Hotel Pullman Abidjan
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Travel Blogs from Abidjan
Baptisms and seminars
... at such times, that angels were inscribing new names in the book of life, and that the Bible says there is joy in heaven when a sinner repents. That’s a profound concept when we consider it in all it represents.
We bumped and bounced our way back to La Mé where we again congratulated our new family members and I said goodbye to those I wouldn’t see again until my next visit, half a year away at least.
Back on the blacktopped ...
Visit to La Mé
... US and many other areas, many or most people don’t have an ancestral home, weren’t as attached to a particular locale and that many people moved often and didn’t expect to return anywhere particular later in life. I explained that I didn’t have a village, that I’d moved a dozen times when I was young (my father was a pastor) and that I didn’t have anywhere particular to which I needed to return. They were startled and ...
Arrival in Abidjan
... the ***** and Bani Rivers meet. Among other trade items huge slabs of salt arrive by boat from Timbuktu just down river, slabs that Touareg tribesmen cut from a prehistoric seabed in the Sahara Desert, and transport by camel caravan. Tasting that salt was an other-worldly experience. Mopti is also the jumping off spot for a visit to the village of Djenné where the world’s largest mud-brick mosque is located, and to the amazing Dogon cliff village areas.
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Out of Africa?
... in country and a lady in La Mé had ask to talk about baptism, and I didn’t want to cancel the appointment.
Just before 09:00 Paul arrived with his son, Seussié, the car company manager, and the driver, who did not give his name. I paid for the car and we loaded up and headed out toward La Mé. We could not go the most direct routes because during and right after heavy rains, certain low-lying streets are so far under water they are impassible. ...
Visits around Abidjan
... said for many people in many countries today, even the wealthiest and most stable.
After a quick lunch I walk back to the hotel. Paul Tia comes by shortly thereafter with a battered orange taxi. The driver is the husband of a woman who attends services in Abidjan. The car shudders alarmingly as we start up. The clutch is nearly gone. We drive out of the center of Abidjan toward Adiopodoumé on the outskirts where Paul lives and where ...
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