Like every Sunday, we drove to Ecatepec, about a 35 km or one hour drive, to attend church. We had an extra guest with us today, Nicole, who is a friend of Brittany from school. Church was good as always with meaningful worship and good preaching: Moises Ruiz was preaching today. Our friend, Juan Carlos, helped Marcel learn and practice plural verbs in the past tense. Juan Carlos has been a great help for Marcel and a good friend. After church we went to a mall called Las Americas for lunch. The girls had pizza and the parents had Japanese. Later, it was back to the church where Ingrid taught her first piano lesson in Spanish and Marcel read a book concerning church leadership. Ingrid needs to teach piano lessons so that there is a future group of piano players and keyboardists to help the worship services. This week we begin to help the church develop a constitution. It will be a long process but if it is done well, it will provide a sound standard of operation.
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Saturday, September 29, 2007
Here's one for the conspiracy theorists
Here's one for the conspiracy theorists. While downtown today, we visited the government building where, in the past, Mexico's congress met. We noticed something very interesting. On the ceiling above the legislators is the Masonic all-seeing-eye. This is the same image that appears on the US one dollar bill and is common in masonic literature and symbolism. What are your thoughts about this?
Nacho Libre
Friday, September 28, 2007
The joy of marble floors
Our house
We thought today would be a good day to show everybody what our house looks like. It's a fairly large house and that is good when you have five active little girls. There are three floors to the house. The first floor has the living room, kitchen, half bathroom and office. The second floor has four bedrooms and three bathrooms (again, something that's very needed with so many girls in the home). The bottom floor has a sauna room that is not functional and is being used for storage, a recreation room for little girls' toys and a laundry area. The house does not have an internal air-conditioning or heating unit. During mornings and evenings, it gets quite cool. Thus, we have an incredible amount of layers of blankets on our beds. Unfortunately, the roof leaks on the house and we have electrical problems but we are grateful to be living where we we do; the view from this mountain perch is incredible.
Yesterday, we had extensive meetings with our colleagues the Ruiz to plan, somewhat, the next little while. It has become quite clear to us that 1. because the church is not ready to become fully independent and 2. the camp/ retreat centre is still under construction, we will not be able to begin church planting for a while. Marcel will be helping the church develop a constitution and show them how to run an effective meeting. Hopefully by this time next year, the church will be led by national leadership. While we finish the other work, we will educate ourselves about church planting here and do more language acquisition.
Today was a half day at school for the girls. Tonight Brittany is going to a youth meeting and tomorrow I'm taking her and a friend to the Artisan Market to let her buy some gifts.
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Happy 4th B-Day
Today was Ahava's birthday; she turned four. In our family, it is tradition to have what you want for supper, the kind of cake you want and whichever breakfast cereal you choose that everybody has to eat. To our collective disappointment, she wanted supper at McDonalds and a carrot cake from Costco. Fortunately, we have not gone grocery shopping so we have been spared having to eat something else that we don't want. She received a number of gifts from the family and e-mails from churches in the US and Canada. Thanks to all of you that remembered this little person's special day.
The other Mexico City
One can get the impression that Mexico City is not a very nice place to live because of poverty, smog and crime. Those things do exist but the city has many positive qualities as well: a rich arts community, beautiful arcitecture and a long facinating history. For guys like me, it is also a coin collectors paradise! The Mexican mint has incredible silver coins! The picture you see at the left is of the Libertad which is on the Paseo de Reforma (one of the main streets in downtown Mexico City) and it celebrates Mexico's freedom and liberty. The statue's image is often seen on tourist brochures and even on Mexican coins. The gold relief at the top is that of an angel. I recently found an article that really captures the heart of what Mexico City is like. Enjoy!
Mexico City - An Outrageous Place & A Great City
This is an outrageous place - a city whose history is more epic than anything Hollywood could imagine, a city where art flourishes on every street corner, a city so vast and varied that everything said about it, good or bad, is true.
Flying in is always a bit of a shock. First comes the smog barrier. A blanket of pollution hangs over the flat valley where the city sprawls, despite efforts to reduce the number of cars.
Then comes landing. Mexico City's airport is smack in the middle of the biggest city in the Western Hemisphere and one of the biggest in the world. The plane circles lower and lower above houses painted turquoise, yellow, red, orange, flamingo pink - like a garish model railroad layout - but what you are really seeing is a lesson about culture, history and architecture...
More obviously, it's about density and courtyards. The Arabs influenced Spain, and Spain influenced Mexico, and one result is these shady patios behind high walls.
They make every house a tiny haven, a walled oasis of calm in the midst of the multitude. The courtyards let people live smack up against other people, other buildings, other industries and still have a sense of privacy. Even if a neighbor paints hers hot blue with red and green trim.
How hard it must be to administer any city, I thought, flying into it this time. To make any place work, let alone this one. The amazing thing about Mexico City, though, is that it works so well.
Yes, there's smog. Yes, there are pickpockets and pirate taxis. Yes, the whole thing sits on a network of earthquake faults. Yes, there's corruption in politics. And yes, you can't drink the water.
But it remains a great city, a world city, like London or Cairo or New York. An estimated 23 million people live here, and more flood in every day, hoping for jobs and a better life."
Catherine Watson Minneapolis Star Tribune January 18, 2004
This is an outrageous place - a city whose history is more epic than anything Hollywood could imagine, a city where art flourishes on every street corner, a city so vast and varied that everything said about it, good or bad, is true.
Flying in is always a bit of a shock. First comes the smog barrier. A blanket of pollution hangs over the flat valley where the city sprawls, despite efforts to reduce the number of cars.
Then comes landing. Mexico City's airport is smack in the middle of the biggest city in the Western Hemisphere and one of the biggest in the world. The plane circles lower and lower above houses painted turquoise, yellow, red, orange, flamingo pink - like a garish model railroad layout - but what you are really seeing is a lesson about culture, history and architecture...
More obviously, it's about density and courtyards. The Arabs influenced Spain, and Spain influenced Mexico, and one result is these shady patios behind high walls.
They make every house a tiny haven, a walled oasis of calm in the midst of the multitude. The courtyards let people live smack up against other people, other buildings, other industries and still have a sense of privacy. Even if a neighbor paints hers hot blue with red and green trim.
How hard it must be to administer any city, I thought, flying into it this time. To make any place work, let alone this one. The amazing thing about Mexico City, though, is that it works so well.
Yes, there's smog. Yes, there are pickpockets and pirate taxis. Yes, the whole thing sits on a network of earthquake faults. Yes, there's corruption in politics. And yes, you can't drink the water.
But it remains a great city, a world city, like London or Cairo or New York. An estimated 23 million people live here, and more flood in every day, hoping for jobs and a better life."
Catherine Watson Minneapolis Star Tribune January 18, 2004
New tag
As we have stated before, we have been pulled over by the police a fair bit in Mexico City since having arrived here four months ago. Fridays seem to be especially bad. The excuse for these traffic stops has been that we do not have a front licence plate. Unfortunately Alberta only gives one licence plate as do some US states. The solution to our problem was for us to get our good friend back in Edmonton, Ed , to get a Alberta vanity plate made with our licence number. Yesterday we received it by DHL courier and we put it on right away.
Now I hope that this will help keep the Trafico (traffic police) away.
Monday, September 24, 2007
Ohio team at work
The Ohio team left this morning after more than a week of work at the camp. They completed an unbelievable amount of tiling including the three bedrooms in the house, the dining area in the new building and the new kitchen. As well, they did a lot of little plumbing and electrical repairs including getting the fountain in the middle of the courtyard to work again. Moises and Marcel got some work done repairing the roof on the house with a product called "impermabilizante" (a rusty colored waterproofer). The roof had been leaking for a while and was destroying the plaster ceiling inside. The first picture at the top is of one of the Ohio men tearing down a dangerous section of plaster ruined by water. The other pictures show one of the bedrooms under renovation and the last picture is of the men soaking the tiles in large barrels, preparing them for use. I will try to get some pictures of the completed project on this blog sometime today or tomorrow.
Monday, September 17, 2007
Good eating
Don't worry Mom, the boys are eating well! Olga is in the kitchen (blue apron) and has Carolyn as her sous chef assistant. This is a picture of one of the delicious meals that Olga prepares for each group: Enchiladas Verdes. This dish is made of corn tortillas dipped in the chili sauce. "Enchilada" means "chilied" in the sense that the tortilla is dipped in the salsa sauce. The tortillas are then filled and some salsa is poured over the folded tortillas. The filling for Enchiladas Verdes is shredded chicken and the toppings are sliced onions, cream, fresh grated Mexican white cheese, and a salsa that is made from a type of tomatoes that are green when fully ripe. Olga prepares two salsas (one spicy and one, not spicy) and then takes special orders from each person: how many enchiladas, spicy or not spicy, onions or not, cream or not, cheese or not. If you don't like spicy food or happen to be lactose intolerant, no problem! This is so much work but Olga completely spoils us. Usually, people eat two or three enchiladas for a meal. Two young men during the summer each ate nine enchiladas!
Sunday, September 16, 2007
Mexican Independence Day
The 16th of September is a big day in Mexico. It marks their Independence Day. Many people will flood into the town squares where their communities will host parties to celebrate this great day. Christ Lives Bible Church also put on a celebration of Noche Mexicana (Mexican Night). There were lots of traditional Mexican foods, games, and a singing contest (Marcel tried to sing like a Las Vegas act "You've Lost that Loving Feeling", by the Righteous Brothers...It was a bomb!). People, but mostly children, dress in traditional Mexican clothes and put red, white and green paint on their faces as seen in the above picture. We have a team of workers here from Ohio to work on the camp and they really seemed to enjoy the evening. They have been working very hard and are a friendly group. The team mixed well with the people of the church, trying to speak Spanish when they could. The picture above is of one of the men from the church. He told me he really wants to buy a sombrero and decided to try this one on for size. I will help him later this week when we visit the artisan market for their tourist day. Today the Ohio team, from Parma Heights Baptist Church near Cleveland, enjoyed a church service and then went to the Pyramids.
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Taking care of the camp
Saturday, September 8, 2007
Not just another smoggy morning
This morning we woke up to the sound of sirens and helicopters near our house. We looked outside to see that across the valley there was a warehouse on fire. I don't know what is stored in the warehouse but I'm grateful the wind was pushing the smoke away from us. There are no fire hydrants here so the bomberos (firefighters) use tanker trucks in much the same way many rural fire departments do in the US and Canada.
Today is a bit of a work day for all of us. Marcel has to speak briefly in church tomorrow so he has to continue to prepare what he has to say today. After church we are going to the camp. We found some tiles that may match the new paint put on by the Hamilton team so we want to check-it-out before we make the tile purchase. Thus, the girls have to finish their homework today. A team from Parma Heights in Ohio joins us this week and we are looking forward to all the work that they will be doing. The dormitory rooms are coming together and hopefully soon we will hear of more work teams that will come to help complete the camp.
Friday, September 7, 2007
Is That a Bat?
At first, we thought it was a bat but then realized it was a moth. In Alberta, the biggest moth we had seen was the size of a quarter. When Marcel took a group to Nicaragua some years ago, one of the boys caught a moth the size of a bat and let it loose inside one of the girl's tents. That caused some screaming!
Our little girls weren't frightened. Ahava checked it out, Emma caught it (a bit of its wing broke off), and then the three little blondies did a successful "catch and release" using a cookie box. This moth was about the size of my (Ingrid's) hand.
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Layout of the Retreat Centre
This is a very not-to-scale diagram of the Retreat Centre property (click on the map to enlarge). At least it gives you an idea of what an urban camp is like. A young man who lives a couple doors down from us went out to the camp with Marcel to help us move our trailer out there now that the children's camps are completed for the summer. Marcel intended for this to be a time to hang out and to get to know this fellow but did we ever end up NEEDING his help! On the hillside just 3 minutes from our house, there is a patch of pavement which is very bumpy. Though Marcel was driving very slowly, the trailer began to bounce and detached! We came all the way from Texas with no problems and then when the trailer is empty, this happened. Marcel and this fellow had a time of reattaching the trailer but were on their way quite quickly. When they arrived at the camp, this young man's jaw dropped. "This is really nice! Is this all yours? I mean, your church's? What do you do here?" What an opening to share with this Catholic young man!! He felt a bit uncomfortable yet he went on to ask a lot of good questions.
To me (Ingrid), two city lots (even if they are larger than average) is not what I envision for a camp after growing up on a farm and going to camp in the foothills of the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Yet for the children and youth of Mexico City, two acres with a grass soccer field, a fountain that currently doesn't work, and some fruit trees really wows them. These children must stay in their small yards to play when they are at home, often with a concrete area instead of any lawn. They can't afford to travel to the beautiful rural areas of Mexico to attend a camp and they cherish being able to "get away" at this place on the edge of Mexico City.
To me (Ingrid), two city lots (even if they are larger than average) is not what I envision for a camp after growing up on a farm and going to camp in the foothills of the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Yet for the children and youth of Mexico City, two acres with a grass soccer field, a fountain that currently doesn't work, and some fruit trees really wows them. These children must stay in their small yards to play when they are at home, often with a concrete area instead of any lawn. They can't afford to travel to the beautiful rural areas of Mexico to attend a camp and they cherish being able to "get away" at this place on the edge of Mexico City.
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Our New Neighbourhood
This is a map of the Valley of Mexico City. I can't add text onto this map so you'll have to do a bit of searching! We have five points of interest to show you in the northern portion of the map:
1. Mitchell House. We live in Atizapan, to the right of the North symbol.
2. Our girls' school, Mexico City Christian Academy. Right above Atizapan, near the town marker for La Colmena.
3. Christ Lives Bible Church. Located north of the large lake in the city of Ecatepec de Morelos.
4. The Pyramids. In the upper righthand part of the map at the town marker for Teotihuacan.
5. Acolman Retreat Centre. In the same upper righthand part of the map, just beneath the pyramids, near the end of the word Ozumbilla.
These are the places where we've been "hangin' out" since we came to Mexico in June. It takes us about an hour to drive from our house in the northwest to the Acolman Retreat Centre in the northeast or two hours when it's "Rush Hour".
1. Mitchell House. We live in Atizapan, to the right of the North symbol.
2. Our girls' school, Mexico City Christian Academy. Right above Atizapan, near the town marker for La Colmena.
3. Christ Lives Bible Church. Located north of the large lake in the city of Ecatepec de Morelos.
4. The Pyramids. In the upper righthand part of the map at the town marker for Teotihuacan.
5. Acolman Retreat Centre. In the same upper righthand part of the map, just beneath the pyramids, near the end of the word Ozumbilla.
These are the places where we've been "hangin' out" since we came to Mexico in June. It takes us about an hour to drive from our house in the northwest to the Acolman Retreat Centre in the northeast or two hours when it's "Rush Hour".
Urgent Prayer Request for Honduras - Hurricane Felix
We received this prayer request from our Honduran friends that we met during our time at language school in Texas. This photo is of Noel and Reina Gomez and their children, Noeli and Daniel Carlos. Noel was one of Marcel's Spanish tutors and Reina showed Ingrid how to make corn tortillas from scratch. They live in a city on a plateau in the mountains of Honduras called Siguatepeque. Noel plans to continue his seminary education at a Spanish seminary that is in his city. Reina has all ready begun the school year as a public school teacher in the high mountains. Noel sent this e-mail:
Queidos hermanos y amigos, espero que Dios les este bendiciendo ricamente en sus vidas. El motivo de esta carta es para pedirles oracion por mi país, pues estamos apunto d sufrir los efectos del uracán Felix, como ustedes ya saben mi país es uno de los paices más pobres del mundo y esto solo biene a agravar las cosas, los pronosticos no son muy alentadores, por eso ruego su clamor por este pueblo. En Cristo, Noel Gómez.
Dear Christian brothers and friends: I hope that God is richly blessing your lives. The motive of this letter is to ask you to pray for my country. Well, we are at the point of suffering the effects of Hurricane Felix. As you all ready know, my country is one of the most poor countries of the world and this is only good to aggravate things. The forecasts are not very encouraging. For that I beg you to cry out for this people. In Christ, Noel Gomez.
We are worried about those who will be affected by Hurricane Felix in various countries but we are concerned for this family in particular. There were mudslides in the mountains following Hurricane Mitch six years ago and this hour, predictions are for two feet of rain in the mountains as Hurricane Felix passes over land.
We welcome your written prayers added to our comments so that Noel can be encouraged and will be able to share our prayers with his church congregation.
Saturday, September 1, 2007
Mexican Independence Day Flag Vendors
The celebration begins every September 15th at 11 p.m. in every single city and town in Mexico. In Mexico City, the President, following the ritual, rings the historic liberty bell that Father Hidalgo rang to call the people. Then he gives the "El Grito" (The Cry). He shouts "Mexicanos, Viva Mexico" and the crowd echos back, establishing the tradition which has been solemnly followed every year thereafter. This cry is also echoed by the governor of each state throughout the country. The Cry may include other acclamations, such as the one included by President Benito Juarez to honor all those who sacrificed to make Mexico free: "Long live the Heroes of our Independence!". No one really knows what Hidalgo actually told the people. So all over Mexico City you will see people selling all sorts of flags, balloons, banisters, dolls, and candy that is green, white and red colored, and the list goes on and on. The people here are very patriotic, and they love to party.
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