Vusi Mahlasela (no, not Vusi Nicholson) is touring America with Bela Fleck (a "banjo virtuoso," apparently) and is going to be performing near you soon! Vusi Mahlasela is one of South Africa's great musicians and singer/songwriters. His music is generally in a folk style - his guitar and his amazing voice singing together in a number of South African languages - and is worth making an effort to hear.
For most of us, 1991 was still a period of 80's recovery. Apparently Brett Favre was not immune... NFL Draft Day, 1991:
Pretty sure I had the aqua and grey striped shirt you see on your left. But Brett rockin' the jorts (with bonus cuff) brings back all the memories. There is a whole series here - including Brett passing the time playing NES golf.
24 hours after leaving our Thailand home, we arrived home in Muizenberg. Vusi slept pretty well - unfortunately, his father didn't. Don't expect any more blogging today... so sleepy...
Oh - and d/l the latest episode of the ServLife Africa podcast... should be up now, or very shortly. While you're at it, d/l the first two episodes that you didn't listen to yet. :)
I would have kept going with the blog title, but I don't know to spell anything in German without google, and it is too late to look anything up because I'm leaving for two weeks in the morning and haven't packed yet.
As I continue cleaning out my "should blog this" folder, I noticed quite a few interesting ideas on the general theme of Jesus/People Who Like Jesus/Things People Say About Jesus, etc. Here are a handful of Jesus-related shoulda bloggeds...
Rev. Jin Mingri peered out from the pulpit and delivered an unusual appeal: "Please leave," the 39-year-old pastor commanded his followers, who were packed, standing-room-only on a Sunday afternoon, into a converted office space in China's capital. "We don't have enough seats for the others who want to come, so, please, only stay for one service a day."
There you go - six links worth clicking if you're interested in Jesus-related topics. Each worthy of a long-winded blog post that never happened. :)
When one blogs as sporadically as I do, one is bound to have tons of ideas for blog posts that never made it online. Lucky you, I've decided to post again - but the cheap and easy way by clearing out my blog idea folder. It is a very big folder that only grows and never shrinks... here is one small step toward the shrink.
It has been a month and seven days since my last post on this lonely blog. In case you were wondering, based on my last post, I'm actually back from Zimbabwe. Have been for a while.
Back to Zimbabwe tomorrow for the second time in as many months. The crisis there deepens daily, and we are fortunate to have some new friends making the trip with me, as they have raised a nice chunk of money to help out the kids in the church home for orphans with whom we partner.
I've decided to set the alarm for 3AM. Not sure yet how I'll feel after a 4 hour nap... no telling whether or not I'll make it up to listen to Mick Hubert's call over the internet.
The brother and family arrive in a few hours. I haven't been grocery shopping, haven't cleaned the house, and generally haven't prepared anything at all. So instead of posting, I'm passing on four "must-read" links. Take a minute between glasses of champagne to read and remember Zimbabwe - there is no celebration there tonight.
So I pretty much caved in already on that Southern Hemisphere Christmas thing. I'll just cheat a little and say this was to please the grandparents. ;)
I'm used to celebrating warm Christmases. After all, for 29 consecutive years, I spent Christmas day in the American South - specifically in Florida, Georgia, or (I think maybe once or twice) in South Carolina. It was possible for Christmas to be cold in Georgia, but not that cold, and in Florida, a cold Christmas was rare at best. I never dreamt of a white Christmas, I never heard sleigh bells in the snow, I never roasted chestnuts on an open fire, and I certainly never understood why any old man would wear such a thick fur-lined velvet suit in a Florida mall. I remember that it dipped below freezing one year on Christmas and we ran the garden hose over the deck the night before to make icicles. That happened once. I remember several years when the neighborhood kids quit playing outside with our new toys because it was too hot and went swimming instead. I suppose that to some that wouldn't seem like Christmas, but it does to me - that was Christmas in the South.
This is Gugulethu (Goo-goo-lay-too), or Gugu for short. At least that's what he is called at Musha Wevana children's home in Zimbabwe where he now lives. Gugu has got to be one of the cutest little two year olds I've met - he loves attention, climbing up into my lap and perching himself there for the duration of each of my visits to his home.
I returned home today from a quick trip up to Zimbabwe - so many sad stories to tell - but I am in desperate need of a shower and warm bed.
I'll be in Zimbabwe by nightfall Monday for a very short trip. I'm visiting our Zimbabwean friends who are caring for 64+ orphaned and abandoned children to support them, encourage them, and to bring cash and supplies from the ServLife sponsorship program. (There are still at least 30 children waiting to be sponsored for only $30 a month - you are literally saving lives with this donation.)
Today was World AIDS Day 2008. I'm not sure many people noticed. World AIDS Day happens every year on December 1, but I didn't hear much at all this year. I was happy that ServLife is responding and promoting action and advocacy... but enormously disappointed that World AIDS Day 2008 didn't show up on the top of Google News at all, and only briefly in my US news section, and then only related to politicians. Singer/trainwreck Britney Spears showed up on the top news section. So did football player Derek Anderson. And movie star Reese Witherspoon. But not World AIDS Day.
It didn't take Amy and me long to decide what we're most thankful for this year...
Nine or ten people (plus babies) headed to the house tomorrow to celebrate Thanksgiving - I've heard rumors of pumpkin pie, corn pudding, stuffing, mashed potatoes, and more coming as well.
Today is the UN's International Day of No Violence Against Women and it kicks of the 16 Days of Activism Against Women and Child Abuse in South Africa. Around the world, it is 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence, but in South Africa, the campaign includes child abuse as well.