| We were delighted by  Deborah’s invitation for dinner with the apology that she hadn’t done it  earlier with being sick and all.  She is  30 and a single mom with loads of family in  the church neighborhood. When we got there she admitted that she had  never cooked a proper meal in her life and she asked her sisters and mum what to cook.  It was delicious, spaghetti  Bolognese and chocolate cake with Devon cream,  yum.  The second dinner  invitation came from Margaret, a lady who single handedly collects for the  Irish Leprosy Mission.  She and her  husband John had us into the yard for tea and biscuits, then into the house for  dinner, then off to a neighboring church for evening worship.  Our church ceased evening worship for two  months allowing us the privilege of visiting other churches.  Margaret took us to Whitewell Metropolitan  Tabernacle, which is what the Irish imagine all American churches to be like:  hundreds of people bused in and 1000s in hand clapping worship.  It was interesting, but too big for us.
 The third invitation from  a church member came from Barbara, a professor.   Barbara is a child of the Greater Shankill and also has a PhD in  Psychology from Queens   University.  She readily tells us her father is an  alcoholic, served time in jail, was a member of the UVF (paramilitaries), and  her mother was dysfunctional on Valiums.   When she was 14, her 11 year old brother fell from a roof and died.  She recalls two bomb blasts during the  Troubles, and a militant with a machine gun in her front yard!
  After four months, Eddie  who comes to church worship alone came over to me and asks, “How are you  getting along?”  After some conversation  he told us where he lived and invited us to visit him and his wife.  So after 30 years of conflict and 10 uneasy  years, the basic character of community, friendliness, and hospitality is  intact.Outside our church we  received an invitation from McCall, to return as her guest to Downhill Hostel on  the North coast.  We stayed at Downhill  last month when we took Deborah and Carson up to the Giant’s Causeway and Londonderry.   McCall’s own immigration from Seattle  ten years ago was hard and she was willing to reach out to us.  She and her Northern Irish husband, William, own a  wonderful hostel and she teaches and has a pottery studio.  She is brilliant and helped me build a set of  plates between their baby’s nap and play with daddy.
  This is our community. Email: wardstothers@cten.org
              New Phone: (028) 90 291986  From US  01144.2890.291986.
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