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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 02 June 2006 |
By Melanie England, medical elective student from New Zealand at Kijabe from 27 November 2003 to 4 February 2004. Her husband Murray, a water engineer, also found plenty to do surveying and mapping the Kijabe mission station, with particular emphasis on the water and waste-water system. Melanie tending a very premature baby, who later died. |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 02 June 2006 )
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Looking for fruit in a slum |
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 02 June 2006 |
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After 13 years in Zaire and Central African Republic, Lynette Bay was forced to relocate because of instability in that region. Her new ministry was very different as she found herself working among the poorest of the poor in a huge slum of a major African city. As her urban ministry grew, Lynette began mentoring African missionaries from CAPRO so they could use the same pattern of outreach she had found useful. |
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“The New Zealand embassy in the capital is advising its nationals to leave…” |
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 02 June 2006 |
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When we hear such words from an overseas reporter on the six o’clock news from the safety of our lounge room, we rarely stop to think of all the implications for those Kiwis in that particular country. But for missionaries who are living in the country facing unrest, it is a time of uncertainty, stress, and …a renewed reliance on God. |
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