Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Jambo from TZ



I’m alive! Sorry for the delay in posting, I have been living a very technology free life here in Tanzania…and it has been great! I am living in a small town called Usa River which is the half way point between Arusha and Moshi. It is a nice, relatively quiet and is a great place to call home for these three weeks.

Everything is going just swimmingly! We arrived a little over a week ago and have been chugging along smoothly. My daily adventure starts out with me waking up and running in the morning. Then eating a breakfast (homemade sourdough bread, peanut butter, bananas, mangos, honey) prepared by Joyness, they lady we are staying with. Then Kate and I walk 5K to the local supermarket/restaurant called Rotterdam Garden where we are picked up by our supervisors and brought to the Seeway Center.

Here’s what I did last week: (my main tasks included assuming my role as a glorified camp counselor and helping the kids recall their math facts and reading skills. Most of the kids were enjoying their last week of holiday break and so our main goal was to help prepare them for the upcoming school week.)

·         Monday- learned the 10ish kids names by playing board and card games with them. Facilitating and participating in soccer and tag games
·         Tuesday- making individual math quizzes for each student and correcting them. Walking the kids on their “path to school” to help jog their memory
·         Wednesday- market with our supervisor in the morning. This was a totally awesome experience because it was a traditional Tanzanianopen-air market where everyone was yelling about, and selling their specific food. Kate and I were able to buy all the fruits, veggies and beans that we needed for the whole week…AND we did it all in Kiswahili. Go us! Once we got back to the center we walked with the kids on their “path to school” again…but this time we walked on the correct path—yesterday they lead us on the wrong one. Oops, good thing we reviewed it.
·         Thursday- Attended a networking meeting with our supervisors and help construct their constitution for their newly recognized NGO. (SO COOL!) This was really fun because I have never been on the construction side of an NGO, so it was interesting to get that new experience. Once we got back to the center I played some music (keyboards, drums and guitars) with the kids and read out loud many books (they love this).
·         Friday- Tanzania celebrated their “Union Day” which is the unionizing of Tanganyika and Zanzibar. We celebrated it at the center with the kids and also recognized some of the kids birthdays. We ate cupcakes, sang happy birthday and played games. Later, I assisted one of my advisors on a “field trip” with 5 of the 7-10 year old girls. We went out to lunch and then went to the Cultural HeritageMuseum in Arusha, which was a lot of fun. A tad bit overwhelming for the young girls because there was so much artwork—but they took a special interest in the sculpture chairs. It’s the little things that make you happy I suppose. We then went to get ice cream. I have never seen kids eat ice cream so slowly—it took them 30 minutes to finish one scoop of chocolate gelato. I guess it’s very much true; East African’s do not like cold things!
·         Saturday- Took a DollaDolla (small bus) into Arusha to meet up with our friend Chloe. We navigated our way through Arusha to find this quaint little coffee shop where we rested. We explored, wrote our papers which were due on Monday and talked with the people that were staying at our hostel.
·         Sunday- Ate breakfast at our favorite coffee shop, visited an internet café, went to the open air market to get some fruit and then took a DollaDolla back to our Usa River home
It has been a very fun and interesting week.

My low this week has been the roads. Due to the rainy season the roads are absolutely horrible. I really mean horrible. I am someone who can tolerate a lot of things, but these roads are just SO bumpy and rocky and uneven it makes driving and running notpleasurable.
But my high for this week was getting acquainted with Usa River, the Seeway Center and the kids and going into Arusha. I feel very comfortable and confident in the area and am really enjoying my time.
My aspiration (ECIT SHOUTOUT) for next week is to practice my Kiswahili more. In Tanzania they speak more Kiswahili and so by default I have been speaking more Kiswahili here then I have throughout my entire semester, but I would really like to solidify my skills these next two weeks.

Random facts:
·         Everything in Tanzania is INCREDIBLY CHEEP
·         I took a DollaDolla bus from Usa River to Arusha (40 minutes) for 600 Tsh which is equal to about $.60 USD.
·         We stayed in a hostel for $9 USD…granted it was a little sketchy…it did the job!
·         Math is called Maths…I think it’s the way the British call it too?
·         At the center we feed the kids “pipi” (which means candy in Kiswahili) which is essentially a snack time. Because a majority of the kids come from poor and dysfunctional situations, they are malnourished and are very underweight so we give them a “fattening” snack every day around 3:30 pm. One day we gave the kids a cracker with a layer of butter on it and a layer of peanut butter on top of that. I’ll leave you to decide you’re feelings about that…(ewwww!)
·         Every morning, while Kate and I wait to get picked up, we see a bus that passes by us that has FACEBOOK written across the entire bus in huge letters.
·         We had to switch our phones to Tanzanian numbers and to get a new SIM cardcosted $2 USD
·         One day last week we stopped at an internet café called the “Mzungu Café” (that means white person)
·         I cannot walk down the streets without being cat called, whistled at, hissed at or taunted by the local young boys/men (I won’t miss this)
·         Kate, Chloe and I received a bill for our lunch that read 420,000 tsh. This was equal to about $25 USD. WHAT?! How is this even possible?
·         We are forbidden to walk on the streets at night because there are no street lights and the bridge we would have to cross supposedly is the “most dangerous bridge in the area” because people hide under it and grab your ankles
·         Kate and I learned how to make a delicious beans and vegetable mix. This has been our diet for the past week. I suppose it is a good source of protein?
·         Our house has a guard dog who weighs as much as me…but actually, not kidding.
·         I saw a chameleon change from green, to grey, to brown to blue as it fell from the tree onto the gravel then was picked up by my supervisor who was wearing a blue shirt. HOW COOL!
·         I think I am going turn into a Mango or a Banana.
·         Most Tanzanians smell better then most Kenyans
·         A pikipiki (motorcycle) has so many more uses in Tanzania then it does in America. (Here it carries 3 people, acts as a taxi, can carry stacks of boxes or egg crates, huge bundles of grass for cows and long planks of wood!)

So that last post is about last week…here’swhat’s been happening this week! Sorry for the sporadic, unorganized posting…doing what I can.

Monday- went to the center and observed the nursery school (3-7 years old). My class was the “most advanced class” which simply meant that my kids could speak the most English…and it was very limited at that. It was very interesting to observe the teaching techniques of “Teacher Elisa”. She was very stern and strict but devoted. She made frequent barks at her students to “sit up straight” “look at the blackboard” but contradictorily was very excited when teaching and fed off of the students enthusiasm when they got a word correct. I very much enjoyed this observation and got me very excited to pursue teaching?! After lunch Kate and I were assigned to make wall hangings for the “baby class”. We spent the next 3 hours writing bubble letter cards for the alphabet, for example:A with a picture of an appleK, Key, U Umbrella and so on. Because both Kate and I enjoy menial and particular tasks like this, it was right up our ally. (Als, you would have gotten a kick out of this) We still haven’t finished so are very eager to get back and finish!
Tuesday- Instead of going to the center we went into town (Arusha) with our supervisors to sell their 300 ish eggs. At Seeway there are 600+ chickens that they then collect the eggs from to sell. They make good money off of them because they have “yellow yolks” which, compared to the unhealthily fed,“white yolks” is a delicacy…and more expensive. We spent the morning driving around Arusha dropping eggs off. During the afternoon we were set free in Arusha to do what we wanted. Kate and I went out to lunch at this hole in the wall place, McMoody’s then explored around a bit more. Around 4:00 pm we took a DollaDolla (bus) into Usa River and walked home!

I am hoping to observe the nursery school a little bit more because it was a great time—they kids are so much fun! I’ll keep you posted…when I have the opportunity!

Hope everyone is doing well! SLU kids—good luck on that work, get it doneeeeeee…you’re almost there!

Sorry I do not have any photos (Andy, I know this is the only reason you read the blog)…there is no Wifi so there is no way I can put my pictures up because I am using a series of random “internet café” computers. Pole sana!

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