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First Year Challenges

A letter from Don Ho and Sook Nim Choi serving in Indonesia|December 28, 2015

Rolling Down a Hill

A Letter from Don Ho and Sook Nim Choi serving in Indonesia|September 27, 2015

Travails and Blessings

A Letter from Don Choi in the U.S., returning to service in Indonesia|June 23, 2015

Settling in

A letter from Dong Ho and Sook Nim Choi serving in Indonesia

March 25, 2015 – Settling In

Dear friends and family, Greetings! We pray you are well and prospering. We have been in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, for almost four months. Thanks to the support, guidance and help from many, we rented a house in a safe and bustling neighborhood not far from Duta Wacana Christian University (where we both serve), bought a used car, and even found a gym for keeping in shape. As expected, initially we had to deal with the (hot and humid) weather, unfamiliarity with local ways and customs, and difficulties in moving around and communicating. But we are happy to report that, after the initial shock, we have settled down and are able to move freely and communicate with limited frustration (together with our efforts to acquire and exercise the local language, our body language skills have been put to remarkable use!). That being said, we are still searching for community and looking to establish a balance of outer and inner life. Indonesia declared its independence from the Netherlands in 1945 after enduring more than 400 years of colonial rule. The brand of Christianity of the European colonizers had met a local matrix suffused with Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism—which had swept through the islands in previous waves of migration and exchange during pre-modern times—and with local animist cults, which together to this day give form to the worldview and everyday lives of peoples in this archipelago nation of 250 million souls. As much as Indonesia is shaped by its past experiences, it is also informed by its forward-looking expectations regarding its life and place in the global community.