Newsletters from a Salvation Army woman officer in Zambia (7) 1971-73
After returning from six months’ “Homeland Furlough” in 1970 and a short return to Bulawayo, my parents were promoted to Brigadiers and appointed Officers Commanding, Zambia Command, based in Lusaka, the capital city. They were there for just over two years (1971-73), after which their last appointment was in South Africa. After three years working in the Magistrates’ Courts and becoming a public prosecutor in 1970, I moved to Vereeniging in South Africa to attend a small Pentecostal Bible College in March 1971. Carol had begun nursing training in Salisbury, but withdrew and would pick it up again in Canada after she moved there with her husband and daughter in 1980. After a few years in Canada, they moved to the United States and live on the south-western coast of Florida.
P.O. Box RW 193
Ridgeway, Lusaka.
Zambia.
June 1971.
This is the first opportunity I have had of writing to our friends
since we arrived in Zambia, as we have been kept very busy. We had a long wait
before we could get visas to enter Zambia and were beginning to wonder if we
would ever get in, but knew that if the Lord wanted us here we would get in
eventually. We arrived here at last on March 25th, and that first
weekend had our official welcome at Chikankata Hospital and Secondary School.
This is a splendid centre of S.A. activity, and there is an excellent team of
officers and lay staff from all parts of the world. …
We are soldiers at the Lusaka City Corps which is a fine example
of a multiracial corps, English speaking. …
We spent Easter weekend on the Copperbelt right up in the north
near the Congo border, and it was a joy to meet the Salvationists up there. …
On Easter Sunday morning we had a sunrise service in the marketplace in Ndola.
…
Keith and I have just returned from a 9-day trek in the Gwembe
Valley, where we had a wonderful time. Since our schools down there were taken
over by the Government, there has been little Army work done there, and we only
have 2 officers for 9 centres. We had a wonderful reception wherever we went,
and the people are hungry for the Gospel. … The people told us that they
thought the Salvation Army had forgotten them, and wanted us to send them
leaders, but we just haven’t got them. … During the daytime we visited in the
villages and fields. I was unable to hold any Home League meetings as the women
were living in the fields, guarding their crops from elephants, but we visited
them in their fields and villages, and each night had a village meeting round a
huge log fire with crowds attending. … We thank God that over 200 adults, including
a number of headmen, and over 500 Y.P. sought the Lord during our trek in the
Valley. We are so grateful to the Lord, and felt all the battling with terrible
roads, getting stuck at a river, sleeping in classrooms, getting covered in
dust, was all so worth while to win these people to the Lord. …
We are overjoyed that there is a prospect of opening our Training
College in September this year… and we hope to have four couple in the first
session. We are desperately in need of Officers, as none have been trained in
Zambia since Independence [in 1964]. Will you join with us in praying that the
right young people will come forward.
Allan is very happily settled in Bible College in South Africa, and Carol is working in Salisbury, and living in a bachelor flat. We are hoping she will be able to come and visit us for the Rhodes and Founders holiday weekend.
P.O. Box RW 193
Ridgeway
LUSAKA.
November 1971
It hardly seems possible that Christmas is almost on us again and
I must send greetings to our many friends. We have had a very full and interesting
time since I last wrote and we thank God for the strength He has given to us to
keep up the pace. We have now visited every part of our work in Zambia and have
a better idea of the position, the needs and problems to be faced. We have had
some wonderful experience as we have travelled round the country in some of the
remote country areas, and the evening village meetings with crowds of men,
women and children gathering round huge log fires coming to the Lord. …
… On another occasion we found that all the women had gone to a
certain village for the initiation ceremony of a teenage girl, so I could not
have the Home League at the usual place, so went to this village. The girl was
due to come out from the hut that day having been confined there for several
weeks, and all the women were dancing the traditional dance for such an
occasion, stripped to the waist and with grass skirts. I joined the dancing
women and waited until they had finished the dance, then asked them to come and
listen for a short while, which they did, also many of the men. They were
preparing the feast and beer, tremendously big pots of African beer, and a huge
pot from which they pulled out 24 cooked chickens! …I asked permission of the
Father to enter the hut to see the girl, which was gladly given. I found the
girl wrapped in a blanket and with four teenage girls … ready to bring her out
with dancing at the appropriate time. I spoke to her about the Lord… not only
she but her four companions said they wanted to be Christians, so I had the joy
of leading these five teenagers to the Lord. …
The highlight of the year has been the opening of the Zambian
Training College, and we now have two fine married couples in training. A third
couple was accepted but he went and got himself another wife just before the
session started, so their case had to be dropped. This is a real problem in
Zambia… drunkenness is the curse of this country and Government officials are
constantly appealing for people not to get drunk, as the accident rate is
enormously high. …
…
…
…
Keith and the General Secretary will shortly be going to Nairobi
for the Africa Zonal Conference with the Chief of the Staff. He is happy to
visit the place again where he first felt the Lord leading him into the Army
when he was in the forces there [during World War 2]. Allan writes very happily
from the Bible College. Carol is in Salisbury [Harare] working in the Accounts
Office of Lever Bros. She was able to spend a holiday weekend with us and it
was lovely to have her with us again.
We need the prayers of our friends so much. …
We pray that Christmas may be full of the joy and peace of Bethlehem, and the New Year full of rich blessing.
P.O. Box RW 193,
Ridgeway,
LUSAKA. ZAMBIA.
November 1972.
We have had a very busy and eventful year, but very happy in the
opportunities of service for the Lord. The first term of the year we had the
two children of Captain Hetherington of Chikankata, living with us, as when
they got back to the Boarding School they found that the food in the hostel had
been changed to Zambian diet – thick porridge etc. With a boy and girl in the
house again it took me back a few years. … Education for our overseas children
is becoming an increasing problem.
We have had much joy in going on trek with the District Officers
who are in the first year in that position, and the joy of seeing men, women,
boys and girls seeking the Lord cannot be surpassed. Some of the roads on which
we travel have to be seen to be believed….
It has been a great joy to visit Government Boarding (Secondary)
Schools once each term and to witness the enthusiastic way these young folk are
taking hold of Christianity. …
…
During the week I do full-time at C.H.Q. as Secretary to the
General Secretary, and the work has certainly increased this year. I also take
classes at the Training College where we have two second year couples and three
first year couples. They are so badly needed as we are so short of Zambian
officers. I also act as Secretary of several Boards so that keeps me busy. We
have commenced a monthly meeting with the nurses who are working in Lusaka and
it has been good to link them up. My husband [now 55 years old] took part in a
30 mile walk from Lusaka to Kafue to raise money, and in spite of skinned feet
and dehydrated body he finished the course, and we have been grateful for those
who have sponsored him
We do pray that this Christmas may be
full of the peace of the Lord.
This was
the last newsletter written from Zambia.
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