Thursday, June 2, 2022

Egypt -- Jim & Donna's Excellent Adventures, Pt. 3

    Badr City is a city under construction. It has literally been rising from the desert Northeast or Cairo since the Egyptian government approved the idea in 1982. If I understand the numbers correctly, it has a resident population of 160,000 -- a little less than 25% of what it has been designed for. It has and will have medical centers, universities, and industry -- all modern with a modern infrastructure.

    It took about an hour to drive out of Cairo from Dr. Atef's church to the Badr City Wesleyan Church that Houghton Wesleyan has been specifically partnering with. The new highway from Cairo to Badr City is very nice but there is literally nothing to see to either side except sand. Eventually, of course, there will be.

    Having climbed into the van at the end of the Bible School sessions in the late afternoon, we arrived at Badr City in the early evening for a tour of the building before the service that was scheduled for 7:30.


    The shape of the church, the entryway, and the general look of the exterior is imaginable from what has already been constructed. Rebar extending upwards suggest what the planned third floor will look like. Due to government regulations, the third floor and the roof have to be completed before interior improvements can be made. Additionally, regulations specify a fairly tight time frame to compound sequencing regulations, so there is no opportunity to finish off one area before attending the next. The current pressure point is to finish the third floor and roof before doing more with what will be the sanctuary or putting in bathrooms.


 

The sanctuary floor is a concrete cavern, apart from the immediate area where worship takes place, for which folding chairs, large throw rugs, a wooden stage/platform, and temporary flood lights have been arranged.


A view of the worship space from the unfinished balcony provide a broad view of the area where services are held. We were given seats front row right because we were honored guests. When it was time to get up and speak we had to be watchful of the power cables snaking in from the service panel.




    We were taken up an interior concrete staircase without stair rails that circled an open shaft to see what had been done for the third floor. I might have photographed this feature were it not for the fact that I had to pray urgently that I would not topple down into the pit -- or, worse, find myself somehow unable to move mid-way. Oh, the perils of mission work!

    

    By now you should have concluded that I did not, in fact, topple down the shaft onto the concrete floor far beneath, but I will confess that the passage up and down was terrifying.


    Pastor Atef was eager to show us what had already been accomplished and what remained to be done, both of which are impressive.

    For the detail nerds among us, like me, most of the construction I observed in Egypt was of the sort seen here -- straightforward brickwork, usually rectangular, with poured concrete support columns of various sizes and shapes.

    This construction method and the fact that much of Egypt gets no rain accounts for the boxlike buildings that can be stacked or lined up in a variety of ways and for the flat roofs. Visible rebar means the building is not yet complete. 

    After our tour, we were driven to the Pastor's home for a quick "facilities break" prior to the evening service.



Our team, less Danil, gathered with Dr. Atef, and our hosts for the requisite photo opportunity. I am not sure where Danil was at this point; but he had rejoined us in time for the church service, so we did not have launch a search.

 

   Back at the church, I had opportunity to bring specific greetings from Houghton Wesleyan to the Brothers and Sisters in Badr City. It was my first experience with a translator, which was, I imagine, harder on him than on me. I referenced that little anecdote in Matthew 12:46-50 to contextualize my brief comments.

    We sang a number of loud and energetic praise songs in Arabic, we listened to a few other speakers, and we heard selection from the children's choir.

   

 

    At the end of the service, we greeted many of the congregation, stood for photographs, and prayed with some before making our way to a local restaurant for a big late night meal. This proved to be the pattern for our stay.

 [Here, right to left, Pastor Kamal, a leader in the Badr City church, Dr. Atef, and his son Martin.]

 

 


 I seem to have hit it off particularly well with this little boy, the pastor's son, who seemed to think it cool that I would give him fist bumps. And with his little sisters, who were tickled to pose even late at night for the camera.

 

 


    But of course by this time, having hit the ground running, our batteries were on life support. So back to Cairo to the hotel around midnight, where we fell into bed and slept, again, like babies.





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