Home
About Us
Support Us
Prayer
Resources
News and Media
People and Places
BMS Cymru
Donate
Please select a channel
Ministers
BMS Reps
Mission Opportunities
Campaigns
24:7 Partners
The Bigger Project
Harvest 08
Home
Home
About Us
Support Us
Prayer
Resources
News and Media
News
Podcasts
Videos
Engage Magazine
Archive
News archive
People and Places
BMS Cymru
Do not adjust your set!
30/06/2008
The recent European Championships tournament in Austria and Switzerland, won by Spain on Sunday, will be remembered for many things – great goals, fantastic skills and dramatic matches.
Many football fans won’t also forget the television ‘blackout’ during one of the semi-finals last week, caused by a thunderstorm in Vienna, which interrupted coverage around the world, causing viewers to miss key moments.
As Pete Maycock, a BMS worker in a rural area of north west Thailand, explains here, people there missed much more, and are used to life being disrupted by loss of power.
‘It's disgraceful – the BBC need to get their act together, I've paid my licence fee’.
We read the complaints posted online of TV viewers in the UK with interest, following the five-minute blackout during the Euro 2008 semi-final between Germany and Turkey.
Football is hugely popular in Thailand, and across the country there are big screens showing the live games – despite the time difference meaning that most games start in the early hours of the morning!
In our village, there are many keen football fans, who faithfully stayed up until 1.45am to watch the live broadcasts from Euro 2008.
Unfortunately for the local football enthusiasts, most international competitions are held during the monsoon season. The electricity supply in our village becomes extremely unreliable at this time of year, with regular power cuts.
On the day of the Germany-Turkey game, the power cut off at 3.00pm, and did not return until the following afternoon.
So, our friends were waiting all night in vain for the football – and missed not just one of the goals, but all five!
Frequent power cuts have other effects on daily life here in Musikee.
At Sahamit School, the teachers are often frustrated in their efforts to type up or print out work.
Candles need to be prepared ready for all church meetings held in the evenings. The phones are unreliable and the mobile signal is weak.
However, most local folk can remember the days before electricity came to the village, and so they don’t complain much about these inconveniences.
Last year's Thailand Action Team in Musikee by candleight
And, for many of our friends, missing the football is far more serious!
Pete teaches English in Sahamit School in Musikee, and he and his wife Lizz are also involved with the local church. They have two children: Abigail and Jacob. Find out more about them and download their prayer letters by clicking
here
.
Utilities
Print this page
Contact us
E-mail newsletter
News
My dog walk = my God walk
The price of life: facts and prayer
Riches and poverty: alligators and slums
Seven years of Light
Burma relief continues
Saving north India
Fifty-year bamboo death
Pedalling for pounds
The fallen idols and the miracle baby
Alice through the bottle-glass
Statement from Alistair Brown
Great jubilation in Guinea
A young man called Bhim
An end to exile
China and Burma update
Lumi's Faith
Abel's Faith
Leonise's Faith
Action Team Photo Competition
Teaching literacy - and much more
Guilty until proven innocent
Pastor shot during apology visit
BMS staff member on the run
Ribbon cut on new Kolkata centre
Guinea update
Learning to receive
‘Republic day’ for Nepal
The drugs don't work
Five get baptised in the sea
Earthquake in China
SAT-7 still 'on' amidst fighting
Dramatic exit with help from God and a local 'angel'
Traditional healer meets the Great Physician
Earthquake in China - BMS statement
Why I marched for Palestine
BMS March for Palestine
Eyewitness: Beirut
Food crisis in Afghanistan: the human cost
Burma cyclone disaster - update, 23 May
Signs of hope
End of an era
Jungle books
Maoists’ success heralds new Nepal
Sleepless in Beirut
BMS = Baptist Marriage Service!
Guitar hero
Treasure chest
Water, water everywhere
Family focus at Sicily church
Still caring for tsunami sufferers
Say it with flour
The branch bears fruit
Relief amidst danger in Peru
Going the extra mile for BMS
Putting something back
Nepal hospital continues to serve
New Christian youth channel for Middle East
Alistair Brown to leave BMS
World joins in prayer with BMS
New hope for trafficked women
Strikes and shortages in tense Nepal
Independence in Kosova
Petition presented to Albanian embassy
Asia grants help to prepare and respond
Life-saving training for Afghan mothers
Witch-doctors, train robbers and thousands being saved
Brazil church walks the talk
Escaping and rebuilding after the storm
Help Kenyan refugees
BMS calls for Orissa action
Team to encourage Angolan women
New believers and new building
World Aids Day: the front line
Eleven thousand support
In transit
BMS World Mission & Bangladesh Cyclone
Church planting in action in urban slum
Brand new site for BMS
The lunch queue
More to mission
Call for calm in fragile Guinea
Chandraghona 100 years old
Formal Commission before Scottish Baptists
Forging 'The Way Ahead'
© BMS World Mission
Terms & Conditions
|
Privacy Policy
|
Site Map
Website by Baigent