• Nov 2
    … now that the rest of the team has returned to the UK, Bernie is left alone in Brazil…

    Friday & Saturday

    Spent a few days at Ed & Gio´s which is a nice rest and time with the family. Gio is not very happy with me for being more at Washington Pires than her house so I have some amends to make! Went to the supermarket on the Friday which meant walking there and going home by combi van. Spent the rest of the day washing clothes, playing with the kids, relaxing and speaking to Amy & Simon on Skype.

    On Saturday Karen, Gio & I went out shopping. This meant a very evil bus ride, literally every bone in your body rattles as you are thrown around and lifted off your seat. Then we looked around an outdoor market and drank fresh coconut juice, yum. Followed by Pastel a very traditional kind of light pastry filled with meat or cheese, followed by ice-cream… by now you are getting the idea of what a Shopping trip is! Couldn´t find a coffee shop though :o(

    Then around 5pm when we were at home it started raining. This turned into the worst storm they have seen since Gio was a child. It went from blazing sun to hail the size of golf balls. The road outside her house was literally a flowing river over the deep pavements, a garage wall collapsed onto the car 3 doors away. Then we noticed water was running down the upstairs walls inside so we had to shut the electric off, move all the furniture into the middle and mop up with towels. very scary! It went on for over an hour and people were clearing up outside for hours afterwards. Ed went out with a jug collecting ice for Ciaparinas ha ha. We were due to go to a church service and celebration dinner for a 50th wedding anniversary so continued to get ready for that. We were late arriving but that´s not a problem in Brazil!

     

    Sunday

    Again spent the day relaxing with Gio´s extended family, also helped Ed with an English class he was doing. Spoke to Graham & Jess on Skype :o) so it was a good day. I returned to Washington Pires in time for church in the evening and to settle in Elias & Milene´s house. Church was a bit strange without the team there and no other English speakers, but everyone was very friendly. Ricardo took the service as Elias had to take Milene to the hospital. I got a bit scared when Ricardo called me to the front but it was only to pray for the church. Phew, I managed half in English & half in Portuguese :o)

     

    Monday

    Spent the morning at the project preparing English classes for the week. I´m really grateful for Amy´s material which has been very helpful and also decided to extend the food topic as it´s such a passion for Brazilians ;o) Also some of the older kids came after school & before lunch for me to help them with their English homework. Next time I would love to do Homework clubs here, they would work really well.

    In the afternoon I spent time with Milene at the house as she is still unwell. She is 3 months pregnant and has some problems so prayer for her would be good. From what I can gather her pregnancy with Nicole was difficult as well, and I´ve already met several women here who have had stillbirths or lost children within days of birth. They also have a good friend who is a pharmacist so that´s been very helpful as well.

    In the evening we all just chilled watching a kind of X factor only 20 times cheesier! This was a great evening for me as it´s the first time I´ve really seen Elias relax with his family. Already this week I am seeing more of a normal routine and it´s good to experience.

    Tuesday

    Spent the day at the project taking an English class in the morning for 10 young kids. I loved it. I just lavished love & praise on them and if they learnt anything I saw it as a bonus ;o) Actually they are really keen and have remembered stuff from the week before and now learnt new stuff. They just lap up the praise and affirmation which is so important for them. Most of these kids are very poor and I´m finding out more about their home situations which are very sad.

    In the afternoon I took a class for adults and teenagers. This time more women from the favela came. Again they were very keen to learn and appreciated the praise. They were also keen to know when the next class was. After that I helped bag up fresh food the project had just collected from the food bank to be given away in the morning. As we were doing it several kids came, obviously hungry to try to get some food early. They had probably been sent by their mums. They were given bread and told to return in the morning for more.

    If you got to this point…thanks for reading ;o) Appreciate your emails and prayers especially as I´m not too well at the moment. Also prayer for continued growth with the language would be good. I´m studying every spare minute I can as it´s easier here when you´re surrounded with the language, but I´m not convinced how much is staying in my brain ;o) Finally prayer to make the most of the rest of my time here and concentrate on what God wants me to do would be fab.

     

  • Oct 27
    Update from Bernie – my (Keith’s) fault that it got posted late, sorry.

    Finally got a chance to write a bit of an update. I have had no internet for a week and been really busy, so it’s been impossible to write before.

    Saturday

    Was a great day. We travelled to another city called Itabarito to visit a project run by my friend called New Destiny. It´s an outdoor activity centre run by a scottish lady called Morvan who has lived in Brazil for about 15yrs. She has also worked with Ed & Gio in the past. So this project takes kids from the Favela for camps and gives them an amazing experience. It was a very moving visit for the team and also shows them more of the area as it´s a hour and a half journey.

     

    Then in the evening we had a presentation from the people in charge of the rebuilding of Simones house project. At the meeting was a Journalist, architect, engineer and a Lawyer, all woman. This was a great group of people with a huge committment to the project and to Elias. They showed us plans for the house, how it was all going to happen and also how legally they were going to put the house in Simones childrens name so that if she died no-one could take the house away from them. I then told them of my involvement and the others said why they were there. There was a real sense of us all being a team together. The building will start Monday.

     

    Sunday

    We should have had a Baptism at a Lake but it has been raining constantly for over 24hrs! So as well as the rain the lake is flooded. Thankfully they cancelled it! So we spent the morning preparing the English classes we will do next week.

     

    At lunch time we went to the Fazenda of Elias´s former primary school teacher and her husband and daughter. This is a farm but not like a farm we know, its basically cut back jungle with loads of fruit trees, sugar cane, sweetcorn and lots of cows & horses. We were again spoilt to pieces and had lots of food produced on the farm such as Orange Juice, milk, cheese, meat, cake made with Sweetcorn. everything was amazing. They´d made little messages for us in English to welcome us and when we left gave us chocolate with again another message! The couple who own the farm help Elias and the project by donating food, picking up food from the wharehouse, and others things. Then had church tonight. For several reasons today was a difficult day for me, also some cultural difficulties occurred for the team so I appreciate your prayers and support.

     

    Monday

    Spent time at the project talking to lots of kids throughout the day. It was a really special time getting to know some of them better. They helped us with Portuguese and we helped them with English! Phil helped with the 1st day of building Simones house. We went to check on the progress and started chatting to some of the men helping they are all from the community and most of them not in the church. They have all been in prison but respect Elias & Ricardo lots. It,s a really good strategy to involve them because as well as it being a way to just get along side them, the community need to accept Simones house without being jealous about it. Suddenly one of them produced a guitar and we had a singsong ha ha. Then straight after Ricardo got one of the young men singing to lift up his tee-shirt. he had a scar from his neck all the way down his stomach. He also had 2 gun shot wounds on his stomach and one right on the back of his neck. They explained he’s been shot by the drug traffickers 6 months ago. I have no idea how he is alive. After that Elias found him a job and he has turned his life around. That incident is a good example of life here, one minute you are singing & laughing, the next hearing the most dreadful of stories. Before Elias & the church arrived 2 murders A WEEK happened in Washington Pires!

     

    Later that afternoon we revisited the elderly man who had the terrible ulcerated leg. We went with a friend of Elias who’s a pharmacist. Since our last visit the man had had an amputation above the knee and was already home the day after the op! This is because the family are expected to care for the patient and also the hospitals are not always very good! I was surprised to see the man was much more alert and able to talk. He was obviously very close to death the first time I saw him. Geraldo the pharmacist was great with him, took his B.P, blood sugar, checked him over, gave some pain relief and explained to the family how to care for the man and his stump. It’s scary to think that only 3 years ago before Elias arrived nothing like this would have happened.

     

    Monday night was a BBQ at Elias house for us and some others we have been getting to know. An elderly guy at the church who has been with Elias since the beginning bought all the food and wanted to cook for us. It’s impossible to convey how much we are being blessed!

     

     

  • Oct 24

    Oi Todos,
    Firstly, thank you for your kind emails encouraging me; it´s hard to express how much they mean when you are here. I’ve managed to borrow a dial up modem for a few minutes so can email but prayer for more internet contact would be useful please :o)

    We are all okay.  Phil’s still a bit off colour and my stomach starting playing up 2 days ago but I can manage to carry on. We had a good day yesterday, with a long team time as there were some things that needed sorting out. It´s amazing how a trip like this makes people feel vulnerable and also not aware of cultural differences. However it’s all part of the experience; we are all ok and we are all laughing a lot as well which I think is a good safety valve!

    Yesterday we went to the project and gave out food parcels, then 2 hairdressers came and cut hair for free – they do it twice a month, Loads of people came, especially boys who want a short cut with lines shaved in. The people doing it took a lot of care and gave a great service. We prepared more English classes and talked loads to kids. Phil helped some of the men with some physical work so he was very happy.

    Then at lunch time there were 13 for food, as I met Cicero and his secretary who I’d met in April. He is a politician who helps Elias a lot. He was really pleased to see me again, but was a bit confused and asked where Edmilson was for the translation and even more surprised when I said “I’m it”, ha ha. We managed to chat though and he was really complimentary about my Portuguese …. which if you knew how much I knew would confirm God is at work, ha ha. Then we went to look at the football project for a bit. In the evening we went to church for the mid week service which again was great, loud and long! It was a very busy day o everyone was shattered.

    We are still being looked after amazingly and escorted everywhere, which is good!  However you are soon reminded that this a tough place. We met a 15 year old yesterday who had been involved with drug trafficking. 6 months ago he was shot by them (not sure why) 5 times, twice in the head and is now blind and traumatised. He also has a huge dint in his head. Very very sad.  It’s so tough to be disabled here.  Elias also showed us yesterday the place where again 6 months ago a 16 year old was killed, it was on the dangerous side of the Favela.

    On Tuesday a  TV crew came to record some stories from victims & families and show what needs doing and what the Town Hall are failing to do. It should be on TV next week.  It’s by a channel I watch at home so it might be on in the UK!

    The whole area has so much need, but the church has a big vision, a big heart and works with passion and commitment, again reminding me of KK and Metro NY. I do love it here, I can’t help it, I do think it’s God.

    A good prayer point would be for some time with Elias & Edmilson together as obviously I need a translator for the very detailed stuff.

    Today we are going to Belo Horizonte to try to get more money out of a bank and show the others a quick city tour, then this afternoon there is a women’s church service and then in the evening there is talk of pancakes :o)

    Thank you for your prayers and emails.

  • Oct 17

    Message from Bernie in Brazil

    Day One
    Amazing welcome, we were met at the airport by Elias, Ed, & a couple of others and taken straight to a restaurant!

    We are staying with Wendel, who has given up his home for us and has also taken holiday from work to look after us! They arrive first thing to feed us and make lunch for later in the day: the hospitality we are recieving is amazing. Things keep just appearing in the house that we need but have’t asked for! It’s like they can sense what we need.

    Everyone is trying to feed us too much!

    Day Two
    7:30am: 3 people arrived to make breakfast and cook lunch for later in the day!

    Then we had a very emotional look around the Favela. First we visited the project centre and saw people being given food packages. They are helping about 100 people a week now.Then we had a walk around and looked at where Elias wants to start with rebuilding people’s houses. He has 5 urgent ones to begin with. First they will rebuild Simone’s house, starting on Monday.  The old house has already been pulled down. The builders will be volunteers from the community – mostly people involved in drugs and with other problems and not attending the church. It will cost double because it needs adapting for the disabled. Then Elias explained they had 5 families they wanted to start with the rebuilding project.

    So we visited the 2nd of the list. We climbed up a very steep hill of paths and steps, slipping in mud with a sheer steep drop to one side. In this house lives a mum with her 2 daughters one of whom is in a wheelchair. She only gets out of the home when she visits the hospital; she has no way of going to school. To get out, first the mum has to carry the wheelchair down this very dangerous path, then go back and carry her daughter. We all found the path extremely difficult and have no idea how she does it. The house had no electric light and a huge damp problem.

    The 3rd house was a man of 80+years who had many health problems including huge ulcers on his legs. Again he is trapped in the house as he lives on a very steep slope with his daughter and granddaughters. He was obviously in a lot of pain and his surroundings weren’t comfortable at all.

    We will visit the other two at a later date. All our hearts were full and it brought it home to the team the scale of the problem and what the project is trying to do. It’s impossible to get a true idea of the area from the photos and the team were shocked at the level of poverty.

    Day Three
    We are spending the day at Ed & Gio’s with the kids, relaxing and eating, ha ha. Then this evening we will go to church brazilian style, ha ha. We will say a little of why we are there and it will be good for me to connect with the church again, so many amazing people doing so much, with so little!