Page 143 - uji coba EBook INJE tahap 2
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fall down to the river for any reason. The third step was one had to guard one’s
            balance by always holding the (cable-like) hanging roots over them while walking
            along the beam.
                  Despite the threatening, highly-suppressing and very scary condition that
            haunted NJE’s team, there were also some good news in the middle of the crisis. In
            this case, the hanging roots suspended from overhanging branches of the two
            anchoring trees were long enough to hold easily. Their numbers were a lot so it was
            always available at each step taken by us while walking on the beam. Even some of
            them were inter-twined well one to another creating a long suspended cable-like
            rope which could be grapped and hold easily by us while walking on the beam. It was
            not clear how the inter-twining hanging roots could happen (were made).
                    It was almost impossible that the inter-twining process happened naturally
            by the strong blowing wind due to gravity effect. They needed two opposite winds
            blowing the two near-by hanging roots at the same time which were impossible. If
            this was done manually then who in this world would enter and walk in the jungle to
            find such large trees on both banks of a river and inter-twine every 2 hanging roots?
            Who would cut the 25-m high tree, lay it across the 20-m wide river in the jungle and
            tied it strongly to the existing two trees? This area was not public road and all this
            facility was done for free. The possibility of man’s work was also close to zero. Then
            whose work and product was it? Only one possibility, the works of the angels of God
            considering the possible fact that the river at that night time, before the torrential
            rain pouring down, was only a dried small valley in the normal condition.
            Consequently one could cross the valley easily by the ‘ordinary walking in the forest’.
            Praise Lord Jesus who is always with His servants performing His Great Commission!
                  The crossing test gave us the additional information due to the near-miss
            accident. Ps J. Rengkung lost his body’s balance while walking on the beam and
            holding the hanging roots at the point near the middle of the beam. Combining with
            the other data of the twisting of the beam towards the middle i.e. due to the most
            strong current of the river, it could be concluded that walking on the beam one
            people by one people, one after another, was dangerous due to the twist i.e. the
            twisted surface inclination and its slippery. (The previously-laid horizontal surface had
            changed its position into the inclined surface because of the strong current in the
            middle of the river). This could be overcome using more weights imposed on and
            along the beam in order to reduce the twist i.e. the cross-sectional angle of rotation
            at the middle. It meaned that we had to make a long human chain, and walked
            together on the beam by shifting our bodies to the side, step by step, along the
            beam. Since we knew roughly the size of the beam we could possibly believe on the
            strength of the tree-stem beam.
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