The Odyssey of a Family:

Reconciliation in Trans Mara

by Carl E. Hansen

Accompanied by their two youngest teenage daughters, the author and his companion leave behind a comfortable life in Canada and move to Kenya. They make their home in Ogwedhi, a village on the boundary between South Nyanza and the Trans Mara Region of Rift Valley Province. Where a bloody massacre had left hatred and distrust between the Maasai and their Luo and Kissi neighbors, this couple takes up the challenge of directing a comprehensive project designed to bring peace and reconciliation through wholistic community development.   

Their successful efforts at bringing together former “enemy” tribes comes at a personal cost to their own family. Separated, feeling abandoned, their two eldest daughters must remain in college in the USA, while the two younger ones face the loneliness of being confined to boarding at the Rift Valley Academy.     

This story is unusual in that this missionary intervention was initiated by the local Maasai leadership, not a foreign “sending” agency. The nomadic Maasai elders invited the Kenya Mennonite neighbors to recruit a missionary to assist them in leaving their nomadic way of life and adapting to more modern sedentary living.

The elders specified five objectives for their project: “We want primary schools for our children, a clinic for our sick, a church for our spiritual needs, animal husbandry to improve our cattle, and agricultural development since we will become farmers.”  The Ogwedhi-Sigawa Community Development Project (OSP) became a model for such intervention. The lasting result was a radical transformation of the community, including the planting of an indigenous Maasai church.

The project was launched in 1979. The events of this story took place from 1985 to 1991.

About the Book

What People Are Saying

I found this well written book to be a realistic, honest, and down to earth portrayal of missionary life of an expatriate family in a third world setting. It includes the challenges and the outcome. — Charlotte Plumer

This is an amazing historical record of missionary involvement.  I heartily recommend these amazing books for your inspiration and encouragement -- your greater understanding of the global church! — Leon Ressler

This is a very interesting read. Mennonite Rev. Carl Hansen, his wife, and two teenage daughters leave Canada and go to Kenya to conduct missionary work for tribal reconciliation and community organization. The 308-page book, with many pictures of their lives there, describes their activities. It reads a bit like a combined memoir and a diary with details regarding day-to-day family life, friends and people visited, the many health challenges, church development, and community organizing between 1985 and 1991. The "Cattle Theft and the Golden Rule" is a particularly interesting chapter. Hansen has written an informative book that gives the reader a glimpse into the lives of East African tribes and a dedicated missionary family. — Dr. Thomas Syre