Thursday, December 21, 2006

Sky Blue Christmas

Sky Blue Christmas Christmas is a social holiday, spent with family and friends. Office Christmas parties, family gatherings and whatnot, just as it should be. Like them or not they are interwoven into the fabric of what defines the holiday season. I’ve said before that Uganda feels more like another planet than another country and the Christmas season is no different. It’s like a ghost town here and nowhere does it ‘look’ or feel like Christmas. The kids are on holidays so the schools are empty. People from compassion are leaving to spend time with their relatives, Jacob is going on a mini-vacation to Egypt. I did hear some Christmas music blasting from a small shop on my way into town the other day, which still feels strange without cold weather, snow and dead looking lawns and trees all around. But the Christmas season is about more. It’s a ‘spirit’ that is traditionally about giving. So Jacob and I decided to throw a little Christmas party for our friends at Sky Blue restaurant. Over the past 7 months, Sky Blue has become an oasis for us. It’s our "Great, Good Place", the 3rd place apart from our homes and work. The Cheers bar where ‘Everyone knows your name." It’s that place that you go to at any time "and they’re always glad you came." There are no obligations to go, no timeframe of when you’re expected to return. Nothing you’re expected to do there, just be. The longer you are away the more they miss you. It’s a place I go to to read or type on my computer or to watch the NFL or an occasional movie. Nobody stares at me or calls me ‘Muzungu’. Jacob and I joke relentlessly with the staff. They accommodate us like none other. There’s Bruno, the small guy from Kabale who never has a down day. He’s freakin hilarious and says some of the most random things. He hugs me if he hasn’t seen me in a while and he reminds me of Chris Monroe. Annett who is from the Central and doesn’t speak the local language. Christine who they call Akazungu, meaning "small white person" because of her size and light skin. Felix who we call ‘Pineapple Felix’ because that’s what he thought I said when I ordered ‘Pineapple fritters’. Then there’s the kitchen staff: Prossy the head cook and then other Prossy, plus a bunch of others who peel potatoes and cook Matooke (plantain). Plus Sharon the manager. It’s just the best group of people, really. So tonight, Jacob and I bought a ‘cake’ from the ‘super market’ and took it for a ‘Christmas Party’. You would have thought that President was coming to eat there or something! They just thought it was the best thing! There was cake for everyone and we even pitched in a few liters of Coke. They turned the radio up and danced and laughed. They even called a photographer in to take some pictures of Jacob and I cutting the cake and then distributing it to each of them individually. We use a lot of the local language with them mostly because it’s a fun and carefree environment to use it. If you walked in at any given moment you would hear us saying "I want to fight", "they don’t want me", "Oh my!", "bring the electricity" or any number of quirky, random phrases that just came to be. Immediately following that party we had another ‘End of the year’ party to attend. We had both received invitations for this one and the invitations said that it was to start at 6pm. Of course this is Africa which means that it’ll start significantly later than that, so we figured that when we showed up an hour and a half late the party would be in full swing… much to our surprise we were the 2nd and 3rd guests to arrive… So saying a party begins at 6 means that people will actually show up around 9pm apparently. They also said that they had some videos and speeches to go through first before dinner! We made a judgment call and hit the exit doors otherwise I think we’d still be there! 5 Month Package A package arrived from my sister, Jennifer, nearly 5 months after she sent it. It was stamped at the end of July from her local post office and then it also had a stamp from the Uganda customs office for the 15th of December. Where it was in between then and now…God only knows. I’ve heard of packages taking 6 and 7 months to arrive, but I’m glad it did come. The guys at the post office here told me "The packages always come, you might not know when but they always do come." That was reassuring. Health Report Ran for the first time this morning. Was a little rusty from the time off but I think I’m basically fully recovered. Close Shave After trying to grow my hair out for about a year and hoping to get it into a pony tail someday, it’s now all gone! I’ve hit that late 20s stage in life where God’s curse to male egos known as ‘male pattern baldness’ hits with tsunami like force. I was tired of feeling like I needed to wear a hat everywhere to hide it. I needed a change and the hair had to go. The general consensus is that my ‘white friends’ think it looks better and that I look younger because of it (Jacob said I looked like a shady tv evangelist before), but the Ugandans HATE that I cut my hair off!! All of them have said that I had really nice hair. That was one thing I did like about trying to grow it out here, nobody really cared or said anything bad about it. One girl here said I looked like a ‘hunk’ before and that I’ve lost my ‘hunky-ness’ now!! Breakdown in Communication My computer is broken. It works fine but the screen won’t stay up so it’s in Kampala for repairs, but it’s really hindered my emailing and blogging and picture downloading. Plus, they had a power surge or something at Africare and all but 1 of their 15 computers are somehow fried, plus their internet is hit and miss. It’s a hassle but in all honesty it puts me in the same playing field as all of the other PCVs here. New Years Resolution I don’t often make New Years Resolutions, I try to make ‘life resolutions’ just on the fly as the year goes on, but if I had to make one it would be to really focus in on why I’m here and to try to implement some ideas I’ve had, despite not really knowing how to get money to fund them. Have you heard how sports commentators sometimes talk about teams playing down to the competition? It’s like that here sometimes. They say the Peace Corps is the toughest job you’ll ever love, and to an extent it can feel like that, but teaching was definitely tougher in regards to pressure put on by self, the school, parents, community, standards, the state, etc. Here, I can be sitting in my room having a nice long chat with a visiting friend and not think a thing about ‘missing’ work ("I wouldn’t say I’m missing work" –office space). So the only pressure here to do something is the pressure you put on yourself, and unless you’re a real go-getter it can be tough to get out there and do stuff, especially when you’re fighting language and culture barriers. So my resolution is to really try harder to be a do-er and to make something happen rather than worry about how it will happen or when it should happen. Random Factoid Cows can move FAST! At least the baby ones can! I was riding my bike in the rain down an extremely steep dirt road when all of a sudden a calf appeared through a brush fence right in front of me. Hitting the poor calf was completely unavoidable. My brakes were soaked and dirty and wouldn’t work properly so I braced myself for contact and quickly scanned the place for a reasonably soft landing spot. Just when I thought I was going to be the proud new owner of a lamed calf, the thing developed cat-like reflexes and somehow half twitched and half jumped into a bush and out of harms way. I’ll think of that amazing young cow this weekend as I sink my teeth into a juicy hamburger in Kampala too. Blog Screening Just a reminder, at the request of the Peace Corps, after my next blog I’m going to try to ‘password protect’ my blog. If you want an invitation I’ll be happy to send you one, just email me and let me know. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!

Saturday, December 16, 2006

South Africa

Blogger has merged with google.com and due to some technical difficulties I haven’t been able to post, so when I do there will be an onslaught of blogs… I apologize for the inconsistency of posting this has caused.

I returned from South Africa yesterday after a 1 week hiatus from site for medical reasons. A 3.5 hour flight from Johannesburg to Nairobi then a 1 hr flight to Entebbe. Again, it was mostly a preventive surgery to prevent further complications.

I could easily write pages (that is if the web had ‘pages’) about my experiences there but I’ll try to touch on the highlights.

South Africa, at least the city I was in, Pretoria, looks just like the US: great hospitals, nice roads, very beautifully landscaped houses, malls, movie theaters, swimming pools, live music and theater, fantastic food and a bunch of white people everywhere. The weather there was awesome! I sat outside several evenings by the pool reading and writing, just enjoying the pleasantness of peace and quiet.

The driver who picked me up at the airport was a character. He was a bald, middle aged white man with a thick brown goatee. At first I couldn’t understand a word he was saying and was even doubting that he was speaking English at all. He sounded something like Brad Pitt’s character in Snatch where subtitles are needed just to get what he’s saying. He began telling me stories of the racism and hate in and around Johannesburg. He told me about an African man who insulted his wife, she in turn insulted him and his mother and then broke the man’s arm using karate (girl power!). The man, after being released from jail, then sat outside their house for several days until my driver unloaded his .38 caliber handgun into the back of his car “just a few days ago”!! The woman who picked me up (who might have been his wife) told how their house had been burglarized 3 times and how they had increased the size of the wall (not fence, but wall) around their house and added razor wire and an electric fence to the top…

Peace Corps Volunteers are not permitted into Johannesburg without written permission from the Peace Corps, it’s that unsafe.

Most people’s homes in the “rich and nice” place I stayed, The Rose Guesthouse, had huge walls with razor wire or electric fences on top, massive German Shepherd dogs and ADT security systems. One person commented that in the USA we build prisons to keep the criminals inside but in South Africa they build prisons around the homes to keep the criminals out…

I was glad the procedure was done in S. Africa. The hospital was fantastic, the food was great, and the procedure was significantly more painful and uncomfortable than I thought it was going to be.

I met 2 other PCVs who were in S. Africa for surgeries. A girl from Ohio who’s serving in Malawi and the other from Buffalo, NY who is serving in Ghana where my cousin is also serving as a PCV! James, from Ghana is working in his village and the surrounding communities to help them build concrete, ventilated pit latrines, which he said the country is lacking. He went on to explain that in Ghana the villagers have been told NOT to build the latrines from local materials (logs, sticks, mud and banana leaves) and that they must be built of concrete. Here in Uganda, most (95%) have latrines and most of them are of the local kind. In Ghana, apparently, they just go in the bush which contributes greatly to the spread of several diseases!

The 3 of us had a great time doing everything together from watching several movies (Casino Royale, Borat! and The Holliday) , eating at nice Italian restaurants and listening to live jazz, attending the ambassador’s Christmas party (which felt like Christmas in July!!), swimming in the guesthouse pool and going to, what felt like a very normal, Methodist church together.

Being Med-Evaked (the PC term for Medically Evacuated from site) was pretty cool, I have to admit. It was like a mini vacation paid for entirely by the Peace Corps (ps, thanks for paying your taxes this year!), a week away and a chance to be an ‘American’ again, however there’s a constant feeling that you have to be watching your back in fear of what could be lurking behind you. I live in a village full of black African people who stare at me, call me names, laugh at me and think that I am loaded with money, but they don’t hate, they’re just curious mostly. I feel incredibly safe here. I’ve concluded that I would much rather live in a 3rd world country in peace than live in the midst of that hate and fear, which they claim, “you get used to it after a while…”.

Random Factoid

Eating while you are waling is considered bad manners here. The premise is that you should take the time to sit and eat, after all, the one thing they do have here is time (as opposed to money).

Blogger has merged with google.com and due to some technical difficulties I haven’t been able to post, so when I do there will be an onslaught of blogs… I apologize for the inconsistency of posting this has caused.

I returned from South Africa yesterday after a 1 week hiatus from site for medical reasons. A 3.5 hour flight from Johannesburg to Nairobi then a 1 hr flight to Entebbe. Again, it was mostly a preventive surgery to prevent further complications.

I could easily write pages (that is if the web had ‘pages’) about my experiences there but I’ll try to touch on the highlights.

South Africa, at least the city I was in, Pretoria, looks just like the US: great hospitals, nice roads, very beautifully landscaped houses, malls, movie theaters, swimming pools, live music and theater, fantastic food and a bunch of white people everywhere. The weather there was awesome! I sat outside several evenings by the pool reading and writing, just enjoying the pleasantness of peace and quiet.

The driver who picked me up at the airport was a character. He was a bald, middle aged white man with a thick brown goatee. At first I couldn’t understand a word he was saying and was even doubting that he was speaking English at all. He sounded something like Brad Pitt’s character in Snatch where subtitles are needed just to get what he’s saying. He began telling me stories of the racism and hate in and around Johannesburg. He told me about an African man who insulted his wife, she in turn insulted him and his mother and then broke the man’s arm using karate (girl power!). The man, after being released from jail, then sat outside their house for several days until my driver unloaded his .38 caliber handgun into the back of his car “just a few days ago”!! The woman who picked me up (who might have been his wife) told how their house had been burglarized 3 times and how they had increased the size of the wall (not fence, but wall) around their house and added razor wire and an electric fence to the top…

Peace Corps Volunteers are not permitted into Johannesburg without written permission from the Peace Corps, it’s that unsafe.

Most people’s homes in the “rich and nice” place I stayed, The Rose Guesthouse, had huge walls with razor wire or electric fences on top, massive German Shepherd dogs and ADT security systems. One person commented that in the USA we build prisons to keep the criminals inside but in South Africa they build prisons around the homes to keep the criminals out…

I was glad the procedure was done in S. Africa. The hospital was fantastic, the food was great, and the procedure was significantly more painful and uncomfortable than I thought it was going to be.

I met 2 other PCVs who were in S. Africa for surgeries. A girl from Ohio who’s serving in Malawi and the other from Buffalo, NY who is serving in Ghana where my cousin is also serving as a PCV! James, from Ghana is working in his village and the surrounding communities to help them build concrete, ventilated pit latrines, which he said the country is lacking. He went on to explain that in Ghana the villagers have been told NOT to build the latrines from local materials (logs, sticks, mud and banana leaves) and that they must be built of concrete. Here in Uganda, most (95%) have latrines and most of them are of the local kind. In Ghana, apparently, they just go in the bush which contributes greatly to the spread of several diseases!

The 3 of us had a great time doing everything together from watching several movies (Casino Royale, Borat! and The Holliday) , eating at nice Italian restaurants and listening to live jazz, attending the ambassador’s Christmas party (which felt like Christmas in July!!), swimming in the guesthouse pool and going to, what felt like a very normal, Methodist church together.

Being Med-Evaked (the PC term for Medically Evacuated from site) was pretty cool, I have to admit. It was like a mini vacation paid for entirely by the Peace Corps (ps, thanks for paying your taxes this year!), a week away and a chance to be an ‘American’ again, however there’s a constant feeling that you have to be watching your back in fear of what could be lurking behind you. I live in a village full of black African people who stare at me, call me names, laugh at me and think that I am loaded with money, but they don’t hate, they’re just curious mostly. I feel incredibly safe here. I’ve concluded that I would much rather live in a 3rd world country in peace than live in the midst of that hate and fear, which they claim, “you get used to it after a while…”.

Random Factoid

Eating while you are waling is considered bad manners here. The premise is that you should take the time to sit and eat, after all, the one thing they do have here is time (as opposed to money).

Health Report and Blog Restrictions

Invitation Only

I visited the PC office in Kampala this weekend for a medical checkup this week (more on that later) and was called into the office by the PC Director. It was actually more like “Have a seat,” then she picked up the phone, pressed a button and said 2 words, “Brian’s here.” I sat in silence, patiently waiting to find out what exactly “Brian’s here” meant and for who. Eventually the acting APCD came into the room and sat down.

We had an at length conversation about blogs and blogging. The PC has some guidelines about volunteers posting blogs. First, we’re not allowed to use the PC official logo anywhere on our blog. Second, there must be some disclaimer stating that the blog is our own and not the views of the US or the Peace Corps. Those things I’ve done. The PC is concerned about blogs for a couple of reasons. It can compromise the safety and security of the volunteer and perhaps even open the door to a terrorist act by displaying the exact location of the volunteer. As volunteers we are considered a ‘soft’ target for terrorist activities and it’s difficult for me to imagine the Taliban traveling to my tiny little village in the middle of Africa to kidnap me or to torture my cat until I reveal all of the secrets I know about the US government, but I guess stranger things have happened.

The main reason this is even coming up now is that a volunteer recently had some thing posted on her blog which were then discovered by her organization. I won’t go into details but in essence she was using her blog more as a personal diary where she unloaded her thoughts and frustrations, thinking that the PC or organization wouldn’t find out and they did. I don’t think that the people in the PC office here reads through our blogs frequently but they’ve said they’ll read through from time to time just to see how we’re doing at our site. They told me specifically that they found nothing on my site that would seem offensive but it would be possible that my organization could still misconstrue something from what I had said.

I hate to protect the blog on one hand because on several occasions random people have stumbled across it by doing a Google search and then contacted me. On one hand it feels a little like I’m being imposed on my freedom of speech, but on the other hand their job is to take the ‘safe’ approach. I agreed to try it and see. If I feel like it’s not working out then I’ll remove the restrictions. I just feel like it would be inconvenient for someone to be at a computer, looking for information about Uganda or the Peace Corps and have to send an email, which may not be answered for weeks, requesting permission to view a blog that they don’t even know is worthwhile to view or not…

So what’s next?

Beginning in January I’ll send out an invitation to anyone who wants it and to my regular readers that I know. I have no problem sending anyone the invitation. Google said that you have to have a gmail.com email account or get one within 30 days of accepting the invitation, which is another reason I don’t like it. But I’ll try it and see how it goes.

Not Nicholas!!

Compassion’s digital camera was stolen this week. We leave things out all of the time and the kids never take them. It amazes me sometimes, really. I leave my laptop lying around and my camera and my bag without any worries whatsoever. Compassion has a new digital camera and Serinah had been using it that morning, she left her office for a few minutes and when she came back it was gone! There had been caregivers and kids there who were picking up some goats that had been purchased for them as income generating projects, so there were a few suspects. We looked high and low for it but it was nowhere to be found. We talked about putting a notice on the local radio about it too. Apparently, Nicholas’ Uncle, the Nicholas I love who I visited in Kampala Hospital who couldn’t walk or even sit up and the doctors couldn’t figure out why, that Nicholas, his Uncle, knowing that Nicholas had a fascination with phones and gadgets, went home and didn’t ask but demanded that Nicholas produce the camera. Within a few seconds he brought the camera from his room and the Uncle brought it back to us. I couldn’t believe that Nicholas had taken it! Serinah even cried when she found out it was him who took it. Apparently he had taken pictures of several kids and some dogs with it… I haven’t seen the pictures yet. I asked what would happen to him now and was told that because he’s still weak from his sickness, he probably won’t be caned, but he will probably have to apologize to all of the Compassion kids for what he did.

Health Report

I traveled to Kampala 3 times this week!!! That may not sound like much but it’s a 6 hour crappy bus ride each way!! The first time was for my organization the last two were for health reasons. I’ll spare most of the details but just say that it’s a ‘guy thing’. The medical term for it is a torsion and what I have apparently is called a partial torsion. The British doctor I visited said that if it were him he would go to a Russian surgeon in town and have a minor operation which would prevent it from happening again, however, the Peace Corps has a certain protocol and has decided that I should have this operation in South Africa instead. If it had been an emergency they would have permitted me to even have the operation in a small community hospital in Mbarara which is near my site, but I’m not going to argue with a trip to South Africa. To me it’s more like going to France to have my tonsils removed. So on Monday or Tuesday I’ll fly out by myself and have this done and then fly back. It’s very minor, more of a precautionary thing than anything. It’s certainly nice to know that this system is in place for medical situations that arise and that they go over the top to ensure proper diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions.

It was certainly a concern going into the PC that I might be lying in a mud hut dying of some rare tropical disease and that nobody would even hear my cries for help, but it’s certainly not the case. In fact, before I came to Kampala I was on the cell phone with the PC nurse and the doctor discussing my condition, I was then very easily able to make arrangements to have a personal vehicle take me to the nearest Hospital in Mbarara an hour away for a general diagnosis by a local doctor, where the PC convinced me to take my Supervisor, Japheth, who was more than happy to accompany me. The PC paid for my transportation, my night’s stay in the hotel there and my supervisors. They paid for everything and even sent one of their personal drivers to pick me up the next morning so that I wouldn’t have to take public means on into Kampala for further medical assistance. Everything was just taken care of and I was in contact with the nurse the entire time, all on the Peace Corp’s dime.

End of Poverty

I’m reading a book called “The End of Poverty” by Jeffrey Sachs. Please, just put this book on your list of books to read next. Sachs is “internationally renowned for his work as an economic advisor to governments in Latin America, Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, Asia and Africa.” It’s the 2nd time I’ve read it and it’s better now than it was before.

Random Factoid – Handshakes

There’s nothing quite like a good, firm ‘American’ handshake. Uh…yeah, we don’t have those here. It’s more like they’re offering you a wet lemming rather than a hand. There’s commonly no grip whatsoever. It’s like shaking the hand of a 97-year-old woman. A handshake is often accompanied by the opposite hand touching their own elbow as a sign of respect. What’s more disturbing and strange is that if their hand is dirty or wet then they offer you their wrist to shake!! What’s up with that?? There’s even the wrist on wrist shake if both parties have dirty or wet hands… Ah, Uganda!

So let me know if you would like an invitation to continue to read the blog. Don’t be shy, even if I don’t know you I’ll send you an invite, no problem…