Wednesday 31 October 2012

Bangladesh

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All Saints Day finds me in Bangladesh for a partners round table meeting. The sermon at this early morning communion is talking about saints being like pyjamas - a word usually found in the plural. Saintliness is something found in community. We need each other to be saintly. Later of course we will be talking about how we from Europe and US can be with the people of the Church of Bangladesh in the work of sharing God's love in this beautiful country. Saints always have dirty hands the preacher is saying... Steve

JAPAN Days 12 - 20

Days 12 - 20:  Family time now, largely based in Okayama but today, for instance, I am travelling to Niigata in the North West of Honshu to spend 3/4 days in the mountains. Hoping the snows don't arrive too early as they can get one metre in a single day with more to come on almost every other day as well!!  Will also be travelling to my daughter in laws family in Tokushima in remembrance of her Grand father who died a few months ago. A short posting covering a long period, but if anything occurs that I think may be of general interest I will certainly post. Will be going to see Sheila Norris Mission Partner in Nagasaki on the 8th November and coming back to Okayama on the 10th (Day 22 PrayerManual)

Alan Ashton All Saints Day 2012

Tuesday 30 October 2012

Ecumenical Programme of Accompaniment in Colombia

For more than 50 years the beautiful contry of Colombia has been in civil war. The Government, Left wing paramilitary groups and drug cartels have been waring with each other. In the middle of all this are the beautiful people of Colombia. Most of whom have little to do with drugs and violence for which Colombia has gained a reputation. In recent times the political climate has started to change and there is a real interest and a will amongs many to seek a negotiated settlement. The Latin American Council of Churches (CLAI) has started a programme in Colombia to ultimately support communities that have been caight up in these struggles to call for and accompany the poorest communties in a peaceful application of justice. Can this be done? Before attending the Methodist Conference in Medellin, I am in Bogota listening to what success has been achieved by the national council of churches in establishing this. That the theme has been raised with new groups that have become interested in this process has been a major sucess. We are meeting in the Anglican Church in Bogota. Sadly I was struck that for such an important theme more women and younger people are not present. 

JAPAN Day 11

Japan Day 11: An early start this morning to visit Mission Partners Daniel & Yasuko Dellming and their children. They live in Nishinomiya north of Kobe. Daniel teaches at Kwansei Gakuin now a hugely popular educational facility well known throughout Japan teaching from elementary grade all the way through to graduation from their University. It is a Christian school founded in 1889 and celebrates its 125th anniversary in 2014. The whole school family numbers 25,000 students from all walks of life. As an example of their Christian commitment they have a Head Chaplain Professor Musubi Tabuchi with a staff of 13 full time Chaplains who also teach. The original motto of the school is still followed today "Mastery for Service" based on Mk 10:43 "be a servant of all", My fascinating and challenging day, part of the support offered to Daniel and his family  began with a meeting with the Headmaster of the Senior High School Keichi Ishimori in which we talked around the possibilities of looking for cultural exchanges between young people of similar ages. I sat in on the mandatory service for 1st year students(turned out to be 350 boys) in one of the Chapels. This one can seat the whole Senior High School of 930 students when they worship together. The music for the hymn was called "a little basket of flowers" which I confess I couldn't find on "Singing the Faith plus" website. Shared in an English lesson with Daniel plus a Japanese teacher who had studied English in Leeds. The class had a demonstration of different English dialects, including Yorkshire demonstrated by guess who, and there is now a class in the school who all make a reasonable attempt of saying 'ee by gum!! Some achievement eh. Time to meet Chancellor and Professor Ruth Grubel (missionary from the UMC) - she kindly hosted our lunch in which we took the opportunity of sharing some of her dreams for the entire school as it approaches its 125th anniversary. With her husband they are keen fans of British TV dramas, liking Rumpole of the Bailey. I couldn't resist mentioning Dad's Army and the fact that our famous Downton Abbey first series had started on Sunday on Japanese TV. I warned Ruth she would be hooked if she watched. The voices are dubbed into Japanese but Lady Grantham still reigns supreme even in Japanese.Was grateful for a rest period in Daniel's home and especially for the piece of home made apple cake with a welcome cup of tea. We were able to share time together discussing how Daniel was feeling about his role within the school where he has been a teacher now for around 12 years. Our time of sharing concluded naturally with prayer. I had left from the station in Okayama at 7.30 a.m. and got back to Okayama at 7.00 p.m. quite a day. Phew!

Alan Ashton 30th October 2012

Monday 29 October 2012

Hurricane Sandy

The Methodist Church in Britain has offered an immediate response in aid to Churches affected by Hurricane Sandy. A grant from the Church’s World Mission Fund will be released to help combat the destruction left by the storm that has wreaked havoc across Jamaica, Cuba, the Bahamas and Haiti and is currently on course to hit the east coast of the United States.

The Revd Tom Quenet, Partnership Coordinator for The Americas and the Caribbean, has warned that Hurricane Sandy could turn out to be the largest and most destructive of the Caribbean’s 2012 hurricane season. “Living in the Caribbean you expect hurricanes between June and November,” he said, “what you can never tell is how intense they will be and what impact they will have as they pass near you.”

Hurricane Sandy has already battered Jamaica, Cuba, the Bahamas and indirectly affected Haiti and the Dominican Republic.  In Haiti, which is still recovering from the 2010 earthquake, the streets of Port au Prince, recently cleared of rubble, were inundated with meters of water. Officials announced that the storm had killed 58 people and left hundreds and thousands of people without homes or livelihoods.

John and Sharon Harbottle, mission partners working in Haiti, said: “Haitian President Martelly’s reputed words that Southern Haiti was under water turned out to be an accurate description of what we saw two days after Tropical Storm Sandy deluged Haiti. Travelling home from Jeremie where we had been sheltering, we passed one devastated village after another. There was so much crop damage. Fields of maize lay flattened by the torrential rain, plantations of sugar cane resembled rice paddies, and whole banana trees were submerged by swollen rivers that had burst their banks. Families spread their belongings out to dry on every available bush, swept the mud that had washed through their homes and stood and stared at their lost crops.”

John and Sharon were stranded while visiting clinics, schools and churches in Jeremie. They were welcomed into the home of a minister who guided them to the point where they could safely cross the deluge when the storm had passed. “The journey itself was really very good,” they said. “We were constantly praising God as we passed one potential problem after another. River crossings, mudslides and fallen rocks had been cleared enabling us to pass through.”

In Jamaica, the Revd George Mulrain reported that there had been severe flooding. “Kintyre, where we have a church, has been cut off completely,” he said. “The water in the river bed rose to the level of the road. Several roads are impassable due to trees that fell. In our area, like most of the country, we are without electricity.”

Bishop Pereira of the Methodist Church in Cuba, also reported on the damage. “Santiago de Cuba province reports that many houses have collapsed and the Wesley Church has been damaged too,” he said. “Many churches have been destroyed. Communication is very difficult. Through cell phones we have received reports that the town Arroyo Blanco in North Holguin was devastated, including the church where the storm ripped the roof off the parsonage. The community in Alcala, also in Holguin, reported the same thing. We are asking for prayers. We are doing our best to reach the affected areas as soon as possible.”

In the Bahamas, mission partners Eddie and Susan Sykes said that hurricane shutters had been erected and that people were preparing for the full impact of 100 miles-per-hour winds.

The Revd Tom Quenet added: “John and Sharon Harbottle in Haiti as mission partners have been welcomed by the Methodist Church in Haiti as sharing in the struggle to rebuild and recover. Hurricane Sandy has caused a lot of damage and loss of life in the Caribbean and has gone on to affect the United States. All our partners in the region appreciate the willingness and speed that we have shown in responding to disasters of this kind. Please pray for the many whose lives have been affected.”

Sunday 28 October 2012

JAPAN DAY 9

Day 9: I noticed that the website address I gave for ARI seems not to have appeared in the blog for Day 8 - so here it is again www.ari-edu.org
Heavy rain during the night and much colder than Okayama so it took some courage to get out of bed a little before 6 a.m. to discover cold water shower! Yesterday Dr Otsu had suggested I might like to start my morning like the rest of the community, I made some sort of a passable excuse and didn't turn up for the 6.30 p.m. open air exercise or the one hour farm work at 7 a.m. arriving for Breakfast instead at 8.15 a.m. I have spent some considerable time whilst at ARI with two people sponsored by Methodist Church in Britain,The Revd. Nisantha Gunarathe from The Methodist Church in Sri Lanka and The Revd Sang Bik Cem from The Methodist Church (Upper Myanmar) Hakha District.  Nisantha comments "I have been equipped socially and spiritually. I thank ARI and the British Methodist Church for allowing me to come to Japan and study learning by doing" Sang says " I learned about many cultures and life styles in this one place....I appreciate the British Methodist Church who sponsored me,and also I appreciate ARI where I learned about leadership and sustainable agriculture". I left ARI just before lunch time and went back down to Tokyo arriving at Tokyo Terminal to find a huge crowd of travellers moving around the huge complex. It has been known even for Japanese people to walk into Tokyo Terminal and not see the light of day for a few hours, and still trying to find the right line and track for their train!! I did reasonably well and found the first Information desk where I saw that they spoke English & Spanish and soon followed then blue Shinkansen sighs and found Track 19 for my long journey back to Okayama.  Brilliant sunset, as my on the four hr and twenty minutes journey back continued. Had evening meal with my son and three of his customers from Indonesia.End of a long day  and sleep came quickly as my head hit the pillow.
Day 10: Time in the UK is now 9 hours behind Japan so I need to get the new figure into my head. Beautiful sunny day in Okayama                         (21c) but its going to spoil itself by heavy rain later. My 2 grand sons have decided what lunch will be today so I found myself facing McDonalds double burger with cheese and chips! Hope to post some photos soon when I can manage to get them out of my camera. Planning travel to Nishinomiya tomorrow to see our Mission Partners Daniel & Yasuko Delling and their family. He has a full day planned from 10.00 a.n. - 4.30 p.n. including lunch with the Chancellor of the University.
Alan Ashton  28th October 2012

Saturday 27 October 2012

JAPAN DAYS 8

Day 8: after excellent breakfast at Hotel Metropolitan in Tokyo travelled by Shinkansen to Nasushiobara north of Tokyo and around 85k from the Fukushima Nuclear facility which was so heavily damaged by the Tsunami. I am making an overnight visit to the Asian Rural Institute (ARI). The institute exists as an international training centre for grass roots leaders and was founded in 1973 by The Revd Dr Toshihiro Takami and by using sustainable, organic agriculture, and community development the participants learn from each other how to live a life that is healthy and dignified. Throughout the training a multicultural multi-faith community is set up in which everyone actively participates. Learning and growth are experienced together in community. A significant part of the training lies in the daily labour required to maintain a self-sufficient farm. Participants manage their own fields, care for livestock, and cook  and serve the food they raise.  Steve Cutting who handles ARI's ecumenical relations took me round the complete site (comprising 6 hectares) from machinery to the pig stys to the one and a half tons of sweet potatoes harvested yesterday, to the egg production unit and the duckpond!  Had a one hour meeting with The Revd Kenichi Otsu, Director and Chair of the Board of ARI in which we looked at the ways in which The Methodist Church in Britain might work more closely with ARI, on the one hand with encouraging people in Great Britain to serve at ARI for a short or long term as a volunteer and on the other to actively seek how across Africa and Asia we might identify individuals who would be ideal participants.  Ate my lunch at a round table with people from 7 different countries and in the evening at a similar round table with a different group from 6 different countries. ARI is truly international at all levels. Access more information by going to www.ari-edu.org 

Alan Ashton 28th October 2012.

Mission Partners at All Nations

Today we had a "Methodist Day" at "ALL NATIONS" - it was a great day and the college provided excellent support. These familes will be going to Africa, Central America, South America, The Pacific and Africa and who know's one of them may even be going to the North East of England. Mission from everywhere to everywhere.

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Thursday 25 October 2012

JAPAN Day 6 & 7 CORRECTION

Temporary accomodation after tsnunami. I opreviously said that the Jaoanese government have set at date at which all accomodation will be removed. The actually date is the Spring of 2014 and NOT as stated earlier.altogether 300,000 are housed in this way and even facing removal so far ahead brings great pressure as to when other alternative accomodation can be provided on a permament basis especially around the issues of education and work for families.

Alan Ashton

Japan Experience

Day 6: Assembly meetings continue all day for delegates as they pursue their Agenda and make a number of key appointments. Along with the General Secretary of the Church of South India Mr Philips and his wife Anil we are to be taken by the Executive Secretary for Ecumenical Ministries up to Sendai to see effects of the March 2011 Tsunami and the relief work being carried out by UCCJ in that area. Travel again by Shinkansen bullet train super efficient as always. Nothing can prepare you for the sight of the disaster which came to these towns and villages. Even though it is now 18 months down the line and Japanese efficiency means that all is being restored to some semblance of order the sheer awfulness of what happened is all around you. By now cars  lorries, boats childrens toys etc and everything else by way of debris is stacked in lines, for cars sometimes 3 or 4 cars high, or debris has been sorted into loads of catergories, timber, paper, plastic, soil, metal and huge piles are sifted and sorted and much going off to recycling plants. Machinery works 24 hrs a day in this gigantic task .Empitness speaks volumes, like at a primary school which when you peer into the severely damaged building you see text books sitting on desks and fire revaged metalwork is twisted in the windows. One window now looks as if it has some modern version of a cross in the middle of it. To walk where 7 metres of water had crushed 4,000 people to death in Ishinomaki is a humbling and shocking experience all at the same time. We stood as a group in shocked silence, as images shown on TV last year flashed through our minds. Overnight in Sendai city.
Day 7: Main feature this morning is to visit the Emergency Disaster Centre in Sendai. UCCJ have set up three such centres from where co-ordination of volunteer teams takes place. Work has now moved on, in the passage of time from clearing from the underneath of homes stinking mud and picking sea pebbles out of rice fields so that they could be cultivated again, to helping to restore and make liveable again, damaged homes. Still, in the Sendai region alone, 20,000 people remain  in temporary accomodation and across the whole of the effected area 300,000 altogerther are living in government provided accomodation. A target for clearing temporary homes away has been set by the Japanese government of Spring 2012 this date has already been extended by one year. It is still felt that this is unworkable as not enought housing is available for people to move into in areas where they can find work. Many people are forbidden by new laws to returning to land they once owned, which has now been taken by the authortities after decuision s have been m,ade not to allow rebuilding. 

Monday 22 October 2012

Japan Days 3-5

Day 3: Sunday a leisure time with family, children went mad at a park running themselves ragged and I sat in the shade enjoying the heat! Wonderful feeling to have grandhcildren around and feel fully part of them all here in Japan.
Day 4: Travel time to Tokyo by the legendary Shinkansen - " Bullet Train" so advanced a technology, they connect all parts of Japan and have their own designated stations, a smooth running operation. Chimes on the train get you ready for an announcement - only trouble is the first 4 bars sound like the opening of God Save the Queen and I have a nationalistic urge to stand up!! My train has 16 coaches and when full will seat 1440 passengers! Arrival in Tokyo 35 second early prompts an abject apology if the early arrival is an inconvenience to passengers. My mind races to leaves on the track and all that sort of British stuff.  Soon checked into the hotel after being met on the platform by a staff member from United Church of Christ in Japan (UCCJ). Out for evening meal withThe Revd. Makoto Kato, Executive Secretary for Ecumenical Ministries. A good evening spent chatting around the life our two churches and for me discussing ways in which we might
advance relationships between our sister churches.
Day 5: 38th General assembly starts today meeting in my hotel. Opening worship at 1.00 p.m. & afternoon session, my speech at 5.00 p.m. bringing greetings from President & Vice-President of The Methodist Conference. Moderators dinner tonight on the 25th floor with stunning night time views of Tokyo. Dinner given for executive committee of UCCJ overseas representatives and ecumenical guests here in Japan. Should be a fascinating day. Assembly comprises around 450 delegates from the 16 districts of UCCJ from all oevr Japan.
Alan Ashton.

Saturday 20 October 2012

Japanese visit Day 2

Highlight of today was a visit to Korakuen Garden in Okayama, one of Japan's famous three gardens. Commissioned by Lord Ikeda the gardens were completed in 1700. Though a classic stroll garden it was the first in Japan to use large expanses of lawn. It is divided into three sections and features, bamboo, pine, plum and cherry trees along with tea bushes. Also included are streams and a pond crossed by an elegant red bridge. The nearby castle is incorporated as "borrowed scenery" a classic devise in Japanese gardens, adopted later by many famous European gardeners. Okayama Castle is nicknamed the "Crow's Castle" due to its black walls. Destroyed in WWII the exterior of the c16th was faithfully reconstructed in 1966. Alan Ashton 20th October 2012 (still Lost in Translation)

Japanese visit Day 1

Arrived safe and sound in Japan, where amongst other things I am representing the Methodist Church in Britain at the 38th General Assembly of the United Church of Christ in Japan which begins next week in Tokyo. I am spending my first few days in Okayama City with my son and his family. Okayama is a city of 750,000 people situated about halfway between Osaka and Hiroshima close to the Seto Inland Sea. It's famous for it's locally grown grapes and peaches, which I have been told are delicious, as well as the famous Japanese garden called Korakuen, one of the top three gardens in Japan. I have two Grandson's living in Japan, one of whom I saw when he was 6 months old and visiting the UK with his parents. My second Grandson I saw in the flesh for the first time yesterday. Grandad with his Grandchildren is shown in these few photographs. More later, as my stay in Okayama continues, prior to leaving for Tokyo... Alan Ashton 20th October 2012 (Lost in Translation)

Monday 8 October 2012

Papua New Guinea

I am at the General Assembly of the United Church of Papua New Guinea. This is a 44-year-old united church twice as big as our Methodist Church with a governing body that is half the size of ours, meets every two years with a participative committee-based style. The Bible studies each morning are led by Rev Garo Kilagi who has just returned from a circuit in Lancashire on the World Church in Britain programme. His reflections on life in Britain are proving fascinating to assembly members. My blogging will be erratic, I have no phone coverage and only very restricted internet. (The town has also had no water for the last five days and it took members so long to get here the assembly started two days late. I am looking forward to a shower when I get to Fiji on Thursday!) Steve in Alotau on Tuesday 9th.

Friday 5 October 2012

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MURAL IDEAS?

The Methodist Church in El Salvador has just completed building its first school, a nursery. Mary Cook & Paul Collins, Mission Partners currently preparing themselves to go to El Salvador, will start work in the nursery in the New Year. In one photo we see the quadrangle foundations being laid. This will become a clear area where the children can play. In the second photo we see the rather bleak exterior facing the main street. The church plans to paint a mural on it and is asking for ideas. If you have a good one please let me know at quenett@methodistchurch.org.uk

Tom Quenet 

Wednesday 3 October 2012

Cite Soleil

Through mission partners John and Sharon Harbottle in Haiti I have received these images of Cite Soleil in Haiti. For me they illustrate that earthquake relief and rebuilding do not eliminate poverty and the consequences of it. I doubt if these photos have changed significantly from those before the earthquake. Except!! - if you look closely some shacks have tarpaulin roofs - this i suspect is an improvement and in the ditch you can see polysterene containers, this could be worse than it was before. The containers are on what food is distributed as aid or fast food is sold in. There is a lot of progress being made on cleaning up the rubble, rebuilding and recovering so much of what was destroyed. This is only the start of the real problem - the elimination of poverty.

Tom Quenet