Friday, December 19, 2008

Arusha, Tanzania

In the short three and a half months I've been living in Kenya, I have changed a lot as an individual. Before coming to Kenya, I had never traveled by myself before. After just a few weeks in Kenya, I found myself taking a bus for 7 hours, arriving in a foreign town well after dark, just to see a friend who was living in a rural part of Kenya. Just a few weeks after that, I found myself taking a bus 15 hours overnight from Kisumu on the western coast of Kenya on Lake Victoria all the way to Mombasa on the eastern coast of Kenya on the Indian Ocean to visit with some friends for the weekend and to do some sightseeing.

This week I was supposed to be going to Arusha in Tanzania on Thursday to visit some Catholic Relief Services (CRS) programs. In a typical African fashion, I got an email Monday morning asking me if I could go to Arusha on Tuesday instead because some of the offices would be closing for holiday leave. Before I knew it, I had bought my bus ticket, packed and was at the bus stop the next morning at 6am ready to go to Tanzania. My bus was supposed to leave at 6:30am but then again TIA (this is Africa!). It didn't leave until 8am and then we ran into brake problems that had to be fixed at the border. All in all we arrived over 2 hours late and I missed my meeting and wasn't able to do site visits on Tuesday. I felt bad because people waited for me for 3 hours at the office to show me their programs, but it was entirely out of my control.

CRS Arusha graciously arranged for a driver to pick me up at the bus stop in Akamba and in doing so fullfilled one of my lifetime goals to arrive somewhere foreign/unfamiliar and have someone holding a sign with my name. I think being the only white person on the bus might have also made it easier for the driver to find me. I have worked for CRS for two summers in the CRS Midwest office in Chicago. In working with CRS in America, a lot of my work has been educating Americans about the work of CRS overseas. Visiting Arusha allowed me to see first-hand the great work of CRS in the developing world.

The driver brought me back to the CRS Arusha office where I was able to meet with several staff members and here about their work on various projects including Water and Sanitation and Orphans and Vulnerable Children. After meeting with some of the staff, I needed to get to an ATM and arrange for my accommodation. CRS provided the driver to serve as my personal escort around Arusha. They offered to call us a taxi to get to town, but I opted for the public transport for 1/10 the cost. It's always interesting getting money out of an ATM in another country because the amount of money you have always seems so different. In Tanzania, the Tanzanian shilling to US dollar ratio is 1300 to 1.

I ended up staying at the Arusha Backpackers Hotel as recommended by one of the other students in my program. He said it was inexpensive and "basic." I soon learned how people's definitions of "basic" vary. I paid $9 a night and the rooms reflected the price. When I went to my room the first time, I opened the door and ran into the bed. The room resembled a jail cell more than anything else. It had a single bed and about 8 inches of room on the side of the bed to walk - and that was it.

In the morning, a man from the Arusha Archdiocesan Integrated Development and Relief Office (AAIDRO) picked me up at my hotel. He brought me to the Archdiocesan office and I was able to meet the whole AAIDRO staff that works closely with CRS. CRS works through partnerships with local organizations that are already working in communities. With AAIDRO, CRS helps provide funding for programs for HIV/AIDS patients, money for Anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs), and agro-enterprise programs. One of the main programs CRS and AAIDRO are working on in the rural area outside of Arusha is working with HIV/AIDS groups to help grow drought-resistant crops like pigeon peas. Many people have a significant amount of land, but the land is being under-utilized. CRS and AAIDRO are trying to help people use their land more effectively to grow crops to sustain themselves but also to generate income.

On our way to the rural village, the man from AAIDRO pointed out Mt. Kilimanjaro peaking out of the clouds. We stopped and I was able to get a quick photo of the top of the mountain. That was the only time I was able to see Kilimanjaro my entire time in Arusha - the clouds hide it very well.

I was able to meet with one HIV/AIDS group during one of my visits. I have never received such a warm welcome in my entire life. One elderly woman, came up to me and hugged me and vigorously shook my hand. Throughout our meeting, she kept staring at me with a BIG smile on her face. 19 HIV postive people have come together in the community to form a group to support one another. They meet once a week and have a constitution. During each meeting, each member contributes 200 TSH (15 cents US) in dues. The money is saved up and used to take care of a member if they fall ill. I introduced myself and fielded questions from people through the use of translator because my Swahili is still quite limited.

During the time I was there, some people brought up the issue that the food that CRS/AAIDRO usually provides for them was not enough for the last month. Afterwards, I spoke with the man I was with from AAIDRO and he told me about all of the financial problems they face. The need is so great in these communities but the funding is very limited. He said that in most cases, he can only make it out to these communities once or twice a month to monitor programs because of the cost of fuel and the availability of vehicles. On this day, we brought this group a large bunch of bananas which only temporarily fixes the hunger problem. All 19 members of this group are also on anti-retrovirals which require good nutrition in order to work effectively.

In the afternoon, I attended a meeting between elders of a community about issues the community was facing. Unfortunately the entire meeting was conducted in Swahili and with my still limited knowledge of Swahili I was only able to catch the occasional word like "but" or "because" which doesn't really help. It was interesting however watching and observing the group dynamics and even though I had very little idea of what was going on, I was able to figure out which people were supporting which side of the argument and how people reacted to different people's points.

I really enjoyed my time in Arusha thanks to the warm African hospitality of the people at Catholic Relief Services and AAIDRO

Sunday, November 30, 2008

How to Donate


I have mentioned several times before about getting involved in helping some causes here in Kenya. My work's website has recently added a DONATE option under "Quick Links" at www.ografoundation.org You can donate securely through an organization called CafAmerica that operates a website for donating internationally to non-governmental organizations. OGRA Foundation tries to respect donor-intent as much as possible so if there is a specific project you would like to contribute to (ie. the orphan feeding center) please indicate that.

Unfortunately, it appears that CafAmerica won't let you donate unless your donation is over $500. So at this point, I don't recommend using CafAmerica unless you plan to donate over $500. If you ARE interested in donating though, please contact me and I can help you find the most appropriate way for you to donate.

I am also working on a project raising money to buy bicycles for our Community Health Workers (CHWs). The CHWs work in very rural villages and perform outreach / home-based care for HIV/AIDS patients on anti-retrovirals. They do a lot of education and help the patients adhere to the complicated anti-retroviral drug regiment. 98% of our CHWs are themselves HIV positive. It would be very difficult to ship a bicycle from the States so we are asking people to donate money. You can make checks payable to OGRA FOUNDATION. Two family friends will be coming to east Africa around Christmas and can deliver any checks to me. If you are interested and would like more information, please contact me directly.



As always, if there are any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Thanksgiving in Kenya

Being in Kenya for Thanksgiving was certainly a unique experience. An American couple, Meg and Daniel, have been volunteering with my organization for a month and they invited me to have Thanksgiving with them at their hostel. We really wanted to re-create an American Thanksgiving as much as we could so we tried very hard to find a turkey. Of course being in Kenya, the only turkey we found was the live bird at the local market. We would then have to kill it ourselves, de-feather it, etc. We also ran into a major problem in terms of how we would cook a turkey. At Meg and Daniel's hostel, they only have 2 stove-top burners. Ovens in Kenya are not designed to fit a turkey. We actually got to the point where we asked the major hotel in town if they would allow us to use their oven to cook our turkey but they said it was against their regulations.

At one point last week we even looked into ordering a honey-baked ham from the States and having it mailed here. We figured the Kenya Bureau of Standards wouldn't let a ham through customs especially since I'm still waiting for my Halloween care package from my parents that was sent in the beginning of October.

On Thursday I was out in Ombeyi, a rural town a half hour outside of Kisumu, working on a USAID APHIA II training. I got back to Kisumu around 5pm, just in time for my parents from the U.S. to call to wish me a happy Thanksgiving. After the phone call, I went into town to check my mail at my host mother's P.O. Box and was excited to have two Thanksgiving cards from my grand-parents. I took a boda-boda (bicycle taxi) to Meg and Daniel's from town.

I have been getting very frustrated lately with the "mzungu price" which is when people inflate the price of a product or service for a white person. I got my haircut last week and the guy tried charging me 5 times as much as the typical Kenyan would pay. I spoke with men waiting in line to get their haircuts the day before so I knew exactly how much I should have had to pay. When I got the boda-boda from town, I was very blunt with the driver and told him that I live in Kisumu and that I know exactly how much I should pay for the distance I wanted to go. I told him to not even bother trying to give me the mzungu price and that if he was going to waste my time, I'd just go on to the next driver who would give me the fair price. This was very unusual for me because I'm usually not as direct and straightforward/demanding but last week had been especially bad with the mzungu price. The boda boda driver actually responded very well to it and gave me the fair price without me having to negotiate.

About two blocks after getting on the boda-boda, it started raining heavily. I still had about a mile and a half left to go and when you're stuck in a situation like that you just have to laugh and take it in. I started humming Christmas songs to humor myself. I arrived to Meg and Daniel's soaked to the bone.

At dinner there were the three of us Americans, the deputy director of OGRA, Gaby and his wife and then the organization's driver, George. As dinner was still being prepared, the three of us Americans took the time to talk about the history of Thanksgiving in America and then we each talked about what our families traditionally do on Thanksgiving to celebrate. Growing up, my family would always deliver meals to elderly people and visit with them. We would also always help with our church's food drive for our church's food pantry. A large part of what my family has taught me about Thanksgiving is to not only be thankful for what we have but to serve others who may not be as fortunate. This motto in general was a huge motivating factor for me wanting to come to Kenya.

After talking about the history of Thanksgiving, we each went around and said some things we are thankful for. This whole experience being in Kenya has really given me a lot to be thankful for. A simple thing like water is almost always taken for granted in America. My host family in Kisumu doesn't have running water. I have to carry water with me to the bathroom everytime I go. I bathe using a bucket of water that has to be warmed on the stove. All the water we drink is collected rain water. The last time it rained heavily, the househelp and I spent about an hour outside in the rain collecting water in buckets to store for later use. The househelp did this all clutching an umbrella while I had put on my swimsuit and was having a great time. I have never been in a situation where I have been so dependent on nature for basic needs. Although it is the rainy season, we haven't gotten a lot of rain lately so our stored water is diminishing.

There are so many people I have met in Kenya who struggle to make it through each day. I met the 82 year old woman who is the sole provider for her daughter and two grandchildren. This woman can only provide one meal a day, usually maize meal (ugali) for her family yet she welcomed me into her home and tried giving me food.

I've helped train Community Health Workers in rural western Kenya who do community outreach and home visits for HIV/AIDS patients in hard-to-reach areas. At the training I attended, 98% of the Community Health Workers were themselves HIV positive. The one training manual I read before the training advised Community Health Workers to treat the patients as if they themselves had HIV. I guess this is pretty easy to do in a province where the HIV prevalence is between 34-38% of the population. In the one rural village I work, the wealthiest man in the community is the carpenter who makes coffins along the roadside.

I've met with a woman who lives in Kibera slum living on less than $15 a month who told me how she saves up money during Ramadan to give to the poor. This left me wondering if not this woman, than who is "the poor?"

During one of my community nutrition classes at ISMAT where I teach, we were talking about the top killers of Kenyans (malaria, TB, HIV/AIDS). After we finished, one of my students asked me what most Americans die of. This was a very humbling moment for me as I stood in front of my class and told them how the top three killers of Americans are cancer, heart disease, and stroke. Two of these three are directly related to obesity. I come from a country where the biggest problem for most Americans is that they eat too much. I read somewhere before I came to Kenya that the amount of money that Americans spend on diet plans could feed the entire world's poor. Even according to my Development textbook, Development and Social Change: A Global Perspective, "the $17 billion spent annually in the United States and Europe on pet food exceeds by $4 billion the estimated annual additional cost of providing basic health and nutrition for everyone in the world." Even our pets are overweight and suffer from diseases like diabetes.

As I reflected on Thanksgiving, I really do have a lot to be thankful and being in Kenya has helped me see a lot of these things. It's something that I think a lot of us already know, but when confronted with situations like extreme poverty, it helps to put things into perspective...

Friday, November 28, 2008

Meeting Barack Obama's Grandmother

Last Thursday when I visited APECC we were near the town of Kogelo where Barack Obama's paternal grandmother lives. As we drove into town we saw the sign posts for the Senator Obama Secondary School that Barack Obama founded during one of his visits to Kenya. We got to one intersection in the village and didn't really know where to go. There were about a dozen men all sitting under the shade of a tree who all started pointing and saying "White House this way!" when they saw us. We made the turn and drove on a little further and when we got to the house, we could just tell that we had arrived. The house compound has a newly installed barbed wire fence and large gate. Just inside the gate we saw two tents where the security guards sleep. 24 hours a day a security guard from the Kenya Police monitors the compound. We started taking pictures but were stopped by the security guard who told us we couldn't take photographs until we signed in. So he opened the gate for us and we signed the guest book. He then told us we were free to walk around and take any pictures we wanted. Someone else directed us to sit in some lawn chairs that were set up near the house. We just kind of sat there not really knowing what we were waiting for. Just outside the home we saw the grave sites of Barack Hussein Obama (Obama's father) and Hussein Barack Obama (Obama's grandfather).

After a few minutes of waiting a security guard in a suit came out and welcomed us into the home! We entered the small home and saw Mama Sarah, Barack Obama's grandmother sitting on the couch. They welcomed us in to sit down next to her. She only spoke Luo and Swahili so our driver did a lot of the talking. We all just kind of sat there in awe at the whole situation. She had a few pictures of Obama's visit to her home in years past. She also had a large cardboard cut-out of him and a large Obama calendar. I took 6 weeks of Swahili when I got to Kenya, so I introduced myself to her, told her I was a student and that I was from Chicago. I also introduced all of my coworkers. She was very impressed with my Swahili and even told me that I know more Swahili than Barack!

We were allowed to take one group picture with her and then we left the home. When we were outside we talked with one of the guys who was in the home with us. He introduced himself and we found out that his name was Roy Obama, Barack Obama's cousin. Basically everyone in Kenya claims that they are Barack Obama's cousin but I think we met his legitimate cousin. He was surprisingly interested in us and where we were from. I told him that I was staying in Kisumu until April and he said that he comes to Kisumu a lot. We exchanged phone numbers and he wants to hang out soon.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Equator and APECC visit




On Thursday I went on a pseudo-field trip with the 3 other American volunteers working for OGRA Foundation in Kisumu. We drove past the Equator so we of course had to stop and take funny pictures in both hemispheres. The main goal of the trip was to visit the APECC (Apostolic Evangelical Christian Church) home for the destitute and mentally disabled. OGRA is looking to form a partnership with this organization and perhaps build a health clinic within the compound. People from all over western Kenya come to the small rural village to dump/abandon their relatives with mental disabilities. For many Kenyan families, the cost and burden of taking care of a family member with a disability is often too great so they turn to a place like APECC to take care of their relatives. APECC does not receive any money from these families that abandon their relatives nor do they receive any government funding. This place is incredibily self-sufficient - they have many dairy cows, goats and chickens in addition to acres of farmland where they grow their own maize, onions, tomatoes, bananas, herbs and other items.

APECC is completely run by volunteers, many who have lived there for upwards of 30 years. The one director of the home gave us a tour of the compound where they house over 150 people. The occupants of the home range in age from the very young to the very old and from the orphaned to the abandoned. The director talked about their lack of funding and resources saying that they are only able to provide for the people's physical needs, not their mental needs. The children with mental disabilities can not be taught in a regular school setting but there are no special needs teachers so they often grow up without any education. The people with mental disabilities vary in severity. The one man we met used to be a university lecturer before becoming mentally unstable. Speaking with him, he now has a fear of hands. One thing that he said that struck me when he described his fear was that he is afraid of hands because it's hands that have brought him here, hands that keep him here, hands that bind/restrain, etc. For some of the patients who have violent tendencies they spend their days chained to trees. We saw one of these patients on our tour of the compound.

When we finished our tour, they brought us to a building and had us sit down at a table. Six women came in with large trays of food. For the six of us present, we couldn't have finished the food that was brought to us if we sat there for a week without ever getting up. The food was very very good and was truly a Kenyan feast. During lunch, the director told us more about the needs of the home. With so many patients, there is a constant need for varying levels of medical attention. With the remotely rural location of the home and the condition of the roads, it could be hours for a patient to reach the nearest district hospital. This unfortunately has led to several cases where the patients have died at the home because there was no form of transport available.

We at OGRA Foundation are hoping to begin a partnership with APECC soon to improve the quality of the dormitories and assist in other projects like acquiring an ambulance or building a small medical facility that we can supply.

I will try to post more information (contact info) about APECC this week if you would like to donate or get involved. Because of its rural nature, they currently do not have a website but we are looking to link them through the OGRA website soon

Monday, November 17, 2008

Poverty Reflection

This entry is a work in progress. I have seen a lot of poverty since being in Kenya and have included some stories and thoughts of my experiences thus far. I encourage a dialogue about this topic and look forward to answering people's questions or providing people with more information. If you feel at all motivated to take action, please let me know so I can help you from on the ground here in Kenya. No action or donation is too small to affect the lives of people living in poverty all over the world.

I have been in Kenya now for two and a half months. During this time I have seen some pretty unimaginable things. I have spent some time working in Kibera Slum, the 3rd largest slum in the world. I have been introduced to and witnessed the "flying toilet" where people go to the bathroom in a plastic bag (mostly at night), and then whip it as far as they can. This often will land on people's homes or even sometimes people or animals. I have seen pit latrines built right on the banks of rivers. People must pay to use these latrines which contributes to people employing the flying toilet as an alternative. The owner will often build the latrine with holes from the ground level so that when it rains, water fills the latrine and empties the contents. As I mentioned, many of these latrines are built on the banks of rivers so the fecal matter flows directly into the river (in Kibera slum, into the Nairobi River). This same river is often where children will play or sift through garbage looking for anything valuable; the same river where livestock drink from and defecate in, furthering the water contamination.

Walking through Kibera Slum, I've also seen a young girl wearing a Sleeping Beauty costume dress - but in this case, this girl wasn't playing dress-up, this was what she wore almost everyday. Several of my friends had taken a tour of Kibera the week before I did and mentioned that they saw a girl in a Sleeping Beauty dress. A week later, I saw the same girl wearing the same dress and got chills when I saw her.

In situations of extreme poverty that I've seen, the people are usually not wallowing in self-pity or waiting for a hand-out from any passerby. These people live complete lives and take things in stride. As I walked through these areas, I am always greeted by cheers of "Mzungu! How are you" from the children as they laugh and play. I have been welcomed into the home of an elderly woman and offered dinner yet she could only provide one meal a day for her family.

In Kisumu, there are many boys who wander the streets sniffing glue. The sight is much more common than I ever would have thought. At first it can be quite jarring seeing young boys in tattered clothes walking the streets with a bottle of glue held between their mouth and nose. Getting high off glue can be an appetite suppresent, but are they sniffing glue to suppress their appetite or can they not eat because of their addiction to glue?

As part of my internship in Kisumu I have been working with my organization's feeding centre. The feeding centre provides 12 meals a week for 30 children. Most, if not all of these children have lost one or both parents to AIDS. Kisumu is located in Nyanza Province where certain areas have an HIV prevalence of 34-38%! I've also been lecturing at ISMAT, a local community-based college about community nutrition and epidemiology and communicable diseases. In my community nutrition class I presented the feeding centre as a case study. I told my students that it was up to them to analyze and improve the menu. The students really struggled with the fact that the children are only receiving 12 meals a week. For many of the children, the only food they receive in a week comes from the feeding centre. From Saturday lunch until Monday breakfast, some of these children may not be getting any food. I had the students look at the menu and note what was missing. Because of budgetary constraints and limited donor funding, the feeding centre can only provide these 12 meals for 30 children. There are obviously more than 30 hungry children in all of western Kenya but we our resources are limited. I had my students add different foods to the menu to make up for the food groups that were missing (notably meat and fruit). After the students were completely satisfied with their menu additions, I looked at the board and then crossed out the number 30 (representing the amount of students we were feeding) and wrote the number 20. I told the students that the additions they made were great, but since we have a limited budget that means that we could only then serve 20 children. This really frustrated and angered my students who had obviously wanted to better the situation for all of the children not just a select few. From there we discussed the issues that an organization faces in operating a feeding centre. We brainstormed many different income generating activities (IGAs) to bring in additional money for the feeding centre. I promised my students that their ideas would be listened to and after class I went back to my work and typed up their suggestions and presented them to the person in charge of the feeding centre. I am now working with them to implement some of these changes for the feeding centre.

OGRA Foundation now also has an American married couple volunteering with us for the month. Their major project will be constructing a chicken coop for the feeding centre. They hope to house between 200-300 chickens which will provide the feeding centre a constant supply of fresh eggs and occasionally meat as the chickens become older and can no longer lay eggs. The project is progressing nicely and has come from an idea to being half-constructed in less than a week. I will also try to post pictures of the chicken coop as soon as I can.

In Mombasa this weekend I was once again reminded of the extent of poverty in Kenya. There were many many people on the sidewalks begging for money. Rachel and I got to the point where we would take the bananas from the hotel's continental breakfast and pass them out to the poor people we would encounter. I had some extra chapatis (flat bread) from my bus ride to Mombasa that we also passed out to people we encountered. I think one moment that struck both of us was that when we had finished passing out the bananas and chapatis we had, we walked by a mother with two young children begging for food for her kids. The very young boy was standing on the street corner completely naked begging any passerby for food. Rachel and I had gone from a natural high of doing good in distributing food to the hungry to feeling frustrated that we still weren't doing enough. We could pass out food for hours among the streets of Mombasa but there would still be thousands of people that would go to bed hungry that night. Most of these people would also go to bed not in proper beds but on the street corners, stoops of businesses or local parks.

Mombasa Weekend

This weekend I went to Mombasa, the second largest city in Kenya. Mombasa has a lot of history and in modern day still serves as a major port of east Africa. Kenya receives a lot of revenue from land-locked neighbors like Uganda and Rwanda for use of the port.

I took a large bus that left Kisumu at 5pm on Thursday. The bus was only about half full leaving Kisumu because we would be picking up passengers along the way. I sat next to a really nice guy and we talked about all sorts of issues. He too was going to Mombasa to visit with friends. He had a degree in natural resources management so we had a long conversation about pollution and sanitation. I brought up how dirty Lake Victoria is. In Kisumu there's one major path that leads down to the lakefront but a lot of cars and trucks drive directly into the water and then the drivers wash their vehicles. So as you can imagine all of the dirt, oil, chemicals, etc go right into the lake water. Lake Victoria is beautiful from afar but definitely nothing to get excited about at shore-level.

It was really great being able to meet someone on the bus because we'd watch over each other at all the different stops. The bus stopped after about an hour and a half in Kericho to fuel and pick up passengers. The bus then made stops in Nakuru, Naivasha and Nairobi. The buses sometimes leave arbitrarily and without warning from stops so it was good to have someone to tell them if I wasn't on the bus yet. The toilets are always an interesting experience in rural Kenya. Most of the toilets are squatters and have just about everything all over the floors and walls. If you can imagine your worst truck-stop toilet and then multiply it by about 5, you'll be getting close to what some of these toilets are like. We got to Nairobi around midnight and waited there for about 40 minutes. Some people bought some food at a roadside stand but I ate the chapatis (flatbread) my househelp had packed for me. I had way too many chapatis so I made friends and shared them. The road leaving Nairobi toward Mombasa was pretty bad with some parts resembling the lunar surface. It's always difficult to sleep on a bus but I was able to get an hour or two in at a time between fuel/bathroom stops.

I finally got into Mombasa at 8:30am, fifteen and a half hours after I left Kisumu. I ended up sharing a tuk-tuk (three-wheeled motor vehicle that carries max. 3 passengers) with the guy I met on the bus into town. I went to the GPO (General Post Office) because that's where some of the other students from my program were meeting with our one professor. I called my one friend and we met up and talked for a little before all the other students came. The meeting went very well and our professor treated all of us to breakfast. It was really good to see a lot of the other students especially since they've all been working on the complete opposite side of the country from me.

After the meeting I explored the city with some of the students. Got a little turned around but it helped me learn the city quicker. Rachel got into town in the late afternoon so we all met up with her at the hotel and then all laid under the airconditioning for awhile. I couldn't walk more than 15 feet in Mombasa without being completely drenched in sweat.

On Saturday we all met up again to go to the famous beaches of Mombasa. We had to to take a matatu to the end of the island and then a ferry across to the mainland. From there we had to take another two matatus to eventually get to the beach. We met up with two other girls from our program at their resort. The beach was nice but it was low tide so we had to navigate through all the coral (away from the sea urchins and sand fish) to even get anywhere close to the water. We of course encountered the beach boys of Mombasa (no, not the group). Beach boys are young men who will try to sell you things or offer to show you around for money. They are often very persistent, annoying and bother tourists. It wasn't very long into our walk through the low tide when the beach boys started asking us for money. None of us brought money with us to the beach so it was easy to be honest in saying that we didn't have any money. Some of them became quite angry and kept trying to negotiate a price while some of the others backed down. We kept insisting that we did not actively seek out their services so we were not obligated to pay anything. They eventually left us alone with none of us giving them any money.

After that beach, we took a matatu further south to Diani beach and had lunch right on the water. It was really a great experience - there was a band playing your stereotypical beach rhythms with the nice breeze off the water. Rachel and I headed back to town after that because we were getting pretty tired. I surprisingly only got a little sunburn on my shoulders which was a great improvement from my beat-red legs from our Nile River rafting trip.

On Sunday, we walked around town for awhile. We did some shopping on Biashara Street for some kangas (an African-patterned wrap with sayings on them). We did some good-natured bargaining and got very good prices for them. After Biashara Street we walked to the other side of the island and took a tour of Fort Jesus, a 15th century Portegeuse fort on the Indian Ocean coast. I managed to get in for the Kenyan citizen rate which was greatly reduced from the non-resident rate. The fort was really interesting. There is one passage to ocean called the Passage of the Archways which was carved completely out of solid coral! We got some really good pictures that I'll work on getting up on Facebook or here this week. A student showed us around the fort and was very nice and informative. He showed us around a little bit of Old Town which consists of buildings that are hundreds of years old. We asked him upfront at the beginning how much he wanted for a tour (because nothing is ever free) and he said that since I was a Kenyan "citizen" (I have residency status) to not worry about it (Hakuna matata). At the end of the tour he of course brought about the issue of paying him. We had already agreed that we really enjoyed the tour and wanted to give him something for his time. All of the guide books we read recommended 100-200 KSH for a tour of Fort Jesus so we were prepared for something in that range. He asked us for 400 KSH each person! We were pretty shocked to hear his price especially since it only cost me 100 KSH to get IN to the fort. We told him that there was no way we'd pay 400 KSH and we settled on a much more reasonable price.

Sunday evening I boarded the bus for another 15-16 hour bus ride back to Kisumu. I arrived at 9am in Kisumu. I went home briefly but went to work by 10am.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Happy Obama Day!

Wednesday morning after we found out the election results, President Mwai Kibaki announced that Thursday would be a public holiday to allow Kenyans to celebrate the Obama victory. When the President made the announcement he addressed Obama directly saying that "We Kenyans are very proud of your ancestry." I think pride is an understatement because everyone in Kisumu at least has Obama-Fever!

On Wednesday, I woke up at 5am to watch the election results. I had to hook up the TV through several extension cords, but managed to get it working. It was really exciting to see all the scenes from Grant Park. My host mom ended up waking up to watch it with me and she was SO shocked to see how many people were there. She was also really surprised to see children at the rally. She said that rallies in Kenya never end without some people throwing stones or other violence. She thought it was really great how that many people could gather together peacefully to support a cause.

It was interesting trying to explain to my host mother the Electoral College and what it meant when each state was announced going to a certain candidate. We found out the results about 7am in Kenya. We were both a little late to work because we stayed at home to watch Barack Obama's speech.

My walk to work was a little interesting. I wore a shirt that said "ILLINOIS" on it and wore a Barack Obama pin. I felt like a celebrity because people kept waving to me, boda bodas (bicycle taxis) kept ringing their bells, cars would honk as they passed me. Some people who saw me would yell out "Obama!!!" while others yelled "Thank You!" or "Good Job!" Obama really is loved here in Kenya.

When I got to work, people kept coming up to me and congratulating me and my country for a job well done. In the morning, I taught an Epidemiology class at ISMAT (International School of Medicine and Applied Technology) about Malaria. We spent the first few minutes of class with people asking me about Obama and if I voted, who I voted for, etc. The fact that you can vote through an absentee ballot amazes people. In Kenya, you have to be in the country in order to vote.

The celebrations were pretty subdued here in Kisumu. I heard from people at work and then saw on the news that hundreds of people gathered in the local sports grounds to watch the coverage on a projected screen. There were a few parades/celebrations in the streets but everything was pretty calm. It rained all afternoon which I think also hampered people's celebrations.

In Kogelo, Obama's ancestral home, bulls were slaughtered in celebration. I got a few text messages from people asking if I was headed to Kogelo to share in the celebration.

Next week it looks like I'll be traveling with work. Some midwives from Europe are coming and will be working with Community Health Workers at our OSANI health clinic in the rural lakeside village of Ndhiwa. I'll be helping with some of the trainings. I am anticipating that I will be without internet then from Tuesday until Friday. I will be sure to update this blog upon my return.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Day before the Election

Well, today is Tuesday November 4th, the day before the U.S. presidential election. Since I've been in Kenya I've seen a lot of support for Barack Obama. Some matatus (small buses) even display large pictures of Obama on the sides and backs of the vehicle. Coming to Kisumu recently, I've seen a whole new level of Obama-support. Barack Obama has familial connections to the Luo ethnic group of western Kenya. Kisumu has a large Luo population so everyone here is absolutely obsessed with Obama. Everytime I walk down the street people yell "Obama!" It was a somewhat welcomed change from the usual call of "mzungu!" (white person). Every single person I encounter asks me if I've voted for Obama. When they find out I'm from Illinois or Chicago they often get even more excited. Kenyans often seem so surprised that anyone would support John McCain. The political knowledge of Kenyans varies greatly. Some people are very informed about American politics and have made informed decisions as to why they support a certain candidate. In most cases, it seems that people like Obama simply because he's "Kenyan." One person asked me yesterday how Americans feel about Obama since he's not "ours." I asked him to clarify his question and he voiced the same opinion that I've heard since I've arrived in Kenya - that Obama is more Kenyan than American.

Many people are very excited about the U.S. election and have a whole spectrum of opinions about what will happen as a result. One of the MPs (members of Parliament) was quoted as saying that he wanted to expand the Kisumu airport to accomdate Air Force One as soon as possible. Some people speculate (somewhat jokingly) that the dollar will be the new currency of Nyanza Province as of next week. Others are convinced that if Obama becomes president, it will be much easier for Kenyans to get visas to the U.S. There is already a Barack Obama Primary School near his "home village" where he has extended family. Foreign journalists have swarmed the small village for weeks now. I've heard rumors that the village is now charging $100 US in order to enter the village.

Obama-Fever is quite prevalent in my internship organization. The organization's Land Rover has an Obama bumper sticker. The Director's car has an Obama bumper sticker on the back AND front (just in case anyone had any question which candidate he's supporting). Almost every person at work proudly wears an Obama button as well.

Every night for the last several weeks, there has been a special segment on the news called "America Votes 2008" featuring Kenyan reporters stationed all over key battleground states in America. The segment usually lasts about 10 minutes and even includes a "Fact File" to teach people about how the American electoral system works (electoral college, etc). On Sunday night they showed the stores in downtown Kisumu that are completely dedicated to Obama. These stores sell all kinds of buttons, t-shirts, framed pictures, and even a DVD about the life of Barack Obama.

Today I ran some errands around town and as we drove people kept running up to our vehicle with today's newspaper that featured a full-page colored picture of Obama with his hand over his heart. Obama really is the Son of Kenya in the eyes of many people here. One of the first weeks I was in Nairobi, I read an article in the newspaper in the young generation's section. The newspaper asked primary school children to write about what they thought would happen if Barack Obama was elected president. One girl wrote that Barack Obama will buy computers for every school in Kenya and help all of the poor people living in the slums.

We will find out the results of the election early Wednesday morning (Kenya is now 9 hours ahead of Central Time in the U.S.). Regardless of the outcome, I am sure that there will be people in the streets; it's only a matter of whether they are protesting or celebrating. In light of the post-election violence just 9 months ago, I think all of us American students in Kisumu are at least somewhat concerned about how people will react to the election results. The repercussions of the post-election violence are still very much present. I work for OGRA Foundation which lost its main building as a result of arson during the post-election violence. At church this Sunday, they made an announcement asking anyone who was sexually abused during the post-election violence to please go to the town hall this week because their is a government commission investigating the abuses during the violence. You just know that this issue must be prevalent in this community if it's included in the general announcments at the end of church!

It will be interesting to see in the coming months how the outcome of the election will be interpreted here in Kenya. If Obama wins will people be disappointed if their lives here in Kenya are not significantly changed? Will they feel left down or forgotten by their national hero?

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Kisumu Internship - first week

I started my internship on Friday with the OGRA foundation On Friday I met with several people on staff and then accompanied several people on visits to rural primary schools. We took the organizations Land Rover which we definitely needed to navigate a lot of the rural roads. The organization runs a health clinic in Ombeyi where people can come for very affordable and sometimes free health care. The facility is equipped with a pharmacy, laboratory, several exam rooms, a maternity ward and bed occupancy for about 30-40 people. The facility also is a VCT (voluntary counseling and testing) for HIV. We provide testing services and then follow-up support counseling with our staff. The organization also provides free anti-retroviral drugs for 294 patients with 424 on the waiting list. Nyanza Province in western Kenya has the highest prevalance of HIV in the country with about 37% of the population being HIV positive.

We have been going to the primary schools to photgraph some of the children as part of their family's registration for the National Hospital Insurance Fund. Through this program, the familes can become eligible to receive free treatment at our health clinic. I have done a lot of editing of pictures and organizing of files since we have to submit the information to the government soon.

Today I spent the day at the organizations feeding center. The feeding center is located near one fo the rural primary schools. We provide 2 meals a day, 6 days a week for about 30 children presently. For many of the children, the meals they receive through OGRA may be their only food for the day. The feeding center has seen great success with classroom attendence increasing and performance improving. Several of the headmasters we spoke to told us how difficult it is to teach children who are hungry. By 10am, the children can not concentrate. The feeding center was built through the generosity of Kenyan Orphan Project who has currently been visiting with us this week. They are looking to build a youth center for the children that can also be used for community education purposes. One of my projects for the internship will be working with OGRA to analyze the operations of the feeding center. I am interested in examining the menu to determine areas where we need to introduce new and different foods. Fruits and meat are very expensive so they are often lacking from the menu at the feeding center. A balanced diet provides these children crucial vitamins and nutrients during these important development periods.

One of my other main projects will be in conjunction with the International School of Medicine and Applied Technology, an OGRA Foundation project. ISMAT is a comprehensive community-response tertiary college that trains under-privileged and vulnerable youth. The college currently teaches 72 students. I will be contributing as a guest lecturer/tutorial fellow for the Community Health and Development program. I am looking forward to this knowledge exchange with the students since we can learn from each other's backgrounds and experiences.

I will also be working with the organizations webmaster to improve on the website. We are looking to expand our networking by linking with our partners' websites to increase awareness about OGRA. We are also looking to expand our fundraising capacity by increasing ways for people to donate directly to OGRA programs.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Karibu Kisumu!

I have safely arrived in Kisumu in western Kenya where I will spend the next six and a half months with my internship. I will return to Nairobi the second week of December for final exams. I will then be travelling for three weeks. My travel plans are still in the works. I have to be back to Nairobi on January 5th (my birthday) for a weeklong seminar to discuss my plans for my second semester research. I will then be back working with my internship in Kisumu from early January until the end of April.

On Thursday I got a taxi from YaYa shopping center near my Nairobi home. The taxi was about 30 minutes late since the two other students he was picking up had slept through their alarms. We students don't respond well to 6am. We thankfully made it to our bus on-time since it was running late. The bus was quite nice - the size of a Coach bus. They gave us a bottle of water, hard-boiled egg, vegetable samosa, and sweet cake. The bus took about 6 hours, it would have been shorter but we blew a tire so we were stopped for an hour as they replaced it.

I met up with my new host mother after lunch. My house in Kisumu is about 4 blocks from the town center. Both my host mom and househelp have been very nice and welcoming. The househelp speaks little to no Engish so I've been able to use my Swahili I've been learning for the past 6 weeks.

On Friday I went to my internship at the OGRA Foundation. I met several of the staff members and one of them is an American from Connecticut who is taking some time off between high school and college. I went with several of my coworkers to 5 different primary schools to take pictures of children to complete their registration for the NHIF - National Hospital Insurance Fund. By doing this, these children can receive free medical care at our rural health clinic in Ombeyi. I also visited the health clinic in Ombeyi which has a pharmacy, exam rooms, laboratory, maternity ward and VCT (voluntary counseling and testing) for HIV. The costs at this clinic are either greatly reduced or free for most patients.

This is my host family's house in Kisumu.


Sophi, our househelp, coming home from the market carrying eggs on her head. Very impressive!

Thursday, October 16, 2008

October 5, 2008

As usual I met up with my friend Anna to go to church at Holy Family Basilica in downtown Nairobi. We arrived at the church pretty early so we walked around town for awhile. We took some pictures of downtown so we could show people what the city is like. We've both gotten a lot of questions from family and friends about what Kenya, particularly Nairobi, is like. The Parliament is near to our church so we walked around the area. We asked the security guards but they wouldn't let us take a picture with them or Parliament. Kenya is very secretive when it comes to government buildings. The State House where the President lives is a huge complex that is about a mile long with a huge gate. Every 10 feet or so there are huge signs that warn about taking photographs.

When we got to church, we found out immediately that it was going to be a huge celebration. Archbishop Njenga from the Archdiocese of Mombasa (on the coast) was celebrating Mass because he was releasing his biography. The Mass started with a very large women's choir marching around the outside of the church. The children's choir was all dressed up and lined the main aisle of the basilica. The procession contained over a dozen priests and several deacons. The Mass ended up lasting over two and a half hours which was quite longer than the usual hour-long Catholic Mass. After Mass Archbishop Njenga saw Anna and I (being the only two white people in the congregation of 600+ people) and blessed us and smiled. When we were walking in the parking lot we encountered the procession again as it was walking around the basilica. Archbishop Njenga saw us again and personally welcomed us to Kenya.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Ngong Hills


On October 4th, I went hiking in the Ngong Hills just outside of Nairobi in the town of Ngong. I caught a bus early in the morning with my friend Anna outside of Prestige Plaza (a large shopping center near my home). It took about a half hour to get to Ngong Town and the bus was quite crowded with people going to the Nairobi Show. When we arrived we were dropped off at the main stage where all the buses and matatus pick up and drop off passengers. The town was very busy and had many different stands with vendors selling everything from fruits, sugar cane, rice, nuts and cellphone air time. As always, two white people walking around attracted some attention from people as we got the now expected chants of "how are you" and "mzungu!!!" We utilized the African Map which is basically asking people directions until you eventually find your way. We ended up walking about 1.5 miles from the town up and winding road and eventually found a very small sign that indicated that we were going in the right direction. From there we walked up a STEEP gravel path for about another half mile to the gate. We ended up having to pay 100 KSH ($1.38) to get in which we of course were hesitant to pay since we thought it was another instance of trying to get the white people to pay more for things than the average person. We tried telling the workers that we were residents and lived in Kenya (in Swahili) but they didn't buy it. We figured it wasn't very much so we gave up. They recommended that we take a guide with us on our hike and pointed to the disclaimer sign warning people about wild animal attacks in the area. We politely refused the assistance of a guide.

As we started hiking, we soon realized that having a guide would be completely unnecessary. The hike was very straightforward and we just followed a single path all the way to the top. The "wildlife" that they warned us about ended up just being the occasional grazing goat, sheep or cow. The path was pretty steep so we took several breaks for water and to admire the views. As we got closer to the top, we could see all of Ngong town and for many miles in the valley. It took us about an hour and a half to make it to the top. The top of the hill is home to many satelite dishes and towers. We decided to eat an early lunch and enjoy the views from the top of the hill. As we ate a dozen cows walked by us and we being the city kids that we are got excited and took pictures with them. It was definitely a lot colder on top of the hill and we ended up having to put on our rain jackets we packed. This time of year, the rains come quite frequently in the afternoon so we had to be prepared for anything.

The hike down the hill went a lot faster. Since the decent was so steep, it was hard on our toes. We took the bus back into downtown Nairobi and then went to the Maasai Market. When we arrived we were immediately welcomed by the self-proclaimed "chiefs" of the market. They explained to us that they would help show us around the market and gather things from different vendors to help us comparison shop. When we were finished they would bring together everything and then barter the price. I had been looking into buying a rhino sculpture since I arrived in Kenya and I had been doing a lot of comparison shopping so I knew exactly what I should pay for it. I walked around the market and picked up some African masks, a Maasai blanket, some jewelry and several batiqs (painted murals). One man brought a mural that I really liked but he told me the price was 10,500 KSH ($145). I knew from the minute I heard the price that he was trying to rip me off. I used my new-found Swahili to call him out on it saying that he was charging me "bei ya mzungu" (white person's price). He asked me to name my price so I told him I would pay him 750 KSH for it - a drastic difference from his 10,500 asking price. I could tell instantly that my price was too low and for the first time ever I actually had a vendor walk away from me. Of course being a true Kenyan, he found me 10 minutes later in the market wanting to bargain with me again. I eventually got him down to 2,000 KSH (1/5 his original price!) but I could tell that he was still overly eager to finalize the deal. I told him that it was still too expensive and that I wasn't about to pay an inflated mzungu price. Vendors are never very friendly when they realize you aren't going to buy from them.

It started to rain so I ran across the street with Anna and the "chiefs." I only had 2100 KSH with me so I knew I had to do some serious bartering. I knew that I could get a certain price for the rhino sculpture at the Hilton (hotel) Arcade. They started with all of the prices way over their actual value. I had set aside a small and a large rhino sculpture. They wanted 3400 KSH for the rhino that I knew I could get for 1500 KSH at the Hilton Arcade. They wrote down a price for each item and then asked me to write down my price. For each time I halved their price and then some. Oftentimes the mzungu price is SO inflated that even half the price is still more than you should pay for it. I've started to like the challenge of bartering so I spent about 45 minutes talking the various prices down. When they wouldn't budge any further, I employed one of the my dad's favorite tricks that he always uses when buying a car. I gave my final offer and when they said no, I grabbed my things and just walked away. This definitely got their attention and before I knew it they gave me the Maasai blanket and large rhino for 2100 KSH. They were originally asking for 3400 KSH for the rhino and another 2000 KSH for the blanket. I left the market feeling only mildly cheated.

Monday, October 13, 2008

October 3, 2008

On Friday October 3rd, we got out of class early so several us decided to attend the Nairobi Show (Nairobi International Trade Fair). It is basically a huge state fair but since it's Kenya, it attracts people from all over the country. The Ministry of Agriculture is a major sponsor and displays all kinds of farm animals.

We decided to walk through Jamhuri Estates which is the equivalent of a subdivision. We had to ask for help to navigate our way to the fairgrounds and two ladies volunteered to help show us the way. Another woman joined us later along our way but when we arrived at the Show, she tried telling us that since she "helped" get us to the Show we had to pay the 200 KSH admission fee. This kind of thing happens to us a lot where people are eager to help but then expect payment just because we're white and are assumed to be wealthy.

When we got there, we found one of our fellow MSID students who works with an orphanage in Kibera Slum. She helped organize a trip for about 50 of the kids to come to the Show so we all volunteered to help bring the kids around for the day. They told all of the kids to grab the hand of the nearest mzungu (white person). I ended up walking with a little boy named Michael who was about 4 years old. He was pretty small so he walked very slowly. I ended up carrying him on my shoulders for the majority of the afternoon. The Show was very very crowded and there were a lot of school groups. Many of the schools give the students the day off in order to attend the Show.

We stopped at the stadium and watched some of the dramatic performances for awhile. None of us white students understood the plots of any of them, but the kids all seemed to really like them. We ended up buying all 50 of the kids ice cream which turned into a pretty funny ordeal. White people passing out free ice cream definitely attracted the attention of just about everyone around us.

After watching the performances, we took the kids to see all of the different animals. We saw sheep, goats, cows, pigs, chickens, and even camels. The kids seemed to really enjoy it. It started to rain so we walked all of the kids back to Kibera. One of the girls in the program had made friends with one of the girls from the orphanage. They found out that they were the same shoe size and the girl from the orphanage had been walking around all day at the Show in a pair of high heels. She told us that the heels were here only pair of shoes besides her school shoes. The student with the same shoe size traded shoes with her for the walk home. It was interesting to see the student reflect on this experience as she put into life the saying to "walk a mile in another person's shoes." In this case, she walked several miles in a pair of high heels that belonged to an orphan girl from Kibera. The student vowed to return to Kibera during her time in Nairobi to bring this particular girl a new pair of shoes.

Spending time with these kids was a really good experience. Granted Michael who I spent the afternoon with gave me his cold, I really enjoyed spending time with them. During my initial visit to the orphanage, I played soccer with several of the boys and since the Show I have come back to visit with the boys one other time. For many of these kids, the only opportunity they have to leave the orphanage is through the activities organized by my fellow MSID student. It's been great to see other U.S. students get involved in volunteering with the orphanage.

Several people have told me that they would like to make a donation to something in Kenya. About 80 kids reside in the orphanage, several of which are HIV positive. Most beds are shared by 2-3 children. Over 200 kids attend primary school classes in the orphanage. The orphanage works to pay the school fees for the older kids to attend secondary school. The orphanage is also currently sponsoring one girl to attend university. The goal is for each child in the orphanage to graduate from the university. This place gives these children a chance that they normally would never have.

I would really appreciate if anyone could support the work of this great place.

Tunza Children Centre Kibera
c/o Diminah Khasiala
P.O. Box 7164-00200
Nairobi, Kenya

tunzachildrenscentre@yahoo.com

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Kibera Reflection

September 24, 2008

Today I went to Kibera Slum with my fellow MSID students Meghann, Lindsey, Chelsey and Rebecca. As Meghann and I walked down the only road that leads into Kibera, she pointed out to me that the area in which we were walking had all been burned down in the post-election violence. We walked through a market called Toi Market that went on for blocks in densely constructed stands selling everything from cell phone minutes, winter coats, jeans, shirts, shoes, candy and much more. This market was completely destroyed in the post-election violence yet today there are few hints of what this area looked like just 8 months before. Kibera Slum is comprised primarily of people from the Luo ethnic group and the Nubian people who were brought by
the British out of the Sudan to fight instead of British troops in the days of colonization. Kibera as a slum has been around since the time of the First World War. The land in which Kibera Slum now lies was once an expansive forest. The Nubian people settled in Kibera because they were a people without a land of their own.

Over the years, Kibera Slum developed into an incredibly dense slum area consisting of people from a variety of ethnic groups. These ethnic groups have organized into "villages" within the congested slum. As a result of the post-election violence, many of the Kikuyus who lived in Kibera fled. Kenyan President Kibaki comes from the Kikuyu ethnic group. Prime Minister Odinga comes from the Luo ethnic group. In Kenya, elections do not simply bring changes in administration and policies, elections can mean the difference between life and death. Since independence, the presidents of Kenya have historically favored the land of their ethnic group. Resources are concentrated in this area and they get good roads, hospitals, schools and other luxuries. As one area of the country is favored, others are consequently neglected. These neglected areas often have very few schools, and the schools that do exist are under-funded. In the northern third of Kenya, there still remains less than 20 schools and even less secondary schools. 90 % of school-age girls do not attend
schools in a country where primary education has been made "free" and compulsory by the government. The education may be free but there are still building fees, teacher fees, uniforms, textbooks, mandatory field trips and other expenses that families struggle to afford. Kibera Slum today has anywhere from 1.4 to 1.9 million occupants. In a place like Kibera it is difficult to determine just how many people reside. Most estimates are derived from doing a sampling of some houses to see how many occupants live in a certain area and then multiplying that by the area. Most small houses that are no bigger than 15 ft by 15 ft often have five or more residents.

We arrived in Kibera around 2pm and met up with Meghann's friend and coworker Cartoon. We purchased a bag of beans and rice from a local vendor which we carried with us in our backpacks. We made a turn off the main road through a thin pathway that led down a rocky terrain. As we walked we were constantly greeted by young children playing in the streets or on their way home from school. "Mzungu!" could be heard in all directions and word spread quickly that a group of white people were walking around. Every time we encountered children they would say, "how are you!?" "How are you" is not a question but has become assimilated into the jargon of the children as a substitute for "mzungu" or white person. They would often repeat "How are you! How are you! How are you!" until we were well past them.

We stopped soon at a local shop of men who knew Cartoon. They welcomed us in as we approached from afar yelling "Karibuni!" (welcome). The one man Frederick welcomed us at the entrance with open arms and greeted all of us with a customary handshake. Frederick told us how this was a shop where they recycled bones. They receive the bones from the local butcher and then grind and polish them into shapes that they use to make jewelry. He showed us every step in the jewelry making process. There are three different machines they use to smooth the bones and shape them into round, square and custom shapes.
They boil the bone pieces which helps in the dyeing process. They dye the pieces in various designs and use them to make bracelets, necklaces, key chains and other pieces of jewelry. He brought out several of his finished pieces but insisted that each one of us take a bracelet as a gift from him. Two of the girls ended up buying other jewelry from him for very fair prices. Here is a man who lives in the second largest slum in the world, yet he insisted that we have a
bracelet. He also sold the other jewelry to the girls for the equivalent of less than $3 US. The jewelry they bought was beautifully handmade and decorated and would sell for no less than $30 in the US. We stopped to take pictures of our new friends and their business before continuing on our tour.

We walked around the railroad tracks that run through Kibera Slum encountering more children and more shouts of "How are you!" I asked if they were still in use and Cartoon told us that the tracks we were walking on are the only railroad tracks that link the coast to the central provinces. The railroad tracks were constructed by the British for the sole purpose of transporting tea and coffee from the Rift Valley to the coast for export. As a common theme in Kenya, the resources are exploited and exported out of the country with Kenya
receiving minimum return. We stopped to take pictures at a point that overlooked the majority of the slum. On the top of the hill were new developments that were built by the government as part of slum renovation projects. The developments lack proper sanitation but are an upgrade from the tin roof shanties that people live in. On the surface these developments seem like a great improvement until you speak with the people who live in Kibera. The government wants to charge people 5,000 KSH ($70 US) a month to live in the developments – a price that is out of reach for almost all of the residents of Kibera Slum.

Our next stop was the only "movie theater" in Kibera. We entered through a short doorway into a dark room. As our eyes adjusted we saw about 15 wooden benches. The walls of this movie theater consisted of tree branch cross beams and cut-up sacks. In the front of the room sat a small TV no larger than 30 inches on a stand with a DVD player and VCR. People pay 20 KSH (about 29 cents) to see a movie or football (soccer game) televised on TV. For a big football match people pay up to 40 KSH (about 57 cents) to watch. This kind of movie theater was vastly different than the typical movie theaters in the U.S. where
people pay close to $10 to see a movie in padded stadium seating on a gigantic screen with surround sound as they snack on their over-priced popcorn and 64 oz. soda.

Our next stop was to visit with a family. The woman welcomed us warmly and insisted that we enter her home and sit down and talk. The room was dark with no light except for the natural sunlight that came in through the doorway. The house was a one-room house no larger than 10 ft. by 10 ft. The woman wanted to know about each one of us and what we were doing in Kenya. She told us about her family and her life. She was born and raised in Kibera and has lived there her entire life. Her grandfather and all of the subsequent generations have lived in Kibera. Her family is Nubian – originally from Sudan and brought to
Kenya by the British. Her grandfather settled in Kibera when the Nubian people had nowhere else to live. The woman told us how Kibera was not always as congested and densely populated as it is today. When her family settled in Kibera, it was still a vast forest. Over the years, the area became populated by people with no other option than to live with next to nothing in a shanty. Most homes in Kibera have walls of stones mixed with mud and supported by a frame of sticks. The roofs are comprised of rusting tin sheets. For this particular woman, she shares a wall with the movie theater with only a cut-up sack between.

The woman we spoke with was Muslim and described her fasting during Ramadan. She showed us her Ramadan timetable of when she begins fasting each day and when she is allowed to break the fast. She told us that a part of Ramadan is giving money to the poor which is called Zakar. She told us how she saves money to give to the less fortunate. As she said this I sat there amazed at her words. This is a woman who lives in a one-room house in the middle of the second largest slum in the world and yet she donates money to give to those who are less fortunate than she is. How relative the perception of poverty is. Not one time during our conversation with the woman did she ever hint at
bitterness regarding her situation or living conditions. She reminded us that generations before her lived in Kibera and then told us how she has a young son who was born and will be raised in Kibera. She told us that she cannot leave because this is the only place she and her family have ever known. She encouraged us to pass by the cemetery on the outskirts of Kibera because she said that it will be the place where she will one day rest along with her relatives who have come before her. We said our good-byes and presented her with the bag of rice and beans that we purchased earlier. She was very gracious and insisted that we come back and visit with her so that she could cook us dinner.

On official government maps, the area of Kibera Slum is still shown as a forest – evidence of the fact that the Kenyan government refuses to recognize Kibera. The official government stance regarding Kibera is that the homes are illegal structures on government land in which the government can do whatever it wishes – and it does. It is a frequent occurrence that the government will come in and bulldoze homes or shops. When the developments were constructed, homes were demolished to make way.

The river that runs through Kibera was once plentiful with fish and was clean enough to drink from. Now the river is polluted with garbage. The fish are long gone and the water is no longer safe to drink. People have built latrines on the banks of the river and when the latrines overflow it empties into the river. Children can be seen picking through the garbage on the banks of the river looking for something valuable or edible. We crossed a bridge that Cartoon said
was built by a religious NGO as part of a peace building project to bring the different villages within Kibera together. We hiked up a very steep hill to one of the highest parts of Kibera. At this point we were near the new government developments. From this distance we could see that these developments remained vacant because none of the people who the program was targeting could afford to live in them. As we walked along the top of the hill, there was a large amount of unoccupied space which is a rarity in the congested slum. Cartoon said that the government had demolished these homes. People who lived in these homes rebuilt nearby but now use this land to have simple gardens on their old properties.

We made our way slowly down the hill to another bridge over the river. As we struggled to make it down the steep decline, we were greeted with giggles and more shouts of "how are you" by the young children. When we stood on the bridge to rest we looked up and saw about a dozen school kids running and jumping down the hill that just took us about 10 minutes to descend. From here our tour of Kibera was just about over. I stopped to take a picture of Flat Stanley who was given to me by one of my coworkers at CRS. Flat Stanley is part of a project that grade school kids participate in to learn more about the world and other cultures. At the end of our tour we came across a woman who Cartoon knows named Pamela. She greeted each of us and welcomed us into her shop. She told us that she is HIV positive and proud of her status. She works with several other HIV positive women in a self-sustaining business in which they make crafts and sell them. They use the money to fund HIV/AIDS awareness and education programs in Kibera. From the outside Pamela appears perfectly healthy. She has high spirits, is enthusiastic and is not ashamed to say that she has HIV. In fact, she showed us a public health poster encouraging people to find out their HIV status in which she is prominently featured. For many people who are HIV positive, they suffer from the stigma that is associated with having HIV. With Pamela, she is a woman who has embraced her status and is using it to educate others about HIV prevention and being aware of their status.

Our final stop in Kibera was at Tunza Children Center Kibera. The Tunza Center is an orphanage that houses approximately 80 children. The center serves over 200 orphans with the majority living with relatives. The Tunza Center provides a primary education for the children and has ten small classrooms. One of the teachers gave us a tour of the center and showed us the various classrooms, dormitories and facilities. In the dormitories, no bed has less than 2 children
sleeping in it. After one of the teachers showed us around, the girls went inside to watch TV with some of the children. I went outside and played football (soccer) with some of the little boys I found. Their soccer ball was a bunch of plastic bags bunched together and tied with string. We had a lot of fun regardless. I started kicking the ball around with one boy but by the time I had to leave there were 8 of us playing. Our "field" was no more than a 15 ft by 6 feet area with the door to the orphanage as our goal and a 3 year old boy as our goal
keeper.

One of the teachers walked us to the bus stop around 4:30pm. We had to leave before it started to get dark. All of us got on a matatu to Prestige Plaza. The four of us parted ways there each in our own direction towards our homes. Each one of us came away from Kibera seeing and noting different things. Each one of us was incredibly humbled and moved by what we saw. This experience is something I will never forget and I hope to go back to Kibera several other times while I am in Nairobi. Throughout the whole afternoon as we walked around Kibera, not one person ever asked us for money or tried to sell us something. Each person we encountered welcomed us warmly and seemed to genuinely appreciate our company. This experience has given me a lot to reflect on and I know that I will use what I have learned in Kibera throughout my life.



Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Giraffes

I went to the Giraffe Centre this weekend in Karen, a suburb of Nairobi. I made very good friends with Betty, the giraffe.









Friday, September 19, 2008

Finally some pictures!


Here's a picture of the non-Minnesota/Wisconsin students. From left to
right (white people): Me, Meghann, Colin, Ashley (in blue), Marie (red
bandanna), Stephanie F., Kristen (in white), Andre (in hat). Africans
left to right: Simon, Jane and Abdul-Aziz -- they are all on the MSID
staff.

Here's the closest I've gotten to taking a picture that looks like
Lion King. This was taken at Babboon Cliff at Lake Nakuru National
Park - with Lake Nakuru in the background.


Giraffes


Here's a picture of me at Lake Nakuru with a bunch of pelicans and
flamingos. (This one is for Grandma!)





This is by far my favorite picture I've taken in Kenya. It's now the
desktop background on my computer.




Lake Nakuru National Park


Me at Lake Nakuru National Park

Me at Makalia Falls

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Weekend

This Saturday was the first time I've felt sick since I've been here. I woke up in the morning feeling very ill and felt nauseous all day. I ended up napping a lot and working on my homework. I had 8 chapters of Swahili homework to work on so this at least gave me a chance to do that. It thankfully only ended up being a 24 hour illness and I felt nearly 100% on Sunday.

Sunday, I met up with one of the other girls in the program at Prestige Plaza (a large shopping center) to catch a bus downtown. We took a short bus ride into downtown Nairobi to attend mass at Holy Family Basillica. The man on the bus who collects the fare of course tried ripping me off again. He first told me that the fare was 60 KSH (the actual fare is 30 KSH). When I basically called him crazy, he said that it was 40 KSH. When I still refused he finally accepted my 30 KSH. We arrived at the Basillica at 10:45am and the Mass wasn't supposed to begin until 11:30am. The Swahili Mass at 10:30am went long so our Mass didn't start until 11:45am. The church is very large and several hundred people attended Mass. This was much different than the small Protestant service I attended the week before with my host family that was in an event tent with 35 people. They sang a lot more songs than I was used to and the people swayed, clapped and danced a lot as well. Me and the other girl from the program stuck out as 2 of 4 white people in the whole church. Communion was very random and arbitrary - basically, whenever people felt like it was their time to go, they would walk up to the front of church and receive Communion. There were definitely a lot of things that were the exact same as my church at home. I guess it is a universal Catholic thing to only give the sign of peace to the people immediately surrounding you. Church lasted about an hour and a half (3 offertory and 3 Communion songs certainly adds a lot).

After church, we went to Steers near the church which had fast food. I got an overpriced cheeseburger. When we were finished eating, the friend I was with reached for her bag and it was gone! Somehow someone managed to take her bag from between both of our legs under the table. It unfortunately had her Ipod, an expensive rain jacket, her cell phone and some money in it. Thankfully she didn't lose her passport or her ATM card. We reported it to the security guard at the restaurant but he couldn't really do much.

Monday morning before class we all compared out interesting weekend stories. One guy while getting his haircut at a salon had 2 armed men burst in and rob the salon. They grabbed the items from one of his pockets then left. Thankfully, they grabbed the wrong pocket and only took sugarcane from him. His cellphone, wallet and other items were in a different pocket! He said that he feels that the only reason the salon was robbed was because of his presence as a white person. We as white people in Kenya attract a lot of negative attention. Our skin color is viewed as wealthy no matter our actual financial situation. Just by being somewhere, we can attract crime.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Internship Info

As I have mentioned before, my study abroad trip has both an academic and internship component. I will be with a host family in Nairobi until October 24th while I take classes. The last week of October I will be moving to Kisumu which is in the far western part of Kenya on Lake Victoria. Here I will be living with another host family. The Kisumu host family is comprised of a mom, a dad who works primarily in a rural part of the country, a university student and the house help. The university student studies Public Health (the program chose to pair me with this family because of this).

For my internship, I will be working with the OGRA Foundation. They have a health clinic that I will spend some time at but I will primarily be doing community outreach health education. The OGRA Foundation does a lot of work with educating people about nutrition, HIV/AIDS and water sanitation. They receive some funding from U.S. government programs like PEPFAR and the USAID. The OGRA Foundation also works with OVCs (orphans and vulnerable children) and works towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals that were set by the United Nations. Another large component of the OGRA Foundations work is using sports to promote health. I was very excited to hear this since during my time in Belize during high school, I helped organize a soccer and music camp for the young people in the community to promote structured activities and healthy alternatives.

I will be working with the OGRA Foundation until December 5th before returning to Nairobi for finals and debrief. I will return to the internship on January 19th following a weeklong research seminar in Nairobi where I will plan out my second semester's research.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

First Day of Class

Today was our first real day of class. I met up with the two girls who also live on Kayahwe Road to walk to class together. We had 4 hours of Kiswahili class in the morning with a short tea break. We covered basic greetings and some vocab. During the tea break I proudly walked around telling people the one Swahili phrase I remembered - Jina langu ni Dan (my name is Dan).

My host mom is a translator, so I tried practicing some of my Swahili with my family this evening at dinner. I started saying some of the phrases I remembered and evidently said, "I have one taco America" instead of "I come from America." The phrase is supposed to be "Ninatoka nchi ya America" and I instead said "Ninatako nchi ya America." They got a good laugh out of it and insisted that they would help me practice. I guess I need it!

In the afternoon, we had 2 hours of Country Analysis. The professor today focused on pre-colonialism because he said that most people forget that Kenya had a proud history and political system before the Europeans colonized.

After class several of us walked over to the MSID office to pick up textbooks and check e-mail. While we were there a huge storm started and the office lost power. 5 of us walked to YaYa Center in the rain to pick up some things and check e-mail. Internet at YaYa was three times more than what we paid for internet in downtown Nairobi because it is a very ritzy mall where a lot of the rich white people shop. I once again helped some of the girls navigate the roads and find their homes. We all once again were soaked to the bone and covered in mud. My host family claims that it really doesn't rain this much and that it must be the curse of the U.S. students.

Life in Nairobi

I returned to Nairobi on Saturday after a week in Lake Nakuru National Park. My host mom and brother picked me up at the African Nazarene University in Nairobi. My brother's name is Joshua (JJ) and he is 8 years old. He helped carry one of my big bags which everyone in the program thought was so cute. I received a quick tour of my new home in Kilimani (just southwest of Nairobi - check it out on Google Maps). For those of you who are worried about my safety and security in Kenya - my home is part of an apartment complex with a large security gate and a 24 hour watchman.

I brought with me 3 soccer balls, so I pumped up one of them and gave it to my host brother. He ran outside to tell his friends and before I knew it, I was playing soccer in the parking lot with 6 young boys. They use the security gate as the goal and there are signs of frequent soccer playing in dirty soccer ball marks all over the surrounding walls and the security gate. We played soccer (football) for about 2 hours and I think it was a great way for me to connect with the young boys in the apartment complex. The next day at church, I saw one of them and he was very excited to see me.

On Sunday I went to my family's church service at the Community of Christ church. The church had about 35 people at the service and was held under a large event tent. At one point in the service, the congregation split into two groups to study a chapter in the Acts of the Apostles in the Bible. My host father led my group's discussion. We talked about how Paul had to go before a judge and that the judge wanted a bribe from Paul. We each had to go around and talk about an example in our own lives where we have seen someone try to extort a bribe or an example of corruption. It was a great exercise and really brought the reading to life as many Kenyans live a life where "give me something small" is a way to get things done.

On Monday, I started classes. My family has a driver and he walked me to school my first day. I walk about 2.5 miles to class every day. We had a quick introduction to the faculty. I will be taking a Swahili course, a course on Country Analysis of Kenya, and International Development with a focus in Public Health.

After an hour of class, we caught a bus to downtown Nairobi and bought our cell phones. I bought the cheapest cell phone they had because students often lose or have their phones stolen. The women in the store tried to rip a lot of us off. They would try to charge people an extra 100 KSH connection fee if they weren't vigilent. 100 KSH is only about a $1.42 US but the idea is that people associate white people with wealth and try to take advantage of it at all times.

We went to lunch in downtown Nairobi and the 4 of us at my table all ordered cheeseburgers. When it came time to pay, we were once again met with someone trying to rip us off. After the bill came and we paid we stayed around as other tables finished their meals. After about 10 minutes the waitress came back to our table and picked up a receipt that she had left on the table and tried accusing us that one of us did not pay for our meal. The waitress then also tried claiming that two of the girls ordered their meals differently and ordered the cheesburger, fries and Coke each separately therefore adding up to 20 KSH more than the Combo that came with the same 3 items. We even had one of our Kenyan staff members come over to the table and discuss with the waitress and she finally agreed that we didn't have to pay more than we already did.

After lunch we went to the immigration office to get multi-entry visas and our Alien Registration Cards. The whole process was quite lengthy especially since we overwhelmed the office by bringing in 32 people at one time. I had to wait in 3 different lines, fill out a lot of different forms and have each of my fingers fingerprinted.

After we were done with all of our errands, 4 of us grabbed a bus that dropped us off at YaYa Center which is a large shopping center about 5 minutes from my home. By this time it was raining heavily so the roads that were dirt in the morning were now very muddy with many puddles/lakes. The 3 of us who live on Kayahwe Road made it back to our homes and the 4th girl thought she lived near us. We asked the watchman at my complex to point her in the right direction and he said that it was past YaYa Center which we had just walked from. She didn't want to walk home by herself, so all 4 of us walked about 2 miles in the driving rain and muddy roads to drop her off. Even though our shoes were caked in mud and we were all filthy, it really helped us learn the roads around us and helped us gain confidence.

(Please note that I have tried to build-in links to websites for more information on certain topics in my entries. The link will most likely navigate you away from the blog just so you are aware)