After busing from Waco to Houston, the Baylor traveling party took a nine-hour flight to Amsterdam and then another 6 ½-hour flight to Accra, the capital city of Ghana. "When we got off the airplane in Accra, it was as hot and humid as it could be, and you're carrying your luggage across potholes," said Katherine Johnson, the team chaplain. "That first night, we stayed at a nicer place, but you didn't know if you were going to have AC or even water in your room. I think they quickly realized that this is going to be a little different, this isn't our comfort zone of back home. "But I think because we were doing it together, you had your teammate next to you, you had your coaches, people you were familiar with. It became, 'Hey, we're going to take what we've been given, we're going to take it in stride and we're going to serve.' That's why we're here." They also pitched, caught, ran and coached in a three-day camp in Obuasi, Ghana, where they introduced the sport of softball to 300 children and a number of adult coaches. "On our previous trip to Panama (in 2011), we didn't have the opportunity to utilize our skills in spreading the Gospel. And that was never the intention of the mission trip," Moore said. "But looking into future mission trips, I thought it would be advantageous to be able to use the gifts that these girls had been given to further the Kingdom of God and spread the Gospel." The people in Ghana had never even heard of softball and really knew nothing about baseball, either. Their closest comparison was cricket, "which gave them some idea of what we were trying to teach," Moore said. By the second day, though, the adult coaches were already playing a game before the Baylor group arrived. "That was such a cool moment to see that we had just taught them something brand new, and they were already loving it and wanting to further it more," said sophomore infielder Caitlin Charlton from Palmetto Bay, Fla. Sydney Christensen, a sophomore from Crawford who admitted she wasn't very good working with kids, found a buddy named Edward on the last day of the camp who limped badly because of being kicked while playing soccer. When a ball got past Christensen, Edward bounced past her and ran as fast as he could to retrieve the ball.
"Then I asked, 'Why did you run after the ball if you're hurt?' The words that came out of the little boy's mouth were incredible. He told me, 'You have done so much to bless me, I wanted to do something for you.' I had known this hurt boy for maybe twenty minutes, and he was caring for me. He wanted to make me happy. I didn't know what else to do but hug little Edward.''' - Sydney Christensen, sophomore (from Jan. 2 blog entry) |