Ghana Slideshow

July 9th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana


New Creation Sermon

July 7th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

Proper 9C
July 4, 2010
Isaiah 66: 10-14, Psalm 66: 1-8
Galatians 6: 7-16, Luke 10: 1-11, 16-20
Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration
Dallas, Texas
The Rev’d Joy A. Daley

Jesus sends out his disciples, “Go on your way, carry no purse, no bag, no sandals.” Well, Lord, how about this -One purse, three bags, two pairs of sandals waterproofed shoes and an extra pair of sneakers? These among many other things are what I carried with me on my trip to Ghana in northwest Africa with Episcopal Relief and Development June 19-26. I had such a great detailed packing list in comparison to Jesus’s nonexistent one for the disciples. Jesus does not want his disciples to be distracted by stuff so they can move freely as they spread his message of peace, as they proclaim that the kingdom of God has come near. Most of all I think he wants them to know that they can trust God to provide everything that is needed as they spread the Good News. This was a good message for me to remember as I prepared for my trip and as I became immersed in the experience of it.

I had been invited to take the journey to Ghana with 7 other church leaders from throughout the country along with some of the national staff of Episcopal Relief and Development, to see first hand what ERD is doing in Africa with the money churches so generously donate to care for God’s people. Most of us know that ERD is one of the first organizations to respond with aid when there is a disaster like the earthquake in Haiti or the oil spill off the gulf coast. This work is the relief part of their mission to heal a hurting world but much of what I saw on this trip was the strength and consistency of their development emphasis. ERD is a ministry that helps us to live out our baptismal covenant in many ways but the primary promise I saw being lived out is, “respecting the dignity of every human being.”

ERD heals a hurting world by going into small communities throughout the world and first of all listening to what people need, not telling them what they should do. Then they provide the tools that communities need to become healthy, independent and strong. Particularly this July 4th weekend it is good for us to remember our own call to use our freedom to empower others, to use our gifts so that others may live more fully and freely into who they are called to be.

On the first day of our journey as we got ready to set out , we all stood together waiting. I shared a quote with our group from John Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley – “A journey is a person in itself . No two are alike and all plans, safeguards, policing and coercion are fruitless…..we do not take a trip, a trip takes us.” And the trip did take us to places outward and inward that I didn’t expect, and ultimately to the place of realization that when God’s people join together to fight poverty and disease, it really makes a difference. As we traveled from one end of Ghana to another over the course of the week, riding in vans, small planes, staying in a number of hotels, packing and repacking, leaving things behind – the items I had stuffed in my bags “just in case” became less and less important.

You may think that a group such as ours from the U.S. might be the agents of the message “The kingdom of God is near” but the reverse was true in many ways as that message of hope was proclaimed to us over and over again in the witness of the people we met in Ghana and through the amazing work of Episcopal Relief and Development in partnership with the Anglican Diocesan Development and Relief Organization. Many times these days we hear about conflicts between Episcopal and Anglican because of differences. But when we realize that the church is really about joining together in ministry to spread God’s message of peace and hope, when we get busy changing lives, differences fade into the background. When the gospel guides our vision and our actions we become free to join in an interdependence that is incredibly life-giving to all those involved. This is what I saw in the partnership of ERD and ADDRO over and over again throughout the week. It both humbled me and gave me a sense of pride to be a member of God’s one, holy, catholic and apostolic church.

For years many of us have been supporters of ERD. I knew their work was good but I left Ghana realizing that it is truly amazing. Take for example the staff of the ADDRO office They are all local residents and they work hand in hand with ERD in Ghana. There are just about 10 of them. In May of this year this small committed group enlisted 11,000 volunteers and together installed 600,000 mosquito nets in little homes throughout the countryside. They didn’t just drop off the nets. They also provided instruction on how to use the nets to prevent malaria. 600,000 nets- not in a year, not in a month but in just one week! In the north of Ghana, the poorest section, infant mortality had been at 96% It has dropped to 53% due to malaria prevention with mosquito nets. As the work continues I know that number will keep dropping.

On another day of our travels we were driving down the road in our van and saw a group of about 12 women dressed in brightly colored clothes tilling a field and joyfully singing. They were planting nuts. At first we watched them from a distance but we couldn’t stay away, for their spirit, their singing drew us in. We learned that the words of the song they sang meant “Let us unite and develop ourselves.” One of the women whose name was Adolzell owned the field. She was able to buy it with a small loan through ERD. “What will you do with the money you earn, Adolzell?” we asked. Adolzell told us she had six children and she would use the money to pay for her children’s education – A woman empowered -Hope for the next generation. The kingdom of God comes near.

After lunch we went on to see a school for those with disabilities that ERD supports. People who are deaf and blind learn skills so they may live independently. We then hopped back on the van drove a little further and met Grabba a 28 year old man who cannot speak or hear but has his own furniture making shop because of the skills he learned at the school.

That same day we saw the place where eggs are incubated and hatched into chickens that are given to people who can then feed their own families and earn money by selling eggs to others. They become self sufficient and grow in a sense of dignity and freedom. So many of you have purchased chickens mosquito nets and other life changing gifts from the ERD Gifts For Life Catalogue and given them to family members as gifts. Each time you have done this you have been a part of the kingdom of God coming near, the kingdom of justice and peace where people have enough to eat and a sense of hope for their lives and the lives of their children.

I met so many people who impressed me through their warm welcome and willingness to share, people who had little but seemed to understand on a deeply spiritual level what stewardship means. The person who touched me the most in this regard was Bishop Emmanuel of Tamale. He is from the northern part of Ghana, the poorest part. We all crowded into his tiny little office which was smaller than one of our rest rooms down the hall. It didn’t even look like an office. It was clear that this diocese had very little money. We talked about many things. The love for his people was so very evident in Bishop Emmanuel, especially when he tearfully told us of the young women of his diocese who are dying of AIDS. They were not statistics to him . He referred to them as his daughters. He also related that when his community was devastated by floods the help given by ERD helped his people tremendously. It was because of ERD’s example, he said, that he felt called to send what money he could from his diocese to Haiti when the devastating earthquake hit. This diocese has next to nothing. I have never seen a clearer or more moving example of grace, gratitude and giving than I did through the humility of this servant leader. In that cramped little office as individuals from many different places huddled together there was a sense of shared pain, intimacy and belonging that I can’t really describe – the kingdom of God had come near. One Lord, one Faith one Baptism one God and Father of all. We don’t all need to be the same. It helps me to see that Paul’s words to the Galatians are relevant for us today because he in essence tells us that differences are nothing, circumcision, non-circumcision, Black White, Anglican, Episcopal – nothing …but a new creation….a new creation…. Now that is everything. As we are sent on our way let us work for the good of all in the service of that new creation, and watch…watch…. the kingdom of God come near.


The sun sets….

June 27th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

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…on one part of the journey, but the journey continues


Time to say goodbye

June 27th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

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Till we meet again…

June 27th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

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The way home

June 27th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

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It is approximately 11 hours from Accra to JFK.  I decide to watch a movie- Invictus.  some of you know that this is the story of how Nelson Mandela pulled his people together when he was first president  of South Africa through getting behind the underdog rugby team that no one wanted to cheer for because of it’s link to apartheid and how Mandela’s example  of reconciliationbrought people together, unified in hope.  I can’t help but make the connection to world cup soccer being played in South Africa this week. Just as in the movie World Cup Rugby brought a nation together I want that sense of hope for the people of Ghana who have touched my heart in so many ways this week. Today the U.S. is playing Ghana as we travel home.  Earlier in the week Ghana played Germany and as we travelled from one destination to another, we listened to the game on the radio.  As we drove through many communities in the darkness you could see small groups by the side of the road gathered around small TVs outside hoping for the best.  I suspend my national loyalty just for today and am cheering for Ghana.  The thought of people gathered together in hope makes me smileDSC_1017


Leaving the Ivory Coast

June 27th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

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On the way home we were all very tired.  We talked and told stories.  The traffic was bad.  The three hour trip turned into 4 hours.  As we get closer to Accra the traffic is at a standstill.  All through the week when traffic is slow vendors selling various things come close to the windows of the van.  It is not a good idea for us to buy the food that is being sold.  We get used to saying “no”  But when it is children working in this way it is hard to turn away.  We see a little boy carrying his wares in a washtub on his head.  He has big brown eyes.  Then a young girl about 13 with neatly braided hair offers bags of some kind of chips for sale.  She sees we aren’t going to purchase anything and her eyes look ahead to the next car  but in the split second before  she turns away I catch the look of disappointment in her face.  Does she wonder how much longer she will be working tonight?  It is already dark.  It’s that look that opens my soul in a way that I didn’t really want right then.  I’m not saying we should have stopped.  That’s not my point.  It’s one of the places this journey takes you – the inward connection to people you don’t even know and will never see again  We are part of one global family. It reminded me of the vulnerability of Bishop Emmanuel earlier in the week.  It helps me understand on a different level the motivation of Augustina and the women in the peanut field who are working with the help of ERD and ADDRO to pay for their children’s education so they will be free in new ways.  It reminds me that I cannot simply go home and go back to my usual routine.  I still have more work to do.


Slavery and Freedom

June 27th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

So much of what we have seen this week has been about people moving from slavery into freedom.  Looking at Slave Trade, this time of darkness in our history was a reminder that we as humans can use our God given gifts to be instruments of God’s kingdom of justice and peace or we can choose to use the liberties we possess to keep others in bondage through subtle oppression and sometimes through our silence and inaction.  We were quiet for a time.  We celebrated Eucharist together.  We used the words of the sign below as our collect at the Prayers of the People.  We revisited the quote from John Steinbeck from the beginning of the week, remembering that this journey has taken us to places both inward and outward that we didn’t expect.  Though we will go our separate ways we will hopefully continue to let the journey take us to new places as we return home to tell the stories of all that we have seen- the pain, the poverty, the freedom, the joy and above all the hope of what we can do as God’s people together.

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The weather matched the experience

The weather matched the experience

Richard Radtke and Dean Jacob honoring the partnership of Episcopal Relief and Development and Anglican Diocesan Development and Relief Organization

Rob Radtke and Dean Jacob honoring the partnership of Episcopal Relief and Development and Anglican Diocesan Development and Relief Organization


A different kind of intensity

June 27th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

Friday was a very intense day but different from what we had been experiencing.  We went back in time.  We got up quite early (as seems to be our custom!) and piled into two vans to take the 3 hour drive from Accra to the Ivory Coast.  Here we saw where slave trade took place., very sobering and sad….  Our first stop was Elmina Castle which was built by the Portuguese in 1482.  We stood as a group inside a cell in the darkness.  Over the doorway was a skull and crossbones.  This small cramped space was where those who were resisting being in bondage were kept.  There was no food and water given.  The people were held there until they died and then their bodies were thrown into the sea.  We saw a trap door leading to where other slaves were held.  Then we looked toward the haunting “Door of No Return” through which the captives passed through to the ships and taken to other places in the world including America to become slaves for the rest of their lives.  We stopped and prayed in these places of darkness where God’s holy people had the dreams for their lives snatched away from them through death or the evil of slavery.

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The Trap Door

The Trap Door

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Remember buying chickens from the ERD Catalogue?

June 24th, 2010 by Joy Daley | No Comments | Category is Ghana

This is where it all starts

Which comes first?

Which comes first?

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Currently Browsing Ghana

  • Ghana Slideshow
  • New Creation Sermon
  • The sun sets….
  • Time to say goodbye
  • Till we meet again…

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