Mission Connections PC (USA) Seal PC(USA) logo (link to home)
 
 
             
  A letter from Alan and Ellen Smith in Russia  
             
 

December 2002

Dear Friends and Family,

We are drawing to the end of our second year in service here. It has been a full year. Our first year was a time for getting acquainted-getting to know our partners, learning the language, learning our way around, and adjusting to a new culture. Mulling this over recently, I would characterize 2002 as a time for stretching-stretching our minds, our energy, our vision of the work before us-a time for finding new limits and maybe limits isn't a good word.

We shared with many of you last year, how hard the transition had been for our youngest. Emma missed what she had known and didn't have what she needed to be able to fully adapt to Russia-she was lonely, unhappy. Emma has been transformed by starting school. She got out of the car on the first day of kindergarten a different person. We had visited the school on the Friday before to meet teachers, and she had hidden behind me, shy and withdrawn. On Monday, she emerged with a confidence I had never seen. She knew what she was supposed to do-hit the playground and find some friends. She has now decided that she loves Russia. She is taking ballet class twice a week at a Russian center. The teacher speaks no English, but Emma doesn't care. She loves to dance and can watch carefully to sort out what she should be doing. She is even beginning to practice her Russian with us. She is stretching in ways that she refused to do last year.

 
             
 

"Working with the different churches has been an area of significant stretching for both of us. Each is culturally quite different and they don't really communicate very well with each other."

  Meg feared the prospect of Russia, but has enjoyed the reality from the beginning. Meg loves being in sixth grade. She likes all of her teachers and has a class full of friends. She is the most social of our children. She is beginning to come out of her shell in terms of speaking Russian, too, though she still refuses to speak it when I am around. I think it's a game at this point. (Stuborness is, alas, a family trait.) Meg decided to join the junior-varsity volleyball team this fall. She is not particularly athletic, but she was determined. It has been a stretch for all of us with after-school practices, but Al took on coaching her team and so was also able to accompany her home on public transport. (The route was too complicated and long for me to be comfortable with her taking it alone.)  
             
  Allison is now with us for the holidays. She has made it through her first term at Carleton College. She has worked very hard, studying like she has never had to study before, but has also found time to enjoy other aspects of college life. In some ways, I think it has been more of an adjustment for us than for her. She was already used to not having her parents nearby. Allison is not a good correspondent. Last year, the friends who took care of her kept us up to date. Now we have long periods of silence. We have had to adjust to not hearing from or about her. We do trust her to make good choices, but we feel so much more out of touch.

Al began teaching this fall at the mission school that the girls attend. He is teaching mathematics, which he loves and he enjoys working with the young people. Still, it has meant a good deal of adjustment. I now do nearly all the traveling. The girls don't like it, but they have gotten used to it. We realized early in the school year that it was important for me to try to limit the traveling to one trip a month when possible (it isn't always possible). It has been a challenge to keep each other up to date on schedule demands, meetings that we now attend separately, and our individual understanding of priorities. Al is able to manage some of the meetings in Moscow and he makes many of the phone calls. We have to work harder at communicating, but that is a good thing.

Our work has begun evolving in new directions. The Twinning Program has been expanded this year to include churches of ELKRAS (the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Russia and Other States), as well as churches in Belarus. With the addition of ELKRAS partners, the program now includes the three churches that were well established in Russia prior to the revolution. In Belarus, the partnerships are both with Baptist and Orthodox churches. There are also possibilities for partnerships with ELKRAS churches there, as well as with a small Reformed presence, but our work in that country has only just begun. We are at the relationship-building stage. Working with the different churches has been an area of significant stretching for both of us. Each is culturally quite different and they don't really communicate very well with each other. As many of you have probably read, there have been significant problems with dialogue and inter-church relations this year in this part of the world. We believe that we are called to stand here among our brothers and sisters in Christ, open to and in dialogue with each of them as they struggle to find ways to be in dialogue with each other. Sometimes the stretching is strenuous.

Ellen has made four trips to Belarus this year, getting to know the people and work of the Belarussian Round Table for Inter-Church Aid, an ecumenical organization with Orthodox, Baptist, Lutheran, Reformed, and Bible Society representation. Working in partnership with the Belarussian Round Table, our work has moved off in some other new directions. Ellen, along with colleague Gary Payton (PC(USA)'s regional facilitator for Russia, Belarus and the Ukraine), has worked hard this year to become familiar with the projects of the Round Table. The PC(USA) is finding ways to connect there, focusing primarily on the needs of the victims of Chernobyl and the rapidly growing HIV/AIDS epidemic. We are broadening our understanding of the health issues that face Belarus and all the countries of the former Soviet Union. We are stretching.

Soon Allison will return to the U.S. We are moving from Advent, preparing for His coming, into Christmas. Here we will celebrate Christmas twice, for many of our partners celebrate Christmas by the Orthodox calendar (on January 7). New Year's is also celebrated twice, as the old calendar (the Julian Calendar) is still honored here. Our thoughts and prayers will be with you all on the far side of the ocean as you too enter this joyful season.

But the angel said to them, "Do not be afraid. I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord."

We ask for your prayers for our partners here who work to preach that good news to all the people. There are so many obstacles and difficulties, but they are not afraid. Please pray also for inter-church dialogue. We are brothers and sisters in Christ and the problems that face this region need united efforts. Finally, we ask for your prayers for our family as Allison returns to the states again and as we move forward into another year.

Peace and blessings,

Ellen & Al Smith

The 2003 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 94

 
             
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  
     
  World Mission Challenge  
     
  World Mission Celebration 2009  
     
   
     
     
  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)