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THE STORY OF MY TIME WITH THE
CARIBBEAN MERCY
-Abe Quilling
May
2001
I
believe it was around the twenty-eighth of May when my brother Ben and I
found ourselves in Victoria, Canada aboard the M/V Caribbean Mercy
(where it was just starting it's public relations tour down the west
coast of America). Ben was to work for three months in the engine room
and I, after a short time in the kitchen, was to start a Discipleship
Training School (DTS) on board the ship. The
ship in itself, when we got there, seemed huge. Two hundred and eighty
feet of crisscrossed walkways and hundreds of rooms. At first we were
lost in just getting from our sleeping quarters to the dining room and
back again!
A
few days before the DTS started the students started filtering in. A
Canadian here, a couple from Germany there, some Swedes and of course a
few more States people like myself showed up. All in all there was about
nineteen of us all total for the school and outreach. We had three
months of lectures and then two months working in Guatemala to look
forward to. As the ship sailed down the West Coast of America on it P.R.
tour we would be in our lecture phase, then our team would fly down to
Guatemala to prepare for the ship that would get there a month later.
Each
week, as we went with the ship south, we had a different speaker that
would lecture for around four hours every morning (except for weekends).
The afternoons were our work times where each one of us helped with
running the ship. The speakers, for the most part, I found to be very
good. They had some really good things to talk about, everything from
marriage and dating to spiritual warfare. At the end of those three
months I felt like my brain was going to explode with all the info that
was being poured into it!
We
left San Diego, our last port on the P.R. tour, a few days after the
lecture phase to fly to Guatemala City. From there we took a very
interesting bus ride east to the little port town of Puerto Barrios
where the ship would be docking. For the first month that we were there
we did weekly and daily prayer walks in the town. We focused on the
poorer side of it where the population was mainly black people that were
the dissidents of slaves that the Spanish brought over with them. We did
street dramas and open airs and also went weekly to this little school
for mentally handicapped children, that first month. We started a
twenty-four-hour prayer session that lasted a couple weeks; I really
think that that was the best thing we did down there. Having a truly
lasting impact.
When
the ship landed our life down there did a one-eighty and most of our
time was spent working to get the ship ready for ministry other than
working with the people. Many hot and sweaty hours spent down in the
cargo holds!
The
eighteenth of Nov. we found ourselves back in Guatemala City saying some
tearful goodbyes and watching as our friends got into there taxies to
head for the airport. Their homes in sight! Mine was still a couple
weeks off though for I had a trip planned with my brother, friend and
three other DTS'ers. We were planning on spending a week on the beaches
of Belize and another week in beautiful Antigua, Guatemala. It was a
wonderful holiday with a long flight and snowy Montana at its end.
-Abe
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