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impressions

BY: CHELSEA


FIRST IMPRESSIONS:

First impressions: If I don’t write them down, they’ll fade. And these tidbits may be interesting for any of you with cultural curiosities or who want to picture, more tangibly, what our first couple weeks in Rwanda have looked like. The reflections below are not exhaustive, nor are they in any particular order. They’re also mine — Wade might share some sentiments and feel differently about others.

(What are Rwanda’s first impressions of us? We wish we knew!!)


The land:  

The hills are lovely. I love topographical change, and Rwanda is nicknamed “the Land of a Thousand Hills.” I’m happy that our walks to the supermarket or to church always involve a view. Terra cotta colored roofs; paved roads and dirt roads; banana trees; hazy horizon lines. Some days I have sat, for a few minutes, on the ledge outside our driveway just to look over at the distant red dirt road that climbs up the hill south of us. People and bicycles navigate up and down slowly, just dots on the landscape. It’s calming to watch. 

(I try to imagine what the land was like before it was developed and cultivated. That’s an era of the past. The city is abuzz now, and growing. Construction is everywhere. Things change quickly here. But there is still green on the hills, and agriculture in the valleys, and that is good!)

view looking south from our home

The walls:

For security purposes, almost all the properties here are walled and gated (including our house). This is a sad reality for me. I love physical and social openness, and some of my fondest memories of our home back in Illinois involve the shared yard space we had with our neighbors, who were also dear friends. The days when the neighbor kids could be outside at any time, ready to have impromptu conversations or help Evie get on a tricycle, feel like a bygone era — one we treasure. For us now, it is brick walls and padlocked gates. I don’t know what to do with this opacity yet.

walls

The streets:

Anytime of day, there are people walking the streets. I love this; it makes me feel more connected with a living, moving community. Some people are walking to work, others to the store, others to I don’t know where. On main roads, lots of motos [motorcycle taxis] and bicyclists navigate alongside vehicles. Driving feels like more of an art than a science.


The work:

In Rwanda, many things are done manually, and labor is cheap. The people impress me — the men stacking bricks; the women with babies on their backs and a basket of produce on their head; the men meticulously cutting dead vines out of chain link fence so that it can be re-used. People walk down the streets with long stacks of empty buckets on their heads like they are just carrying a purse. Our first week, I saw a wheelbarrow strapped to a bicycle as the cyclist whizzed down the hill. Around here, it’s work just to get to work. (Of course, there is white collar work here, too, and lots of other people simply drive to their offices each day. There’s a lot here we haven’t seen yet.)

it’s back to manual labor for clothes-drying for us!

The temperament:  

Last October we visited Rwanda for a week, and at that time I found the people to be very serious. In part, I think this is because it’s what I’d heard; they’re serious, they’re reserved. And there is an element of truth to that. From what we understand, the people of Rwanda place a high value on dignity, and on holding oneself in a dignified manner.  

However, now that we are here I see a little more: for one thing, the mask mandate that was in place last fall is lifted, meaning I can see people’s whole faces now, including their smiles! Second, I have come with a specific desire to see, in this serious culture, when and where their joy and laughter and smiles emerge — because they do. And finally, this time we’ve brought Evie (read on!). 


The people and Evie: 

People in Rwanda love Evie so far. We knew that having a toddler would attract the smiles of people anywhere we went, and that Evie would help break the ice on the mission field and such. But precisely because we find ourselves in a more serious culture, I’ve been especially delighted by the affection expressed toward Evie. On the streets, in the stores, Rwandan people smile at her and make funny faces. (At first, Evie was shy. More recently she’s started joining in the game.) And it’s not just the women who do it — men, too. Old men and young men. The other day our waiter at a restaurant smiled at Evie and pinched her cheek. The man in uniform who looked intimidating to ask directions from grinned and started to play peek-a-boo with her. It’s very sweet.

In some ways, we wonder if children give the people here an excuse to be silly. 


The supermarket: 

It takes trips to several supermarkets to gather a well-rounded supply of food. Inside the small stores, butter is hard to find (it’s probably just us newbies), and salt is expensive. I have learned you are supposed to bag your eggs, just as one would do with produce in the U.S.. (Except here you put your both your eggs and produce in brown paper bags, and then you end up with a lot of brown paper bags at home. I don’t know what everyone does with these, since Rwanda doesn’t seem to have recycling. So far we keep ours for catching cockroaches.)

Overall, supermarket pros here: delicious, inexpensive local produce! I love tropical fruits. Here, I can get 10 passion fruits for under a dollar, and finally, we’re in a place that sells avocados at a reasonable price. 🙂 Also, fresh bread!

Cons: it’s a slow learning game of what’s available where, what’s never available, what’s right under your nose in different packaging in a different language, etc. It makes me feel vastly less competent in the world of cooking. It will just take time for this to pass, and that’s okay. I haven’t found many fresh greens close to home; I miss that, and I’ll have to branch out farther if I want a regular supply.  

passion fruit — pick the good wrinkly ones!

Daily life: 

We don’t have real schedules yet. Not structured, regular ones, anyway. Each day we get up, remember we live in Rwanda, and have breakfast (usually eggs, passion fruit or bananas, and some kind of bread). We read a psalm together, and talk about what needs to get done that day. So far some of the tasks have included getting cell service, getting electricity, buying drinking water, obtaining a gas canister for our stove, sitting around waiting (and waiting, and waiting) for the electrician or the people who said they’d deliver our fridge, spending 4.5+ hours setting up a bank account, figuring out how to transfer funds to said bank account, spending 3 hours with the mechanic to fix our broken car key… Oh, and being good parents to Evie and good partners to each other! Not to mention beginning to look outwards toward meetings with people we’ll be doing ministry with here.

Some days feel manageable, and we feel a sense of pleasure and accomplishment. Other days we cry because we miss people — family, friends, our church. Certain days have felt like ocean waves that keep pummeling us and challenging our balance. Recent days have felt more stabilizing. We’re grateful for the truth that God is with us, regardless of whether we’re feeling upbeat or worn down.


Moments of encouragement:

We feel a lot of feelings these days, and one of them IS encouragement! Below are a few moments that I have treasured so far. All involve Evie, which is sweet because it brings me fresh perspective and shows me that she, too, can do well here:

  • Rwanda has no berries (except on coffee trees!), which sort of breaks my heart. But before Evie quite understood what a passion fruit was, she pointed at the seedy interior of one that I’d cut in half and said “more berries!” Well, I am a tad obsessed with passion fruit (so is Evie), so… maybe things will be okay after all.
  • When we walk or drive after dark here (which really means anytime after 6:30pm), we see the hills of Kigali twinkle as if adorned with Christmas lights. To my delight, Evie has taken to imitating us and saying, “Pretty lights!” when we see the a view of the hills after dark. Her latest comment was, as we meandered in and out of view of the hills while walking home: “Lights playing peek-a-boo!” <3
  • Lastly: a week and a day after we arrived to Rwanda, we pulled into our driveway after spending an evening at a new friend’s house. As I waited for Wade to open our gate, Evie said softly from the back seat, “Home.” Did I tell her we were returning to the house? Or did she recognize the turn into our driveway, the pause on the slope, the sound of the gate opening — the new normal? Whatever the case, yes: home. Home, home, home. Finally, after a year+ of slowly pulling back from our lives in the States and dismantling our physical homes there, we are here, in all its bittersweetness, and home.
lights of Kigali at night
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Weeldreyers in Rwanda: Aug 2022 update

You can access our August 2022 newsletter through this link:

https://mailchi.mp/b91b724da9fd/weeldreyers-in-rwanda-mission-update-9160213

This newsletter contains:

  • Move announcement
  • Communication & mail guidelines
  • Prayer requests
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Weeldreyers in Rwanda: July 2022 update

You can access our July 2022 newsletter through this link:

https://mailchi.mp/aec265c56fd1/weeldreyers-in-rwanda-mission-update-9151245

This newsletter contains:

  • Our move date!
  • Fundraising update
  • What our first few months in Rwanda will likely entail
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Weeldreyers in Rwanda: June 2022 newsletter

You can access our June 2022 newsletter through this link:

https://mailchi.mp/c3aba1c7487f/weeldreyers-in-rwanda-mission-update-9078679

This newsletter contains:

  • Summer plans: moving states, visits with family, mission preparation training
  • Fundraising and timeline updates
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Weeldreyers in Rwanda: March 2022 newsletter

You can access our March 2022 newsletter through this link:

https://mailchi.mp/e042171225de/weeldreyers-in-rwanda-mission-update

This newsletter contains:

  • Reflections on meeting with a Rwandan seminary student
  • Fundraising & timeline updates
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cultural crossroads (anticipating life in Rwanda)

BY: CHELSEA

While we were visiting Rwanda in October, we ate at a street café that served African fusion dishes. Actually, the playful menu extended beyond this to include Mexican, American, and Mediterranean spins on dishes as well. There’s a good deal of creativity that comes into play when culinary traditions cross paths — a little of this spice and a little of that culinary technique… the final creation is something undeniably new but with deep roots in pre-existing cuisine. In the case of our Kigali café, this made for a pleasant lunch!

Culture is a bit like this too, I think — or more particularly, “third culture” is a bit like fusion cuisine. Third culture is that unique and dynamic space that emerges when one steps into a new culture but brings, of course, his or her own cultural background. The result is a cultural crossroads that forces a kind of blending or weaving together (whether in harmony, in tension, or some of both!).

Being an optimist and having a deep fondness for cultural diversity, I think this is something to be celebrated! (Though it doesn’t follow that third culture spaces are always cheery or easy.) I’m glad that when we move to Rwanda, our lives will truly be a fusion of Rwandan and American culture (and perhaps subcultures and other cultures entirely, too; it’s never simple, is it?). Thankfully, we don’t have to choose between the two, nor would that be possible.

In some ways we’ll be living and breathing Rwandan culture, yet we’ll also remain very engaged with American culture — we’ll interact closely with the expatriate population in Kigali, and our own cultural backgrounds will accompany us when we relocate to Rwanda. Wade’s past as a farm kid in the Midwest, my childhood as a beach kid in Florida, our memories of our church family, blood relatives, mutual friends — these things are a big part of us, and they’re coming with us! In thought and spirit, at least.

We’re looking forward to stepping into the joys and challenges of life in Rwanda, and we’re also glad that we can bring our whole selves — past heritage and future hopes; hunger to explore Rwandan rainforests and love for North American spring flowers. There’s space and time to lean into both cultures, which is wonderful. That means celebrating the beauty of each, and acknowledging the flaws of each — values and norms that remain in need of God’s redemption.

And as we anticipate this, I’ve been especially struck by the fact that while Wade and I will have many referent points back to our home culture, little Evie (18 months old at present) is much more of a tender little blank slate. On a core level she’s already been formed by the people, places, and seasons of our U.S. life, but as we look toward the future, I realize that her sense of cultural identity (is she American? is she Rwandan? Who is she?!) will depend largely on Wade and me, and how we cultivate our family life in Rwanda — conversations and interactions with others, traditions we establish in the home.

In large part, we’ll want to help Evie know the truths that we do: that our relatives and heritage are in the U.S. (and go back even farther to outside the U.S.), but that the body of Christ is a family, and that in a very real way, we have brothers and sisters in Rwanda. That God loves both Rwandans and U.S. citizens deeply, and wants them to be part of his family. That there’s beauty at the crossroads, and it’s a privilege to partner in mission and ministry with Christians in another part of the world.

So I’m eager to enter that third culture space — both to receive it and to cultivate it. We hope to read books to Evie that reflect the life and seasons of North America — Little House on the Prairie and Anne of Green Gables — as well as other classics like The Chronicles of Narnia. At the same time, we’re also looking forward to discovering Rwandan literature together. We hope that in time, the rhythm of Rwanda’s dry and rainy seasons brings about a sense of “home” for us, yet I also want to find ways to mark and remember spring, summer, autumn, and winter — seasons that are dear to our hearts. Our kitchen will in some way become our own personal fusion café as we juggle integrating local produce into our breakfasts (yum!) and trying to re-create pizza as we know it (cheese is a little different in Rwanda).

Perhaps one of our main tasks as we anticipate moving to Kigali is to enter with an open mind — one that is ready to stand at that crossroads of Rwandan and American culture, to see God at work there, and to join in his mission.

mural & textiles at the cafe (Kigali, Oct 2021)

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Weeldreyers in Rwanda: Jan. 2022 newsletter

You can access our Jan. 2022 newsletter through this link:

https://mailchi.mp/bf2e0cab1c28/weeldreyers-in-rwanda-mission-update

This newsletter contains:

  • A series of FAQs (including things like our fundraising progress, what we’re looking forward to about life in Rwanda, and our thoughts about an anticipated move date)
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Weeldreyers in Rwanda: Nov. 2021 newsletter

You can access our Nov. 2021 newsletter through this link:

https://mailchi.mp/d4e04da3276a/weeldreyer-mission-update-a-week-in-rwanda

This newsletter contains:

  • Reflections on our vision trip to Rwanda, including notes about ministry connections, culture, land, and calling
  • Photos from our week in Rwanda!

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Weeldreyers in Rwanda: Sept. 2021 newsletter

You can access our Sept. 2021 newsletter through this link:

https://mailchi.mp/33e39c72c060/weeldreyer-family-update-rwanda

This was our very first newsletter. It contains:

  • our formal announcement of the decision to serve as missionaries in Rwanda
  • first steps: beginning fundraising, anticipating our vision trip!