appreciated
June 18 2007
It's summer in America. Summer holds different meaning
for different people. Since living here in the land of
eternal summer, we have new associations with the
season that differ from our State-side perspective. One
notable feature of these fleeting months is a surge in
our flying ministry. It seems all the regular flying
continues as normal while we get an additional burst of
requests from all the summer mission teams heading out
to various ends of the earth. It is a fun time, albeit
exhausting, for the pilots and mechanics on our team. I
wrote once about the special place these summer
"volunteers" have in our hearts. (The
Volunteers) Now that the season has
come around once more, the experiences are fresh
again.
I arrived overhead Mariel Bai airstrip last Saturday, the culmination of a 569 mile trip. It is truly impossible to get there any other way but by airplane - especially now at the lively beginning of rainy season in Sudan. I was there to collect a team of thirteen people from Florida who had spent a week on the ground conducting medical clinics among other things. I also had the roof for a nearby church in my airplane - two thousand pounds of wood planks and steel sheets. Given that the roofing supplies had to come out before the passengers could get in, I had some all-to-willing helpers with the load. Some of the folks recognized me from flying them around the year before. Sunburned, unshaven faces gleamed with joy once again, first at the sight of the airplane, and then at the recognition of the tired guy flying it. In lands so foreign and strange, it can be nice just to recognize something. Well, I started the engine to cheers and shut it down four hours later to gracious applause. It's not because these volunteers were jaded by their mission experience. Quite the opposite, they were overcome with joy at having been there. The cheers and smiles could be attributed to something much simpler. As my passenger so candidly put it while we flew the first leg out and back home, "You can only eat so much goat."
I laughed. And then we got in a conversation about the differing levels of toughness that goats come in. These short-term missionaries, if they are flying with us, are going to some very hard places. It's not easy. Part of me, for better or worse, is glad about that. For the folks who venture this far out, it makes the trip more worthwhile in a non-tourist kind of way. And because of the goat stew and the cold showers and the rough beds and stinging, biting creepy things, it makes the airplane a "sight for sore eyes." The pilot...a hero. It's kind of fun to be mistaken as a hero sometimes. It only lasts for a season.
I arrived overhead Mariel Bai airstrip last Saturday, the culmination of a 569 mile trip. It is truly impossible to get there any other way but by airplane - especially now at the lively beginning of rainy season in Sudan. I was there to collect a team of thirteen people from Florida who had spent a week on the ground conducting medical clinics among other things. I also had the roof for a nearby church in my airplane - two thousand pounds of wood planks and steel sheets. Given that the roofing supplies had to come out before the passengers could get in, I had some all-to-willing helpers with the load. Some of the folks recognized me from flying them around the year before. Sunburned, unshaven faces gleamed with joy once again, first at the sight of the airplane, and then at the recognition of the tired guy flying it. In lands so foreign and strange, it can be nice just to recognize something. Well, I started the engine to cheers and shut it down four hours later to gracious applause. It's not because these volunteers were jaded by their mission experience. Quite the opposite, they were overcome with joy at having been there. The cheers and smiles could be attributed to something much simpler. As my passenger so candidly put it while we flew the first leg out and back home, "You can only eat so much goat."
I laughed. And then we got in a conversation about the differing levels of toughness that goats come in. These short-term missionaries, if they are flying with us, are going to some very hard places. It's not easy. Part of me, for better or worse, is glad about that. For the folks who venture this far out, it makes the trip more worthwhile in a non-tourist kind of way. And because of the goat stew and the cold showers and the rough beds and stinging, biting creepy things, it makes the airplane a "sight for sore eyes." The pilot...a hero. It's kind of fun to be mistaken as a hero sometimes. It only lasts for a season.