If I had a special bottle that I could
capture all the sights, smells, sounds and stimulation overload constantly happening
in Calcutta, I would have captured it especially for you all to fully grasp
just exactly what life is like in this very large and busy place. My very first experience in India was the
driving! Let me tell you something, I so
did NOT understand their method of driving of no rules, no speed limit, not
stop signs/lights, no specified lanes and the constant horn honking. That was just the vehicles—cars, trucks,
cabs, and many buses. Motorbikes,
bicycles, makeshift wheeled-things, other transporting things (no words for
what they used!), pedestrians and yes, cows and goats in the midst of all the
shuffling and hustle and bustle of traffic. An experience in itself!!
Surprisingly, each day got easier and
quite comfortable since we had the most excellent drivers. When daylight shone upon this city and we
were driving to our many destinations, we got to witness something that my eyes
had never seen and my mind as well as my heart could not comprehend. No defined curbs separated the road from the
walkway and there were so many people…people that would be selling their many
items on top of tarps just strewn upon the ground. Next would be a make shift café of sorts made
from scraps (wood, rocks, bricks, tarp, boxes, whatever could be found and
could be used.) A fire would be the heat source and the food, tea would be
prepared there as patrons would gather around.
Just a ways down from that would be a mother with her children bundled
up in whatever linens she had found trying to lay as comfortably as possible to
get rest. Next to her were several
children with what appeared to be a grandfather bathing one of his grandsons in
the gutter with runoff water that must have streamed down from the café. The
little guy lathered up with soapy suds and being rinsed off with gutter water
using a small metal bowl. Just around
the corner from them were two large cows grazing through the pile of garbage
that is just thrown into a pile only to be burned later. Make-shift housing all around, laundry from
the homeless strewn about wherever you looked, living wherever possible. People coming and going. Scurrying here and there. We come to a stop –traffic cop trying to
direct traffic and all of a sudden on my window a hand appears tapping three
times onto my window. Not knowing where
the hand came from I looked out my window only to find a young adult male that
looked very deformed and disabled just sitting literally in the midst of all
this traffic only inches away from vehicles on either side of him. His eyes met mine and I saw such despair and
helplessness. I have to admit I was very
startled and not sure what to do. Not
having anything that I could give him, I leaned back brokenhearted and began
weeping. He then gently placed his
entire hand flat upon the window and rested it there for the rest of the time
we waited—which ended up being close to 10 minutes. I began praying for him, feeling such
sadness and a horrible pain in my heart.
We finally began to drive off and slowly his hand slipped off the
window. I had heard about the homeless
and beggars but I had not personally experienced something so
heartbreaking. I felt like he was
invisible. Cars, people just passed him
by as if he didn’t exist. He was right
in the middle of the busy street and people deliberately avoided him like he
was an obstacle. I didn’t get it. I had a whole host of emotions that I offered
up to God.
God was wonderful in dealing with
me. Not giving me answers to my “Why?”
but to remind me that PEOPLE MATTER! Every single person…PEOPLE MATTER! I, too in my everyday life, had gotten in a
visual perspective of only seeing things that I only wanted to see and if that
meant turning a blind eye to people on the street corners with signs asking for
help then I did only choosing when I wanted to “see” them and then I would
continue doing my own thing. God sees
everyone and loves each one the same. Seeing
doesn’t always have to be done with my eyes…sometimes it is very important to
see with the eyes of my heart. I had
asked God to break my heart for what breaks His and I believe He did just that.
At the PEACE Centers, where I spoke and
worked with various women (some men, too!) was a most amazing experience like
no other. There were several places that
we went to, but it was the PEACE Center in Bauria that I had the opportunity to
connect with the women who were tailoring students there. I first spoke Sunday morning at church which
was awesome. It was a packed house.
Sitting on the floor…down the hall—both directions, and people standing
outside listening through the windows.
Amazing!! The next day, I had the
pleasure of speaking to the students directly.
Their faces were so precious.
They all had looks of desperation and much eagerness to soak up whatever
I had to share.
I started off by asking them where their
fabric scraps would be. With a bit of
confusion they went to look for some and gathered some from the trash. I took the material that they brought to me
telling them that the world would just toss this aside…discarding it, not
seeing any purpose or use for it. They
may even step on it, make it feel useless and treat it as if it were nothing
worthy. We, like the material, can very
much feel the same way. Believing what
others say about us, how they treat us, the situations that we go through
tossing us here and there—we begin to believe that we are unworthy, useless,
unhopeful, and no purpose to fulfil. But
our Heavenly Father does not waste anything…He does not discard or throw
away. He takes things that the world
meant for this and turns them into something quite beautiful through life’s
journies. I took that piece of fabric
scrap, roughly cut out four pieces (because life can be quite rough on us) and
I began demonstrating the process of the Rosette. How God holds each petal which represents our
season in His Hand. Nothing can snatch
us out of His Hand. Even when we are put
to the flame of life to be shaped, molded, contained in everyday living as well
as those times of extreme heat of walking in the flame…we are still in His
Hands. I continued this process four
times. I explained to them that God
loved each of us so much that He sent His only son, Jesus, to die on the Cross
so that we may have eternal life. We
must keep God the center of lives, which the button in the Rosette
represents. I held that Rosette up
pointing out the singe marks that represents our dark times, times of
struggles, times that we want to hide or are shameful about, but it is when the
layers of the petals that God puts together those very spots that we try to
hide create the uniqueness and beauty of the Rosette. It is a Materpiece…one of a kind! Their faces spoke very loudly…AMAZING!! I
explained to these wonderful ladies that they were not an accident, that they
were created on purpose and for a purpose!
God has a life story that He is writing specifically for each of their
lives and they are living it. They got
it!!
I wasn’t finished yet. I explained that God does not waste
anything. The lefteover fabric scrap
that I had used I took and made strips and began making fabric twine which can be made into a basket, bowl, bag,
mat, etc…the possiblities are endless!!
I explained that like the material as it is being twisted and turned and
pulled together it is becoming very strong and united, unable to come
apart. It is strengthened by this
process. God does this with us as
well. The process is not always pleasant
and comfortable, we question and wonder why we must go through things, but in
the end a beautiful creation is displayed.
God’s Masterpiece! I told them
that they are His treasure…that He delights in and sings over them…they are
precious to them. By now, they are
visibly happy, faces smiling from ear to ear and very eager to begin making
these Rosettes and fabric twine. They
took to it quickly. Understood it
wonderfully.
Christy Krezman
“The Lord your God wins victory
after victory and is always with you. He
celebrates and sings because of you, and He will refresh your life with His
love.” Zephaniah 3:17 CEV