Nov 8, 2010
Ku Tsundzuka
Our time is up. We extended a couple of months, but those are finished now too. After nearly two and a half years here in South Africa, it’s time to call it quits and head back home to America. We’ll be there to see all of you (or at least most of you) any day now. But we’re not coming back with all of us. There’s quite a lot we’re leaving behind. We don’t have a choice really. In... read more
Oct 26, 2010
Moving Forward, Looking Back
We arrived in South Africa on July 17, 2008 knowing we had committed ourselves to a two-year volunteer service with the United States Peace Corps. Emotions were high as we left everyone and everything we knew back home and embarked on a new way of life. We had no idea all the challenges and joys that South Africa had in store for us. Now we are preparing ourselves to leave, having completed a few... read more
Sep 27, 2010
The World Is Changing
Nothing is static with us. Everything is moving and changing, transforming from one thing to another, or even just developing subtle variations, but nothing is still. Blaise Pascal, the famous French mathematician and theologian, wrote: “Our nature is in movement, complete rest is death.” In the same way, Dumphries, our village where we’ve lived and done development work over the last two years,... read more
Aug 26, 2010
Asking…
“Mabiriviri! Mabiriviri! Kombela mabiriviri!” The kids continued to insist! “Chili peppers! Chili peppers! I’m asking for chili peppers!” Some kids do appreciate spicy foods (I think I was one of those kids), but if you’ve got a group of 5 or 10, some of them only 4 or 5 years old, do you really think they all want chili peppers? “Kombela mabiriviri!” in a big chorus. But... read more
Jun 18, 2010
Laduma!
“Laduuuuma!” The crowd went wild! Everyone in their yellow and green (and some also in red and blue and black and white) jumped up and down, screaming, flailing their arms, waving their flags, blowing as hard and as loud as they could on their vuvuzelas. Many were hugging, many more were dancing where they stood. Some ran down to the front and started a running parade that quickly grew in... read more
May 18, 2010
The Best Cheater Wins
Early last winter, we accompanied one of our primary schools to a far-off township as their “Under 12” boys’ soccer team competed for the title of provincial soccer champions. It was an exciting time for us, to take an all-day trip with some of our school’s students and almost all the staff to a place we’d never been before and see what the larger sports competitions were like. We hadn’t even... read more
Apr 21, 2010
The Universal Church
When you go to another country, especially a hard-to-reach and mostly undeveloped one like Madagascar, you sometimes expect everything to be different. And so when you find a few things that are similar to what you already know, it can sometimes be comforting, even things as simple as the availability of Coca-Cola (for Lora) or French pastries (for me). Some things, like Coca-Cola, are apparently... read more
Mar 6, 2010
It Takes A Village
A while back, we were at the taxi rank in Pretoria, which is where all the mini-buses for long-distance transport gather, waiting to fill up with people and leave for their destinations. It’s a lot like a bus station, but instead it’s full of white vans (taxis) filling every available space, whether paved or not, and passengers and vendors filling whatever space the taxis aren’t. The vendors are... read more
Feb 7, 2010
On The Other Side Of The World
Hi everybody. I thought that I, Lora, would try my hand at writing one of these newsletters. I found it quite difficult to put into words how my experience in South Africa has affected and changed me. I was at the river one Saturday doing my washing, and when I finished I went for a swim with all the children who were already playing in the water. This side of the river had a different atmosphere. ... read more
Jan 10, 2010
Whether Hungry Or Well-Fed
There’s one thing always confronted here in South Africa: the tension between too little and too much. Any small amount of movement from place to place takes a person from one side to the other, in a very short amount of time. The movement takes you through the severe tension at the edges and indeed, even through a strong tension within, just for having the mobility to pass from one side to the... read more

The Willards are missionaries to Madagascar, the world's fourth-largest island, located off the southeast coast of Africa. They strive to work for the Kingdom of God where it's not yet known, spreading the abundant life of Jesus through church planting and sustainable community development.






