Merry Christmas 2005

SHANKSTEPS CHRISTMAS 2005

Somehow this Christmas felt a bit different than
Christmas’ past. Perhaps it was the 80 degrees
instead of 20; or the dust swirling in our barren back
yard rather than snow; maybe the scarcity of Christmas
lights; or absence of Salvation Army bell ringers.
Not to say that any of this is bad, just different.
We spent a nice quiet Christmas together as a family.
We had a Charlie Brown Christmas tree covered in
homemade ornaments (made from Hershey’s kiss
wrappers). We hung stockings, made from old scrubs,
off a shelf of medical books (so it’s not quite a
mantle over the fireplace…) One of the nicest things
about Christmas Day was that we didn’t have to work,
so we got to spend the whole day as a family –
uninterrupted.
It was almost exactly one year ago that we found out
we were coming to Cameroun, Africa. As you may
remember, we had hoped to be in the field by January
2005, but this was not to be. We left Audrey’s
parents in CT after Christmas and still didn’t know
where we were going. We had been praying long and hard
and were very frustrated. The day after we reached
Greg’s parent’s house in WV for New Years we found out
that we were chosen to come to Cameroun. After
figuring out where Cameroun was, we realized that this
is where God had called us. We met with the GC
(General Conference) representative Jan 16; received
the official call to Cameroun the next week; sold our
house the following week –in the snow (after it had
been on the market for 8 months); packed up our
belongings and send them to a warehouse in MD; closed
on our house March 3; and moved to Montreal Canada the
following week. When God moves, HE moves quickly and
you’d better be ready!!!
We spent 3 months in Montreal attempting to learn
French. We had hoped to bypass this step, but our GC
rep forced us into it. Boy am I glad now that he did.
Thank you so much Pastor Sabot for your insistence!!!
I cannot imagine coming here without a French
language base. After 9 weeks of language school
Audrey found out that her mom had lung cancer. She
left the school to be with her mom for surgery and
recovery. We thank everyone for his or her prayers
during this very difficult time. It was a very tough
decision to make to continue our plans to leave for
Africa knowing all that she would go through. Thank
our Lord, and her physicians, she is finishing up
chemotherapy Feb 1 and has handled it well. We are
all relieved that with God’s grace, this chapter will
be finished.
From Montreal we “moved” to Andrews University in
Michigan for 3 weeks of Mission Institute. While
there we made some wonderful friends and learned a lot
about other cultures, our own culture and most
importantly ourselves and families. We will forever
cherish those intense three weeks. After Mission
Institute we spent three glorious weeks in WV
water-skiing and hanging out with Greg’s family. Then
we spent another wonderful three weeks in CT and at
the beach with Aud’s family.
July 17th we left the US for parts unknown. Our
flight was 4 hours late and we missed our connecting
flight to Yaounde, Cameroun. “Unfortunately” we had
to spend a day in Paris:} When we finally got to
Cameroun it was the wrong city and we missed the
flight from Douala to Yaounde again. After finally
making it to Yaounde (and confusing everyone as to
where we were) we spent three weeks trying to complete
paperwork for work permit’s etc. Finally on August
10, 2005, after 20 hours on a train, 10 hours in a
bush taxi, and 2 hours by car we arrived in Koza,
Cameroun – HOME. It’s hard to believe that we have
lived in Koza for 5 months now, and out of the US for
almost six. This past six months has been wild. By
now, the bizarre is almost commonplace. We have been
busy, bored, hungry, sick, healthy, lonely, exhausted,
comforted, frustrated, content, angry, and
exhilarated. Mostly though we have been able to
experience the hand of God himself guiding us through
each day. Sometimes HE is obvious, sometimes we have
to look harder, and listen better, but HE is here with
us every day. Many days, Our Lord is the only thing
that keeps us going, the only strength we have. Many
of our stories can be read and pictures seen on the
website: www.missiondocs.org (Thank you Warren for
keeping this up for us!!! You are a Godsend!)
Throughout the past 5 months we have had several
visitors. Some were shocked at what they saw while
others just dove right in. I think that one has to be
“called” by the Master to come and survive
(physically, emotionally and spiritually) in a place
like Koza. In November, Greg’s parents came to visit,
bringing good cheer, lots of medical supplies, tons of
food, an Ultrasound (with money donated by Sunbelt
Health Systems and many other wonderful people), and
of course chocolate!!! Greg’s mom made a fabulous
Thanksgiving dinner, complete with mock turkey,
stuffing, sweet potatoes, green beans, and pumpkin
pie. I will never again take Thanksgiving dinner for
granted:}
Sarah is finally adjusting to the life here.
Although she still has a hard time with the language,
and misses her friends and family terribly, she is
starting to make friends and has been playing games
with some of our neighbors. Last week we had 35 kids
in our front yard, playing ball. Hectic but fun.
Right now (Jan 11) we are still waiting for our
container to come. It reached the port of Douala 2
months ago but has had trouble clearing customs. In
the container, besides our personal items and our
truck, are many much needed donated medical items from
all around the US. We were extremely blessed by the
medical equipment we received from Boone Memorial
Hospital WV, Summersville Memorial Hospital WV, Robert
Packer Hospital PA, and Parkview Adventist Hospital
ME. We hope you all will be richly blessed as well in
this New Year.
Last month Greg had to travel (again by motorcycle,
bush taxi, and train) to Yaounde for the end of year
Union meetings. Aside from the very busy week I had
without him, the most exciting news that came out of
the meetings was the fact that we are being “forced”
to come home for 6 weeks every year. Six weeks of
vacation with 2 weeks of educational leave allows us
two months in the States. We are requesting leave
around the end of June 2006, to return here at the end
of August. Unfortunately we won’t be able to see
everyone, but we are going to try each year to visit a
different part of the US to visit friends and family.
This year I think we will try to visit our old
stomping grounds of Upstate New York and PA (as well
as our parents in CT and WV or course). When the GC
has cleared our plans and we know dates, we will let
everyone know so we can see as many people as
possible. Although it is too short to visit everyone
and too long to be away from the hospital, we are
actually very blessed to be able to take 2 months a
year for vacation.
Never Forget:
Car Dieu a tant aimé le monde qi’il a donné son Fils
unique, afin que quiconque croit en lui ne périsse
point, mais qu’il ait la vie éternelle. Jean 3:16
(French)

Gar haha Zhiklè a woy herkeda a ndav na, a mva ta kra
nenga’a, kra nenga’a stadgenè, aman ko wawa man a nco
nenga’a a ndav na, a zi azbai, a n’ngotso nshèffè a
mèdèp. John 3:16 (Mofa: local tribal language)

Allah yidi duniyaaru masin, Ngam maajum o hokki Biddo
maako bajjo. Koomoy nuddini Biddo oo, halkataa ammaa
o heban ngeendam nduumiidam. Yuhanna 3:16 (Fufulde:
widespread language of Sahel region)

For God so loved the world, that He gave His only
begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not
perish, but have eternal life. John 3:16

This Bible verse has changed lives throughout the
world. Let it be life changing for you as well. May
you all be richly blessed throughout 2006.

The Shanks

Shanksteps #24 and 25

ShankSteps #24
The Runaway Christmas Present

Our first Christmas in Cameroon…Wow… Sure is hot
for Christmas!
Dad and I went out to cut down a Christmas tree a
few days ago. It was not only a small tree, but also
the wrong kind! But with decorations made from candy
rappers it looked just fine! (Our stash of American
candy was diminished incredibly that day. We couldn’t
fit the candy rappers in our plastic Zip-lock bag!)
To make it seem even more like Christmas, we cut
out paper snowflakes and taped them around the living
room.
Next we got our presents for each other and rapped
them. In toilet paper.
Then Mom sewed stockings for us out of blue
hospital pants.
Well, everything’s ready! Except my parents have
some tricks up their sleeves. You see, on Christmas
day my parents brought me to a mans house to pick up
my Christmas present. Only the man wasn’t there. He
was of at a party.
Great. I have no idea what’s going on. I hear my
dad speaking in French. But when I listen I pick up a
few words before Mom covers my ears. I hear the him
say, “She needs to chose… he said we could get it
here… Before 9:00”
Then their ten million kids go scurrying and
climbing their wall shouting, “There it is, there it
is!”
Unable to find “it”, we headed home to open
presents.
What a nice Christmas! I got an African harp, an
African dress, candy (yum), a wrap (a piece of cloth
you wear as a skirt), and a box my grandmother sent us
filed with paints and stuff that smells good you put
on your hands-very handy when your sitting by an extra
stinky person in church. Just rest your head on your
hands and try to smell your hand lotion instead of the
person. I also got some fake, purple, sparkly
eyelashes about an inch and a half long. I think I’ll
put them on one of these days too!;)
We still hadn’t found the runaway Christmas
present.
That night Mom got sick with what I had. Vomiting,
diarrhea, pain, and fatigue. So Mom got it from me, I
got it from the pediatric word, and the pediatric word
got it from one little kid, who probably got it from
this kid, who got it from that kid and so on…
The day after Christmas a nurse came and got me and
Dad to come to his house. When we got there his cute
little puppy greeted us and then went off to chew up
somebody’s shoe.
We sat down on the chairs outside and talked. His
son came out with two kittens the size of a kid’s
hand. My eyes got big and I squeaked as Dad explained
that I could pick one out.
One was gray with darker gray stripes and was a
boy. The other was white with gray and orange spots
and was a girl. What luck! I’ve always wanted a girl
cat! And I’ve always wanted a cat with spots! Now
I’ve got a spotted girl cat!
Of course I had to leave her with their mom. They
were only 3 days old!
I was the happiest girl!
Dad explained that they had tried to get a cat at
the other person’s house but could not fined it
because it moved.
The hardest thing was naming her. Patches was to
classic and Spot sounded like a dog. But wait! A
Christmas present! Either Holly or Noel! I picked
Holly.
So now the house won’t be so lonely like before.
And I won’t be alone all day! We’re all happy for a
pet! And that will make living here easier!
And so ends the story. Toodles! Sarah Shank

Shanksteps #25 Food edition

Imagine for a moment that it’s Halloween. . . without
costumes. . . an endless supply of kids. . . all
singing “trick or treat” at the top of their lungs. .
. at 4:45 in the morning. . . demanding candy and in
many cases money. . . and lasting all day long! This
is New Year’s Day in Cameroon. But instead of “trick
or treat” it was “Bon Annee” (or “Happy New Year”).
We were warned of this holiday a little bit, but not
nearly enough. For New Year’s Eve, we had all of the
hospital workers to our house for a party, singing,
prayer, vision for the hospital, and lots and lots of
food. People cleared out by about 1:00am, and by
4:45, there were children at the gate singing for
their candy. Fortunately the children are happy with
candy (although not planning ahead, we didn’t have
much). The adults however, bring flowers in exchange
for money. “Sounds endearing” you many say. I’m just
not usually in the habit of handing out money to
anyone who asks. Apparently though, this is
Cameroon’s “charity day”, an acceptable day to beg.
On this day the Mayor’s office gives out tons of
candy, money etc. as a way of giving to the community.
It’s still a bit daunting when you are one of only
two white families for 60 miles and therefore you wear
a huge dollar sign on your head. I hope next year I
will be better prepared for this crazy day.
Have you ever been put in jail for stealing lemons?
I was so excited to find that we have a lemon tree in
our yard. Lemons mean lemonade in the hot season.
However, this tree has turned out to be more trouble
than it’s worth. About a week ago some of the
neighborhood kids discovered this tree. Someone told
our guard that a girl had been stealing lemons from
the tree and when we went to look, the lemons had been
cleared up to about 5 or 6 feet from the ground. We
have a fence all the way around our house, and a
guard. She must have known that it wasn’t okay to
come and take lemons. Since that time we have had
lemon tree surveillance, and several days ago Pierre,
our guard, caught the girl inside our gate. We found
that she is the same girl that had stolen the lemons
last week. So, Greg and Pierre went with her to talk
to her family. Her father wasn’t home, but Greg made
an appointment to talk to the Blama (like a chief) of
her neighborhood. The Blama said that this girl and
her mother have both stolen from many people and are a
problem in their area. So, the Blama said that he
would put her in jail for a week, hopefully to teach
her (and others with the same idea) a lesson. She
disappeared before they could put her in jail.
Yesterday, we caught two more kids with the same
intentions. Will kids never learn??? Interestingly,
they were from the same neighborhood. So, Greg again
talked to the same Blama, who personally took the two
down to the police station. Don’t know yet how this
will turn out.
Well now a week later we finally just picked all the
rest of the lemons ourselves and are giving them to
our friends. So this has currently stopped the
thieving by getting rid of the stimulus. So we had
Pierre check into the other two boys that were
apprehended. Well they also didn’t end up with
anything happening to them. Surprise? No not really.
I really don’t think this is considered an offense
here. Just frustrating to the forigners who want to
let them ripen and use them.
{(Greg) So a few letters ago I told you about a kid
who had been in a knife fight and nearly lost… his
life. Well I’m glad to say that he has healed well
and is ready to go home soon. He is of the nomadic
tribe and they live way out. He herds the cattle most
of the time. He was the one with the diaphragm
laceration, huge liver laceration, stabs in the
shoulders down to the bone. I thank God that he has
his life today. It’s really amazing that he even made
it here in the first place.}
Etiquette tip for the day:
This FYI (For Your Information) is for all of you
non-vegetarians out there. I want you each to know
this in case you are ever presented with the
situation. The next time you sit down to eat chicken
with your friends or families, BEWARE: Only the men
are to eat the stomachs, and only the women are to eat
the chicken’s feet. UNLESS you happen to be a woman
who is about to leave your husband…then it’s okay for
you ladies to eat the stomach also. You never know
when this kind of information may come in handy.
(Greg) This information comes from the new years
party at our house for the hospital workers. The
hospital and us, put on a New Years party behind our
house. So many of the hospital workers wives prepared
the food, leading to the above revelation about food
ediquite. We had a good time. I gave my “directors”
goals for the new year and encouraged all the workers
to work together and strive for better service for our
patients and our God. We had a great fiest at the end
and brought in the new year together. My “normal” new
years is to bring it in at Summersville WV playing
walleyball with the church members. So this was quite
different but was nice anyway. No ball dropping, but
we did have some fireworks someone came up with. We
had a good time and all the workers were happy,
especially for the large quantity of food.
Well we just want to thank you all for your prayers
and support over this past year 2005. It has brought
about many changes in our family and your support
means all the world to us. Also your calls are very
appreciated. We have found out that www.viapin.com
has a calling card that can call us for about
15cents/min from the US if any of you are interested.
It costs us $1/min from here to the US. Thus on our
salary it’s not permissible. Thank you all for your
love and support. We so much appreciate it. Our love
to you, The Shanks

Shanks
BP 53
Koza, Extreme Nord
Cameroon, AFRICA

Shanksteps 22, 23

#22 Cameroon
Well it’s 7 days till Christmas. It was 90 degrees
today and dry. Now those of you in the south-west may
be used to that. We are not! It doesn’t at all seem
like Christmas here. We are however very thankful for
a friend of mine who was able to fix our MP3 player
and we now have all our music back on it. So we have
started playing Christmas music in our house. That
helps a lot. Especially if we turn on the fans and
close all the windows in the morning so it stays cool
and we cannot see the dry outsides. We are definitely
“dreaming of a white Christmas!” We have cut
“snowflakes” and hung them around the house. We saw
a little plastic Christmas tree in Maroua about 2 ft.
tall. Sarah really wanted it but I couldn’t bring
myself to purchase it (it was to pitiful). I would
rather cut a desiduous tree from the yard than buy
THAT! We were also blessed to have a group from Loma
Linda here a few days ago just for a night as they
traveled through. It was nice to spend time with
them. They were on there way to a health fair at
Batouri Adventist Hospital (our sister hospital in a
rural area of the south). Anyway it was nice to see a
little familiarity. I think it’s most difficult to be
far away at times of the year like this and loved ones
birthdays. It seems like the holidays have always
been a time for extended family. Now it’s the nuclear
family. I must say Im very thankful for all my family
members here and in the US. They give me much support
especially when it is needed. When being a Director
was NOT what I had in mind, Audrey is very supportive.
I am also blessed by a good Administrator of the
hospital. He is very good and I think we are each
able to make eachothers job a little easier. The most
difficult issues are dealing with things that occurred
before I arrived and knowing what is best to do with
it. I would be happy to continue receiving your
prayers for my own wisdom administratively and
medically. The challenges are never ending.
I was very encouraged recently when I learned of two
girls who gave significantly to our hospital, Nichole
and Christy. They had a birthday recently and had
heard of the financial difficulties we are having at
the hospital. They decided at their birthday party
they would ask everyone who came NOT to bring them
presents but to bring them money that they would have
used on the presents. They took this money, $100, and
sent it as a donation to our work here in Koza. What
a blessing that was and what commitment to advancing
God’s work. Nichole and Christy, I am very thankful
for your generosity and I know that God is very happy
too. I am praying that you will always keep Him
first in your lives and that we will be able to meet
someday soon, and in heaven!
Also to let each one that is praying for us we very
much appreciate it and know God is leading. We expect
to be back stateside for a few weeks in early summer
2006. If you know of any physicians who would be
interested in covering a hospital for any time frame
up to a couple months while we are gone please let me
know. I pray that each one of you are growing closer
to God and following His plan for your life.
In His Service, Shanks

Shanksteps #23

In the States when someone gets sick what do they do?
If it is mild or something they have had before they
may go to the pharmacy to look for some type of
over-the-counter medication, possibly discussing it
first with the trained pharmacist. If it is more
serious, they go to their local family doctor or
urgent care center or the hospital. Here in Cameroun
the usual sequence is: 1) Wait at home until you make
sure you are very sick. 2) Go to the traditional
healer for a potion or a powder of herbs, roots, and
sometimes, crushed animal parts; or cutting of the
skin to release the bad spirits. 3) If that doesn’t
work, try the local outdoor market for the boy with
the pharmacy on the front of his bicycle. 4) Still
sick, take a trip to the dispensary to see a
marginally trained nurse and receive a real treatment
(although not always correct in dosage or duration).
5) If all else fails, go to the hospital and complain
about how you have already spent all of your money on
medical treatment. Granted, the hospital doctor’s
fees are a bit more than the “pharmacy on a bicycle”,
but by the time they get to us, they have already
spent a lot of money, and precious time that the
person (often a child or woman) could be healing.
As we have seen recently, these steps may overlap,
more than we first realized. Very often after
surgery, a cord with a sack, or often a nut of some
sort will appear on the patient. One woman who came
in with an open fracture of the forearm now wears a
type of dried fruit around her arm for healing. A
sack of seeds appeared around a little girl’s wrist
after having abdominal surgery for typhoid
perforation. Greg teases these patients about taking
off their cast if the dried fruit works as well; or
that they should have had their sack of seeds ready to
ward off surgery. Usually the patient and family
laugh, knowing that it doesn’t really work, but afraid
not to try it. The sack of seeds is relatively
harmless from a medical point of view (a bit more
harmful from a spiritual one however…). I often will
see kids in the hospital who have a powder pasted to
their skin as a type of healing. This is potentially
a bit more harmful from a medical standpoint because I
don’t know what types of active ingredients are in
this treatment. I have seen this powder placed
around the neck, under the armpits and recently in the
ears and nose. Yesterday I saw a child who has been
in the hospital for about 5 days. She initially had
an IV for quinine, but was able to eat so it was
removed. The next day she started vomiting and the
family couldn’t afford another IV, so we have tried
several methods of getting her medication into her.
She was finally able to keep it down. She initially
came in with coughing, vomiting, and occasional
diarrhea (often these are all symptoms of malaria).
We tested her stool to make sure she didn’t have
dysentery or other GI ailment. After asking a bit
more, we found that three days before coming to the
hospital she had her uvula cut out, because this is
what they do for cough. Yesterday as I was going
through her bag of meds I came across a baggie of
unlabeled pills. I asked the mom what these were and
she said that since the child was having diarrhea and
we weren’t treating it, she went to the local pharmacy
(box on the front of a bike) and bought medication
for diarrhea and gave her one pill. Sometimes I just
throw up my hands and wonder what it is that I do here
anyway. We try to practice the best medicine we can
under the circumstances, and still the “pharmacy on a
bike” is trusted more than the hospital. I need to
realize that trust takes time, and we’ve only been
here in Koza for four months. I also have to remember
that Satan is at work here. He doesn’t want people to
trust or come to the hospital to receive God’s
healing. It seems that the more God blesses the
hospital, the more Satan attacks it. Please pray for
God’s blessing on our hospital. Also pray that we
(the workers here) show Christ to our patients and
that they realize that true healing is from God, not
man. Many of our workers need spiritual healing as
well for us to be all unified in Christ. We thank you
for your continued prayers. -Audrey

Shanksteps 20, 21

Cameroon # 20

He was very stoic. It was obvious he was badly hurt.
He was an 18 y/o male with multiple stab wounds that
was brought in to our hospital by car from a village
30 minutes away. On his left upper arm there was a
large laceration with shin and muscle missing. This
wend down to bone. His right shoulder was bandaged
tightly and as I loosened it to see the injury he
began to drip blood from this injury. This side also
was a glancing wound with loss of skin and muscle down
to bone. His right middle finger was also dripping
with bone exposed. His abdomen was wrapped tightly
and as I asked about this spot I was told his
“intestines had come out” of a hole in his abdomen.
As I unwrapped this I noted small and large intestine
lying down to the table at his side. At least the
decision to operate on him was a rapid one.
Fortunately for him he did not have a real high heart
rate or low blood pressure. So we started intravenous
fluids on him and took him to the OR. About ∏ hour
later the operating staff were there with me and we
started in the abdomen. I went in through a midline
(up and down) incision from the sternum to pubis. I
noted a cut in the liver about 4cm deep and 7 inches
in length. This was bleeding slowly. I examined all
the small and large intestine and fortunately for the
patient and myself no injuries were seen. He had had
his liver sliced and that appeared to be all. I then
noticed with each of his breaths that air was entering
his diaphragm (the muscle from breathing separating
chest from abdomen). I also saw that a rib had been
cut in half and the cut slid along the underside of
the next rib up along the chest wall. I reached my
hand into his chest from the abdomen and swiped out
the clots and felt the collapsed lung. So at this
time I’m even more amazed that his is alive. We
operate here with limited resources, and have no
general anesthetics. I did his entire operation under
Ketamine while he breathed. In the US he would be
intubated with a double lumen endotrachial tube and
his lung inflated. This is not an option here. And
in addition I have no chest tube to help inflate his
lung. So I adapted a urinary catheter for this
purpose. I also don’t have suction I can use to help
inflate the lung with the chest tube either. So I
connected the urine catheter in his chest to a urine
bag, added water to it and flipped it upside down to
make a water seal. I’m sure everyone medical is
laughing now. This is NOT the normal treatment but it
is what I had to work with and I was trying to help
save his life. I then proceeded to close the
diaphragmatic laceration. This was successful after
much struggle and liver retraction to visualize the
laceration. Now the liver was bleeding more because
of manipulation. Fortunately I found some surgical
(helps stop bleeding) and after that the oozing
stopped. So I closed his abdomen. Fortunately for
the patient Dr. Appel and his wife arrived to visit
for a day on their way to some meetings. They helped
me “close” the shoulder and finger injuries and
repaired a finger tendon while I closed the abdomen.
So 4 hours after starting we were finished.
It is now a week later. He has healed his abdominal
wounds and granulating his shoulders. Audrey took out
his “chest tube” while I’ve been gone about a week at
other meetings. God is definitely blessing our
efforts with this patient. We give glory to Him for
what He has done. Later we found out the person who
had done this to him was a younger brother who he had
called a donkey thief. I guess that is a serious
accusation; the brother apparently was also brought in
by the army for more minor wound care. Praise God for
this patient’s life today. We explain this to him
daily. I pray he realizes the reality of this. Thank
you for your prayers for our work here, it IS making a
huge difference in this spiritual battlefield. In His
Grip, The Shanks

Cameroon #21

Oh what a trip!!! I was asked by the Central African
Union to assist in a meeting in Yaounde that occurs
every 5 years. I felt this was not wise as we have
not caught up on the hospital workers salaries yet,
and the hospital was the one to foot the expense for
my travel and stay… but many people thought it was
very important, so I went. It’s a long trip at
minimum. I got on the taxi motorcycle form Koza to
Mokolo, along with Dr. Appel and his wife from Bere,
Chad. They were on their way to the same meetings.
So it was nice to travel together. At Mokolo we got a
local minibus transport to Maroua. We only waited
about 2 hours, which is about average. The bus must
be full before it leaves. So we arrived in Maroua at
about 7PM. One of my new friends met us there and
took us to find a room to stay in. After checking the
Baptist Mission for rented rooms we were able to find
two at the Catholic mission. Early in the morning
(5:30) we went to the bus station to catch the first
bus to N’gounderi. After an 8-hour ride we arrived at
the train station there. We had a couple of hours to
spare so we went into “town” and ate at a
“restaurant.” We didn’t know the area so ate where
the taxi motorcycle took us. The “restaurant”
definitely wouldn’t have passed standards in the US
and would be immediately closed. Tables had been
cleaned onto the floor and there were food particles
all over the places in piles. In the back, rats were
seen near the bathroom. Flies were everywhere. But
we had a good salad (risky here) and were able to
watch a soccer match on TV in there. So at 5:30PM
(train was to leave at 6PM) we went to the train and
boarded. We were fortunate to get the sleeper cars
and 4 small beds in a room. To be able to sleep the
night and arrive the following day around noon in
Yaounde (the capital). After getting comfortable in
our beds on the train we just sat there. 1 ∏ hours
later they said we must deboard. Apparently the cargo
train had derailed part way up the route and 10 or so
cars were turned over. We asked if we could stay on
the train and of course we could not. Fortunately by
this time we had met up with the conference president
and he had some church member contacts there who put
us up for the night. So we spent a lovely evening
with them. The next morning someone went to the train
station to see if it would run that night (only daily
departures). Unfortunately it wouldn’t be. So they
arranged for us to take local minibus transport. Well
comparing this to sleeping the night on the train it
didn’t sound like too much fun. But no other options
and we had to make it to Yaounde for the meetings. So
we were to leave at 11AM and arrive, after an all
night trip, at around 6AM in Yaounde. So we set off.
With in 1kmof the train station we were on a bumpy
dirt road packed 5 wide in the minibus. The chicken
sitting on someone’s lap was squawking and the dust
was stifling. About every 2 km’s we met an army or
police stop to ask for our documents. These are after
just a chance to rip off people and increase their
salaries if not all is in order or you want them to
leave you alone and let you continue on. Cameroon is
noted as one of the top 5 corrupt countries.
Fortunately after about 5 stops there were less for
the rest of the trip. Though there was about 15 in
all. After a couple hours we were covered with dust
and sneezing. A couple hours later we stopped at a
small bus station and changed minibuses. Then a few
hours later the same thing. We passed many scenic
spots. I noticed quite a change in hut styles as we
came down the country. At midnight we stopped at
another town to change buses. They moved all the
luggage to the top of the next bus then we waited… and
waited. After about an hour of waiting people were
getting inpatient. Some started to complain to the
office and were getting upset at the wait (especially
when the bus was already full). So they called the
driver of the bus. He arrived on a taxi motorcycle
and some in the group yelled at him also. So he got
upset and said he would not drive till the morning and
left. So they were even more upset and assembled all
the passengers to speak to the people at the ticket
counter. They did this and threatened to call the
police for leaving them there like animals and
threatened to burn things. Well the ticket office
closed and they came up with the chief of that bus
station, who after hearing all the same threats got
another driver to come. So they transferred all the
luggage to this new minibus and we were off like a
rocket of sardines (packed 5 wide, hitting our heads
on the roof frequently) We were off at 2:30 AM.
With my knees buried in the back of the seat in front
of me and squished on either side. We finally
arrived, after about 5 more stops by police/army, at
about 9:30AM. FATIGUE! So I feel I got the full
African travel experience. I also enjoyed seeing
other minibuses with goats tied to the roof rack with
the luggage traveling down the road. I am thankful
that at least we did not have flat tires, and made it
there safely. Thank you Lord, Greg Shank