It's been a while since we've worshiped in our first language - about two months.
Read MoreWe have been invited to Baghdad to the Fifth Annual Christian Peacemaking Conference, and have been making preparations for several months now.
Read MoreRaba is a small village of about 7000 (twice the size of Zababdeh), resting on a nearby mountain peak.
Read MoreToday word came in the school of the Patriarchate Essay Contest Winners. Zababdeh's school had more students honored than any other school in the Patriarchate!
Read MoreMarthame headed back up to the university today to take a peek at a car for sale. It gave him a chance to enjoy the always breathtaking view of Zababdeh (they picked a great spot for a university).
Read MoreZababdeh relies on a broken water pump in Area C, which is caught in "Corporate Occupation" - the Israeli's independent water company is refusing to cooperate with the Palestinian's independent water company due to the current unrest, which means Zababdeh gets water about once a week (roof water tanks are automatically refilled from the pump when they get below a certain level, if there is water).
Read MoreNews came today of the four month-old baby killed in Israeli shelling of a Gaza Refugee Camp. A lot of head-shaking is taking place in Zababdeh, particularly at Sharon's half-hearted "apology" as he visited settlements in Gaza again.
Read MoreMore and more people are getting the urge to depart. The internet cafes (yes, there are two for a village of 3000) have become an escape for some - a few hours of chatting, etc., and a resource for others - learning about American immigration requirements.
Read Moretheological news, today continues the daily worship for the "Month of Mary" in the Latin Church.
Read MoreThe journey was thankfully unremarkable, given the usual route through the valleys and pits, though the Israeli soldiers did allow us to pass through one military checkpoint rather than driving for miles around it.
Read MoreThe reason for the trip was to connect with an American group that had come here for a two week visit.
Read MoreElizabeth went with the Latin Church's youth group on a trip to Nablus to visit Abuna Dominick and the Sisters of Charity. Their convent is also a home for the elderly and for severely handicapped children.
Read MoreChapter one of the long, tedious car saga is drawing to a close.
Read MoreNablus has an incredible energy to it. It's the largest Arab city on the West Bank and hasn't become quite as cosmopolitan as Ramallah has. As a result, it has retained much of its Eastern charm, hospitality, mystery, and activity.
Read MoreWe caught up with some of the families who plied us with coffee and simple Arabic early on - good to reconnect.
Read MoreWent for a picnic in the nearby hills with some contemporaries - late twenties, early thirties professionals who live and work in Zababdeh and Jenin, both Muslim and Christian.
Read MoreHeaded to Jenin today to run a few errands, get out of the village for a few hours, and check out the bootlegged software. The latter is as rampant here as the persistent Israeli roadblocks (neither, it turns out, complies with international law).
Read MoreThe strangest thing today - the sky all around became filled with dust, kind of a yellow fog, like a genuine Lubbock dust storm.
Read MoreToday exams have begun for the Tawjihi - 12th grade students. First, they must do their exams for the school (now), and then they must study for the comprehensive government exams which will take place in June.
Read MoreBefore Oslo, the school was under Israeli control. Those must be the bizarre moments of Occupation, where one country is directing the schools - even down to the uniforms - of another people's schools. During that time, it was forbidden even to use the word Palestine, and all correspondence from the school had to be written in Hebrew.
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