Friday, June 29, 2012

Yakama Video- Team Week 2




This is the video from last week's team on the Yakama Indian Reservation. All the Team Week videos will look kinda similar because they make them to give to the teams to take home with them. Thus, similar faces, songs, or stats at the end. However, Morgan and Anna Grace do an awesome job each week and there are always different things that stand out at me every time.

Our jobs looked a little different here in Yakama- Robert worked on 2 different work sites and Jessica was in the kitchen preparing the meals for 60-100 people every night. She really missed the work-site :( We went to 2 neighborhoods to do Kid's Club-- Totus and Adam's View. We both had an OK week but are looking forward to going back to Warm Springs tomorrow. We will also be able to blog more there- hooray for internet in the RV!

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Warms Springs Video- Week 1




This week the teams from River Oaks (Memphis) and Oak Hills (Kansas City) worked on making benches and tables for the three longhouses on the Warm Springs reservation. They also worked on making the parts for more saw horses. Part of the team went down to the community garden and planted corn and beans. They also headed over the community center to help with cleaning.   

Monday, June 11, 2012

Kid's Club at a Glance

In Warm Springs, we do our Kid's Club at the Boys and Girls Club from 3-5. The kids leave their elementary school and come straight over for a few hours until someone picks them up. The first hour of our time we play games like kickball, foursquare, and jump rope. We also have a few crafts, sidewalk chalk, and "something special" such as bubbles, kites, marble mazes, etc. Then we have a snack and story. I am in charge of the story/skit/songs everyday which has been really fun! Our stories this week were all about Jesus being born-- Mary, Joseph, shepherds, wise men, and angels. The kids get to be in the skit and wear little costumes. I narrate and give them the lines. Some of them get really into it and some are really shy :) Then I ask a few questions and we sing a few songs. Favorites include: "My God is So Big" and "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands". Then we play for a little bit longer until they start leaving. 

sitting for snack and story

Some of our sweet kids:

Robert with his girls- Ashlyn, Feather, and Niya
a quick break from "keep away with Robert's hat"

Jessica and Kevin aka Bumblebee
Cajun during crafts

Fallon jumping rope
Chris Granberry and Sharika-- she prayed to receive Christ on Wednesday :)

All photos taken by Anna Grace Hodge, friend and official photographer for Sacred Road :)


A few highlights:

*The first day upon arrival a kid saw us and yelled "The church people are here!!! We missed you!!!"
*Seeing kids reunite with team members after connections had been made in the previous years
*Breaking up a fight between Mary and Joseph
*After the skit about Joseph and the Angel I asked the question, "What did we learn from this story?" and a girl replied, "That it's ok to get married even when you are confused!" haha
*Tallia reading Bible stories with a team member, Katherine
*Watching Nyleisha, a special needs girl, blossom over the week. Will post about her soon!
*Great conversations with June and Clarissa who work at the Boys and Girls Club


Please pray for these very special and beautiful children! 

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Life in Warm Springs

One of the coolest things about this summer is that Robert and I get to host 1-week teams in Oregon for a few different weeks. This is our first team week working on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation in Oregon. Our teams this week are from Memphis, TN (home town, yay!) and Kansas City. Both teams have been out here several times and have been wonderful to get to know and work alongside. We were very blessed!! 

Since Robert and I are the only married summer staff....we present a few obstacles. The biggest of which is sleeping accommodations. During the team weeks, all the girls stay in one area of the church and the guys stay in another. Neither of us would mind that for one week, but multiple weeks might get hard. So the Granberry's fixed us up with our home away from home-- the RV!! We are in the process of naming it...Robert wants to call it "Sweet Baby Jank" but I'm not so sure...




Another fun thing about staying at a church, is there are no showers :) Therefore, we have this wonderful creation--- the shower trailer! You wouldn't believe it unless you see it. It's quite inventive. 

the trailer bed is fairly normal...those are tarps around the sides


the entrance

inside-- these stalls only reach to your waistline...therefore bathing suits are a must!

In years past, there has only been barrels of water that are heated by the sun during the day. But this year we got fancy....we hooked up the hoses to the indoors and got some wonderful hot water! Thank goodness, because we have had some chilly and rainy days! I can only imagine what the people who live across the street think of this contraption....I bet we are constant entertainment. 

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

When Cultures Collide

                                                          
The Yakama People, and all Native Americans, have a very rich and beautiful story to tell.  Despite years of robbery and oppression from our government, being a forgotten people in society, and living in “fourth” world poverty (third world poverty surrounded by first world wealth… stop and think about this for a minute!!), the American Indians still strive to teach their youth the fullness of their traditions and values.  On one hand it is admirable that they continue to hold onto what they have known and believed from the beginning of their existence.  On the other hand it seems to me as if they strive in vain.  So much of who they are as a people is tied to the land, and for many tribes across our nation, land is one thing that has been slowly taken from them since Columbus sailed the ocean blue.    
The tribes in the Pacific Northwest for generations moved with the seasons in order to survive.  In the spring tribes would travel to the river for Salmon, in the summer they would head to the valley to harvest berries, in the fall they would climb the hills and mountains for the picking of roots and the hunting of deer, and in the winter they would rest at the base of the Cascade Mtn. Range with hopes of surviving the harsh winter.  They relied on God’s provision for life and sustenance in a way I never have before.  They KNEW that the salmon would offer itself as a sacrifice every spring so that God’s children could live.  For sake of time I won’t delve into their Creation story with this post, but I hope to unpack it soon… pretty incredible.  So rich was their tradition!  BUT… today the land on which they relied on so heavily has been sliced and diced and served up to the highest bidder.      
            In the midst of it all, many Natives press on in hopes that their history will not soon be forgotten by their youth.  On Friday, all of the interns attended a traditional Pow Wow, where the elementary kids dressed up in full Regalia (what ignorant Americans like myself would have simply called an Indian “costume”).  This Pow Wow was a glimpse into the valiant efforts by the elders to hold on to what tradition they have left to pass on to the next generation.  Here are just a few picks of the beauty that is Native American Culture.

- Robert