Monday, October 11, 2010

It's Raining, It's Pouring


A few more weeks of this and Nicaragua may be under water! Or so it seems. We have received record levels of rain during the past few months, due to a heavy rainy season and a series of tropical depressions that have dumped heavy rainfall across the country.

For us, this means scrambling to take clothes off the line (or more likely hanging them around inside the house), a few leaky spots in the roof, and a muddy dog. For many people in Nicaragua, though, it has been more than just an inconvenience. On August 19th, a tenth grader at NCA Nejapa, the daughter of one of our cooks at NCA, drowned when walking home from school. Nicaragua has inadequate storm sewer systems, and instead relies on drainage ditches which fill with raging rivers during heavy rains. These are ineffective and dangerous, and she drowned while trying to cross one during her walk home. That same week, Nicaraguan friends of ours called us early in the morning to say that their house, which was made of concrete blocks, had been almost washed away during the night. The runoff from the road had diverted and broken through the wall of their house, leaving a large hole in the side of the house and knocking down the whole back wall. Their house was full of mud and most things were ruined, but they were thankful that their young children had not been sleeping there when the water started pouring into the house.

Many people have lost their homes as the waters of Lake Managua have risen. The newspapers tell us that water level of the lake is higher than it was during Hurricane Mitch, back in 1998. Just last week five Red Cross workers and a journalist drowned while trying to bring relief to a remote village. For people who have so very little, a rainy season like this is devastating. The price of beans, a daily staple, has gone up from nine córdobas ($0.43) a pound last year at this time, to 25 córdobas ($1.20) a pound, because an entire crop of beans was ruined due to rain.

Our family is confronted daily with the reality of the difficult lives that those around us lead. We struggle with knowing how to help people. Giving financially or materially is often not the best solution, but promises to pray for people can often sound empty when the needs are so great. We are thankful that God is the provider, both for us and for our friends in need. He is able to do immeasurably more than we ask or imagine. The past two weeks have been much sunnier than the months of August or September. We ask for you to pray with us for wisdom, safety, and an end to the heavy rains. We are thankful, too, that within a month or so, the rainy season will end and the dry season will begin.

Photo shows perimeter wall blown out by water and flooding at NCA Nejapa.

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