Sunday, October 14, 2012

Artistic Endeavors of Procrastination

Adrienne, my new roommate, has been here for about two weeks now.  After painting a nice base coat on the walls, creating a couch using the already built in base with a cut up mattress wrapped in a sheet, and massacring hundreds of cockroaches, Adrienne's house still need some homey touches. We decided to get a little creative and paint a baobab tree on her wall.  After searching online for several images that inspired us, we finally chose one and began sketching.  

Here is an image of the final product:

As Peace Corps volunteers, you learn to get creative and work with limited resources. We originally planned to head to Nampula to buy colored paint, but after finishing our sketching, both of us were eager to continue with the painting job.  One of us joked about the idea of mixing our white paint with dirt from outside.  After a few minutes, we both thought about how that might actually work.  Adrienne experimented with a small amount first, then we tentatively applied it to the wall to see what would happen.  Success!  We quickly proceeded to add handfuls of dirt to our bucket of paint, creating a chocolate milkshake colored substance.  Lacking paint brushes, we channeled our five-year-old side and embraced finger painting, receiving a nice hand exfoliation from the rocks and grains of dirt present in our dirt-paint.  For the color accents and the sun, Adrienne first drew in colored pencil, then watered down the white paint and applied it over the pencil.  

Here is what I have been up to the past couple days while searching for other things to do than grading exams or calculating final grades.  Also, was a great way to pass the day when we had no electricity.  

Meet Elliot the Elephant and Jaime the Giraffe (names pending)



Thursday, October 11, 2012

The end of the school year


I’ve finished an entire year of teaching (well technically I still have one final exam left then grading to do still, but lessons are over).  And I think, overall, it’s been really good.  Not too bad for a new teacher, teaching for her first time in another country, in another language.  I mean there were certainly those days where I dreaded making the trek to the school and when the students themselves seemed to not want to be there.  It took a few months to get used to the school system and to learn to be totally flexible when surprises came your way like surprise holidays, an unexpected change in the class schedule, or an empty classroom.  But, I think at least some of the students got something out of the class, at least I can hope so.

After my last Biology class, a student thanked me and handed me a letter he had written.  It was definitely a touching moment that I’d like to share.  People always say all the frustrations are worth it if you reach just one student.

Want to practice your Portuguese?  here’s a copy of his letter:

É com grande prazer e enorme satisfação que neste present momento tenho a honra de redigir para desejar a paz, saude, felicidade, uma longa vida, alegria, esperança, amor, sucesso, respeito, harmonia, solidariedade, humildade, amizade, sabedoria, luz, e bom estar nos seus trabalhos diários.
Bom estado de equilíbrio, bons desejos, bom alcance dos seus sonhos, sobre tudo bom regress á terra natal ou de origem EUA e que tenha a vida e terra graças a Deus.
Agradeço e elogio o vosso caminho e bontade, paciência e amor que teve por nos, de modo particular o meu nome pessoal ao long do nosso processo de ensino e aprendissagente do corrent ano 2012.
Muito obrigado professora Sara! Pela generocidade, gentileza e todos valores éticos que nos tem mostrado.
Atravessou rios, lagos, e mares; florestras, savannas, e montanhas; atravessou fronteiras entre continents e países, e passou mais cidades com a compixa de conhecer e transmitir o saber ao povo Moçambicano.  Dando o contributo na luta contra pobreza e para o desenvolviment da nação!
Aceitou sofizer por vários efeitos, tais como diversidade da cultura e humilidade, mas nunca perdeu a força nem vontade do trabalha.  Peço e espero a seus pai todo poderoso que abençoe a senhora professor.
Sem medo de errar sera-me tão dificil esquecer a professor Sara por ter-me levado e deixado no mundo da Biologia sem dúvidas.
Pouco foi o tempo que tivemos, maior é a esperança de que mas um dia faremos se seus quiser; poucas são as palavras que trocamos mas maiores são os conhecimentos que aolquiri senhora professor.

Vosso aluno,
Anifo

Or if you prefer English, i translated it:

It is with great pleasure and enormous satisfaction that in this present moment I have the honor of writing for the wish of peace, health, happiness, a long life, joy, hope, love, success, respect, harmony, solidarity, humility, friendship, wisdom, light and good being in your daily work. 
Good state of balance, good wishes, good reaching of your dreams, about everything, good return to your native land the USA and in which you have a life and land thanks to God.
Thanks and praise for your care, good will, patience, and love that you had for us, particularly for me personally along our process of learning in this current year 2012.
Thank you very much teacher Sara!  For the generosity, kindness and all the valuable ethics that you have shown us.
Across the rivers, lakes, and oceans; forests, savannahs, and mountains; across the borders between continents and countries and past the cities, for the compassion of knowing and transmitting knowledge to the Mozambican people, for giving a contribution to the fight against poverty and for the development of the nation.
You accepted suffering from various effects like diversity of the culture and humility but never lost the force nor the will to work.  I ask for and hope that the all-powerful Father bless you.
Without fear of error, it will be very difficult for me to forget teacher Sara for having led and left me in the world of Biology without doubts.
Short was the time that we had, greater is the hope, but one day we will talk if you wish; few were the words that we exchanged but greater is the knowledge that I acquired teacher.

Your student,
Anifo





Monday, October 1, 2012

One Year!!


September 26th marked exactly one year since I left home for my first days of Peace Corps training.  Technically, the one year anniversary for being a Peace Corps volunteer will not be until early December, but I think this still merits some acknowledgement. 

I came across the new group of Peace Corps Mozambique education volunteers’ Facebook page, and it provided a great means for comparing where I was then and where I am one year later. 

For instance, they had questions and concerns like what “professional clothing” really means and if they should bring their professional suit to how the cell phones work to how you can fit two years of stuff into two bags and how you can possibly be expected to learn another language in such a short amount of time.  Basically, total cluelessness and lack of any idea of what it will really be like.  You can read books and blogs, browse through the daunting stack of paperwork Peace Corps gives you, or ask current and returned volunteers about their experiences, trying to form your own idea of what it might be like.  Ultimately though, nothing can really prepare you for this adventure until you actually arrive, experience it and live it.

And I have lived it, for an entire year now!  It really is pretty crazy to think about.  I still have those moments walking to the market or standing in front of the classroom where I think to myself, “Wow, this is my life…living in Africa” and I can only really chuckle to myself thinking about what a strange reality that is. 

I have grown accustomed to walking to school with a herd of cows and goats and chickens roaming the streets.  It is normal to use a hole in the ground as my “toilet”, to take a shower without running water and to pee in a bucket in the middle of the night.  It no longer intimidates me being constantly stared at and being the only white person around for miles and miles.  I am an expert carvão (charcoal) lighter and can even make sweet potato gnoochi without an American kitchen and all its conveniences.  I have come to expect an unreliability in electricity and cheer right along with the rest of the town when it comes back gone.  It really is amazing how your sense of “normal” can change in such a short amount of time.

Certain things though still catch me off guard and are reminders that I am not in California anymore –  That goat riding on the front of someone’s bicycle, lizards on the walls of my house almost constantly, the six year old boy herding goats along the national highway.  I’m still just as surprised when I see four people drive by on a single motorcycle, no helmets, a baby in the front.  Those chickens still take me by surprise, especially when one is hiding in my bathroom and rushes past my legs, giving me a heart attack.  The extreme power of the African sun and trying to sleep in a house that is over 90 degrees is something you can expect but certainly never get used to.

Those things and moments are reminders that life is a little, no, a lot different here.  But amongst all those inconveniences, simples moments like when I walk home from school and three little girls come running up to give me a big hug and kids coming over in the evening asking for a “discotecha”, meaning for me to bring my flash light out and put it on strobe mode while they dance.  Helping 11 year old Niquito learn to read and seeing my students’ faces when I show them photos of animals they have never heard of like jellyfish and clams.  Those are the things that keep me around and guarantee to make me smile. 

So I have made it through my first year.  Through the ups and downs and all the emotions one might expect someone in this situation to have, and then some.  Have I changed in this past year? Yes, how could you not!?  Here, you certainly need to develop a huge sense of patience and flexibility and it’s almost impossible not to develop an appreciation for the simple things. I most certainly have learned a lot about myself and am much more comfortable and confident.  Mom, that young shy girl who was afraid to talk on the phone or order her food is long gone.  Now I do it in Portuguese or even a local African language! 

It’s still hard and I still have those days where I wish I could sleep in a more comfortable bed without a mosquito net, use a washing machine, or go to a drive-thru.  Days when I wonder what I am doing here, if I’m really making any difference and how nice it would be to hop on a plane and go back to my home in California.  What’s the most surprising aspect?  What’s the biggest difference between here and there?  What’s the hardest part?  Really all I can say in response to those questions is LIFE.  And it’s also my favorite part.  A bit general perhaps, but for this past year, this has been my life and it no longer seems so foreign nor strange.  It’s a simpler life in many ways with fewer conveniences, fewer material items, and a slower pace, but it’s been all the adventure I was hoping it would be.  And guess what….I still have another year! 

Now, rather than thinking of it as a daunting time frame and constantly counting the number of weeks or months I have been here, I have switched to a mindset of realizing how quickly time can pass and how much I still want to do before I leave, potentially just a short 13 months away now!  The days still feel just as long, but the weeks and months seem to be passing much faster now.

This one year mark, interestingly enough exactly one year to the day, brought another surprise….I received a roommate! I had previously been informed that I would most likely be getting a roommate in December, but due to some security reasons at her old house, Adrienne was moved from her site in central Mozambique to come live with me now and will be living in my other small house.  It’ll be quite a different experience this second year not being on my own anymore and sharing my town, but I’m excited for the change! 

It’s been a while since I’ve updated my current projects so I’ll try to catch up on the past few months now too.

About two months ago, I met a neighbor named Iassito when he came by for help with his internet modem.  We got to talking and I discovered he was president of a non-profit organization called AJUDEMU – Associação Juvenil para o Desenvolvimento de Murrupula (Youth Association for the Development of Murrupula).  Volunteerism is not a super common trait among a lot of people here and I was totally impressed hearing about his group’s previous projects and excited at the prospect of possibly being able to help them. 

Currently, they are working on a project to provide computer classes to the community.  They have one super old computer and just finished their first round of classes which include hour-long lessons 5 days a week for 3 weeks for paying students.  Now, I am meeting with about five people, including members of AJUDEMU and the best student from the previous lessons, to help them learn some more about using computers and train them to become teachers for future lessons. 

Iassito also has been helping me with my community library project, along with Professor Shek.  More on this project soon!  We are currently working on making a budget for the construction of the library and are hoping to write a proposal for funding within the next couple months. 

School is coming to its final weeks, only two weeks of classes left and then exam time.  I think both the teachers and the students are ready for the summer break.  During my break, I hope to do a little more traveling, perhaps to see Lake Niassa, travel south of my site to visit other volunteers, and say good-bye to those volunteers who have completed their service and are heading home in November and December.  Perhaps most exciting, my friend Courtney from home is meeting me in South Africa to do a safari and visit Cape Town in January! 

I still can’t decide if it feels like it’s been a long year or has gone by really quickly, but, nonetheless, an entire year has passed since I left home and that is pretty incredible to think about.  Thank you for your considered support and words of encouragement! J