Nigerian Building Project Moves Forward Print E-mail
Written by Martha Wright   

Completed roof of the Sunday School in Aluu, NigeriaWhen the Rev. Collins Asonye returned to Nigeria last December to complete the building project he and Bishop Hollingsworth had planned, he found a much more complex problem than he had anticipated. Based on the July 2005 trip with Bishop Hollingsworth to Aluu, Nigeria, Asonye planned to spend two weeks finishing the roof on a foundation that the people had been unable to complete. Instead, he was there for 29 days buying supplies, hiring day laborers, overseeing the making of cinderblock, digging pilings by hand, and building a new, larger exterior structure with a veranda and outside market stalls. The structure he left is an astonishing testament to perseverance, hard work, cultural savvy, and faith. While he was there the temporary Sunday school structure collapsed, which Asonye saw as a sign from God that he was meant to be there.
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Entering the temporary Sunday school building

The work on the Sunday School building in Aluu stemmed from a common vision of Asonye and Bishop Hollingsworth. With tensions growing in the Anglican communion,  Bishop Hollingsworth wanted to take action towards reconciliation. "Not so much an action to help us get along with one another, but to help us become part of a greater whole," said Hollingsworth. Asonye told him that much of the problem in Nigeria was caused because the people didn't know us. "They had heard about us, but they had no first-hand knowledge. They wanted to worship with us, and to talk with us one-on one," he said. Hollingworth saw the project as not only a way to bridge misunderstandings, but also a means to move from the parochial to the global. "God gives us communion with one another," he said. "It is our job to live into it."

To be continued. . . 

 

 
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