Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Linn's news September 2011




Thank you for all your prayers and support this past month. All of our new teachers are settling in well to life in St. Andrew’s. The Hickmott family have been busy setting up their home in the house behind my flat and they are proving to be lovely neighbours. They have a car and we have enjoyed some good outings to the nurseries for plants for our patio gardens. There has been excitement this week as my pineapple plant is producing a baby pineapple.
The boys are a bit confused about my being a friend at home and “Mrs. Tedman the teacher” at work, but we are getting the boundaries defined. Ha! Ha! On Sunday they all came round for “Panchos on the parilla” (a hot-dog barbecue).

The Church
In the cathedral the congregation is continuing to work in groups on developing a healthy church.
Many of you will know that I am partially deaf. My hearing aid has given up the ghost and I have not been able to cope with the group sessions. Consequently I have moved across to the English-speaking church next door
for a while. It is very refreshing and great to see many old friends and to make new ones. The congregation there changes from week to week as it attracts people, from English-speaking countries around the World, who are visiting Paraguay.

The Country
The weather has been a main talking point this month. Last week we went from 2 Celsius on Tuesday to 40 Celsius on Saturday. Now we are experiencing pleasant Spring like days in the twenties.
The weather has helped to create a sea of colour in the city as the trees have burst into blossom. My walk to school is wonderful at the moment as I pass through an Avenue of both pink and white Orchidilia trees covered in orchid-like flowers.
Political rumbles continue. The campesinos have been on the march again. Money was promised for the purchase of land for the campesinos to settle on, but this has not materialized so their battle for their rights continues.
This week President Lugo appointed a new Minister for the Interior to work on making outlying areas safer against the Peoples Army and land invasion etc.
In fact most of the news this week focuses on International problems like the USA hurricane.
School
This has been the month with the second set of exams so life has been full of pressure for the students and for the teachers who are marking.
We had some light relief on Childrens Day when the Primary children all went out to our Sports centre for a morning of fun and games.
Meanwhile the Pre-School department entertained the pre-school children from our Annexe School for a morning of fun.
Today the Primary children are back at the Sports Centre to begin the first round of competitions prior to their main Sports Day when the parents will come to cheer on their children.
Three classes had an English Grammar exam for the first hour. That is their final exam, so they can relax and have fun after that.
Some of the secondary pupils have been busy with business enterprises. On Monday afternoon they set up stalls to sell their goods. There was some good sales patter going on as they tried to promote their wares.
In the library we have been promoting bilingual reading. The children are now reading well in both Spanish and English. They come into the library regularly to change books and work towards gaining certificates.
Prayer points:-
1. We give thanks to God that we are enjoying the beauty of his creation here with all the blossom brightening up the city. We also give thanks for our new teachers.
2. Please continue to pray for President Lugo and the government. There are many issues of insecurity in some areas that need to be brought under control.
3. Please pray for the health of our staff in the school. Pray especially for the Primary Music teacher who had a minor stroke recently, that he will return to full health and come back to school soon.
4. Please pray for the sixth grade as Babs and I prepare them for a mock Cambridge KET exam at the end of this month. Please pray that they will learn and apply the knowledge that we have taught them ready for the real exam in December.
Linn Tedman working for the Church Mission Society, Watlington Road, Oxford,
OX4 6BZ
email:- ltedman@hotmail.com 
blog:- http://www.linninpy.blogspot.com

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Linn's News August 2011


“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. Matt 11:28-29

Dear Friends,
Greetings in the name of the Lord. I hope all is well with you. This is the month when we celebrate Friendship Day, so Happy Friendship Day to all of you. It has also been our holiday, a time for rest and recuperation in mind, body and spirit.
Thank you all for your prayers. The Lord is busy answering.

The last three months have been very busy with all the Bicentenary celebrations. This was a time of encouragement and hope for the future of the nation. The celebrations brought a long weekend of respite from the reality of day to day struggle for most people. We are told constantly that our economy is strong but the reality is that prices are continually rising and it becomes more difficult for the average family to put food on the table. The problems here continue. The news is so depressing and there is very little good news in the media.
At school life is more cheerful. The Bicentenary celebrations were swiftly followed by the first exams of the year. Students were very busy, studying and working hard. They still found time for fundraising. Each class supports a project to help others. They have been fund raising by selling cakes, crisps and barbecued hotdogs.

During this time the children invited their fathers to come in for breakfast to celebrate Father’s Day. They entertained their dads with poems and songs.
Exams were followed by meetings with parents and handing out reports.  This is always potentially a difficult time, but this time around it seems to have gone smoothly with mainly happy parents.

Finally the winter holidays arrived (2 weeks of bliss), and just before, we were delighted to have a visit from Murray Metcalfe. (Murray and Penny worked as SAMS missionaries here for several years and they set up a home for children awaiting adoption.). Murray came out here to redecorate and review the Esperanza home.
Many children left school early for the holidays to fly after some sunshine in places like Miami and Santa Catarina in Brazil. The rest of us have stayed home for a quiet break, in the rain and cold weather. I have been quite busy, visiting friends and entertaining others to meals in my little flat.

I recently received a family from school for homemade Cornish pasties and an English cream tea. They had taken me out for a meal a few weeks ago and had asked for my “story”. This was an ideal situation in which to evangelize and to speak about Jesus. Now the mother wants to attend a Bible Study. I am not a natural evangelist so I have been very encouraged by this one to one encounter.

Last week a group of us went to Clorinda, in Argentina (one and a half hours away) to shop in the local supermarkets and to try and make our salary stretch, as the exchange rate is currently in our favour. The market there was very colourful in the sunshine. We bought as much as we could carry. Many things were much cheaper there. I returned with a huge bag of heavy washing powder, toothpaste for three months and lots of cheese to put in the freezer.
We loved the trip and saw some lovely rustic sights along the way. It was so liberating to be out across the other side of the river Paraguay and in the countryside.







Just out of town the big Agricultural Exhibition is taking place. Several of our children’s families are involved , with their ranching businesses. There is a big show of animals , rodeo, motor cycle displays etc. all day to keep families entertained.
Yesterday I spent most of the day gathering all my information together to fill in my UK tax form. The job hangs over my head ever year. It is a task that I hate doing. This year I prayed for the Lord’s help and eventually it all slotted into place. Now I just need to find somebody reliable to take it back to UK for me. My online link failed.

A lovely, new family has arrived from Ireland, Matthew, Kim, Sam and Ben. Matthew has come to teach science in the school. We are also hoping that he will become part of the leadership team in the church here. Matthew was here 20 years ago as a Gap year student. Yesterday I took them to Aregua and for a walk along the beach by lake Ypacari.
In our church we have started a month long course on building a Healthy church. Looking in, as a foreigner, I see quite an insular church. Hopefully the course will enable us to reach out more, which will enable growth.
As funding is down, mainly due to exchange rates dropping drastically, the Bishop is trying to persuade the Paraguayans to be more resourceful and less dependent on help from outside. They have some successful sewing groups but they need to look at marketing.

We have all been watching the football Copa de America. Paraguay has not yet actually won a match but they reached the finals on penalties. As I write they have arrived in Buenos Aires for the final against Uruguay. By the time this goes to press we will know the worst or the best. Either way it will be a just result, I am sure.
God bless you,
Linn
Prayer Points:-

    1. Pray for the Paraguayan government. There is an air of unrest. In some areas the poor have set up camps on private land, so ranchers are not happy. In the city indigenous people have been camped out in some of the squares, in the very cold weather. They want better living conditions and work and help from the government. Pray for President Lugo and the government to address the needs of the people.
    2. Pray for the staff and children of St. Andrew’s as we return for the next term. Pray for health and strength to see us through. Pray particularly for Matthew and his family as they settle in and learn Spanish. Pray for Joyce, a local teacher, who will be joining us part time in the primary English department, that she will settle quickly.
    3. Pray for the churches here as they learn to depend more on Christ and to become more self sufficient. Pray that they will all become healthy churches, reaching out and growing, bringing more people to know the Lord and His love for them.
Email:- ltedman@hotmail.com

Blog:- http://linninpy.blogspot.com