The English Club is slowly taking shape. We've scrapped several approaches to the Club, and have now ended up with a simplified newspaper. Abuna Aktham had asked that the students be interviewed about their hopes, wishes, dreams. The Club took to this with great excitement, and spread out around the school to conduct the interviews.
Read MoreMarthame preached this morning at St. Matthew's Anglican Church.
Read MoreAbuna Ra'ed was saying, "We are Christians. We are Arabs." - at which point he was interrupted by one in the congregation who pointed at Marthame. "Nevermind. I will give him Palestinian nationality" was his reply.
Read MoreA small group arrived today from Birzeit University. The students were part of their Palestine and Arabic Studies program, which we had attended this past summer.
Read MoreThanksgiving is always a little harder to be away from home, but it was a wonderful celebration and a good time to stop and reflect and be thankful. Especially in the midst of the turmoil here, such moments are welcome respite and sanctuary.
Read MoreAfter worship, a new fellowship tradition has begun. The men go to drink coffee in the church hall while the women go to do the same at the Convent across the street where the Rosary Sisters of Zababdeh live.
Read MoreHere were broken bottles on the ground, old candles had been burned and scarred up the walls, furniture had been torn, windows had been broken.
Read MoreWhile in the West we may sing "rain, rain, go away," in an arid climate, rain is a sign of blessing.
Read MoreWe were smiled upon today, and the blessing of Window 2 came to our rescue, in the form of the lovely Nina - she helped us slay the beast, and we danced down the stairs, visas in hand and passports intact!
Read MoreHe then consoled us and promised to write a letter saying Marthame "is not only a priest, but a bishop."
Read MoreA day spent somewhere between Apartheid and the Holocaust.
Read MoreWe then made a traditional Palestinian meal for our hosts and some other friends of maqlube (literally, "upside-down").
Read MoreAfter further bellyaching (the only way to force your way through the bureacracy - so we've been told by Israelis, Palestinians, and ex-pats alike), we were told nothing could be done until Wednesday on our applications - the man who knows how to turn on the computer is on vacation.
Read MoreToday being Saturday, all Israeli government offices are closed - thus there was nothing to be done about the visa applications.
Read MoreWe also ran some errands for the priests, something that we can do quite concretely to help out here.
Read MoreAs usual, some of the teachers helped out with that part, by helping prepare coffee and bring in trays of things, and take out trays of things.
Read MoreA few months ago, we had received a video from France on the implementation of electricity in Zababdeh (in 1969).
Read MoreKind of like commuter traffic jams, and then kinda not...
Read MoreOne person recounted how they used to have to sneak to church to avoid the Jordanian snipers in the Old City.
Read MoreOne of the soldiers had scrawled in English on his army jacket, "F*** the world." Somehow appropriate.
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