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Missionary
Newsletter - January 2001
Mark & Cynthia Holder Rich Family
Missionaries in Madagascar |
Past
Issues of the Rich's Newsletter
Fall
2000 |
Christmas
2000 |
Fianarantsoa,
Madagascar - Greetings from Madagascar! This letter
comes to you from the very wet, flooded big island off the east
African coast - our weather has even made the CNN news. It's
been raining a lot (the Malagasy say be dia be [BAY dee-ah BAY),
"be" meaning "big" and "be dia be"
meaning "big upon big") pretty much every day since
Christmas, destroying rice fields and other produce that were close
to harvest. While we have been spared a direct hit from a
cyclone so far this season, the weather systems that surround a
cyclone somewhere else in the Indian Ocean always seem to dump a lot
of rain here. This rainy season is more wet than most; many,
many roads, bridges, and railroads are out. One example: between
here and the capital, the main north-south road has sufferred a
break of around 500 yards, which won't be fixed soon. This situation
will do nothing for decreasing the cost of foodstuffs
or the daily struggle for most Malagasy people.
A WORD OF INTRODUCTION for those receiving this news for the first
time: we are Mark Rich and Cynthia Holder Rich, professors at the
Lutheran Graduate Seminary of the Malagasy Lutheran Church, partner
to the Evang. Lutheran Church in America, and Amboniavaratra
Theological College-FJKM (Church of Jesus Christ in Madagascar),
partner to the Presbyterian Church USA. We have served in
Madagascar for three years. Mark, ordained in the ELCA,
teaches New Testament; Cynthia, ordained in the PCUSA, teaches
ministry courses at both schools, and English at Amboniavaratra. We
are working to finish up the first semester well and get ready for
the second. Our students at both schools are working hard,
too. Here's an update on current work and projects.
FAMILY CENTER CONSTRUCTION FUNDED
The Lutheran Graduate Seminary has received funding from ELCA for
the first phase of a three-phase construction project for our new
Family Center. The Women's Committee is very excited and
gratified about this news. The Family Center project grew out
of the work of the Women's Committee, which seeks to strengthen
women and families in the seminary community, the Fianarantsoa
community, and within the Malagasy Lutheran Church. When all
three buildings are complete, the center will house classrooms,
space for income-producing projects like Maky Madagascar, a large
kitchen for cooking and nutrition classes, meeting rooms for use by
seminary and community groups, offices, and a residence for the
future director of the Center and her family. It will also
have guest rooms for the seminary that will double as "safe
house" space when needed for abuse victims within our
community. This first phase will house the kitchen, a large
meeting/classroom, storage spaces and public restrooms. The
Committee has applied to the Lutheran World Federation for the
funding of the second phase, to house the offices, another large
meeting/classroom, and more storage. Included in the plans are
training and practical experience in pastoral care and counselling
for students, and counselling services being made available to the
seminary and wider communities.
The Women's Committee was also pleased to sponsor a seminary
gathering for all students, staff and spouses in January. The
topic was Education of Children. A really fascinating
discussion ensued about traditional Malagasy ways of raising
children, Christian ways, and comparisons/contrasts between the two.
We learned a lot. These gatherings, all dealing with
family-strengthening issues, have been very well received and
attended; another is planned for March.
MALAGASY FAMILY LAW CURRICULUM
Together with the Provincial Appellate Court in Fianarantsoa, the
University of Andrainjato Law School, and two other theological
education institutions in town, the Women's Committee is working on
developing a two-pronged curriculum on Malagasy family law.
The first prong is to be for Malagasy judges, lawyers, state and
local police; the second is for women in churches and villages.
This project grew out of the Committee's understanding that while
there are good, helpful laws in the Malagasy Law Code that affect
women and families (i.e. concerning inheritance, children, divorce
and child custody, and domestic violence), the law is rarely
enforced. Consequently, there is often no justice for women and
families in Madagascar. The sponsoring groups are applying to the US
Embassy in the capital for funding for this project. If
funded, the project components would include: 1) a conference for
legal and law enforcement professionals at the Law School
(cosponsored by the SALT); 2) a conference for area Christian
leaders and theological students on the Christian Church's response
to family violence (co-sponsored by the three seminaries in town -
Lutheran, Reformed and Roman Catholic); and 3) printed curriculum
resources for women in villages and churches, for the legal and law
enforcement community, and for training handbooks for use by those
teaching the two curricula. We plan to make first use of the
women's curriculum with our student wives program, and train
graduating student wives in how to teach the program where they
serve after graduation. Stay tuned for further developments in
this project.
ENGLISH, ENGLISH, WE TEACH ENGLISH
Our English teaching time is on the increase. Cynthia's time
teaching English at Amboniavaratra Theological College-FJKM, a
school of the partner denomination of the PCUSA, has increased by
taking on time each week with teachers there, emphasizing English
conversation. Mark has taken on partial responsibility for leading a
weekly English Bible Study for students at the University of
Andrainjato. And we're pleased to have been able to begin in
January to offer English Videos night once a month for the seminary.
A new TV and VCR were given by a French Lutheran church, enabling us
to offer leisure time activities for the student community coupled
with English learning. Our first night attracted over 100
people. We're already planning for the second one, to be held
in late February.
PREACHING, PREACHING, WE LOVE PREACHING
Now that our Malagasy has developed from slow-and-painful to less
slow and less painful, we have begun to get pretty regular
invitations to preach and lead worship. Cynthia led worship
for Amboniavaratra on festival occasions twice in the last months,
and preached the Reformed service for an ecumenical congregation in
the area. Mark will lead worship in February at that same
congregation, using the Lutheran worship style. Both Mark and
Cynthia will preach in the coming months at local Lutheran
congregations as well. This is a growing part of our ministry
here.
In addition, we were very pleased to have the opportunity to both
preach and lead worship at the Lutheran Mission Annual Meeting over
the Christmas holidays, where we were able to preach IN ENGLISH.
We were gratified to see that we remembered how!
MAKY MADAGASCAR - NOW MAKING CHAMELEONS!
Maky Madagascar, an income-producing project for student families at
the Lutheran Seminary, has sold close to 1000 stuffed lemur toys to
date, including a number of big orders to US churches and a sale of
over 70 toys in December at the American School of Antananarivo.
The
project committee decided it was time to branch out.
Now, the project is also offering stuffed chameleon toys! The
price for each toy is $6.00. We're hoping people want to buy
island lizards as much as they're taken by the island primates.
While lemurs are only found in Madagascar, about ˝ the world's
chameleons are only found here, including the world's largest and
smallest. Chameleons are a common sight on the island - we
have a lot of them in our backyard, and you often see them crossing
streets in town.
HOME LEAVE 2001
After 3 ˝ years, we will be taking our first home leave this fall.
We will be available for speaking and interpretation dates September
through November, when we will be based in Chicago, serving as
Missionaries-in-Residence at LSTC and McCormick Seminaries. We
have a lot of churches that we will try to visit, and we hope to
send out a tentative schedule to sponsoring congregations this
month. As a number of the congregations are in close proximity
to one another, we will be working to put together a schedule that
reaches the most congregations while making the best use of time and
resources. A tentative cost for each visit will also be
included when we send out the schedule. If your church and another
church would like to combine your visits (and we BLESS YOU in
advance for that!), please let us know those planned dates as well.
Mission festivals that are cosponsored by two or more sponsoring
congregations will receive first priority as we seek to put together
a schedule that serves the interpretation needs of the most
congregations possible in the time. PLEASE NOTE: We're also in
need of a car for use during our home leave. If you know
someone who has a car that is available for use, let us know.
We really enjoy sharing about Madagascar and Protestant mission
here! We do so look forward to putting some names with faces
after a long and fulfilling first term.
FAMILY NEWS
Our three children have all had birthdays since we last wrote.
Joseph, 9, Paul, 6, and Ella, 4 are all proud of their growth (we
share this pride with them!). The kids are all doing well in
school, and enjoying life. We had a wonderful time at Fort
Dauphin on the southern tip of the island at the mission's Annual
Meeting at Christmas time. Cynthia developed a Children's
Program, in which all three of our kids participated with six other
kids. The mission hired an experienced teacher from the
American School to lead the program, and it really went well.
It was great for our three to have the opportunity for Bible School
with other children. They will attend school in Chicago this
fall, and all three are very curious as to what that will be like.
THANKS SO MUCH to all the churches and friends who remembered us at
Christmas and our anniversary with gifts, cards (e-mail or posted),
and other remembrances. We so appreciate your kindness.
THANKS ALSO to all churches and friends who have remembered our
projects with special gifts. In recent months, we have
received funds to continue the Lutheran seminary food bank; to buy
school supplies for area children; and to start a nutritional
enhancement program for children of students. If you are
looking for ways to help above and beyond your sponsorship
commitment, or if you as an individual or group want to make a
special gift, whether or not you are part of a sponsoring
congregation, contact PCUSA Worldwide Ministries or ELCA Division
for Global Mission -- or drop us a line.
PRAYER REQUESTS
--For the students and staff of Amboniavaratra Theological College-FJKM
and the Lutheran Graduate Seminary;
--For the construction of the new Family Center, that it may go
smoothly and serve well;
--For the people of Madagascar, battered again by heavy rains and
lost crops;
--For our family, as we look toward the transitions of coming home
for leave and returning again to our work here.
With the Presbyterian Mission Yearbook of Prayer, we encourage
special prayers for the people of Madagascar on February 10!
As always, heartfelt thanks go to all those who support us in
prayer, with funds, and with other material support. We
couldn't do it without you. We are blessed to have so many
co-workers in the mission of Christ's church.
In His Peace,
Cynthia Holder Rich and Mark Rich
ELCA and PCUSA Missionaries to Madagascar
Maison américaine, Ivory Avaratra
BP 1263
Fianarantsoa 301
Madagascar
© 2001
Redeemer Lutheran Church, ELCA
Last updated 06/26/05
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