The land of lakes
and volcanoes. An area where are spring like temperatures all year
around. A place where you can be at the beach in less than an hour.
A place where there are tons of garden centers only half an hour
away. A place where you can buy everything you need and tons you
don’t need. A place where we have cable TV (although few programs
that we would actually watch), cellular reception, and fast internet.
A place where there are people who share our values, our dreams, our
mission. A place called Nicaragua.
In the end of
September we left our kids and grandkids in Alberta and boarded the
plane for a new adventure in a new land. Unlike our last move to
Bolivia, we had no great plans, no great expectations. We wanted to
take our time to find a place to live and then to find something to
do. Little did we know that the most important thing we needed was a
time to heal.
We did not realize
how we had been so impacted by the last months in Bolivia. We felt
betrayed. We felt a lack of support. We felt alone. Although we
knew that we had left some very good friends behind, we seemed to
remember those that did not stand beside us. Although we had all the
legal documents in place for selling the land, the community
continued, and continues, to stall. We ultimately need their approval
to complete the land sale. Jake said that never felt as much evil as
he did at the last community meeting, an evil that was directed at
him not because he was a bad person, but rather as a result of not
getting what they wanted – our land. At that point, he left the
community and the country. It was hard to leave on that note. We
hoped and prayed for a softening of their hearts but that was not to
be. We still pray for the community and for Dionicio and we know
that God will work it all out for his glory, but we have no idea how.
Thankfully we are able to communicate through internet with those
that we love, those who stood beside us – Dionicio and Viviana,
Claudia and Carlos, Alberto and Cinthia, Rose and Juan.
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Diriamba is a small
town located about 35 minutes south of Managua. Because it is higher
in altitude, it does not have the high temperatures and high humidity
of cities such as Managua, Granada, or León. The ocean and its
beaches are located half an hour to the west of us and run along the
coast to the Costa Rican border. To the west is Lake Nicaragua and
Crater Lake (Laguna de Apoyo). Also to the west is the scenic town
of Catarina which is full of outdoor garden centers, and the touristy
town of San Juan del Oriente, the pottery center of the region.
Masatepe, where they make furniture and the famous Nica rocking
chairs, is on the way to Catarina. Diriamba does not have a lot of
shopping but we purchase our fruits and vegetables at the outdoor
markets there or a little farther south in Jinotepe. When we need
something more ‘American’ we can go to Managua to PriceSmart, La
Colonia or La Union (owned by Walmart.) Just down the road there is
a fantastic bakery and San Marcos, Diriamba and Jinotepe all have
good ice cream shops. Restaurants, both Nica and 'American', abound.
We are not lacking for food!
We were able, with
the help of our friend Lesther, to purchase two vehicles – a Toyota
Corolla for the city driving and a ForeRunner for the most rugged
trips. Within a couple of weeks we had our own internet and phones.
We were ready to get to work!
It is good to hear that you are both able to settle into the area so nicely. Will Uncle Jake try to grow coffee? It is nice that you will have some good land to work with. I hope you have healed and I am sure that in time God will heal the wounds of that community.
ReplyDeleteHe will not grow coffee personally but one of the groups with which he works are coffee farmers from Mombachito.
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