about three years ago. The first one was so successful that two more opened up. In case you didn’t know, Ugandans spend a greater percentage of their income on alcohol then any other nation. So where there are people there will be bars. Then a video hall opened up. And the once empty field became Works.
By the time the fire was contained twenty-six homes had been destroyed and one hundred thirty people were left homeless. I sent Steven and Jacob over that night to tell anyone who needed a place to stay that we had set up andopened the church for shelter. No one came!
The next day we went to see the damage and God led us to feed the people porridge and set up a large tent for a sleeping shelter. That became the starting point. Most families affected by the fire found neighbors or relatives to house their kids but we still have twenty-two people staying in the tent.
Kelli, Jen Long and Bev have organized the feeding of 50-80 people every evening for the past week as well as gathering household needs for the displaced.
With the hard efforts of Johnny Long, Bob Peterson and the rest of the mission community we have started to help our neighbors rebuild. Businesses have responded by donating building materials and our compound has turned into a construction site. People have given support from America, Africa and Europe. It is a real blessing to be a part of this effort.
But God hasn’t stopped there! Four women gave their lives to Jesus Sunday morning and many others came to church for the first time. Sunday School was packed with kids. God has a plan for this neighborhood and these people. It will be exciting to be a part of it.
“There is a fire.” The fire on the 17th was only the start of the Refiner’s fire that is beginning to burn in our neighborhood! Lord, set our hearts aflame for you.
Works is an area owned by the Ministry of Works that for our first five years in Jinja was only an empty field. Then JB got permission to build a small shop to sell things (salt, sugar etc.) Soon there was a row of shops. Today there are over 500 people living there. Now their homes were on fire.
The homes are nothing more than whatever they can find to nail together. Scrap lumber, pieces of tin, plastic, and used discarded iron sheets for roofing. It is at best described as a shanty town.
The bars moved in about three years ago. The first one was so successful that two more opened up. In case you didn’t know, Ugandans spend a greater percentage of their income on alcohol then any other nation. So where there are people there will be bars. Then a video hall opened up. And the once empty field became Works.
By the time the fire was contained twenty-six homes had been destroyed and one hundred thirty people were left homeless. I sent Steven and Jacob over that night to tell anyone who needed a place to stay that we had set up andopened the church for shelter. No one came!
The next day we went to see the damage and God led us to feed the people porridge and set up a large tent for a sleeping shelter. That became the starting point. Most families affected by the fire found neighbors or relatives to house their kids but we still have twenty-two people staying in the tent.
Kelli, Jen Long and Bev have organized the feeding of 50-80 people every evening for the past week as well as gathering household needs for the displaced.
With the hard efforts of Johnny Long, Bob Peterson and the rest of the mission community we have started to help our neighbors rebuild. Businesses have responded by donating building materials and our compound has turned into a construction site. People have given support from America, Africa and Europe. It is a real blessing to be a part of this effort.
But God hasn’t stopped there! Four women gave their lives to Jesus Sunday morning and many others came to church for the first time. Sunday School was packed with kids. God has a plan for this neighborhood and these people. It will be exciting to be a part of it.
“There is a fire.” The fire on the 17th was only the start of the Refiner’s fire that is beginning to burn in our neighborhood! Lord, set our hearts aflame for you.
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