(Sorry for destroying the margins with some of the pictures. I can't fix them because we need to turn the generator off. Click the picture for a better view.)
Mirë Dita! It's a little bit scary that two whole weeks have gone by already. Our trip is almost halfway over already! Sorry about the lack of a sooner update, we started one a week ago but have had consistent computer problems since then. There's a very real chance that we won't have power for the rest of the trip because too many people in Krushe e Vogel haven't paid their electric bill. Crazy stuff, no?
In our first two weeks here, we've done a variety of activities. We helped distribute medicine to a number of villages, servicing more than 350 people. We've started construction on a new outside wall for the daycare. We've attended and taught somewhere in the ballpark of twenty English school lessons. We've attended several men's youth groups, even leading one of them. One of us, Matt, has helped lead worship during three services at a church in Gjakova (pronounced “jakova” like it’s a Starbucks drink or something). We've helped facilitate the daily operations of the daycare by playing with the kids and cleaning up after them. We have played a truckload of soccer and volleyball. And finally, we have prayed prayed prayed.
This is the house that we are staying in. It belongs to Dave and Cindy Johnson, an American couple that have lived in the Kosova village of Krushe e Vogël since 2001.
Above you’ll see Matt working with the Humedica team. For the first week of our trip, we accompanied them to a different village every day, seeing people and distributing medicine and vitamins to anyone who needed it. In Zatriq, Dr. Stephen Wulf, the German doctor who saw all of the patients, noted one of the last women he saw. She had just turned thirty and had three children. Her blood pressure was something like 200 over 40. He prescribed her some medication to help and told her that she would likely suffer a stroke before the end of the year if she didn’t work to bring her blood pressure down. As we were leaving, Dr. Wulf noted that we could very well have saved her life that day.
PRAYER REQUEST: That every person we interacted with experiences full and complete healing and recognizes that healing comes from Christ in heaven.
That trench up there didn’t exist until this week. The daycare needs a new wall, and so for the past couple of weeks we’ve been working on putting in this wall. We’ve marked the trench, dug it and filled it with foundation. In addition, we rebricked a garden area in our first two days here.
There’s Toni laying bricks and mortar. We’ve done a number of miscellaneous work projects for the daycare these weeks. Though they’re menial, we’re saving Dave and the other contacts here a lot of time and energy that they can devote to other things. And speaking of the other contacts...
The above two guys are Alban Bytyqi (top photo, center) and Korab Lushi (bottom, left). These fine two Kosovar gentlemen speak perfect English and serve as our interpreters. More importantly, though, these are two of the few Christians that live in Kosova. Both of them are relatively young in the faith and both are absolutely wonderful men of God. They serve two major functions in the villages of Kosova: they run local youth groups ministering to men and they run several English schools in the surrounding villages. On a daily basis we travel with them (and another teacher who we'll talk about in the next update) to English school and help them teach.

Here is Caitlin teaching children how to say hello in American English. Way to go Caitlin! You teach the shoes off those kids! (No, but seriously, we have to take our shoes off, like, everywhere.)

This is a very tiny girl who sat in on one of our lessons.

These are the wonderful notes that she took.
PRAYER REQUEST: That we both become and remain accurate and compelling teachers of English, so we can show the love and attention that God wants to lavish on these children and that they would become receptive to the words of the Gospel.
In addition to the English schools, Korab and Alban also run several youth groups in the surrounding villages. Here are two of the regular attenders.
WE APOLOGIZE for the inconvenience here. There was a picture of two young men from the village--One was a believer, the other, his cousin--who attend the Bible study in Krushe. Unfortunately, we were gently informed by our contacts that having their pictures and names up alongside words about Jesus and Christianity could potentially hurt their reputations here without their being prepared for that. It is one thing if these young men believe and decide it's time to tell their family and friends, but for it to be done by us in a time they were not prepared for would be devastating in a number of ways. SO. Sorry for having to get rid of the pictures and the names, but pray for the young men attending the Bible study anyways! They need strength and courage to do what they're doing. Alrighty then... and on with the blog!

This is the front to Eternity Church, which we have been attending in Gjakova the past couple of weeks. It's an international church, with members from America, Canada, the UK, Albania, and a couple of other countries. The leadership, however, is entirely Kosovar, and we've received great insight into both Christian living and how to minister to the people in Kosova. Additionally, our team leader Matt has been able to greatly help them by playing the bass in two services each week.
PRAYER REQUEST: That we are a positive and life-giving influence to Eternity Church, that we can serve them and show them love, and that we learn what they have to impart to us.

Here's Elizabeth playing with the children of the daycare. We aren't able to do this everyday, but whenever we can we like to help out the women running the daycare. Usually we play with the kids during playtime, we clean up after them, and generally just to try to make the lives of these women easier. (There will be a picture of them in the next update.) However, almost every night we go out and play with a variety of kids, usually soccer for the boys and a combination of volleyball, duck-duck-goose, and various other games for the girls.
PRAYER REQUEST: That we show these children God's unconditional and accepting love. Though we can't tell them about Him directly, we want to show them His love in the hopes that when they hear about a loving and intimate God, they'll recognize that attitude by what they see in us and especially in Dave and Cindy.
And so that's our first two weeks have been like. We've done our best to serve the Kosovar people and show them Christ's love.
PRAYER REQUEST: That you have a blessed day!

In addition to the English schools, Korab and Alban also run several youth groups in the surrounding villages. Here are two of the regular attenders.
WE APOLOGIZE for the inconvenience here. There was a picture of two young men from the village--One was a believer, the other, his cousin--who attend the Bible study in Krushe. Unfortunately, we were gently informed by our contacts that having their pictures and names up alongside words about Jesus and Christianity could potentially hurt their reputations here without their being prepared for that. It is one thing if these young men believe and decide it's time to tell their family and friends, but for it to be done by us in a time they were not prepared for would be devastating in a number of ways. SO. Sorry for having to get rid of the pictures and the names, but pray for the young men attending the Bible study anyways! They need strength and courage to do what they're doing. Alrighty then... and on with the blog!

This is the front to Eternity Church, which we have been attending in Gjakova the past couple of weeks. It's an international church, with members from America, Canada, the UK, Albania, and a couple of other countries. The leadership, however, is entirely Kosovar, and we've received great insight into both Christian living and how to minister to the people in Kosova. Additionally, our team leader Matt has been able to greatly help them by playing the bass in two services each week.

Here's Elizabeth playing with the children of the daycare. We aren't able to do this everyday, but whenever we can we like to help out the women running the daycare. Usually we play with the kids during playtime, we clean up after them, and generally just to try to make the lives of these women easier. (There will be a picture of them in the next update.) However, almost every night we go out and play with a variety of kids, usually soccer for the boys and a combination of volleyball, duck-duck-goose, and various other games for the girls.
And so that's our first two weeks have been like. We've done our best to serve the Kosovar people and show them Christ's love.











