Tui, who never seems to be without his smile. |
Students would work in this kind of field. |
We are not the only objects of his service, either – Tui is working on creating a program that will help students next year (school is over except for exams and national exams). The program is kind of a work-study program, using the Church welfare farm to raise and sell crops to reduce their school costs. If four acres of kumala (those white sweet potatoes, like the ones Tui brought us) can be planted and harvested three times during the school year, each boarding student’s total school cost will be cut in half. Not bad for two or three hours’ work every Saturday morning. Here’s hoping the area church leaders will approve Tui’s request.
Tui serves for the same reason as most Tongans – they are
firmly convinced that their own spiritual welfare, indeed, their whole balance
of spirit, emotion, intellect and social connection - depends on finding ways to share. Most of the rest of the human race are
happiest when we receive something.
Most Tongans are happiest when they have the opportunity to give
something. Perhaps it is because
they have so little, that they are so generous – sort of “give now while I have something to give, because I
may need someone else to be charitable toward me next week” thinking. Whatever the reason, the generous
nature of these people, as typified by Tui, is remarkable. They don’t call Tonga “The Friendly
Islands” for nothing.