Hauling Salt
September 2005
Well this is a new one. I check the airstrip list
and scan a thousand odd names to find my next
destination. With an often-repeated series of
twists and toggles, I can program the latitude and
longitude into the GPS computer and instantly get a
course, distance and ETA - only fifteen minutes
away, roughly southeast from my present position
over the vast and featureless Sudan. I level off
low since we are almost there and then check the
notes relating to this airstrip, which I know
nothing about. Three young men are already on board
my airplane, and here I’ll pick up one more. 8
miles to run, descending and peering through the
haze for something, anything that looks like a
runway. I spot it and swing around for an approach.
It looks unusually rough, even for an airstrip in
Southern Sudan. Fifty feet over the approach end
and I’m having second thoughts about
landing…there’s a commotion behind me. I turn back
to see my Sudanese passengers waving arms and
shaking heads. Whatever they are trying to say, I
get the message that I’m not supposed to land here.
Up with the power and flaps and I make a circle to
the left while gathering some further hand signals
directing me to the “real” runway. It’s right there
in front of me, next to this old, abandoned strip I
just passed over. It’s not a runway at all; it’s a
road…a Sudanese road, which means it’s basically a
length of dirt that sees more goats than motorized
vehicles. In fact, there’s some grazing on it now.
I communicate my ignorance back to my passengers.
They seem pretty unanimous about landing here on
the road, so I give it a go. This particular runway
‘slash’ road is a sort of Sudanese cul-de-sac. It
dead-ends right into a village. Dozens of perfect
straw cones, homes, populate the approach end, as
well as some ominously tall trees. To clear these
obstacles I touch down a good one-third of the way
toward the other end. I come down hard on the
brakes with a roar and a cloud of dust, sheep and
goats running for dear life (thankfully away from
my decelerating mass.) I whir and whoosh the eight
thousand pound machine slowly back to the spot
where people seem to be gathering, and taxi pretty
much right into the village.For the grubby, smiling
kids in this isolated place I must be like a
space-man who just fell out of the sky. My door
pops open as the propeller is still winding down. I
unfold a ladder out the left side of the airplane
and jump right out of the pilot’s seat to the dusty
earth below. It’s forty degrees C. About 104 as we
Americans measure it. Hot. I’ve just scared these
poor folks’ goats so badly that they may have to
mount a search party to find them all. I’ve dusted
the village, woke all the sleeping children, and
probably ruined school for the rest of the day. Yet
I’m greeted like an old friend, handshakes all
around and “how do you like the airstrip.” The
crowd pushes in as the passengers that arrived with
me clamber out to make their own greetings. We have
very little time to spare in this busy day, and so
I whip out a list of passenger names, “I’m looking
for Zachariah.” The crowd parts like the Red Sea,
and here he comes – wearing his best (and probably
only) suit and tie, carrying one small tattered
bag. The airplane, the commotion, the white guy
with gold bars on his shoulders – they are all here
for this one man. I can see the awestruck faces of
the children. All at once Zachariah has become a
sort of hometown hero, going who-knows-where but
going in style. Actually, he’s a local pastor and a
student. He’s going to study at a 9-week
theological course in another part of the country.
I’m gathering up these young men from all over the
south – from humid little communities along the
great Nile river, and in a dozen such villages as
this... basically bringing them to school. And
almost everywhere I pick up these guys, I have to
smile at the way they are sent off – like a small
town’s favorite son going off to war. Maybe in some
way that is what they are. I take pleasure in
honoring these men – caring for them and their
five-kilo bag. One more walk around the airplane to
clear a path through the people, make my checks,
and we are off... Myself and four young pastors,
and several more stops to make. The plane departs
in a fury of dust again and I circle overhead
before setting on course. I can just imagine the
kids below. They will probably spend the rest of
the day looking for their goats, and maybe talking
all about Zachariah and how they want to be like
him someday. I smile at the thought. These men in
wrinkled, hand-me-down suits and big grins, whose
earthly possessions fit into a suitcase smaller
than my flight bag, and who humbly accept God’s
calling despite the hardships of this land… I think
I’d like to be more like them too.Thirteen thousand
feet, on the last leg of the 12-hour day, after
I’ve made all the stops and filled all the seats,
there are twelve such men sitting behind me.
Resting now, thanks to the cool air and an
autopilot, I get to thinking and am reminded of
Jesus and twelve other guys sometime long ago. “You
are the salt of the earth,” he said to them, “you
are the light of the world.” I feel the
sweat-matted hair crammed under my headset, look at
my filthy hands gripping the control yoke, taste my
lips and somehow get to thinking about the salt.
This bit from the Bible has received some
interpretation through the years. Some say the salt
refers to the disciples influence being a
“preservative” for the world, and yet others say it
means that they, and those who follow, will foster
a thirst for truth, just as salt makes one
physically thirsty. But up here where the altitude
diminishes my higher brain functions, sharing a
battered old airplane with twelve simple, smelly
guys and a hundred Sudanese flies… I think that
maybe the “salt” has something to do with sweat. It
has something to do with this work of building
God’s kingdom not being easy. And it has something
to do with people who are willing to join the fight
and be spent in the effort - sweat, and tears.
These men who shed drops of salty water onto the
dusty ground and parched spirit of South Sudan,
maybe these were the ones Jesus was talking about.
To the muddle of awe-struck kids who watch them
wondrously take to the skies each year, they are
simply larger than life. But I know these guys as
something even larger. They are the salt and light
of biblical proportions – the weak, the humble, the
poor – the unassuming stuff that God prefers to
work with in this world. Of all the loads I haul
around out here in Africa, these are some of the
best. They are the ones I am most proud, and
humbled to fly.
