Back to Addis Ababa
We woke up to a glorious sunrise. My roomie and I never quite got to normal sleeping and waking hours during our time together, but we got pretty close. This Friday morning, our last in Awassa, we woke up in time to photograph the sunrise.
We loaded up the van and after a brief and sadly final stop at the Ajujua Orphanage we were on our way. Much to my sadness (although I guess not really)… we took a different route back to Addis. It was beautiful, but uneventful. I swear I will never forget that ride into Awassa for as long as I live. When I decided to exit my comfort zone I didn’t realize God was going to propel me out of it.. LOL. The ride out was actually quite pleasant and I was awake and alert for this trip ready to take in the scenery.
Once in Addis we stopped at Fekadu’s home for lunch. Fekadu was there every step of the way on this journey and it would not have been the same without him. This is one amazing individual. Fekadu was a sponsored child through Compassion International. His sponsor came to meet him a few years ago and they are still in touch. The more I learned about Compassion on this trip and the men I met that credited Compassion with shaping their lives has given me such an overwhelming respect for this organization. Fekadu owns and operates a business out of Addis called “Life Tour and Adoption Resources”. If you are going to Ethiopia to adopt a child, to investigate adopting a child, to visit the family of a child you have adopted (no matter how remote their location – aka Gambella), or to go on a trip such as ours – Fekadu is your man. He’s not just a driver, he’s not just a translator, he’s a man who understands the lay of the land and who understands everything that someone like me who has never been there before has no understanding of at all. Not to mention he was so much fun to be with. His smile and his humor just make me smile thinking back on our time with him... ”Seriously Fekadu”. I don’t think he understands how integral his part in our trip truly was. He was as much a member of our team this week as any of us. Without him – I just can’t imagine. So thankful for this guy! When I think of Fekadu I think of a story from Bob Goff’s book “Love Does”. Fekadu is secretly incredible! J He doesn’t wear a cape, but I think to many adoptive parents whose travels he manages, he’s a super hero.
Saturday morning was the start of the final day on this journey I had made. We had just a few more stops to make before our day would end with the long plane ride back home. We awoke to scalding water in our hotel room which resulted in rinsing my hair with the little amount of bottled water I had left in the bathroom for teeth brushing. One morning I had no water, this morning I had scalding water. For a week in Ethiopia I’d call that good.
We started our day picking up some gifts to bring home, a couple of authentic Ethiopian coffee pots (jebena), and a little bit of – ok – a lot of coffee. Note to self – next time purchase coffee on day one so that the wonderful smell in the van can be with us all week long.
On this day I spent more time with Zewdu that the other days. What a genuinely sweet individual. His wife was about to give birth to their first child and son to be named Lekibir which means “to glorify God”. I love that. Zewdu like Fekadu was sponsored through Compassion International as a child and Zewdu is now employed by Compassion in addition to being the Awassa man on the ground for Project Hopeful Awassa. What amazing things he’s doing with his life. On our travels this day, we passed a friend of his. Zewdu explained that this friend had been in the Compassion program with him. He told us that these guys and gals that were in the program with him are like siblings. Compassion provides its kids with food, water, medical care, life skills, and an environment that encourages them to develop a strong relationship with God. That is truly what happened with Fekadu and Zewdu. They both have incredibly strong faith that carries them through their lives. What I love is that Fekadu and Zewdu are both living their lives giving back and working to help sponsored kids in both Project Hopeful and Compassion. They are doing amazing things with their lives. So impressed by both of them and thankful for the time I was able to spend with them.
One of our last stops on our trip was at Ahope in Addis. Ahope is an orphanage for HIV positive children. Since my return, when I hear the bitter banter back and forth over topics such as healthcare, I find myself so frustrated. If only our anger, our energy, and our outrage could be focused on these babies in this orphanage. We waste so much negative energy in this country when there is so much to be done. The orphanage appeared clean and well run and again the young man that gave us the tour and told us about this organization was just so incredibly impressive. Good people! Amazingly good people!
A quote from their website reads:
To learn more about Ahope you can visit http://www.ahopeforchildren.org/
AHOPE seemed like an appropriate end to this journey. AHOPE was a place where lives used to end, but now is a place of hope and lives to be saved. A journey really just beginning.
Ethiopia is a place where people hold hands, where honor and respect are valued, where children as well as adults break out in song and praise of God at a moment’s notice.
I miss goats in the road.
I miss strangers taking my hand to guide me when I obviously had no idea what I was doing.
I miss driving down the road without children running towards my car yelling “YOU YOU YOU”
with a big smile and a wave.
I miss the complete lack of anger, frustration, and hostility. The genuine goodness in everyone I met.
I miss hospitality from complete strangers who couldn’t speak a word to me and had no idea who I was yet went into their homes and brought their furniture outside so that I could sit instead of stand.
I miss witnessing lives being changed before our eyes.
I miss the amazing people that I met. People that I hope changed me. People that I just want to be like because they are so good and so awesome. Because of how they live their lives I feel an obligation to change the way I live mine. I have so much. To not give back, to not Live Differently, to not be secretly incredible would be to not honor God and the life he’s given me to live. I’m not sure what that looks like yet. What the next step is. But I’m working on it. It consumes my thoughts. I’m pretty sure like that day of the Facebook post about this random trip to Ethiopia – there will be another day (hopefully sooner because I’m watching for it) and I will take that next rocket propelled trip again out of my comfort zone. I highly recommend it.