Monday, May 22, 2017

Construction Continues

Training Building
 The construction of the Training Hall and Hostel Hall continues. They are currently working on plastering, installing ceilings, and building the septic systems. The room on the right side of the veranda is the restrooms.


The second picture is inside the training room.
There is a small stage for when the room is used for lecture. The door on the right is an office and audio-visual storage room. The door on the left is a storage room for pumps and large items used in training. There is a door from the pump storage room to outside.


Hostel 
To the left of the building there are two shallow boreholes drilled. We will install broken handpumps in these boreholes and the students will get to fix them. A normal borehole would have 10 pipes or more going down into the water table. Much of the student's time would be removing pipes. These boreholes will have only two pipes down to the pump head and we will manually add water into the pipes. This way the students can practice with out having to the repetitive task of removing the pumps or pulling the rods. We also have one deep borehole over by the Out-Patient Building that they can have the pleasure of lifting out pipes.


Hostel Room
Behind the Training Building is the Hostel Building. The students come from all over Adamawa State and around Nigeria. Some will have traveled several hours to get to Demsa. They will need overnight accommodations when attending classes. The Hostel building has two identical rooms built with entrances on opposite sides of the building. They wanted two buildings, One for men and one for women. However, that would have been too expensive. We compromised by making two rooms. Each room has two bathrooms with showers.


The Health Referral Center Renovations are in Stage 5 of a four stage project. This last stage will be to add items that were not considered in the initial design and make modifications for more efficient operations. They are changing one of the consulting rooms into an X-ray room, Changing tiling up the sides of walls in the delivery rooms, surgery, and sluice (surgical instrument cleaning room) to make theses surfaces easier to maintain. They will also be doing storm water drainage improvements
Incinerator Under Construction


One Stage 5 project is the building of a small waster incinerator. They have hired a local man to build an incinerator like the one at the local government hospital. He does not understand principles of combustion but is making a copy of the one he made at the government hospital. It is not going to be a high temperature incinerator, since it was not made of fire brick, has too small of the stack and no combustion air inlets. It is a typical waste incinerator.

In the future we could line it with firebrick and make other modifications to increase its effectiveness in burning. The second picture show it in relationship the facility. The closet building is the Out-Patient, The In-Patient is in the center of the picture and the side of the Training Hall can be seen on the left.

Incinerator with Out-Patient, In-Patient and Training Hall

The largest item to be added will be to install a culvert or low water crossing at the entrance to from the road that gets washed out during each rainy season. We had hoped that the drainage work being performed further up the hill would the extended to past the entrance and paid for by World Bank Funds. It does not appear that the World Bank is going to continue the work on the road. The contractor told Dr. Stanley that a box culvert at the entrance would be 500,000 Naira (about $1,400 at the current exchange rate).

Almost all the available funds from the US have been spent. They are now fundraising in Nigeria for the funds to complete the project.







Wednesday, May 17, 2017

National Convention Women Fellowship Performances

This blog posting is short . I have just attached a small You Tube video of three of the Women Fellowship performances at the LCCN National Conference from April. The video is 11 minutes long and is only a fraction of my footage.

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Finally, Getting Around to Posting - February

The February/March trip was busy. I never seemed to find the time to post. The main focus of the trip was to get the Training Building and Hostel Building at the Demsa Health Referral Center started and to get the Renovations of the Demsa Health Referral Center finished. In the middle of the trip was the Lutheran Church of Christ in Nigeria (LCCN) National Convention.

I am back in Nigeria starting my May/June trip. This trip is to finish the Training Building and Hostel Building and also finish the Renovations of the Demsa Health Referral Center (mostly paper work). This blog post will be from pictures I took during the February and March. Will cover the LCCN National Convention and Ribbon Cutting at the Demsa Health Referral Center.

All the pictures can be made larger by clicking or for some systems double clicking on the pictures.

First a little orientation, Nigeria is in West Africa. It is the most populated country in Africa. The LCCN is headquarter in Numan in Adamawa State in Northeast Nigeria. For the last couple trips I have mostly been working in Demsa and living in Jimeta. Jimeta a section of Yola the state capital. I stay in an old Danish missionary building on the Jimeta Mission Compound. Below are a series of Google Earth maps starting with West Africa and zooming in to Demsa.












The LCCN National Conventions will draw over 30,000 people to Demsa from all over Nigeria. They come by the truck load, buses, cars. People bring their sleeping mats, a change of clothes, and cooking pots. 



Vendors come selling bibles, pastoral clothes, water, books, music, clothes, pots and pans, patent medicines, fruits, vegetables, fish, meats and more. There are many popup restaurants under tarps, clothing stores, household goods stores and you can even find shops with copy machines connected to generators. The Health Board sets up a clinic in one building. They have a steady stream of patients during the four days of the convention.





It is hard to show the size of the convention in pictures. I climbed to the top of the Boys Brigade Building where and took a few panorama shots. There are only a few permanent structures on the grounds. The small main stage is hard to see in this picture. It is mostly obscured by a tree. It is to the left of the open area, a little left of center of the picture.  The green roof of the building used for the clinic is on the right. To get a place in the shade, where you can see the stage you need to arrive on Tuesday or Wednesday to place your mats under the shade shelters on the three sides of the stage area. By Thursday there are rows of people in front of the shade shelters.
Panorama from left of stage. This taken on Thursday early afternoon. Many people were still coming. 

By Friday morning the crowds had swelled to fill in much of the open areas between the stage and the shade shelters.




Taken from behind the stage in the visitor and pastor seating.
Behind the stage is a concrete stadium seating area with woven mats for the roof. The first two rows are for dignitaries and visitors.

Bishop Ann Svennugsen, Archbishop Babba and Archbishop Elect Musa Filibus
Bishop Ann Svennungsen of the Minneapolis Area Synod attended the convention to participate in the installation of the new Archbishop.
Bishop Ann gave greeting to the crowd on Thursday afternoon, 
I spent Friday morning and afternoon at the Demsa Health Referral Center getting it ready for the ribbon cutting later that afternoon. The bishops and guests took a quick break from the convention and went a little over a mile away to the Demsa Health Referral Center for a ribbon cutting to celebrate the renovations that were taking place. The two existing buildings have been razed and rebuilt with higher roofs, new electrical, improved plumbing and expansions. The In-Patient expanded to accommodate a surgical theater, two delivery suites and restrooms attached to the wards. A covered walkway was constructed to connect the two building and future buildings. The facility is now connected to the local power grid, has a back-up generator, and an uninterruptible power supply for the surgical theater.




On Sunday Archbishop-elect Rev. Dr. Musa Filibus was installed as the new Archbishop of the LCCN.

Following the installation of the new Archbishop it was his honor to install his replacement as the new Bishop of the Maya Belwa Diocese.

The last order of business for the convention was the installation of new pastors. All the bishops attending the convention joined in on the installation ceremony with the new Archbishop presiding.




Now some random pictures from the convention. I also shot video but it takes more bandwidth to upload than I have here in Nigeria. If I find time I may resize and edit some video down and post on my YouTube channel.
Tradition flute and drum performance for the installation of the new Archbishop. I am assuming they are from his tribe.
Music was a large part of the convention. Women's groups from each Diocese, Choirs, traditions signers and dancers all performed. Some had elaborate staging and props. Some mixed traditional dance with group performances.




LCCN Choir
The conductor is wearing a jacket with tails.

EOD truck, with cell phone scrambler.
No cell phones worked in the area.
Pastor Doug Cox of Global Health Ministries with
Pastor Andrea Walker of the ELCA Global Missions.

Pastor Ruth Ulea

Pastor Briska
Bishop Ann with Pastor Ruth
Bishop Ann borrowed fancy dress from an Episcopal Bishop.