Monthly Archive: December 2016

There’s a world outside your window

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Matthews was Father Christmas again this year. We handed out 40 bags today to the neighbor kids. Thanks to my siblings for the tiny toy donations. They arrived late last year so I saved them.

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Matthews wants me to go with him to his school in Kamuli so Father Christmas hand out sodas after the first of the year

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To avoid the mob scene from last year, my landlady Margaret mobilized the moms in advance and we had them in line. We still ran out unfortunately.

My work has been sporadic (again). The whole country slows down this time of year. Schools are out until later in January. Quite a few volunteers have gone home for Christmas or taking trips around the country or Rwanda. The November 2014 Education cohort have almost all ended their service. My cohort has now been here the longest.
I’m trying to close out a Peace Corps grant for teaching and building 20 sack gardens. So Matthews has been taking me around to monitor how the ones we built have been doing, and learn whether the farmers and youth have built any more. It is gratifying when we see that others have made their own sack gardens. In Bomba, where we taught Ronnie’s entire village, there are seven new sack gardens scattered about. I taught record keeping to many of these groups, and unfortunately, there is less adherence, with the few bright exceptions of “early adaptors”. “Slowly but slowly” as they say here.

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This guy built a little fence around his three sack gardens. At a few places the neighbors simply stole the seedlings we had planted tsk tsk.

Of course the BBC has been covering the same world news you hear, such as the ongoing tragedy of Syria, and the Trump/Putin love fest. I wonder how much US people hear about some current scary situations in Africa, mainly in three countries.

In Gambia, it’s leader Yahya Jammeh has ruled the country for 22 years after seizing power in a coup. He initially conceded defeat to opposition leader Barrow in the December 1 election, but subsequently rejected the official results. It has brought to country to crisis. He is supposed to turn over power in January.
As a local editorial states:
Leaders who come to power via the gun are not to be trusted. In Uganda, Rwanda, Chad, Sudan, and now Gambia all those men changed their tune chameleon-like to keep imposing themselves on the people.
When they organize elections, they do so without ever intending to hand over power regardless of the outcome of an election. Elections are a vehicle to cling on, not to advance democratic government and to improve their countries with new ideas.
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Just north of Uganda’s border, South Sudan is on the verge of full scale civil war again, with accompanying sectarian genocide feared.

I called my fellow PCV Aruna to check how his family was doing. Unfortunately the situation is so unsafe his mother and other family members recently sought refuge in a camp in Uganda. It’s not the refugee camp we toured, but it is close to Aruna’s site. He plans to visit on Christmas. More than one million of South Sudan’s estimated population of 12 million have fled to neighboring countries. Uganda alone is now host to more than 450,000 South Sudanese.

Across the western border of Uganda is the Democratic Republic of Congo. It’s leader Joseph Kabila, has said that he intends to stay on after his presidential term ends on Monday midnight, December 19 (yesterday). A court previously ruled that he can remain in power until new elections are held. However Kabila has postponed further elections indefinitely. Many observers fear that protests will break out after the deadline passes. At midnight, people blew whistles and rattled pans as part of a protest meant to symbolize the “end of the match” for Joseph Kabila.

Other than the massacre of about 100 of the rebellious King’s guard at Kasese a few weeks ago, Uganda has been calm in comparison.

I hope you all have a calm and peaceful Christmas. It looks like 2017 will be an “interesting” year.

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On the way home the other day a celebratory crowd was coming up the road. The picture is not very focused but the young man in the middle was being honored because he was going to be in a public circumcision ceremony on the next day.

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It’s been grasshopper season. I bought a little packet to snack on.

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They fry the little critters and salt them. Can you see the eyes? They are crunchy, and a good source of protein.

November

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Who needs a truck when you have a boda boda?

Sorry to be negligent about the blog recently. I’ve been a bit sick and had some low mental energy. It’s normal according to Peace Corps. Perhaps while I was gone for three weeks, my mind minimized some of the frustrations of my experience here. There is also distress about current events back home, a very late but moderate rainy season being so disruptive to the town’s grid and my meetings, and the challenge finding my niche in our new project to help youth groups. Its hard to ignore the internet, but reading books is a good distraction..

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I finally gave up on my smart phone, replacing it with new cheap one which I hope will get me through to the end of service. Photography might suffer, although I might still use my crippled phone for that. This Phone Doctor place in Jinja had my phone for a week. I lost a great picture of a lady transferring the SIM card that didn’t work on my phone to test it in her own phone, all the while nursing her baby.

ATEFO’s new contract required us to put in place nearly 600 “backyard gardens” This an ideal opportunity to spread the gospel of permagardens. However, the approach by the field staff is to get out there and slap gardens down, without the little bit of extra work to dig a permagarden, which ultimately will mean less work to maintain over the long haul and more resiliency during dry season. My counterpart and master gardener Matthews says the permagardens we dug recently are thriving. I chide Adams a bit, but ultimately what ATEFO does is a business, and profit trumps what would be best for the beneficiaries. There are many boxes the trainers will have to tick off to complete the contract, so corners will get cut.

While Matthews runs around spraying pesticides, I have gone out to visit the youth groups with a different counterpart, Amos. Each group has chosen a business, such as tomato growing, poultry rearing, vegetable selling, and candle or soap making. ATEFO provides funds to each group for start-up capital, but before they get it, I worked with a few of them to make a budget, and teach them to keep a cash book to account for it. These kids are usually very deficient in education, and not surprising, some of the money has not been accounted for very well. Amos is easier to understand as a translator, but he prefers to summarize a long conversation to real time translations,

Meanwhile I press forward to facilitate Rotary grant funding to renovate Hindocha Primary School, basically by nudging the relevant actors in the Clubs in Bugiri, Colorado and California. I really want to show something for my effort before the end of next summer, but it’s a bit of a slog.My cohort has passed the 2/3 mark, 18 months down, 9 to go. The PCVs of the Education cohort from the Fall of 2014 are starting to go home this month. It’s hard to believe my own cohort will soon to be the most experienced.

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These are coffee beans getting scooped up into bags.

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Carpenter shops. On the left beds to sleep, on the right coffins for that final sleep.


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Cute kids outside my place

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More cute kids.

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I haven’t published too many pictures of other volunteers. Some of us celebrated a pot luck Thanksgiving in Jinja. All three guys from my cohort on the right have not cut their hair since arrival. Coy in the middle is a “no shave in 2016” guy.

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Peace Corps Ladies. Carm in the middle is leaving soon, she’s been filling out applications for grad school.

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Birds land in front of my mirrored window and can’t see me.

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First picture with the new phone. A selfie in Kampala with Aine, the director of the Blue House girls orphanage in Kazo which my sister Karen and I are planning to visit next year. We might do a Peace Corps camp there. I picked up a new pair of glasses while I was there. Each PCV gets a new pair during service. The dust and grit scratch them horribly. Forget about contact lenses.

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Blair’s treatments are going quite well, based on a recent PET scan to evaluate it. She sent me this photo from a recent chemo session. Her last chemo is February 2. She will be happy to stop being sick every two weeks, and looks forward to growing her hair back.