Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Last Push!

Tomorrow we fly back to Kampala for a couple of days, so this was our last full day in Arua and George and I packed it in today!

I started in downtown Arua at the largest furniture manufacturer here - Superior Furniture. Joyce is a wonderful lady who has been running the business for many years. They make high end furniture and the market is currently weak for premium products. Unfortunately the factory keeps producing product at the normal rate and so inventory and debt are increasing rapidly. We spent a couple of hours analyzing the business, and reviewing a few alternatives. The good news is that they keep good operating data, so I was able to bring a selection of figures back with me to see if I could help further. Ultimately the business will improve when Joyce actively looks for customers outside Arua and the production process matches the demand for their various products. Joyce came to the training for the first time last Saturday, and is a new addition to the BVA family, but she already sees the enormous benefit of what BVA has to offer.

Following that we headed off to SNV, a Dutch NGO to meet with the agricultural experts that George had met on the plane into Arua. They are working to increase cash cropping in West Nile by understanding the value chains in agriculture. Interestingly enough, George and I had been developing similar ways of thinking about building sustainable businesses and we found that we had a lot in common. After talking about Sim Sim (sesame), honey, rice and dried fruits, they agreed that we could use them as a source of research, for contacts and for general advice. We appreciate their openness, not always found in the NGO world.

Peter, our pork sausage manufacturer was our host for lunch at his place. We talked marketing pork and beef products and how to increase sales volumes. This is not always easy in an environment where power is very unreliable and there are a significant number of Muslims (no pork). Peter fed us roast pork for lunch and then we walked around his production facilities.

I then met with the Bishop of West Nile and Madi for the Church of Uganda, while George headed back to Slumberland(our hotel!) to meet with Jimmy our Hygienic beef man. I appreciate my growing relationship with the Bishop, and we are trying to understand how we can better integrate business people into the church.

After George met with a chili pepper and sorghum dealer, we began our final and vital BVA Board Meeting. I think we have successfully launched BVA into the hands of our Aruan friends, and I fully anticipate that there will be a fair amount of member activity between now and the timing of our return in late May or early June. After the meeting, we all had dinner together and said our farewells. I will miss this wonderful group of people. Their enthusiasm and spirit and their focus on God make quite an extraordinary combination. They are grateful for our being with them, and are eager to learn at all times, which makes it very rewarding for George and I.

Please pray for our travels. Last time we made this trip, George was 6 hours late and I was 35 hours late!! We are also both feeling a little under the weather. Nothing serious, but like the beginning of a cold or minor flu symptoms.

We appreciate you all and I know my friends can't wait to get the full picture show along with commentary - all 2 hours of it!?!?

Blessings form Arua!

1 comment:

  1. You guys have been busy! I keep hearing and reading it's all about relationships, relationships, relationships. Good work.

    ReplyDelete

The Genesis of the 5810 Project

Vision

When Jesus was asked what was the most important command he answered: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your heart and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments”

As a follower of Jesus, it is challenging to obey these commands, particularly with regard to my neighbors.
How can I love my neighbors? How can I love my neighbors in a global context? How can I love my neighbors who are struggling to thrive in developing countries?

The classic response of western Christians has been to “send”. Whether we send those that have been called to vocational ministry, or send money and resources to “give to the poor”, or occasionally send ourselves on short-term missions trips. Each of these has value, but is this enough? Is it effective? Is it all that God calls us to?

The questions become more complex when you consider that no matter how much money we have spent on the “war on poverty” over decades, the problem remains as acute as ever. We are not winning the war, even here in the US. Are there other approaches?

As I struggled with these ideas, I was led to consider Isaiah Chapter 58. Here God tells us what true fasting is – to loose the chains of injustice; to set the oppressed free; to share food with the hungry; and to provide the poor with shelter. Then verse 10 says “…if you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed then your light will rise in the darkness and your night will become like the noonday.”

“If you spend yourselves in behalf of others …….”

While we should send, we need to spend too.

What does it look like to spend ourselves?
For me I have been led to spend myself as follows:
• To go to a developing country, and to go repeatedly.
• To develop personal relationships with innovative leaders
• To use my own specific gifting and experience in business
• To find ways to move people out of the poverty cycle on a sustainable basis
• To invest money in parallel with my activities
• To share the love of Christ with my neighbor and to spend myself on their behalf.

5810 Project

The 5810 Project is predicated on the belief that while “teaching a man to fish” will provide him with a fish diet for a lifetime, it will not lead him out of poverty. To escape poverty people need to develop sustainable business activities. The 5810 Project’s vision is to provide an opportunity for business people from developed countries to share the love of Christ with their neighbor by “spending” themselves on behalf of others who are trying to build businesses and break the poverty cycle.

The 5810 Project is currently focused on two principal activities in Uganda.

Arua
Arua is a significant market town in the NW of Uganda, with Sudan to the north and Congo to the West. It is an agricultural market town that has grown because of government and NGO activity primarily in S. Sudan, but now increasingly in E. Congo. While the town has prospered and grown, the native Aruans have not enjoyed this economic boon.

Our efforts in Arua are centered on helping the church and Christian business people develop sustainable businesses.
We work with businesspeople to analyze the market situation in Arua, to offer training sessions, to encourage and mentor entrpreneurs and to invest in their businesses.

Kampala
Jesus Commissioned Ministries (“JCM”) is a church founded in 2000 serving three poor communities on the outskirts of Kampala. The leadership of JCM has a heart to reach the many underprivileged children in the communities it serves. Without education, there is little hope for these children to thrive. While education is available, the costs are prohibitive for most families. JCM has established Mercy Junior School (elementary) for these children. In addition to education, the children receive uniforms, food and school materials. The school currently has over 50 pupils in two Pre-K classes and Primary 1 (P1)and Primary 2 (p2) and is building classrooms for P3,4 & 5 for completion in the spring of 2011.

The 5810 Project has helped Mercy Junior School develop its rudimentary facilities and to buy a neighboring plot of land for expansion. We also advise the administrators of the school on business and education practices and have steered them through a process of becoming a fee-baseda significant drive to parent involvement and elevated educational standards and outcomes.

Opportunity
We believe that the 5810 Project offers a significant opportunity for the body of Christ:
• Grass roots opportunity to create sustainable businesses and deliver families and communities out of the oppression of poverty.
• Many business opportunities are apparent with relatively small investment levels necessary.
• Opportunities for talented business people to connect personally with emerging entrepreneurs and spend themselves on them.
• Opportunity for the body of Christ in the developed world to share the love of Christ with our neighbors in developing countries.
• Transformational impact on the “spender” and recipient alike!

If you would like to discuss this further, please contact me Andy Mills at amills@tkc.edu