Monday 28 October 2019

Congo Kinshasa: Going home for a funeral


Before little Fidèle arrived, there had been some plotting going on in Basankusu and further afield. I’d had a problem with the immigration police, in January. For some reason they’d heard that my time with Mill Hill Missionaries had finished. They told me that my current visa, of five years, was no longer valid. This, they explained, was because I was no longer under the protection of the missionary society – even though my original invitation was from the Basankusu Diocese. The January problem was resolved, and not without expense, so I was able to continue with my work.

This time, the problem didn’t come from the immigration office in Basankusu, but from Mbandaka, the provincial capital, 500 km down the river. They wanted me to go there and explain what I was doing in Basankusu. There are only three foreigners in Basankusu: a Nigerian priest, a Chinese shopkeeper, and me.

The airstrip building - they wanted to stop me entering

I went to visit the bishop. He was very welcoming but reminded me about what he’d told me in January. The diocesan Caritas group would need to write a new invitation letter for me, and the bishop would sign it. Nothing had happened on this, so far, so now was the time to do something about it.

Then, as you heard, my father died. I took the opportunity of a direct flight from Basankusu to Kinshasa; a weekly service with a twenty-eight-seater plane had started recently, and although there were sometimes gaps of several weeks in its service, it was the best option.

Our nutrition centre volunteers descended to give their condolences – closely followed by Judith’s choir (she has her own choir!). The idea is that everyone who knows you comes along for a wake. They sit and chat; they dance around a fire, eat and drink. They beat on improvised drums and continued chanting into the night. It was really nice for people to come. Most sat for half an hour and then went home. The choir continued beating out a rhythm. By 11 o’clock I’d had enough and went to bed.

Judith came to check on me at 2 in the morning. “Tell them – thanks for coming, but it’s time to go home.”

“Oh, no,” she laughed, “they’ll be here all night, every night for five nights. It’s our tradition to keep you company.”

“But I want them to go home!” I pleaded.

“I’ll ask them to be quiet,” she smiled and went back outside.

At 5 am I heard her coming in again. I followed her to where she was intending to sleep and watched her crash out … worn out after a night without sleep. I gave her a gentle pat on the back. “What do you want!” … another pat. “Go away!” I continued until I’d got her attention.

“Oh,” I said, “now you want to sleep? Judith, please tell them not to come back.” After a lot of pleading – and even though it was unheard of in the local tradition – she agreed to ask them not to come back. I left her to her slumber.

Some of our volunteers continued for the five days but slept quietly outside on the veranda. Little by little, I arranged my suitcase and got ready for my journey.

Then I got a message: the police had been instructed to bar my entry into the airstrip compound. I wouldn’t be allowed to fly until I’d visited the immigration police’s office in Mbandaka. Judith sorted it all out in the end - more money changed hands. She wouldn’t tell me how much, but the situation was resolved, and I was allowed to travel.

View from a plane landing at
Basankusu airstrip

What upset us the most was that people who we thought were our friends were also involved in the plot, and also took their percentage. I still believe that most people in Basankusu are supportive and respectful of what we do in Basankusu, such as treating malnourished children, building wheelchairs, supporting projects across the diocese with our expertise, but there is still a small group who have other ideas. They are usually officials of some sort – yes, it’s true that they’re mostly poorly paid – but they just see foreigner as naïve cash-cows, fair game to take advantage of. The consequences are very demoralising.

Because I’m the only European in Basankusu, my every action is watched. The work I do is tiring, especially in this tropical heat, but I do so much as go for a quiet drink in one of the local beer gardens, I’m seen as living an outrageous life. Jealously sets in.

At my dad's funeral

Fortunately, Judith and the volunteers are very supportive. I wouldn’t be able to do it without them – certainly I wouldn’t be able to do it without Judith.

While I was in England, Judith had her appendix removed. She’d ignored my advice to have it done in Kinshasa and had confidence that her chosen doctors in Basankusu would do a great job. Well, the infected wound that she ended up with afterwards could have happened even in an English hospital, I suppose.


I arrived back in Kinshasa 23 October. Judith will be coming down to recuperate and to accompany me while I submit my new invitation letter and, with a bit of luck, get a new visa.

The malnutrition centre goes from strength to strength. Even when Judith and I are not there, the work continues – and these days the volunteers are only as far away as a telephone call. So, no problems there …

We really need more funds, though. Your individual kindness has got us this far. Please do your best to send a donation via PayPal to keep this work going. God bless you!

Congo Kinshasa: Selling toys to help malnourished children


They arrived from a village, 30 miles away, on foot.


Francis Hannaway at the malnutrition centre, Basankusu, DR Congo

They had carried their son, Fidèle, aged 11, and who’d just had measles, to our second centre. I took them to our nearby Catholic hospital, and we started to do the paperwork to get him admitted. His dad held him on his lap, wrapped in a faded printed cloth, his skin was pale and his body cool.

As they put a thermometer under his arm, I put my hand under his nose to see if he was still breathing – it was hard to tell. Consultation with a nurse followed and then tests on his blood, etc. They decided to admit him and give a blood transfusion. 

I started to walk back to our centre to get the money for the blood donor, but they called me back before I’d left the compound. 

“He’s already dead,” said Nurse Germain. My heart sank. They’d walked such a distance in search of help – but too late. “Perhaps he was already dead when he arrived,” added Germain. 

The morning sun beat down on me as I collected some money to help them get home. When I got back to the hospital they’d already set off. Germain took me on his motorbike a little way along the rough dirt track to catch them up and I was able to give them the money which would help get them back to their village.

“Is it worth it,” I thought, “to give people hope like that? They’ve come all this way and little Fidèle has died.” I tried to think instead of the countless children who had recovered and then I felt a bit better.

Then came news that my own dad had died. I went back to England.

This little girl's hair has grown white
because of long-term malnutrition

Before the day of my dad’s funeral, I was at Sunday mass at St Gabriel’s parish. One of the parishioners told me about an 11-year-old girl who’d sold her toys to raise money for my malnutrition centres. What a lovely thing to do! Here’s part of what I wrote to her in a thank-you card.

“By selling your toys to raise money for this work, you have not only helped these children to survive, but you've also shown everybody a fantastic example of social responsibility. I know that everyone is very proud of your actions - you thought about others instead of yourself. Well done - and thank you from all the team at my centres.”

It raised my spirits, tremendously. A child of 11 had died, but another 11-year-old was ready with an act of love towards children she’d never met. I wonder if other people would follow her example! For me, it makes it all worthwhile. 



Malnourished children on the mend
at Francis Hannaway's centre for malnutrion

Thursday 10 October 2019

Congo Kinshasa: New glasses for Veronique

This is "Jean Lunettes" - he's part of the Eye-Doctors' team.

Here he is helping Mama Veronique get her glasses during their February visit. She needed glasses to see the distance better ... she'd never learned to read so the eye test couldn't use a text.

Mama Veronique tries on her new glasses

Judith is interpreting from Lingala to French for her. Mama Veronique got a wheelchair from us earlier in the year.

When we arrived, I went around to the main entrance to the hospital compound to get it unlocked. There were crowds of people and a lot of them wanted me to help them to be seen by the doctors. A woman crawling on the ground was trying to get my attentions and I kept shrugging her off - I had to find someone with the key to the gate to let Mama Veronique in. I was getting more distraught because I couldn't see her outside. More people were calling out to me for help in being seen ... at the same time this disabled woman persisted in grabbing my leg as I passed.

I told her, "I don't have time ... I have to find Mama Veronique."

Then I realised - IT WAS Mama Veronique.

Doh!