Right now i m in Rwanda i have taken two days since i come into this place.These i have gifted several places and the people in this nation really like he orgonites. I even met some of the fellows whom both Chris and Nicholas had meet during their mission trip in Lake Victoria.I have found that these people had been longed to get more information of how they can reach the source of the product and even one who can put them through.This really made my presence there to be of a greater value to them.
During this my mission i will try by all means to have at least two or three seminars so that i may reach a larger number of people of which will help to propagate our product.I have already organized with about three personalities who will be of a greater support to me .
I have already done with areas which runs along the lake region and the fishermen there were so happy to meet me face to face i gifted there and i m sure soon the life will change for a good fish production will be realized.In a few days time i m sure i will make sure that even the farmers there also become among the beneficiary of the orgonites here in Rwanda before i make my trip back to Kenya.
I will keep on giving you more reports
Jane
Really my mission in Rwanda has been to a higher success.Thee people in Rwanda actually appreciate my effort of visiting them with the orgonites.I met several farmers and some fishermen who actually received the orgonite with a double hand.And i hope soon these places that we have visited will experience a bigger change in their economical status.
On this account, even Nicholas mission to Lake Tanganyika will also have a greater impact in the lives of the people in that region.Here in Rwanda i had met some people from that region and through my inquiry have realized that even though both Chris and Nicholas had earlier managed to visit the nation,they could not meet the demand of the whole Nation for the nation is very big as compared to others as Kenya ,Uganda, others. Now Nicholas effort there will change the activity ,faith and their economical status.
Right now i wish finances would’ve been sufficient to me i would have managed to meet Chris in Congo.But still i hope all will be well for i know our colleagues.
Jane
Hi Doncroft,
Really the work that i have done in Rwanda is quite remarkable.And orgonites have really catched the attracktion of many farmers and the fishermen.Right now it’s only the isuficiency of the money otherwise i would have travel to Congo and meet Chris who is there by now.For from Rwanda to Congo is along way and the money i have now could not sustain me.
I have done much of the gifting in Kigaly and the responce there was very much positive and i hope soon the whole of that nation will be saved from frequent calamities.Mrs O also had send me some two boxes of the orgonites and now i thank her very much for that effort.
Right now i m still here in Rwanda staying with my sister.All my friends here in Rwanda i have told them about you and they really greeted you.
Jane
Jane Ngugi i see you are doing a good job in Rwanda Chris is also working in Congo so i think it would be good if you can meet Chris in Congo.Chris will proceed to Lake Tanganyika and possibly up to Mbaye town.
Nicholas
Hallow Nicholas
I m doing well in DRC,i have communicated to Jane Ngugi and if possible we will meet
chris
The very brief exchanges between our fellow healers/warriors in this thread belie the magnificence of this pioneering networking venture for Congo’s benefit.
Really, when I contemplate the map I’m envisioning a sort of etheric ballet in progress, directed and conducted by The Operators for the benefit of the Congo and our cohorts are the eager, capable, skilled and tireless dancers
Thanks, guys!
~Don
Hallow Readers
It’s quite very much interesting to express my personal concern of how we counteracted with Chris in the DRC.For sure I had not been exposed to work with him in the field of business and especially in the foreign land. Now my experience about his effort in the business and his convincing power and the way he do his marketing really encouraged me a lot. It really reminded me that I had done very little in the field of business. Now a m happy to acknowledged him as a man of hope and constructive in various fields, in life. My stay with him for just a shorter time made me to learn a lot and got improved in various grounds.
My major happiness is that the people of the DRC really like our product the orgonites,such that i even demanded to continue staying with them so that i may continue teaching them to know more but i m sure if God allows i will go back and even something very little with them
As a committed man knowing Kiswahili to you I know it’s not a big deal you will just know. I know some of our competent fellows like Benedict he will also assist you where necessary for I know how skillful he is.
Really, your coming to Africa and especially East Africa where we do most of our businesses will actually improve our effort for we will come to learn some of the things that we had not known. I m sure there are a lot that we had not known so that of your dreams of we really welcome with a double interest
The trust that we have with you really made me particularly to be very much excited when you say that the website will improve our business by advertising it to various people, places and even to the Western countries. Finally a committed friend like you is very hard to get and I m very sure our effort to work with you will earn us a lasting fruits in our lives. Have a good time and my God bless all of you. Thanks
Jane Ngugi
Hi Readers
Generally what Chris did in Congo is of a remarkable record.All that i saw plus what i heard from the people.The were very much happy with Chris’ visit .Also here in Rwanda these people are very much positive .They doubly adopt to the orgonites without any complain or doubt.This really made me to prolong my stay in Rwanda.Some of the orgonites had been sent to me from Kisumu and i m still busy distributing them to farmers.
On my way from Uganda i had gifted the town of Byumba then i proceeded southwards to the main capital city of Rwanda known as Kigali.Right now i m staying with my sister in Kigali.Then i have gifted Lake Ihema which is at the boarder with the Tanzanians.Also i have done much of my work in the river Nyabarango which i did with the intention of feeding lake Lake Rweru at the South.So now with the orgonites which i have received from Kisumu i m now planning to visit the Western part of Rwanda by going to Lake Kivu.
Jane
Thanks for the update, Jane, and congratulations on your success in Rwanda! Thanks, too, for your encouragement and coaching of my Kiswahli efforts. I’m enjoying the online lessons but what makes it all worthwhile is the personal interactions, of course. I feel like Kiswahili will be my window into the Great and Ancient African Mystery [Image Can Not Be Found] as well as a means to make many new friends and to be able to better serve my associates, there.
For most people in the West, ‘Rwanda’ conjures up an image of internecine slaughter, unfortunately, but it’s actually a very cosmopolitan place where tolerance and harmony have dominated. It’s a very fertile and productive farming country, too. Years ago, I read a good exposé about how the Brits coerced the Rwanda goverment into issuing national ID cards that had ‘Tutsi’ and ‘Hutu’ designations on them, then they sponsored the brutal dictator who initiated the discrimination campaign. They had a lot of success in Uganda sponsoring Idi Amin and his successors but by the time I was there the country felt terrific and most of the people seemed relatively happy and productive. Some of them told me how things were, before.
When that slaughter campaign in Rwanda got started, the CIA flew two, large transport planes continuously over the countryside, broadcasting specific radio/DOR frequencies that induced a sort of frenzy among the killers, who had checkpoints where they demanded to see people’s ID cards in order to find their victims. If there was orgonite distributed in the country, then, I believe that none of that would have been possible. It’s a good motivation to distribute orgonite, in addition to all it’s other evident benefits [Image Can Not Be Found]
Carol and I always assumed that the millions of new death towers all over the world (mistakenly called ‘cell towers’) were intended to fill the same role, but on a global scale, as those CIA transport planes. I think that there’s been enough talk about busting death towers with orgonite that they only remain as lower intensity transmitters of sickening energy, rather, until someone has flipped them all, as many of us have done throughout our own regions, at least, and in our travels. The Africans have pioneered the use of orgonite to improve farming, fishing and climate in a systematic way, and to end military/agency-sponsored (terrorist) conflicts.
Our readers are inspired by seeing how you are following your intuitive guidance in such a productive way. It always makes sense to do that but many of us are trained to second-guess our hunches, which leads to indecision and inactivity. Orgonite has been a wonderful tool for dismantling that training because the observable results are so astonishing when we will follow our internal guidance when distributing it. It’s like we can’t fail.
Carol and I hope to help you all maintain your leading position in this industry in East Africa and probably beyond there. You’ve also been getting helpful advice from others. Most of what we do is the result of others’ contributions, of course. Collaborative efforts are so much better than proprietary ones!
Congo River reaches all the way to the Atlantic and what Chris and you have been doing in the Democratic Republic of Congo will certainly spread to the west [Image Can Not Be Found] The main highways in DRC, not far to the west of where you were working, are rivers that feed into that stream. We know that orgonite has a special affinity for water. The Lualaba River, where you and Chris were in DRC, becomes the Congo River to the north where it starts moving west. I read that in some places the Congo River is 750 feet deep, which makes it the deepest river in the world. The only river with more volume is the Amazon and those two rivers and their regions are very similar.
We’re looking forward to more of your reports from Rwanda, Jane. I bet you didn’t expect to stay so long.
~Don