Shopping and More – Day 2

Sunday began with church at Beza. It was a great experience. At NCC we hear a lot about Beza, and I’ve had the opportunity to hear Pastor Zeb (Beza’s head pastor) speak before. So it was great to be able to actually experience a Beza worship service.

Pastor Sale spoke on “Go.” It was a great message about how we need to just go, to go do what God is telling us to do or to take a step forward in faith, trusting God to meet us on the way.

After service we went to lunch. On the way there a guy came up to the van and wanted me to buy a pair of sunglasses. This type of street vending is very common in Addis Ababa. Usually people aren’t selling something I want, but I knew I’d appreciate having sungalsses while in Addis. The guy asked 75 birr. (A bit more than $7, the exchange rate is around 11 to 1). We haggled over the price and settled on 40 or 50 birr, at which point I realized that I only had 29 birr on me. I figured I was out of luck, but he was happy to sell them to me for 29. I think this made me the first person to haggle for something on the trip. (Well, not including John who had already been here for over two weeks.)

At lunch Rachel and I sat with Melissa and Anna, the Beza staffer who coordinated and led our trip. Afterwards half of the team went to the pool and the other half went to the Ethnological Museum. I headed to the museum which was located in the former palace of former king Haile Selassie. It was a good opportunity to learn a bit more about the history and culture of Ethiopia.

After that we went to the Shiro Meda market, which we we had driven through the day before. It’s an interesting place. Tamara, one of the Entoto Project staffers, was with us and helped us bargain for better prices, but the best find of the day was the Ethiopian coffee pots. I don’t think we even had to haggle over the price. They offered them to us for 10 birr (less than a dollar). Coffee is a staple of Ethiopia, and even those who are very poor have a coffee pot and small stove to prepare coffee, so a pot makes for an authentic souvenir.

The group split up a bit going through the market, leaving me on my own, which is pretty much how I like it in situations like that. I walked down a few shops and saw a belt that I was interested in. Once again, the guy started the price at 75 birr. I said 25. I don’t remember what his “final” price was, but I walked away from it. He called me back and agreed to give me the belt for 40, but when I gave him a 50, he gave me back five ones. I had walked away again by the time I realized it, so I went back to the shop to get five more. He was reluctant, but after some arguing I got my five birr. As I walked away, one of the guys standing around said “Good” to me. I was pretty pround of myself. My second day in Ethiopia on my first trip out of the U.S., and I was already haggling like a pro!

After shopping was dinner at Yod Abyssinia. Yod serves traditional Ethiopian food and has live music and dancing in the traditional Ethiopian style to entertain you while you eat. There’s a good story here, but it’s better accompanied by video, so I’ll leave that for another time…

I know what you’re thinking. This doesn’t sound like much of a mission trip, but let me assure you, the real work began on Monday morning, although for me that meant more shopping. (More on that in my next post.)

A Successful Fundraiser

Tonight we held a fundraiser for Beza, the church that we are partnering with in Ethiopia. It was a good time to hang out and sample some great food, and we were able to raise nearly $2,000!

A huge thanks to Min Kim and Mary Evans for doing most of the prep work for the event and of course thanks are owed to John Hasler, our fearless leader.

The first team leaves on Friday, and our team leaves in two weeks. I’m starting to get excited! Please be in prayer for all of us, especially for the team leaving this week. I’ll be posting some more specific prayer requests later.

The Greatest Candy

The theme of NCC‘s 2009 Leadership Retreat is Greater Things, and we want to give people the greatest candy. So we’re taking a poll to find out which of these candies is the greatest, but this isn’t just any poll. We’re having a Team D (NCC Discipleship Team) showdown. John “Skittles” Hasler, Heather “Snickers” Zempel, and I each picked one candy for the poll, and whichever candy gets the most votes will be given to all of the attendees at the retreat.

In other words, PLEASE vote Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups!