I deeply apologize for the delay in writing to you to thank you and to give you a post-trip report on our time in Africa. First, let me explain the delay. As some of you know, when I returned to the states in October of 2007 I came home to a beautiful fiancé who was eagerly awaiting my return. And with my return came all the preparations for the wedding, along with moving into an apartment, starting a new job at a local congregation, preparing for graduation from LCU this May, and preparing for Graduate School next fall. Not to mention we had a bit of catching up to do after five months separation! We had our hands full to say the least! We were married on Dec. 30th here in Lubbock, TX and have been quite happily married for a month now! Her name is Jaime and she is wonderful!
If you were keeping track of our progress through my webpage, www.chadewheeler.com, then you should be fairly updated except for the final stage of our trip to the Sudan. If you haven’t been able to track us on the web, here’s a brief description of our trip from the beginning to the Sudan: On May 17th, 2007 three of my best friends (Justin Hanes, Justin Gibson, and Josh Pruitt) and I set out from Lubbock, TX and arrived in Entebbe, Uganda on the brink of an amazing adventure. Two days after we landed on African soil we were out in a village teaching a course for MTI (Messiah Theological Institute, Mbale, Uganda) on the Epistle of James, staying in mud huts, with no electricity or clean water, and teaching under a thatch-roofed building for about eight hours a day. It was awesome!
From Uganda we traveled by public transport (you need to experience African public transportJ) to Kisumu, Kenya where we worked with the Ringroad Orphans Day School. We were also met by Tiffany Hanes, our fifth teammate and wife of Justin Hanes. The school supports over 300 children, with the help of the Christian Relief Fund, by providing free education and meals daily. We had the privilege of teaching several classes each day, varying from coloring to biology, and leading a VBS one of the weeks. We were also able, with your help, to purchase over 300 Bibles for the school, which they were so excited to receive! The children are beautiful! They touched our hearts in ways that will forever change us. For more information on the school contact CRF at www.christianrelieffund.org.
From Kisumu we traveled SE to Nairobi, the capitol city of Kenya. Nairobi is a huge city of about 3.5 million people, and there are vast slums all over the city. We worked with a program for street children called “Made-in-the-Streets” which works in Eastleigh. We played soccer with the children and visited them at their “bases” where they stay; we also ran day-camps for them at the compound. Do not misunderstand my language; these are CHILDREN living on the streets! I mean babies with their mothers living on the streets; their mothers sniffing glue while breast-feeding. Thousands of children, as young as five, living on their own, addicted to cheap glue (to ease the pain of hunger), with nothing and no one. Made-in-the-Streets is one of the few places where these children and homeless mothers can find hope, and they do an amazing job of caring for them! One incredible way they help the children is by actually providing a way out; the program works on two levels. The program starts in the slums building relationships with the children and helping them as they can, but every year children are chosen to move out of the city to a place called Kamulu, which is an orphanage run by Made-in-the-Streets. At Kamulu the children live in dormitories with Christian adults who take care of them and teach them in their school. The children also learn different trades like farming, sowing, cooking, carpentry, etc. We had the great blessing of going to Kamulu for a few weeks after our time in Eastleigh. You would not believe the transformation that God is doing with these children! We were so blessed to get to know them! If you want to know more about Made-in-the-Streets visit their website at www.made-in-the-streets.org.
After we left Nairobi we bounced around to several different places on the coast of Kenya and Tanzania. We helped a really cool widow-woman named Margaret who had more energy than all of us together! She is trying to start a house-church to reach out to the Rastafarian culture of Malindi, Kenya. So we dug her a “choo” (African latrine) to be used by the church; don’t worry we tested it out when we finishedJ After a short visit with the Talley’s in Tanga, Tanzania and some crazy traveling adventures, in which I debated with a taxi driver for an hour about the correct price of travel and witnessed the illegal transport of drugs on our taxi from Kenya into Tanzania, we arrived in Dar es Salaam, the capitol city of Tanzania. In Dar es Salaam we stayed with Fielden and Janet Allison, the missionaries I interned with on Mt. Elgon, Kenya in the summer of 2004. They blessed us so immensely by debriefing us and helping us send off three of our teammates. The day our teammates left to return home, Josh Pruitt and I also parted ways, he traveled to Mozambique (a Portuguese speaking country which is Josh’s native language) and I traveled back to Nairobi. It was a therapeutic time for both of us; he was able to speak his mother-tongue, and, in a way, I was too; I went to the mountains and climbed Mt. Kenya (16,300+ft!) with some friends. After our short break, we rejoined in Nairobi and began preparation for Sudan.
We traveled to Mbale, Uganda to stay with the team there and were briefed by Shawn Tyler about the plans for Sudan. A few days later we headed for Entebbe, Uganda where we hopped on a small 4-passenger plane up to Nimule, Sudan. We landed on a dirt strip and were met by David Bikokwa and Kennedy Obura, our faithful companions and guides for the next month. David and Kennedy are native Kenyans, but have been living in Sudan for the last three years working as missionaries. They live on a large compound in Nimule with their families. The compound contains several buildings: their homes, a kitchen/dinning house for visitors, a large school house, and a newly constructed building which serves as both an eye and dental clinic. We stayed in the clinic which at the time was not yet operating. Our arrival in Sudan was pleasant, but we realized quickly that Sudan was very different than any place we had been before. With no infrastructure, the deep effects of decades of civil war, and a dominating military presence, Sudan was a different world than any we had seen.
Our main two objectives while in Sudan were to visit and collect information about the churches/areas we visited and to teach a Bible course from MTI called “Foundational Teachings of Faith” which consisted of 8 lessons taught over a 2-3 day period. In some ways Josh and I were guinea pigs, traveling a road that literally had not been taken by white men on this kind of mission within the past 40+ years. We traveled entirely by public means, which mostly meant hiring soldiers to transport us on the back of their motorbikes, and we stayed with locals in their homes, which meant we slept in mud huts in small villages and in some displacement camps during our month of travel. Traveling was probably the most difficult part of our trip to Sudan; we traveled over 500 miles, averaging 10mph because of incredibly poor road conditions. We also experienced extremely difficult negotiations concerning travel. Because Sudan has seen so few white people in these past years of war, and because the ones they have seen have been mostly well-supported aid-workers, they saw Josh and I as walking-ATMs with supposedly an endless supply of money. Which was definitely not the case! But we were at their mercy, having no other means of transport, we needed them, and God provided.
We taught in seven villages and made contact with 14 different congregations who were all incredibly excited to hear the Word of God. Josh and I worked hard teaching 8-hour days, meeting under large trees and in primitive buildings, and only finding “breaks” on days of travel. The teaching was received well, and many people came to listen each day. The churches are all very young and immature in their faith. Most had only been Christians for a few years, and had a wide variety of ideas about things! We felt like we were transported back in time, to the world within the texts we were teaching about! The questions people asked were amazing: questions about traditional animal sacrifice; questioning if the “churches of Christ” are a cult; questions about polygamy; about the nature of Jesus (is he Divine); about if witch-doctors have the Holy Spirit; about praying for the dead; and many more! Josh and I did our best to respond to their questions, but we kept bringing it back to the foundation we were there to teach: “God made this Jesus both Lord and Christ!” and this is what he is doing!
Overall Sudan was intensely challenging, but the people are desperate for help and are searching, many times in the wrong directions, for hope. They are searching for something different; something drastically different from the violence and hate that have been a part of their lives for so long. And many are finding that hope in our Lord Jesus!
Thousands of miles away there is a land that is wild and beautiful, but most beautiful of all are its people. We have been so challenged and changed and moved by the people of Africa. They are our sisters and brothers. And we love them. Thank you so much for supporting me in so many ways on this mission! I am forever grateful!
Please join me in continuing to lift up the people of Africa to God in prayer. You may know of the recent outbreak of violence in Kenya after the disputed results of their Presidential election in December. Many lives have been lost already; please pray for peace and unity in Kenya. And please join me in lifting up David and Kennedy and the continued work in Sudan.
Eternally grateful,
Chad






