I am frequently asked what I did while I was in Chad. What the Vanderkoois do in Chad. What we accomplished while I was there. Often it seems that as well-meaning of a question it is, I am supposed to come back with numbers - how many people were treated at the clinic, how many people heard the message of Jesus, how many people accepted Christ. All these are good things, and I can supply you with those from the ministry that God is doing through Mark and Diane Vanderkooi in Tchaguine.
But...
I think sometimes it is good to look back and remember the letters. The brief moment when a girl who lives in a culture that would deem her insignificant, was invested in, even in such a small way as showing her how to write her name. The times outside the Vanderkoois' house where the kids would teach me words out of the Kwong Bible stories. The countless times when small, sandy hands poked at each letter of the alphabet, then at the picture beneath it that started with that letter. The reading classes with the women after church, where we would struggle together, letter by letter, to read God's word in Kwong. The times I sought to decipher the words on the clinic "carne" (a small booklet of the individual's medical records) of an ill friend, not being able to make sense of the medicines all written in French. None of these instances count as something that was on my "to-do list" in Chad, and I don't have any numbers to bring back to you besides maybe the number of games of Uno I lost to kids half my age. No, I can't show you much in the way of numbers, but it's all the letters that make up the story of my time there and how God continued to write my story in the context of a beautiful culture.