Sunday, 31 January 2010

20 days in

Hi all! Sorry for the lack of contact but Ive not been near a computer for a good couple of weeks now.

Before I came away I was convinced that I would have no trouble at all writing a blog; after all I would have so much to say! But it seems that is the problem. Imagine that you had been picked up and put down on another planet and then 20 days later sat down in front of a screen and tried to describe it to those still at home. What would you begin with? The smell? The food? The faces? (Tropical, monotonous and smiley respectively by the way.)


The view outside my window

I am still in the training center and getting a little bored of Sexual Reproductive Health training (SRH) now. There is only so may times you can talk about the most serious of things before they begin to lose all meaning. In fact - as a purely educative tool of course - we have invented HIV Cluedo. Its mostly the same except instead of the revolver the rope and the lead piping we have methods of HIV transmission such as breast milk, genital sores and blood transfusions. In case you're interested it was Mrs White in the ballroom with rough sex.

Last Sunday we all took a trip to the source of the Nile just outside Jinja with all of the volunteers. It is a bay where the water flows out of Lake Victoria and begins a journey which will take 3 months to reach the delta in Egypt. It was a beautiful sight, all the more so for the beer we had in the little bar next to the water as the sun sank down. This was soon followed by bad dancing to bad Ugandan hip hop on the little wooden dance floor. Our Ugandan counterparts found our attempts at rhythm truly hilarious but joined in to show us how its done.


Me and the girls at the source of the Nile

Health wise, other than the odd dizzy spell probably due to dehydration, I have been unaffected by the drama around me. Four out of seven international vols are down with malaria, two have had it twice and one had that as well as a bacterial chest infection and suspected dysentery! Considering all this the mood is pretty cheerful, though those of us who have remained healthy and malaria free are beginning to feel left out.

I have found out where my placement will be for the next six months. It is a village called Busede about fifty minutes north of Jinja. Other than that I know very little except that it has a reputation for sugar cane and the phone signal is sporadic. My placement partner is a community volunteer called Joyce who is lovely and I will be living with 2 boys called Joseph and Myco in what is supposedly a two room house (though being the only girl I'm guaranteed my own room). The boys have promised to teach me how to cook Ugandan food and I have assured them that they will grow to love sausage and mash, mainly as that's all I think I will be confident enough to cook on a charcoal stove!

That's all I have time for at the moment but I will try and update again before I head off to the village for a good few weeks out of contact. As promised my Ugandan mobile number is +256785899470 feel free to send me a text any time. Also if you are feeling especially generous my postal address is Anna Corbett, SPW, Plot 6, Acacia Rd, Jinja Municipality. Books are my major craving as I have already devoured three since iv been here, though two were twilight so they don't really count (yes I have finally succumbed). Packages and letters take a month to get through the postal system here so to all those whose letters I will be writing in the coming months please be patient.

Speak to you all as soon as I can and hope you all had a wonderful January.
Anna xxx

Sunday, 17 January 2010

The Netherlands is famous....

My God where do I even begin! It feels like I've been here forever already not 7 days, yet at the same time I am so lost in most situations!

We got here at 10am on Sunday, totally exhausted after not sleeping at all on the 10 hour flight. We were met at the airport by Emma (a man's name in Uganda) who took us to a shopping center where we were told we should buy things like wellies and mosquito nets. Dreamily we bought whatever we were told with no idea whether the prices were good or bad or what the notes in our hands represented in "real" money - we now know it was damn expensive! Setting out on the road every building seemed to double up as a beauty parlor, furniture shop, hairdressers, bar, clothes store, restaurant and anything else under the sun. The bright pinks and yellows of the buildings painted the colors of mobile phone companies contrasted sharply with the green mountains and red roads. After falling asleep in the van dispite the views we arrived at our training center.

The center is located about 45 minutes from Kampala just off the main road to Jinga. After expecting to be in a city it was a lovely surprise to be in beautiful hills surrounded by green tropical vegetation and dusty tracks (pictures to come when i remember to bring my camera next time!). To be honest, after being introduced to 30 smiling people, shown our dorm rooms with about 9 beds hung with mosquito nets as well as the outside loo, I had a small "what the hell am I doing here" moment. Looking back now it was probably just the tiredness. The longer I stay here the happier I am getting.

The training is quite intense: 9 to 5 every weekday with a half day on Saturday. The most interesting day so far has been the "cultural awareness" session. Pieces of flip chart paper were put up on the wall with the names of all the countries that were represented among the volunteers. We were then invited to go round and write a rumor or an assumption that we had about that place so that the people from that place could correct it. Poor Joyce. She is from the Netherlands and on that paper was written things like "they practice female circumcision" and "there is segregation of whites and blacks". She stood there, totally aghast, explaining that this was totally untrue! On the UK page was written "you are all watched by one big camera which records everything you do". We explained the only thing wrong with that was that there were actually lots of cameras.

Towards the end of the week we have been getting into the sexual and reproductive health lessons we will be teaching in schools. At first it was all a bit embarrassing but Uganda solved that by sending us a tropical downpour. It echoed so loudly on the tin roof that we were forced to shout explanations for erections, ejaculation and wet dreams at the top of our lungs which certainly broke the ice.

I'm running out of time here so let me just say I'm having a fantastic if challenging time and missing many of you. Next time I promise a phone number and some pictures.

Monday, 4 January 2010

Packing

Give or take a couple of things: my life for the next year!



Sunday, 3 January 2010

Books

This is a post culled from my other blog that seems to make more sense here. My reaction to the unknown is always to read about it! Must be the historian in me: study breeds familiarity. Here is a list of some wonderful books on Africa and/or the AIDS crisis.

Blood River: A Journey to Africa's Broken Heart by Tim Butcher - excited but upsetting. Granddads remember when cars were on the road and the kids have never seen them because of the total collapse of central Africa's infrastructure and tourist industry.

The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver - fiction but beautiful. It changed the whole way I thought about the challenges facing Africa and the African people. Highly recommended.

Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe - Stunning, experienced a bit of post colonel guilt to be honest. It's a very difficult issue because in some way there is almost no point in regretting it, its done, but it was awful to read of the traditional African beliefs from the point of view of them being ripped to shreds.

The Shadow of the Sun: My African Life by Ryszard Kapuscinski - Beautiful love letter to Africa by a journalist who covered 40 years of strife there. You are permitted little glimpses into these jewels of stories, sometimes never knowing how they began and sometimes not seeing how they ended. Seems to be a metaphor for the fragmented nature of being on the road.

HIV/AIDS A Very Short Introduction Does what it says on the tin, short and clinical but informative.

The Wisdom of Whores by Elizabeth Pisani - a very challenging read about the "business" of AIDS prevention and treatment in Asia. Her account of the fight for funding and ridiculous protectionist policies that cost lives and billions of dollars made my blood boil.

Have these books helped prepare me? I suppose that's a question I can't answer until I get there! What they have done is make me ask more questions of myself and my purpose in going away. I took my first malaria tablet today! One week to go.