This is the reason I went back....I love the children I have met at The Centre For the Poor and Less Privileged. The week of Camp was great and it was good to contribute and work hard in the kitchen. But it was a week with these wonderful kids that gave me more than it gave them. I was right back in my element, improving my coloring and handing out hugs. They benefited tremendously by having a volunteer come back a second time, and were talking more, asking for more reading , and of course more BINGO's. All the things I took, given by generous friends, were appreciated and used, especially the skipping ropes, coloring books, recorders and plasticine, and sponge football. We made the most of our time together, and helping with the procurement of the cow and the start of a website were just bonuses. I had a definite parental feeling and role this time and was able to help with English homework and offer advice to teens. It was hard not to bring more than one child home, and will be hard not to go back every year and visit friends on the other side of the world. Hard parts aside, my trip was still very much worth the effort.
Thursday, January 29, 2009
It's All About The Children
This is the reason I went back....I love the children I have met at The Centre For the Poor and Less Privileged. The week of Camp was great and it was good to contribute and work hard in the kitchen. But it was a week with these wonderful kids that gave me more than it gave them. I was right back in my element, improving my coloring and handing out hugs. They benefited tremendously by having a volunteer come back a second time, and were talking more, asking for more reading , and of course more BINGO's. All the things I took, given by generous friends, were appreciated and used, especially the skipping ropes, coloring books, recorders and plasticine, and sponge football. We made the most of our time together, and helping with the procurement of the cow and the start of a website were just bonuses. I had a definite parental feeling and role this time and was able to help with English homework and offer advice to teens. It was hard not to bring more than one child home, and will be hard not to go back every year and visit friends on the other side of the world. Hard parts aside, my trip was still very much worth the effort.
Downtown and The Market
The downtown area of Maseru is a hub bub of restaurants, government buildings and Internet cafes. Alot of NGO's have headquarters there. For the HL volunteers at the Centre, the experience is very different than that of the teachers in the remote villages without electricity. Once or twice a week it is possible to go to town by taxi or public and have a great lunch and email home. The thatched roof of the "Basotho Hat " tourist and gift centre is a landmark in the "new" downtown.
Several blocks away, there is the old market- much more "real Lesotho" and fun to walk around in. Despite the best photo ops ,
one cannot really pick up a camera there. Women walk around with plastic hampers of knives and other goods on their heads. The plastic and tin sheds/stores sell everything from cooking oil to apples, from roasted corn to haircuts. The smells and sights are totally Africa. I discovered a small craft stall area and met this grandmother, born in 1926, educated in English, she had been to Germany. We engaged in conversation for awhile about Canada and travel.She was an unexpected treasure, and I bought this pot from her. Made by villagers, it was the only one with a horse on it. It made it home in one piece, and reminds me of meeting her and being there.
Helen The Cow
One of the projects I most wanted to accomplish was to find a new dairy cow for the Centre. I have been discussing this with Sr. Margaret over email for some time, and there was a problem getting a good Holstein without going to South Africa and importing it. When I arrived, they told me we were to visit a livestock dealer in the interior. The Federal vet had said he would have a good selection, and as we couldn't contact him, we had to leave at 6 a.m. and hope to find him at home doing chores.
It was a great drive throughi the mountains.Luck was with us as he was there, but he had switched to Jerseys in the past few months and only had three on offer. I was content with the breed ,as the cost of feeding them is lower and the higher milk fat not an issue for the kids, so we went ahead and rectalled the two in the age range I wanted. The beautiful three year old second calf heifer shown here was in calf,and we are going ahead with her purchase. Hopefully, she will soon be milking and they will have two for one. Sr Margaret wants to call her Helen ??????
Traditional Dance
On my last night, the children treated me to dances they practice and perform frequently for visitors. The dance with the skirt ( made from feed bags) is done to a hymn, despite its apparent sensuality. The dancers wear a belt of hundreds of bottle caps under the white skirt and throw their hips back and up creating a fantastic jangle to accompany the voice and drumming. The shoulder dance, my favorite, done on the knees, also is a hymn. I tried and was terrible at it, but got alot of laughs. Strangely, for what is called traditional dance, both have a lead with a whistle and are done with many rotations to the timing of the whistle.They are hypnotic. The concert, including the two last choir numbers, lasted about one hour.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Traditional Dress
The boys dance in Basotho blankets of varying designs, usually with fighting sticks. Their posturing does'nt really tell the truth about how sensitive and caring they are. They asked me for a photo with them in traditional dress. And of course,l I always want to have a photo taken with Liteboho as she is such a favorite, so I couldn't resist capturing her for the last photo shoot of the visit. I brought home two Basotho blankets as gifts, unique symbols of Lesotho.
Camp Week
This portion of the blog will show the camp week and atmosphere. Watch for one more post with photos of my second week at the orphanage and photos of the wonderful children and the new cow.
What was it all About ?
This photo says it all.....the camp built on friendship, trust and relationship. Many of the children are double orphans, and this teen heads a child headed household. Peg says he sleeps with his sponsors photo beside his bed. Whether in their prayers and hymns, or in explosions of joyful music, or at a quiet sing song around the Canadian campfire under the incredible stars , we saw children and youth respond to education, responsibilty and trust in a positive way and rise to the challenge of self examination. We may have only reached a few, but bonds were created that will last and hopefully leaders will emerge and grow.
And I simply had to keep them all fed ! Great work Gillian, Peg and Help Lesotho......
Improv Drama and Other Classes
The participants, including groups of primary and secondary school teachers , did classes in the mornings. Classes covered such issues as self esteem, gender roles, drug and alcohol abuse, HIV/AIDS education and grief and loss. In the afternoons, they were taught improv drama by Doug Thicke, the Ottawa volunteer there for the next placement at the Centre. At first reserved, the teens gradually got into the "act" and we saw some good leaders emerge. Music and sports were also in the afternoons and a group specializing in teaching HIV sensitivity and non stigma to teens came to share time and skill, also through role playing and drama. These kids had more access to talent and education in one week most Lesotho children ever do. They all reproted the sessions were excellent and thought provoking.
Girls Dorm
Each of the three brick dorm buildings at St Pauls school for the deaf has room for 12 beds. We had mattresses( in theory) shipped in and had to ask 25 girls to sleep in each of three rooms, for a total of 75 per building/washroom. There was also an adult staff or teacher room per building to keep order. This room housed at least 25 girls with luggage and was about 110 degrees by the time they all lay down. the atmosphere was definitely "camp like"- an unfamiliar concept in Lesotho.Role call at 9:30 p.m. was amusing and confusing...who was really saying "present" ? And then there was sharing the lavatory with them all......sometimes you actually couldn't open the door for kids bathing standing up in small plastic wash tubs, but they all turned out perfectly every day!
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Nothing was broken!
Since no one had thought about how or where the dishes would be done, we had to improvise. 4 concrete sinks in the utility shed were filled with soapy or rinse water before each meal. The kids learned to work as a team including drying and restocking everything. I then had 15 sopping dish towels to hang up and collect again as an additional part of my " EXTREME CATERING" routine.
Never Ending Line Up
The kids had to line up 6 times a day - breakfast, break, lunch, break, dinner, Simba's ( peanut and raisin snacks before bed). They also had to line up to wash their own dish, until we dscovered it worked best to have 1 group of about 30 people wash all the dishes on one day, and then be off the hook. They often finished by candlelight.
We do in the kitchen ladies!
Carrot Salad for 250
Carrot and raisin salad was served every second day, and I shook up the system by grating two carrots at a time ha ha - then there was potato salad for 250 every other day......you get the idea. I am permanently giviing up pickle making! Actually suggested a less labour intense menu for next year.....potato chips??
Patty and I do Polony.....
Kitchen Ladies
These 5 women and I fed 250 people for 6 days with no refrigerator or automated help, like a cuisinart. Spirits were good despite the 15 hour days, and they each received 500 rand ( $60.00 Canadian) for the week, which paid one childs tuition. They were a total pleasure to work with and communicated well despite the language barrier, with much laughter all around
Safe Return Home and Photos......
My last night at the orphanage, I was treated to several traditional dances by boys and girls and two songs by their combined choir with Sesotho lyrics in beautiful harmony wishing me well. These dances always make me feel incredibly priviledged - to witness the childrens heritage and natural musical talent. I felt special because they organised it all for me themselves without Sister Victoria's help......and they used the new drum I brought! There are always sights , smells, and sounds , like the older women ululating, that I have never experienced any where else. I totally failed at the shoulder dance... but they had a good laugh! Before the dances I served up two watermelons and a bag of ginger cookies with seconds all around.....so everyone was happy, including me!
A bright clear day Sunday meant that the one plane came on time, and I left Maseru airport for an arduos 2 day journey home, including long stops in Johannesburg and Frankfurt. Read two books, picked up a few trinkets, and did a lot of thinking about how wonderful my trip and reconnecting with the children had been. I will close with some photos to show you this years Lesotho adventure........
A bright clear day Sunday meant that the one plane came on time, and I left Maseru airport for an arduos 2 day journey home, including long stops in Johannesburg and Frankfurt. Read two books, picked up a few trinkets, and did a lot of thinking about how wonderful my trip and reconnecting with the children had been. I will close with some photos to show you this years Lesotho adventure........
Friday, January 23, 2009
Great Days at the Centre
It has been a great week for me with the children. Amazing what an affect it has had to have come twice. And I can remember everyones names !
We have had a light week with homework as it is the first week of school, so every night has been different, with reading to the preteens very popular with them and me. I have worked my way through animal books to Bible stories. They are also enjoying lots of hugs and physical contact, nail painting, hair braiding etc. Even the boys are talking alot, and one older boy Thapelo, really connected to me, fiddles with my rings when I talk to him. They are love sponges.
All the toys and gifts sent by Canadans are being used and are perfect. The skipping ropes nonstop, the coloring books almost used up. The sponge football was a hit, and yesterday I taught 6 girls to play a version of football that had them passing and holding and running the ball throught the goals. Got a good response from them as they have little access to the ball/soccer field.
Yesterday, Sr Margaret and I were driven by Joseph into the back country 1 1/2 hrs to a livestock dealer. He was an ex teacher, very knowledgeable animal man who show Merino sheep in SA. He had 3 Jersey cows for sale. We picked a 3 yr old 2nd calf cow. Small but correct and healthy, and I rectalled her to confirm she was in calf. Will be delivered next week and is due in 2 months. Great excitement and they plan to call her Helen. She is truly beautiful, as most Jerseys are, and will be cheaper to feed than a Holstein.
I will post half a dozen photos next week and one will be of me rectalling a cow in Lesotho!
Tonight I will give out the 69 photos and then we will have a Bingo with lots of prizes. Tomorrow Sr Victoria will be here to visit and I will work with her on the website organization and photos. Hope to bring a CD back to Canada and get help ( anyone out there to help me
would be appreciated ) to do a simple cookie cutter web site for the Centre.
Things are winding down now to 48 hrs left and an arduous trip home, this time though Toronto. But it has been worthwhile, certainly for the Camp and projects accomplished, but more for the love given and received. It is hard to have so many I care about on the other side of the globe. Thanks for reading......
We have had a light week with homework as it is the first week of school, so every night has been different, with reading to the preteens very popular with them and me. I have worked my way through animal books to Bible stories. They are also enjoying lots of hugs and physical contact, nail painting, hair braiding etc. Even the boys are talking alot, and one older boy Thapelo, really connected to me, fiddles with my rings when I talk to him. They are love sponges.
All the toys and gifts sent by Canadans are being used and are perfect. The skipping ropes nonstop, the coloring books almost used up. The sponge football was a hit, and yesterday I taught 6 girls to play a version of football that had them passing and holding and running the ball throught the goals. Got a good response from them as they have little access to the ball/soccer field.
Yesterday, Sr Margaret and I were driven by Joseph into the back country 1 1/2 hrs to a livestock dealer. He was an ex teacher, very knowledgeable animal man who show Merino sheep in SA. He had 3 Jersey cows for sale. We picked a 3 yr old 2nd calf cow. Small but correct and healthy, and I rectalled her to confirm she was in calf. Will be delivered next week and is due in 2 months. Great excitement and they plan to call her Helen. She is truly beautiful, as most Jerseys are, and will be cheaper to feed than a Holstein.
I will post half a dozen photos next week and one will be of me rectalling a cow in Lesotho!
Tonight I will give out the 69 photos and then we will have a Bingo with lots of prizes. Tomorrow Sr Victoria will be here to visit and I will work with her on the website organization and photos. Hope to bring a CD back to Canada and get help ( anyone out there to help me
would be appreciated ) to do a simple cookie cutter web site for the Centre.
Things are winding down now to 48 hrs left and an arduous trip home, this time though Toronto. But it has been worthwhile, certainly for the Camp and projects accomplished, but more for the love given and received. It is hard to have so many I care about on the other side of the globe. Thanks for reading......
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
At the Orphanage
Yesterday we had a driver from Help Lesotho bring us to Maseru with all our heavy bags and groceries. Doug, the other volunteer, will only stay 2 days so I can orient him .
It was a fantastic feeling to see and hug the children. Many handshakes and smiles with the boys and I tried to ask as many kids as possible how they did at school and how their Christmas went. Forty out of 60 went away to relatives for the last 6 weeks and they are just returning to school. Great excitement all around. Sr Margaret was very happy to see me and get her new ( reconditioned )laptop. I was put up in the nuns dorm and Doug had the one available room in the rondavel.
We got out some toys and skipping ropes and soon had the kids engaged. Also did a tour of the farm They have expanded to 700 chickens and Me Puleng is worked off her feet.
There were 300 when I was here before. Ntate Mafisa, a social worker, has an office here and has filled in the gap left by Sr Victoria going to university. He counsels the kids and organizes tutoring and debating. Great man. The farm had just had a bucket irrigation system installed over the last 8 weeks by an American volunteer and his wife. All the gardens now have small tubes thru them and there are new gardens and many more pigs. So thing move forward.
We are going to a livestock breeder tomorrow or the next day to pick out a young milk cow, one of my projects. I will also take a photo of each child anad present them all with one on Friday night when I run a BINGO ! Saturday night I hope Sr Victoria will come to see me and I may get to see traditional dance one more time- my favorite.
Another wonderful spontaneous moment for me....last night I asked if I could read to the little ones in the dorm room. We took in a chair and I tried to get them to settle. Many dont speak English. They were crowded in , two in some beds. The orphanage is overfull. The small ones had food on their faces and dust on their legs. Not back to routine yet. But everyone was so happy. We found a perfect book called Brown Bear, simple, big colored pictures of animals, one per page and a great rythmn. We read that thing 3 times, each time faster with more kids participating, and they loved it. I was so glad they agreed and even got to tuck a few in. I love many of these children and feel very happy to be here providing them with some extra care and mothering to them even for a few days It is a rare and meaningful thing for a volunteer to come back.
More in three days then flying out Sunday.
It was a fantastic feeling to see and hug the children. Many handshakes and smiles with the boys and I tried to ask as many kids as possible how they did at school and how their Christmas went. Forty out of 60 went away to relatives for the last 6 weeks and they are just returning to school. Great excitement all around. Sr Margaret was very happy to see me and get her new ( reconditioned )laptop. I was put up in the nuns dorm and Doug had the one available room in the rondavel.
We got out some toys and skipping ropes and soon had the kids engaged. Also did a tour of the farm They have expanded to 700 chickens and Me Puleng is worked off her feet.
There were 300 when I was here before. Ntate Mafisa, a social worker, has an office here and has filled in the gap left by Sr Victoria going to university. He counsels the kids and organizes tutoring and debating. Great man. The farm had just had a bucket irrigation system installed over the last 8 weeks by an American volunteer and his wife. All the gardens now have small tubes thru them and there are new gardens and many more pigs. So thing move forward.
We are going to a livestock breeder tomorrow or the next day to pick out a young milk cow, one of my projects. I will also take a photo of each child anad present them all with one on Friday night when I run a BINGO ! Saturday night I hope Sr Victoria will come to see me and I may get to see traditional dance one more time- my favorite.
Another wonderful spontaneous moment for me....last night I asked if I could read to the little ones in the dorm room. We took in a chair and I tried to get them to settle. Many dont speak English. They were crowded in , two in some beds. The orphanage is overfull. The small ones had food on their faces and dust on their legs. Not back to routine yet. But everyone was so happy. We found a perfect book called Brown Bear, simple, big colored pictures of animals, one per page and a great rythmn. We read that thing 3 times, each time faster with more kids participating, and they loved it. I was so glad they agreed and even got to tuck a few in. I love many of these children and feel very happy to be here providing them with some extra care and mothering to them even for a few days It is a rare and meaningful thing for a volunteer to come back.
More in three days then flying out Sunday.
Monday, January 19, 2009
Song and Dance...
Having sent a last blog entry about bed bugs and children picking on other children, I am happy to write today about some amazing things that happened as the week went by. I am back now, day after the marathon. Very tired and getting a cold, but what a great tired. Help Lesotho ran a great camp, a concept foreign to the Basotho. The staff now know what to expect and everyone was psyched to work hard, and work hard we did.
Yesterday was the closing up and all the kids filled out surveys and then had hot chocolate, marshmallows and popcorn before getting the bus fare home. All the dorms had to be emptied and swept, the lavatories cleaned and the dishes done and returned. The grounds had to cleaned up, desks returned and mattresses brought out to the road. Stuart from Victoria drove many loads of things around and Patty, his wife cleaned up craft supplies and returned food to the office. I, being the food person, made 500 shredded cheese and chutney sandwiches after serving the 7 a.m. breakfast to 250.
I go back to the week. Every day, there were two classes each morning for the groups to rotate through. The program was ramped up, with module “b” of the classes last year. The emphasis is on health, gender equity and HIV prevention, but this year they added grief counselling and drug and alcohol abuse to name a couple .The program was excellent. Doug Thicke, an actor , did drama and skits in the afternoons, which were originally hard to get going. By the end of the week , he had the teens acting and taught the teachers tools to get the kids doing improve and skits. At night, the talent show was always good.
Thursday night, there was an explosive outburst of song and dance after the talent show that I can never describe . It lasted about half an hour under the big tent. It was time to
Give out the sweets ( another line up) and somehow the evening hymn, always in amazing harmony, became a chant in Sesotho that said God gave us this moment to appreciate so be happy and love him , or something like that…..and all of a sudden 250 people were singing and dancing loudly with exuberant joy and the Canadians were swept into this mass, changing to Congo line changing to circles, changing to individuals hugging ( one teacher held my elbows and sang the song right to me while dancing) It was a beautiful song anyway, but the way it all happened was beyond my ability to recount . My wide smile turned to tears as I FELT the appreciation for life that even the littlest ones were showing, not to mention the repetitive chant was hypnotic and no one seemed to want to stop. Wow ! This knowing the stories of many of the people there are unimaginably sad.
Friday night we had a bonfire under the stars. Had to order wood and the boys all built a stone pit ( note the gender inequity, had a terrible time keeping them in the dish processing room too !) It was very peaceful compared to the riot the night before. We had the first go of hot chocolate and marshmallows and then they all sang hymns very quietly and with that wonderful harmony learned since childhood. The sky was a blanket of stars
Such as I have never seen. I had one teen boy ask me about the ritual and why the fire and I explained we were inside so much in the winter we stayed outside all summer, and this was one way we could relax and sing. I did not try to explain about cottages and lakes.
Now we all have a day to rest. Tonight a gathering at the Leribe Hotel with pizza and beer. Tomorrow, off to Maseru to the orphanage. I am lucky they have decided to send Doug with me for orientation and we will take his and my heavy things and some groceries and water, so are getting a ride from the HL truck. I will be there for 6 days then home. Hope I can pull off my idea to get them a milk cow.
One more note re unexpected moments. Last night when we got back from camp, I was lucky enough to spend and hour with one of the finest people I have met here or anywhere, “M’e MaHlompho from HL. We did the food together all week and she was a gem to work with. She told me a lot about her family and the loss of her husband. How they had land near Maseru and she has had to leave it, laving the orchard to fall to ruin, to get a job here. Her 3 boys are all smart and hope to go to university. She also told me about a family incident over Christmas that she is still recovering from, when a herd boy with a grudge came into their home during a meal and sprayed pellets around. Only the heavy chairs protected her boys from being hurt badly. We discussed herd boys at length and the lonely, deprived antisocial lives they live away from families and society. They spend the summer by themselves on a mountain usually with only papa to eat. Anyway, her boys are fine and getting over it, with a few pellets remaining in their bodies. All because she didn’t have the doors locked. So many kind people here, and then always the threats…you can't let down your guard. Hard for a Nova Scotian. It was a pleasure to have an hour with her alone to learn more about her life and life here despite the subjects.
She lived in one room for awhile when she stared working for HL and now has a house and practically runs the office, as well as doing comedy plays on late night radio, and raising three boys .
Have a chance to go now to Pitseng as a tag along to take Patty and Stuart back, so will sign out. Its where the camp was last year and HL has built a new centre there I’d like to see- and the scenery on the drive is great.
One more entry next week.
Yesterday was the closing up and all the kids filled out surveys and then had hot chocolate, marshmallows and popcorn before getting the bus fare home. All the dorms had to be emptied and swept, the lavatories cleaned and the dishes done and returned. The grounds had to cleaned up, desks returned and mattresses brought out to the road. Stuart from Victoria drove many loads of things around and Patty, his wife cleaned up craft supplies and returned food to the office. I, being the food person, made 500 shredded cheese and chutney sandwiches after serving the 7 a.m. breakfast to 250.
I go back to the week. Every day, there were two classes each morning for the groups to rotate through. The program was ramped up, with module “b” of the classes last year. The emphasis is on health, gender equity and HIV prevention, but this year they added grief counselling and drug and alcohol abuse to name a couple .The program was excellent. Doug Thicke, an actor , did drama and skits in the afternoons, which were originally hard to get going. By the end of the week , he had the teens acting and taught the teachers tools to get the kids doing improve and skits. At night, the talent show was always good.
Thursday night, there was an explosive outburst of song and dance after the talent show that I can never describe . It lasted about half an hour under the big tent. It was time to
Give out the sweets ( another line up) and somehow the evening hymn, always in amazing harmony, became a chant in Sesotho that said God gave us this moment to appreciate so be happy and love him , or something like that…..and all of a sudden 250 people were singing and dancing loudly with exuberant joy and the Canadians were swept into this mass, changing to Congo line changing to circles, changing to individuals hugging ( one teacher held my elbows and sang the song right to me while dancing) It was a beautiful song anyway, but the way it all happened was beyond my ability to recount . My wide smile turned to tears as I FELT the appreciation for life that even the littlest ones were showing, not to mention the repetitive chant was hypnotic and no one seemed to want to stop. Wow ! This knowing the stories of many of the people there are unimaginably sad.
Friday night we had a bonfire under the stars. Had to order wood and the boys all built a stone pit ( note the gender inequity, had a terrible time keeping them in the dish processing room too !) It was very peaceful compared to the riot the night before. We had the first go of hot chocolate and marshmallows and then they all sang hymns very quietly and with that wonderful harmony learned since childhood. The sky was a blanket of stars
Such as I have never seen. I had one teen boy ask me about the ritual and why the fire and I explained we were inside so much in the winter we stayed outside all summer, and this was one way we could relax and sing. I did not try to explain about cottages and lakes.
Now we all have a day to rest. Tonight a gathering at the Leribe Hotel with pizza and beer. Tomorrow, off to Maseru to the orphanage. I am lucky they have decided to send Doug with me for orientation and we will take his and my heavy things and some groceries and water, so are getting a ride from the HL truck. I will be there for 6 days then home. Hope I can pull off my idea to get them a milk cow.
One more note re unexpected moments. Last night when we got back from camp, I was lucky enough to spend and hour with one of the finest people I have met here or anywhere, “M’e MaHlompho from HL. We did the food together all week and she was a gem to work with. She told me a lot about her family and the loss of her husband. How they had land near Maseru and she has had to leave it, laving the orchard to fall to ruin, to get a job here. Her 3 boys are all smart and hope to go to university. She also told me about a family incident over Christmas that she is still recovering from, when a herd boy with a grudge came into their home during a meal and sprayed pellets around. Only the heavy chairs protected her boys from being hurt badly. We discussed herd boys at length and the lonely, deprived antisocial lives they live away from families and society. They spend the summer by themselves on a mountain usually with only papa to eat. Anyway, her boys are fine and getting over it, with a few pellets remaining in their bodies. All because she didn’t have the doors locked. So many kind people here, and then always the threats…you can't let down your guard. Hard for a Nova Scotian. It was a pleasure to have an hour with her alone to learn more about her life and life here despite the subjects.
She lived in one room for awhile when she stared working for HL and now has a house and practically runs the office, as well as doing comedy plays on late night radio, and raising three boys .
Have a chance to go now to Pitseng as a tag along to take Patty and Stuart back, so will sign out. Its where the camp was last year and HL has built a new centre there I’d like to see- and the scenery on the drive is great.
One more entry next week.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Chaotic routine....
We are getting into a routine at the camp. After several failed experiments re how to manage the food and cleanup, I have asked the 6 groups to split into 1/2 and each do lunch and dinner. There is no refrigeration, dishwasher, or garbage handling. I do breakfast cleanup with the other volunteers in time to set out the break stuff . After the big meals where we assembly line the 250 plates, the 10 or so kids go into the utility shed and try to wash all the plates and cups and dry them before class again, or the talent show in the evening as the case may be. There is general chaos, with the boys sneaking off, the hot water running out, tea towels are wet, food goes into the sink if I dont direct traffic. They are washing plates with tea bags and chicken bones and cold water. The other 240 people try to crowd in and put their plates all around us and on the floor.It's pretty wild. Today I finally got the boys involved with plenty of praise, talk about team work and a treat after.
There are many cultural problems regardign the males and their role, although they are here to learn gender equity and nonviolence. Yesterday, Doug the other Ottawa volunteer, got told not to help the boys sweep the dorm quite forcefully, as it is not done by men here.Last night a poor sad little boy got beaten in the washroom. He is HIV positive and has had TB. He is small and thin and just different. He has been raised in a hospital.We dont know if he was beaten because he is HIV./AIDS or entered the talent show or is just diferent, but you can tell he is heartbroken today.
I had a meaingful time with a girl who came to me to tell me she is HIV positive. She was crying, lost her parents in 2003 and 2005. She is very scared, but goes regularly for CD4 counts and will be on meds soon. I was told last year that this would/might happen to me and how to handle it.
I spent a long time with her and we ended up laughing and talking about living life to the fullest and making every day a good one.I hope I helped her by being there for her to talk to.
I cant believe what these kids put up with. They are in dorms that are 30 to a room. It is 110 degrees in there at night. Last night we discovered the whole dorm is full of bed bugs, and everyone in 2 rooms is being bitten. One staff member awoke covered. I have'nt been attacked but it is awful and today they sprayed the rooms.I am not really allowed to jump ship as everyone will and Peg is hanging in there too.
In the morning the teachers have the loo from 4:30 til 5:30 and then the 75 girls try to get ready. This a.m. I snuck in to take the toilet paper (thankfully having discovered a washroom off the kitchen where we can shower.) There were 15 girls standing in small rubber wash tubs trying to bath. They then have to sweep and tidy the rooms and be at breakfast at 7 and class at 8 a.m.
Not one teenager I know could cope with this. We, the women staff, have 8 people in the room and so we are in luxury!
The talent shows at night are amazing and give me a real "cant believe I am here" feeling.. The singing, harmony, dancing, miming, poetry ( read like drama) etc are so good, I need to be able to film a bit to even get close to describing it all.The week will end with a testing day, bonfire with hot chocolate on Friday night. Lots of counselling on grief and other issues are available.The teachers usually get into it and do a few singing acts too, mostly hymns. Fantastic.
I am going to rest and wash clothes Sunday, and then go to the Bytown orphanage on Monday. Can't wait to see the kids, There are 5 here, and they have already asked me to do a BINGO.
I am very disappointed that my friend Julia, the teacher who took me riding, did not come fromThaba Tseka. I cant get through to her on the phone yet, so will just send a letter and present. She was a wonderful part of last years visit for me and I hope she is o.k. The HL staff asked me not to go there as there is tribal violence over livestock stealing and lots of guns and violence.
We really have no idea how good we have it in Canada. Pictures to follow.
There are many cultural problems regardign the males and their role, although they are here to learn gender equity and nonviolence. Yesterday, Doug the other Ottawa volunteer, got told not to help the boys sweep the dorm quite forcefully, as it is not done by men here.Last night a poor sad little boy got beaten in the washroom. He is HIV positive and has had TB. He is small and thin and just different. He has been raised in a hospital.We dont know if he was beaten because he is HIV./AIDS or entered the talent show or is just diferent, but you can tell he is heartbroken today.
I had a meaingful time with a girl who came to me to tell me she is HIV positive. She was crying, lost her parents in 2003 and 2005. She is very scared, but goes regularly for CD4 counts and will be on meds soon. I was told last year that this would/might happen to me and how to handle it.
I spent a long time with her and we ended up laughing and talking about living life to the fullest and making every day a good one.I hope I helped her by being there for her to talk to.
I cant believe what these kids put up with. They are in dorms that are 30 to a room. It is 110 degrees in there at night. Last night we discovered the whole dorm is full of bed bugs, and everyone in 2 rooms is being bitten. One staff member awoke covered. I have'nt been attacked but it is awful and today they sprayed the rooms.I am not really allowed to jump ship as everyone will and Peg is hanging in there too.
In the morning the teachers have the loo from 4:30 til 5:30 and then the 75 girls try to get ready. This a.m. I snuck in to take the toilet paper (thankfully having discovered a washroom off the kitchen where we can shower.) There were 15 girls standing in small rubber wash tubs trying to bath. They then have to sweep and tidy the rooms and be at breakfast at 7 and class at 8 a.m.
Not one teenager I know could cope with this. We, the women staff, have 8 people in the room and so we are in luxury!
The talent shows at night are amazing and give me a real "cant believe I am here" feeling.. The singing, harmony, dancing, miming, poetry ( read like drama) etc are so good, I need to be able to film a bit to even get close to describing it all.The week will end with a testing day, bonfire with hot chocolate on Friday night. Lots of counselling on grief and other issues are available.The teachers usually get into it and do a few singing acts too, mostly hymns. Fantastic.
I am going to rest and wash clothes Sunday, and then go to the Bytown orphanage on Monday. Can't wait to see the kids, There are 5 here, and they have already asked me to do a BINGO.
I am very disappointed that my friend Julia, the teacher who took me riding, did not come fromThaba Tseka. I cant get through to her on the phone yet, so will just send a letter and present. She was a wonderful part of last years visit for me and I hope she is o.k. The HL staff asked me not to go there as there is tribal violence over livestock stealing and lots of guns and violence.
We really have no idea how good we have it in Canada. Pictures to follow.
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
At the Leadership camp
We are short handed at the camp and it is at a new place. There are a few Canadian volunteers, 5, and many youth to help - it is still hard to feed the 175 kids and 50 adults
attending.Two of us are on food and we have helpers, but three times a day 250 people line up and we have to ladle out the food and then are left with a severe dish problem, There was
no plan for the dishes and no place to do them, so we are using a utility shed with concrete tubs and candle light. There is no soap today and hot water runs out. There are 75 girls in each of 2 residences and 75 boys in another on the floor on wall to wall foam mattesses. There are small lavatories ( we are staying on the premises). This a.m. I had to fight my way in past the naked soaped bodies to use the toilets that didnt flush after all. Quite the experiences - I am the chief cook bottle washer and clean up. My desire to wipe and chop will severely diminished after this, a life long habit will be gone. But if can help educate these girls and prevent more
more HIV and violence it will be worth it. Back to the camp now - Talent show starts tonight.
attending.Two of us are on food and we have helpers, but three times a day 250 people line up and we have to ladle out the food and then are left with a severe dish problem, There was
no plan for the dishes and no place to do them, so we are using a utility shed with concrete tubs and candle light. There is no soap today and hot water runs out. There are 75 girls in each of 2 residences and 75 boys in another on the floor on wall to wall foam mattesses. There are small lavatories ( we are staying on the premises). This a.m. I had to fight my way in past the naked soaped bodies to use the toilets that didnt flush after all. Quite the experiences - I am the chief cook bottle washer and clean up. My desire to wipe and chop will severely diminished after this, a life long habit will be gone. But if can help educate these girls and prevent more
more HIV and violence it will be worth it. Back to the camp now - Talent show starts tonight.
Arrived!
Hello from Lesotho....I have arrived with all of my luggage..yeah! Stayed tuned.....stories to come soon!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)