All posts by Suzy Kuj

Sunday in Sudan!

Here is a typical Sunday for us in Sudan.  We love Sunday’s but they can be quite busy.  Suzy likes to give the compound cook the morning to sleep in and makes breakfast for everyone, usually pancakes from scratch!  The kids help wash, rinse and dry the dishes ready for breakfast and tea after church.  Dr. Tom also likes to help out after lunch washing the dishes!  Quite a task with a minimum of 16 staff/missionaries living on the compound and sometimes as many as 24-26 when a team visits!

Church starts at 10:30 am and is held on our compound.  Sabet is worship leader and pastor, doing a fabulous job of leading the church through God’s Word and in worship. 

The whole team living on the compound mucks in together and helps with church and sound set-up, worship, Sunday school, refreshments, greeting and announcements.  The Sunday school is a mix of different age groups and ranges from age 1 all the way to 14-15 year olds.  The numbers can also be quite overwhelming so we try and screen the kids, pulling ages 3-11 for Sunday school and asking mums to keep infants in church with them.  The children older than 11 we encourage to sit in church and listen to the message.  This still results in as many as 20-40 children every week with only one teacher and one translator.  With the various ages together in one class we have a great need for more helpers! 

Here are some prayer needs for help in the church:

  • Assistant/Youth pastor
  • Sunday school teachers
  • Worship leader
  • Favor from the local authorities to move the church outside the compound and use a nearby school building

We would love the above positions to be filled by missionaries desiring to serve the Lord on a long-term basis.  They would need to apply through our website and go through the missions preparation, cross-cultural training, support raising and team building process before coming, which can take more than a year.

After church we either drive out to our ‘picnic tree’ and enjoy a family picnic with visitors or staff.  We picked a tree in the middle of the swamp area as it is not easy to get to and therefore not many people to watch us eat!  So it also is quite peaceful and relaxing and a good place to take a little nap.  Our kids love this Sunday tradition, it is the highlight of their week.

After our picnic we like to visit members from our church in their homes and just encourage them.  They feel very honored and special to have us visit and pray for them.  We have seen the Lord answer many prayers of blessing over these precious people when we have gone to their homes on visitations.  And it is a tremendous witness to the neighbors of God’s love and care for His church.

Today, Mary and her husband Joseph invited our family and visiting team for a traditional Sudanese meal of chicken, kudra and kisera.  Jobs are scarce in Tonj so providing for the family is a challenge and inviting guests for supper is a real sacrifice that we felt so blessed to be asked and participate in.  You can read Mary’s testimony on a previous blog and I ask you to join us in our prayer over her home that the Lord would open her womb and bless them with many children.  Here are a few photo’s of the surrounding areas where Joseph and Mary live.

Hannah and Jed

 

  

Sunday evenings Sabet and I like to take time to pray for the week ahead with our children, for school, for opportunities and for guidance and protection.  In Sudan it is so evident that prayer needs to be at the forefront of everything we do and plan to do.  The battle is real and the enemy prowls around like a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour.  We realize that our prayers are a key shield and weapon against the enemy and appreciate your prayers for us as we go into battle daily for the souls in Sudan.

Thanks for your prayers – Suzy Kuj

Serving the Lord in Sudan

Sabet Dinka Dancing!

This is one type of Dinka dance that requires a lot of energy and foot stomping, quite a good way to keep fit if you can keep going for longer than 5 minutes!  The Dinka men usually compete to see who can stay the longest.  The other Dinka dance has the arms held up to resemble a bull’s horns as you stomp the ground.

Toothbrushes for IDAT Clinic

The AID Sudan team did a community health outreach to our clinic patients waiting to see the doctor.  Kerrie Snow gave a talk on dental hygiene and passed out toothbrushes as she explained how to use them.  The patients were very happy to receive the toothbrushes as most of them use sticks to clean their teeth.

Tonj Academy

 

Today the AID Sudan team went to a local school called Tonj Academy to assess the possibility to have a radio program that would assit the teachers.  AID Sudan is praying about partnering with In Deed and Truth Ministries to put a radio tower on our compound.  This would be a very effective way to reach the local and surrounding community with the gospel, health talks and education.

A local Sudanese school teacher called William Majok had the vision to help students get the education they desperately desire and started this ‘private’ school to help them.  Resources are limited and classes are overcrowded.

Primary Standard 2

A typical sight early in the morning is the children walking down the road with a plastic chair on their head.  If they don’t bring their own they don’t get to sit on a chair.

Some of the children don’t even have  a makeshift classroom but are happy to receive whatever education they can even if it means sitting outside with limited shade from a large tree.  Sabet and AID Sudan’s Andrew Brown share a bible story with the children.

Maloney Outreach!

For the past one year we have been taking our medical clinic on the road to a remote village 40 minutes drive away called Maloney.  Every Thursday we pack up our car with everything we need and split out medical staff in half, sometimes borrowing from our compound staff to translate and help out.  It is always a blessing to have a team that can lighten that load, so this week the AID Sudan team helped us out.  In one year we have gone from seeing 25 patients to over 100 every week.  Now the rains are setting in we ask for prayer as it really is a difficult place to reach when the footpath is muddy.  Last year we got stuck so badly we ended up moving the clinic closer to the road.

Drive from Maloney