The Pearl of Africa was a superb vehicle. That old Toyota Land Cruiser could drive through streams, slog through deep mud resembling greased peanut butter, cling to a steep rock face on a hillside, and somehow adhere to a tiny point of a mountaintop, preventing our certain deaths.
You’ll remember that on the first day Dave and I spent in our final segment of our three-month orientation, The Pearl wouldn’t start. Yet someone—we didn’t know who—had scheduled important appointments
for Dave, as our group’s leader, with the District Commissioner, the Bishop,
and the police. Brian, our orientation director, had explained that relating
with those officials would assure them our group had no suspicious motives.
Brian impressed upon us that establishing a
good relationship with them was of great importance.
But we couldn’t get The Pearl started!
Aaaargh!
And we had no one nearby to help—we were
in a remote, sparsely populated forest in steep mountains at about 6,000 feet.
We'd have to push to get her started.
Looking around, we were keenly aware that
only thirty feet away we would come to a drop-off of nearly five hundred feet. It
was going to be tricky. Mighty tricky.
Bwana Mwakodi and I pushed while Dave
steered The Pearl and worked the clutch, but she wouldn’t start. We pushed
again. That Toyota Land Cruiser was a sturdy, heavy vehicle!
Winded, we strained and shoved, but The
Pearl still wouldn’t start. The nearest mechanic was probably dozens of
kilometers away.
I looked at Dave. He looked as sick as
I felt.
We had only one option: turn The Pearl
around and face it downhill. However, whether we turned to the right or to the
left, we had to push The Pearl uphill to turn it around.
If and when we got the back wheels up
on the hill, we had to avoid yet another drop-off. Bwana and I tried and tried,
but didn’t have enough muscle to push The Pearl uphill.
Then, as if by a miracle, a man stepped
out of the forest. And then another, and another, all of them Bwana’s friends
and neighbors. For an hour, we struggled and groaned and sweated and eventually
managed to turn The Pearl around, facing downhill.
We pushed once again and that time it
chugged and sputtered—and came to life! Oh, what a sublime sound!
From that day forward,
we always parked The Pearl facing
downhill
so we could get her started by pushing.
Nevertheless, our adventures with The
Pearl continued. One morning we climbed in and expected her to chug to life by
compression after I pushed it wobbling down the hill—but it did not.
My heart nearly stopped. I looked over
at Dave. He looked pale.
Had The Pearl gasped her last breath?
Dave looked around for a way to avoid
pushing her uphill backward to try again. He scouted out a steep, forested
trail beyond the Mwakodis’ house, one we’d never driven before.
It took travelers away from
civilization, but it was a downhill slope, so the two of us pushed The Pearl
that direction. Dave jumped in at the last moment and worked the clutch—but it
didn’t start.
That left us stuck worse than ever
before.
What should we do? We could push it
further down into that unpopulated mountain valley and hope it would start, but
if we had already tried twice without success, why should we expect The Pearl
to come to life the third time?
If it still didn’t start, towing it out
would be all the harder, if not impossible.
We were so stressed we felt sick.
Faint-hearted.
We felt so alone, so isolated—and in
fact, we were. No one was around to help this time.
After nervous deliberation, lots of sighing,
and silent praying, we decided to push once more before we gave up—and . . .
. . . and The Pearl sputtered to life. Hooray!
It’s hard to find words for the enormous relief we felt. Tears stung my eyes.
At that point, Dave faced another
challenge: he had to back The Pearl up that narrow steep trail, up and up and
up, until he got to the dirt road at the Mwakodis’ place.
“Ah,” Dave sighed, “the perils of The
Pearl.”
My stomach still knots when I remember
that day. I can feel again the light-headedness, the cold sweat.
But once again, we had witnessed that:
God had worked on our behalf,
confirming His promise
for those He sends to do His work:
“Do not be afraid or discouraged
for the Lord will personally go ahead
of you.
He will be with you.
He will neither fail you nor abandon
you.”
(Deuteronomy 31:8)
(From Chapter 3, Grandma’s Letters from Africa)
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