Mission Connections PC (USA) Seal PC(USA) logo (link to home)
 
 
             
  A letter from Andy and Ellen Collins in Nepal  
             
 

March 2003
Kathmandu, Nepal

Dear Friends,

This letter is written at a time when the word “change” is on the lips, hearts, and minds of those of us living and working with the United Mission to Nepal. As we all know, while change can be good and necessary, it can also be uncertain and threatening.

Things are changing here in Nepal. On the one hand, they are looking up. Not only is the weather taking a turn for the warmer, but the ceasefire called by the government and the Maoists seems to be holding. People are still skeptical, but at least they have a glimmer of hope now. We continue to pray for peace as talks take place and those affected by the seven-year conflict struggle to get their lives back together. The losses to individuals and the country as a whole have been tremendous. It feels almost awkward to say that our family has been blessed with safety and good health since returning to Nepal in June 2002. Sometimes we feel so fortunate, so sheltered, so blessed beyond measure. No matter how hard we try to reach out, no matter how hard we try to empathize, the truth is that we have the choice to be here or to leave, and our Nepali neighbors do not. We often struggle with this reality, particularly as the country—and the United Mission to Nepal—have been forced to weather the storm of change.

 
             
  Ellen and Jonathan in at the playground.
Ellen and Jonathan in at the playground.
  A few months ago we were privileged to return to the place of my childhood, Tansen, in the mid-western hills of Nepal. The United Mission Hospital in Tansen was founded in 1955, when the government of Nepal asked a few missionaries to heal the sick in that area. Many medical missionaries have served there over the years, among them my father, Dr. Richard Harding, which is how I once came to call Tansen “home.”  
             
  That was long ago, and things change. Andy and I live in Kathmandu, the capital city, a whole day’s journey by bus on mountain roads. We rarely make the trip to Tansen. But by coincidence in December we were both working on projects for the hospital there, and so this was a “work visit.” We took Christopher (7) and Jonathan (1) along, as well as our helper, Indi, to help with the boys. After a bumpy 12-hour ride, we were delighted to see the “light on the hill,” which is what we used to call the hospital, perched on the compound with a view of the Himalayas behind it.  
             
  Whenever I return to Tansen, a certain nostalgia comes over me, and I yearn for the “way things were” back in “the good old days.” How things have changed! The hospital itself has doubled in size. The little one-room mission school started by my mother has now relocated to a two-room building where 10 or 12 kids and two teachers spend their days. The long hike from the hospital to the Tansen bazaar now takes only 10 minutes, since the trail has been replaced by a motorable road.   Andy and Christopher Collins in Tansen, December 2002.
Andy and Christopher Collins in Tansen, December 2002.
 
             
 

Besides these physical changes seen through the eyes of a child-turned-adult, there is a major transition in the making: the impending handover of the hospital by UMN to a Nepali organization or entity of some kind. Not much is clear yet, but the wheels of change are turning, and by 2005 UMN will no longer operate Tansen Hospital. Although this change has been anticipated for decades, it is a difficult and scary prospect, especially for the Nepali staff involved.

Luckily some things in Tansen are constant. The work of the hospital continues to benefit the poor and sick, and the community health program continues to teach people how to prevent illness and improve their quality of life. The need for doctors, hospital administrators, and support personnel remains, as the workload never seems to get any lighter. This is because the hospital has a great reputation, and people come from as far away as India and up to several days walk in search of care—“Jesus care,” as the Tansen staff call it. The motto of Tansen Hospital is written on the front gate: “We Serve, Jesus Heals.” I am happy to say that this philosophy hasn’t changed either. The holistic care people find at Tansen hospital is modeled by Jesus himself, as he ministered to physical, mental, and spiritual needs of those around Him.

The video Andy shot and the stories I collected for the Friends of Tansen magazine I edited, illustrate the great witness of this place and of those who serve here. As I bumped into Nepali Christian staff whom I knew 30 years ago, I was reminded that even as the missionaries come and go, these faithful servants have remained. Their dedication to the mission and vision of the hospital is unprecedented.

Please join us in praying for the future of mission projects like Tansen Hospital. Pray for those responsible for planning the change process within UMN, and for those whom the change will affect. And most of all, lift up the country as a whole as it faces the possibility of a political change that will bring long-awaited peace. And while you are praying for Nepal, pray for your own country too. We all need peace.

While in Tansen this last visit I spent half my time telling my son how things “used to be.” At one point Christopher said, “Mom, you really are stuck on that ‘used to be’ stuff.”

He’s right. It’s time to make a few changes. And may our God, the Unchanging One, lead us in making them.

Yours in Christ,

Ellen & Andy Collins,
Christopher & Jonathan

The 2003 Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study, p. 166

 
             
PC(USA) Home (Link)
     
   
  Home  
   
  Mission Speakers  
   
  Mission Workers  
   
  Letters from Young Adult Volunteers  
   
  Photo Albums  
   
  Archives  
   
  Frequently Asked Questions  
   
 
  RSS icon
 
   
     
  show your support  
     
   
     
   
     
     
  For more information contact Peter Kemmerle (888) 728-7228 x5612, Anne Blair (888) 728-7228 x5373, or Carol Somplatsky-Jarman (888) 728-7228 x5628 - Or write to: 100 Witherspoon Street, Louisville, KY, 40202  
     
  Link to Top of Page  
 
Contact PC (USA) (link)