Posts tagged ‘travel’

May 12, 2025

Clothes for children

by Rod Smith

Very kind people in New Castle, Indiana went shopping and spent a considerable sum on new clothing for children aged 0-12,. It was my joy to deliver half the hoist to Bujumbura, Burundi this week. 

“It’s rare for the children to have new clothes,” said Romy, community coordinator from the campus where I was teaching for the week. 

“The clothes come with much love,” I said, “from New Castle, Indiana.”

In the next few days children in Noepe, Togo, will get the other half of the purchases – again, with love from people in New Castle, Indiana.

*********

Burundi is not on everyone’s cup of tea but it’s mine.

I love it. 

This morning I had breakfast, two bananas and a bread roll, with the banks of Lake Tanganyika in view. I was on the outskirts of Bujumbura, the Burundi capital..

In my almost immediate foreground there is a community play area, and now, Friday mid-afternoon, scores of children are at play in the beautiful sunshine. They’ve walked home from school to the make-shift neighborhoods. The older children,  those who are about 7 and up, are in their school uniforms. I’m quite accustomed to school uniforms, wore a collar and tie myself for all my 12 years of South African schooling. It’s not their dress code which has my attention, it’s the freedom, the joy, the sheer delight in chase and catch, holding hands, turning in circles until they all fall down which they do more from giggles than anything else. 

Burundi is the poorest nation on Earth but watching these children, I’d suggest the nation may be poor, but this little cross-section is one more proof that wealth and happiness are not cousins, often not even from the same family. 

Deeper in the market areas I’ve seen a series of seven or eight motorcycles parked side-by-side, their riders milling nearby. These men are available for rides near and far, up and down the lake’s coast between Bujumbura and nearby towns. They are poised to take somebody to the hospital, drop a teacher at school, or someone to work. I’m told this is a word-of-mouth informal Uber-of-sorts-station for motorcycles. Prices are negotiated on the spot, cash changes hands, and before you can say “Bujumbura” you’re on the back of the motorcycle skirting potholes and chickens and children and trucks and cars and buses and bicycles, some hauling king-size wooden bed frames, and you’re headed there. Locals wedge a child or two between themselves and the driver and off they go. There’s laughter, there’s fun, there’s friendliness and familiarity as prices are bartered and currency is exchanged, and elderly passengers may need help getting onto the motorcycle and extra room may be found last-minute for an extra child who may arrive and beg a ride.

Conversations with the adult students I have the pleasure of teaching for my week in each location leave me impressed at their knowledge of world events. They are up-to-date on the election of the Pope, what’s going on in wartorn areas of the world, the closest being in DRC just across the lake, and South Sudan. 

Students seem far more aware of world events than I certainly was in my early 20s.

In 24 hours I’m leaving Burundi and heading for a night in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and then I will head for Lome, Togo. This will be my third teaching week in Togo and it is  also one of my favorite countries. I love the air of European sophistication, an essence of French culture that’s beautifully refreshing. 

Burundi, Togo, almost opposite sides of this vibrant continent seem to possess some things in common. There’s deference to elders, a warm welcome to strangers, interest in the foreigner and to those who cannot speak the local language. 

“There’s room at our table for you” may not be a known axiom in these parts but it is declared loudly and clearly in the poorest countries on earth – and I have been to a few of them.

Want to help me secure 70 lbs of new clothes for children in Madagascar?

OpenHand International INC

PO BOX 88 New Castle,

IN 47362

USA TAX payers — gifts are tax deductible

August 3, 2015

Packing for Switzerland

by Rod Smith

When I arrived in Geneva – Switzerland (there are others) yesterday, I stepped of the United flight from Dulles wearing Nate Smith’s school shoes. I wore Thulani Smith’s white Butler University bulldog shirt and my yellow hat.

In my DPHS (readers from Durban will know what DPHS is) carryon bag – a treasured gift from Richard Neave – I had Coates’ “Between The World and Me” which I have already read but still can’t put it down and “The Namesake” by Jhumpa Lahiri.

I also brought my (new) red sunglasses and my (new-to-me) red shoes.

Then, it thrilled me to peer out the porthole as we rolled to the gate to see it was raining quite steadily. This meant I could wear (not slung over my shoulder) one of my favorite gifts – my Swaziland jacket commissioned by Bernadette Fourie.

Some other things in my bag?

A pocket New Testament from the welcome desk at Kevin Driver’s church in Banff, the beautiful fountain pen my brother gave me for my birthday, and a plastic model of the human brain.

In my wallet there are two four-leaf clovers laminated beautifully. These are gifts from my friend Jim Cannull. No – I am not superstitious – but several years ago he found the clovers and went to FedEx and laminated them for ME.

Every piece of all this is intentional.

I could tell you exactly why I put it all together and how I put things together for each trip. I will not go into that detail now – although I will be glad to answer specific questions.

Essentially I do this it is because it is NEVER just another week of speaking.

On Monday morning I have the unique, singular joy and unmerited privilege to stand before a class of young men and women (in their 20s and 30s) from several nations (mostly Chinese) and representing very diverse cultures.

I need all these artifacts and symbols and playful pieces of clothing and equipment, not for them, but to enhance my courage to empower all the students to live great and robust and intentional and international lives of meaning and significance.

I need these things to remind me that I come from a community, an international community of men and women who love me. I come from sons who love me. I come from a brother and a sister and immediate and extended family who love me and would do anything for me. I carry a plastic brain to remind me to use the front parts of the real one in my head. I wear a Swazi jacket to be an outward symbol of the Enchanting Continent of my birth.

I wear my yellow hat because it’s Yellow Hat Month and I am going to wear it when a hat is necessary and as long as I can find it – I lose stuff.

I wear my son’s shoes so I can learn to walk in them.

And, beginning on Monday morning (in Lausanne) I am going to tell every last one of the students whom I will then teach for several hours each day that he or she is stunningly beautiful, uniquely talented, and absolutely loved by a Benevolent God and that not a single one of them should put up with a single minute of disregard or ill manners from any person ever (and I’ll add strongly and graphically that I don’t care who it is).

I’ll also teach them Family Therapy 101.

July 11, 2015

Why do you go to so many places and what do you do there?

by Rod Smith

A handful of (newspaper) readers have asked about our travel.

The suggestion is that I am independently wealthy, perhaps a little bored:

1. I travel mostly to speak in Youth With A Mission and its affiliated University of the Nations. I try to take my sons with me. This is a volunteer organization operating in hundreds of locations. I think I’ve been to about 40. I teach classes about growing up, personal responsibility, and about the concept of Differentiation of Self. I have loved this imperfect organization since I was 17. I have tried to play my role since 1986.

2. Outside of YWAM I have developed a readership through my newspaper column (The Mercury). Consequently, I have been invited to address schools, colleges, and public groups about various matters like RACE, ADOPTION, and SINGLE-PARENTING. My newspaper audience is predominantly in South Africa although invitations have come from the UK and Eastern Europe.

3. I travel to assist individuals and groups in conflict. I help people speak and hear each other and engage in necessary and meaningful conflict. On such missions I have no agenda but to help parties articulate what they think they need.

4. I don’t use PowerPoint, I have no bells and whistles. It’s all about the process, respect, mutuality, and love. When I use the term LOVE in this context I mean seeking the highest good for all concerned.

[YES. I will come to you, your organization, your school, church or whatever. It’s all about time and availability. No destination is too far. Am I expensive? YES. It will cost you everything – and the least expensive aspects of what it costs will have to do with money.]