It's the final week of Ramadan. In the Muslim tradition, God brings the moon up if he wills, so you can't predict scientifically when Ramadan will end. Instead, the evening before, religious leaders gather to determine what God has decided for this year's moon cycle. Once they announce the ending date, people know when Ramadan will be over. "It's usually 30 days long, so probably Thursday," our Muslim friends say.
Families and friends gather together (as we already did with Dr Hanna) to eat special foods. This year is especially difficult for families. The annual pilgrimage home (mudik) is forbidden by the government, trying to prevent the migration of COVID from hard-hit cities into rural areas. We pray for all those missing their families at this time.
Saturday, May 9, 2021
My lower retainer fell into the garbage beside the nightstand years ago - and was tossed before I noticed. My bottom teeth are getting crooked so I go to an orthodontist near our neighborhood. Our dentist and friend DrGati recommended DrEvi. She's nice! as she takes a model of my teeth. Braces again. Ugh. When the appointment is over, I wait outside her gate for our car. Look at that tree! (that's a 6' /2-meter-high fence.) The Bunyan tree is popular within folk religions in the tropics: the locals think spirits may live in them so are reluctant to chop them down, even when the road has to weave around their massive roots.
Monday
Our friends are hosting a 24-hr prayer marathon (10am today to 10am tomorrow). We join at four different hours, praying this year's theme: God's blessings on the women of Indonesia. May God care abundantly for them and their families, giving them good children, meaningful work, godly peace, and an understanding of how much God values and loves each one.
We meet both online and in a typical house, bounded by walls on all sides. The staggered tile roofs shed tropical rainfall and shade the windows and doors from the hot sun overhead.
Tuesday
Our date breakfast is at Nara on the Pino Terrace. We enjoy Maystar's dim sum, Pino's nasi kuning (yellow rice) and baso goreng (fried shrimp balls), along with our favorite China tea.
Heads up for foreign interns who work with various organizations: what can you expect in Bandung? There's no way to describe the many differences between Indonesia and the West. There's staggering beauty: simple guava trunks are knotted into patterns that rival abstract art.
We have good weather days (85-90o) and nights (68-75o), so bring cooling clothing: pack cottons and rayons, not polyester! Of course, you can sit on the porch at any time. You want to be off the streets after darkness falls at 6.You need to be aware of your feet at all times - the pavement is uneven, to say the least. Here's an example: someone put down cement to broaden a public road. The striped pattern is from the handmade broom used to beat the wet cement. That way, when it rains and moss grows on it, it won't be too slick.
While the cement dries, plastic bags and cardboard pieces are strung on plastic twine to keep people and cars off of it. Of course, the cement is hand-mixed in a wheelbarrow, too. (This is road expansion on a popular, well-traveled street.)
The electric plugs have 2 prongs and are 220 volts. Bring an adaptor but no 110 hair dryers or other appliances.
There is a sea of workers' motorcycles at the front of the center. Hundreds of motorcycles!
We proceed through registration and the jab without incident. It's well-organized. There's one section for seniors and another for young people and factory workers. We are taken to the front of the line, maybe because W looks old with his white hair? He has his picture snapped with a young volunteer. Our blood pressure tests good, our temperature low. They ask us, "Do you take any medication?" (no) Do you have an existing illnesses? (no) Is your heart healthy? (yes) ... etc."
The young assistants are helpful and polite throughout. Before long, we're done. I have trouble understanding the furor over vaccines and COVID: there have always been illnesses and flus sweeping across the planet. Millions have always died - and we have always tried to get well. Vaccines have saved many lives in the last 100 years, haven't they? (I have a little smallpox scar as well as avoiding measles, mumps, rubella, and polio as a child.)
Before we get home, a friend of a friend delivers a huge bag of plant trimmings. We pass them on to Danny's farm. I get dropped at the office, where a friend meets me for tea and a chat on the balcony.
The flavor I love best and leave for last is always Rendang, a hearty beef and coconut stew. But DrH's family recipe of opor (coconut chicken and tofu) is marvelous, too.
The ketupat is rice boiled for 2 hours after it is packaged in woven strips of leaves. The box is only filled 1/4 full of rice because the grains expand when it's boiled. (Thanks, Pak Gum, for that info!) I cut my rice cake into blocks and heat it in the microwave. Yum.
And this is the boldness we have in him, that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. 1 John 5:14
Moravian Prayer: Defender of the defenseless, hear our prayer. Safeguard the vulnerable in our society from predators seeking to exploit them. Provide a refuge for all who need shelter, grant courage to those who face hardship, and spiritually feed all those in despair. In Jesus’ name, we pray. Amen.
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