All week I've been thinking about this
place. Something draws me here and as the van drives up closer to
the face of the dump and so many children run to greet us, I know
what it is- it's them! I can't advocate for people I've never met or
share the plight of a people I've never seen. So today I will see
this place firsthand. As I climb out of the van, the rest of the team looks
solemn. They've done this before. Last week, on a day that my boys
and I spent with family, the team came here. When we met up with
them later for dinner, their faces held this same expression. A
mixture of shock and helplessness. As they shared what they had seen
and experienced at the dump and about the people who lived there, my
heart joined them in their grief and a wave of sorrow smothered me.
They live at the dump. Their homes are plastic and tarp. They
live where the sludge collects at the bottom of the mountainous heaps
of trash.
I couldn't eat. I spent most of that
evening on the floor of a stall in the restaurant bathroom crying
out in anger to God. “Why, God? It's not right. It's just not
right”.
Now I get out of the van to meet these
people for myself. A beautiful elderly woman and her nearly blind
daughter and four-year-old granddaughter greet us. This
grandmothers' hugs and kisses are so fervent that they hurt my
cheeks. Her smile is so broad that it hurts my eyes. It's an
oxymoron for her to be smiling here. I half want her to stop-
doesn't she see her surroundings? Doesn't she perceive the danger
here for her family? But on she smiles with a joy that is either
utterly stupid or profoundly supernatural. At this moment, I can't
tell which.
We balance our way along a one and a half foot wide
concrete ledge which any misstep off either side would land us 12
feet down into a green river of sewage and garbage. The four year
old granddaughter navigates it with ease. This is her neighborhood.
We continue walking toward her home,
following after sure-footed-grandmother in the lead. The path to her
home is mud and garbage but mostly smashed empty plastic bottles.
With each step, the bottles crush down and the mud seeps up and
overtakes my shoe. Now the dump is in my shoe. After a short
distance, we take a left off the path and are faced with a steep,
rocky, muddy trail down to her home. Find sure footing. Don't
slip. And yet grandmother swiftly leads the way with nearly
blind daughter and four-year-old granddaughter following. We are
soon at the bottom, standing in front of her home. Her makeshift
home is leaning awkwardly, evidence that the hillside is slowly
giving way under the weight of the daily rain and the trash collected
there. Each day during rainy season, water seeps up through the
ground of her house making it muddy inside as well as out.
I look back up the path that we have
just climbed down. On it's right, held back by a fence made of long
wooden poles, is a huge pile of plastics to be recycled. The fence
leans heavily against the weight, threatening to overtake the path
and the home at the bottom. Mudslide is imminent here.
The daughter whose eyesight fails her
stares into a space beyond my eyes. Her body is exposed through the
shreds of her dress. Her daughter holds on to grandma's skirt and
looks up curiously at the white visitors.
Grandmother tells us about stomach pain and surgeries and about the miraculous provision from the Ethiopian
hosts who have brought us here. She tells us how her life is
improving. Our translator tells her that all things good are from
God. She heartily agrees. When asked permission for a photo, she
puffs up and laughs, getting ready to pose.
In spite of these surroundings, this
grandmother smiles, motions to the heavens and blesses the Lord.
I know this grandmother is teaching me
something but I'm not sure what it is. “Be thankful for what you
have?” Too simple. “Real joy comes from knowing God?” Okay,
but I know God too and still my joy wanes at trouble. What's the
lesson, grandmother? Maybe the lesson is still to be discovered.
Maybe I'll find it as I figure out how to respond to what I've seen
here today.
As I leave the garbage dump village of
Kore this year, I am finding it a strange honor to be bitten by these
damned bugs and covered in this parasitic dirt. It's not enough
suffering to compare with the suffering of the people here. Some
people ask God, 'why them and not me?' But I truly believe
our placement on the is earth is some kind of dumb luck. I'm not
chosen for privilege while this grandmother is chosen for tragedy.
Dumb luck though, doesn't exempt me from knowing the poverty of the
world. It only puts me in a position to change it. I'd like to find
out how to change it, please. Someone tell me how and then I'll do
it.
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