Monday, December 31, 2007

Teachers Getting Trained

Here are pictures of a few of the students who went to the two-week training course in Early Childhood Development at APPM.

Picture 1: During the Certificates Ceremony, the trainees showed us, the guests, what they had learned. There was singing, dancing, and demonstrations of Immunization Record keeping, how to make an alphabet chart, etc. Pictured here are a bunch of the teachers showing the cool stuff you can make for students (or have them make themselves) using local materials. Do NOT miss Patrick on the far left. He put on the sunglasses just for the singing. A crowd favorite, that one.


Picture 2: The sign for the place is in the background). These are the teachers from Kuunika Foundation. Note how creeped out Rita appears to be by my placing my hand on her shoulder. From the left, it's Brandina, Rita, (White Guy), Ruth, (Hawa's baby), Hawa, Jonas, Emmanuel.


Thanks go to Chris Pappas in New York/Turkey, Ethan and Laurel in Bowling Green, WI (that's right, right?), Laura Groen in Hollywood (I love saying that), and Laremy and Becca in Annapolis, MD. Dang, I can't help feeling really cool by association here. Groovy, groovy people give me money. And, not everyone gets to city-name-drop like this, ostensibly "for a good cause," but really for my own ego.

The Phone of Jonas

Here is Jonas, and his new phone.


Jonas is the Head Teacher at Kuunika Foundation, an orphanage in transition between having next to nothing to having a bunch of new buildings, a garden, and a worldwide funding network. At the time they're barely making ends meet, and Jonas is a big part of making it happen. He's not quite as sharp as Steven, the Executive Director, but he works hard and maintains an interminably positive attitude. It's a little difficult to coordinate with him sometimes, if Steven or I need something to get done, simply because we can't always contact him, and he lives quite a walk from the orphanage. This phone means he can "flash" or "missed call" one of us to let us know he wants to talk, and we who have money for phone credit can call him back, and we can coordinate. Already the phone's been used a lot, for practical things. Yay!

Gotta love that missing tooth, huh?

Thanks to Brielle from Eugene, OR for this one.

Monday, December 3, 2007

not all wine and roses

Hello, ZP people. In an effort not to mislead anyone about the nature of development, I wrote an essay about some of the darker realities that I don't put in my e-mails. It's for you, for your understanding:

ZP: The Dark Side

One of the most important components of sustainable development is understanding. You can’t help someone to make positive changes that will last if you don’t put in the time to learn what’s really going on with him/her. It’s been my goal that you all could at least get a glimpse of what their lives are like over here, in the interest of helping to educate us all about the plight of the poor.

Unfortunately, sometimes, since I’m also trying to wheedle money out of ya, I do what most aid agencies do: I tell about the needs with cuteness and optimism to make everyone feel like it’s a simple matter of giving money to good people and things will change. I’ve realized of late that this kind of approach leaves you with a critically inaccurate picture of what really goes on and just how tough this whole game is.

Hence the title of this little note, “The Dark Side.” Too many people fail to realize how deep and widespread the problem is (indeed, thousands and thousands of well-intentioned Westerners have marched into Africa and done more harm than good for that very reason), and I feel that I would be doing you a disservice if I didn’t make an effort to convey that.

Countries like Malawi aren’t just economically poor, they’re spiritually, mentally, and physically poor—because poverty has a way of creeping into everything, like a cancer. Someone you consider a close friend could stab you in the back easily, for the sake of money. Many a volunteer here has a story of someone they trusted, or even worked with for over a year, who outright robbed them. The man who founded one of the orphanages I’ve been working with, a Malawian man respected in the community, ended up sexually abusing the orphans and staff, stealing money, and other perpetrating other offenses I won’t list. The co-founder of a particular school I visited, who owns the land on which it’s built, recently chopped down a huge mango used for meetings, shade, and play, simply because he was feeling slighted by one of the workers and wanted to assert his authority (He claimed it was for firewood, but trees are plenteous in that area.) One week ago the water spigot at the orphanage was stolen. The water spigot. So the kids didn’t have water because someone wanted the extra dollar or two he might get from selling the spigot. If a door hinge breaks or the map of Malawi gets accidentally torn and falls lopsidedly to the ground, someone almost never lifts a finger to fix it. People aren’t taught to maintain or take pride in things they own, either individually or collectively, so most things are in a perpetual state of falling into disrepair. This has proven true with locations I’ve visited like the large Chiradzulu hospital, donated by the EU, that administers quality health care. Unfortunately, several machines have stopped working and no one will fix them, though they aren’t difficult to repair. In ten or twenty years, as someone on my visit commented, without regular visits from donors and work teams, the hospital will needlessly fall apart due to a lack maintenance. Similarly, if you introduce a helpful concept, like “permaculture” in one location where a Swiss friend of mine is working—a practice whereby you can increase your crop yields, manage the land better, and maintain the ecological balance—most of the time the villagers will only adopt the concept as a novelty to humor you, and when you leave or try to shift the responsibility to the locals they’ll abandon it. It happens all the time.

Not to be a downer, but that’s only the beginning. There’s child abuse, a general delusion about what causes AIDS, corruption that helps the rich get richer, and the list goes on. I could start in on how many of Africa’s problems come from Westerners who plundered natural resources, trafficked and sold slaves, and imposed a culturally arrogant version of Christianity etc., but we’d be here all night.

Concerning ZP affairs, things haven’t been failing by any means, but I feel it would be remiss not to mention a few foibles: The sugar cane press project unfortunately had to be abandoned in favor of selling the materials for a good price. Due to a series of events typical of Malawi (I was stood up 3 times in a row by the same man who said he would sell us his freezer but then never did, the supply of sugarcane ran out, and other things took longer than they should have), we came to a point where I knew the project won’t be up and running by the time I leave in February—and that’s a recipe for disaster. At the same time, someone offered us a very good price for the materials whereby we can make a small profit, and they will benefit from our experience and use the press for and worthy project in Zomba, a town not far from Blantyre. It’s disappointing, of course, but it’s always necessary to cut one’s losses and be realistic when the situation calls for it. The money we’ve gotten out of the sale will help to pay for a few necessary rainy-season supplies for the orphanage and/or a smaller, more manageable income-generating project.

One week after Pastor Tembo and company got the farm equipment for New Jerusalem Food Farm, he visited again to ask for money for seeds and fertilizer. I’d told them that the ZP was not going to provide money for ongoing needs and perishables, and that they shouldn’t think that we were going to “fund” them in any way. They’d done beautiful, if modest things without any outside help, and I didn’t want to interfere with that spirit. Still, it seems that their notion that they’d “scored” in finding a white donor led them to start thinking in that old, codependent way. Hopefully my refusal of his request, cold though it may seem, can nip that in the bud.

Overall, the message is that no gift is perfect, and real development requires immense patience, longsuffering, and simplicity of heart. And none of us, including me, have earned the right with our giving to think we don’t still bear a great weight of responsibility to seriously contemplate our role in a world where the situation of the poor just isn’t improving and our habits and lifestyles as the world’s rich are contributing to it. I’ve intended with this message not to point out how lazy or irresponsible the poor in Malawi (or me, for that matter) are, but to make sure that you can, vicariously and as clearly as I’m able to convey, get a more well-rounded view of whom you’re helping and how—sort of like getting the Cliff’s Notes on a few of the hard lessons I’m learning, so that I don’t feel like I’m the only one benefiting from them.

And please don’t feel disheartened. I still feel good about the gifts we’ve given—it’s much harder to go wrong when you invest in education and in hardworking people who already have their own projects underway. And, it’s always worth the hassle and heartache to continue striving towards the goal—and I say that as much to hear it myself as to tell it to you.

Thanks for reading. As always, if you want to know more, I’m happy to answer questions.

Peace,

Adam

Monday, October 29, 2007

New Jerusalem Food Farm

Pastor Tembo (see if you can figure out which one's him!) and I spent a long day buying the hoes, watering cans, pangas, and bikes together, but when we arrived back at the orphanage/farm, the ladies were waiting for us, and happy to get their stuff. In a few weeks I'll be visiting New Jerusalem Food Farm again to check on their progress. They have two hectares of land and they plan to cultivate tomatoes, corn, potatoes, greens, onions, and other stuff too.

First, here are the hoes. The wood handles are easy to make and at the moment of the photo they only had four. Hence, they're holding the rest of them. We bought a tougher metal that lasts at least five years, as opposed to the cheaper kind that lasts one or two seasons.
Watering cans. The land is next to a river and since there aren't any really good irrigation systems in place, during the dry season a lot of the smaller plants take water by hand. So it goes.
Um, right. The Zikomo Project: Promoting peace and understanding one weapon of death at a time. (Actually, the panga knives are a multiple-use tool for farming, cooking, chopping . . . and possibly decapitation.) At the time of the picture I think someone had just insulted someone else's goat.
The bikes are so that Pastor Tembo and company can get around easily and cheaply. They live a good half hour walk from the market and main road, and after that's a minibus ride into town, which costs money. With bikes they can save time and money.
Thanks go to: Chris and Maria in Austin, MN for one bike; Mike and Sherri in Delaware for the other one. Sarah Grace in Chicago and Grete in Chicago for the watering cans. Ned and Rosemary in Twin Falls, ID for the hoes. Gretchen and James in Liberty, Missouri for the pangas.

And, this is me, acting like an idiot. What else are you going to do when you have ten machete-like instruments at hand?

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Alfred's Certificate


Alfred is a really solid guy. He works at the District Assembly with the election council, but more pertinently he does sessions on HIV/AIDS awareness all over the place, mostly of his own volition. He's worked mainly with Linda, but in my dealings with him he's been gracious, well-spoken, and keen. The Zikomo Project kicked in $100 of the $250 he needs to get a management certificate. He's currently attending the classes. He's also a point man in the sugar cane project, insofar as he's working to help the Lunzu Women's Group to get their business off the ground. He will probably be an asset as a resource not only while I'm here, but for a long time to come.

Thanks to Nick and Jess from Chicago.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Hampered

I once again find myself saddled with visa issues. This has slowed things down considerably. I am, unfortunately, discovering that a white person without much money (ie: Me) doesn't fit comfortably into any categories here, and unfortunately the corruption in the system has been visited upon my situation. It'll work itself out eventually, but for now all things are on hold. Please do stay tuned.

Friday, August 24, 2007

The Cane Press


That's Linda. No, on the left--that's ME, you weirdo. Linda's the Crisis Corps Volunteer who commissioned the first cane press to be made. The second one belongs to the ZP, and everyone I talk to about it says "Oh, man, that's a good idea." Wish it was my idea. Oh well. I did invent peanut butter, after all.

This little beauty will be used, probably by a group of women from the village, to make fresh sugar cane juice to be sold on the street--with a percentage of the profits also going to the Kuunika Foundsation Orphanage. I think I'll require them to draw up a business plan, and eventually pay the cost of the press back with their profits, so another one can be bought with the money, making this deal a sort of franchise.

Thanks to Brett (two T's) from Chicago, Norma from Twin Falls, Ryan and Amie from Lynden (Washington), and The General Fund (we were about $14 short so we dipped into the reserve).

If you were wondering, sugar cane juice has a surprisingly light, refreshing taste that's vaguely floral and not too sweet. It's best when spiked with lemon, lime, or ginger.

Lemosi gets schooled


If Lemosi were an American and knew me well, he'd hate me. I'm a seat-of-the-pants type of guy, and Lemosi is not. Every time I've seen him, he is dressed nicely with a clean and pressed shirt (though he's dirt poor). Though his phone is held together with rubber bands and was probably made in the 1500's, he managed to call me 8 times when he heard I'd come to his school while he was out on an errand. He was mortified that I'd come during school hours and he was not there. He always speaks politely, smiles like he's Miss Teen USA, and sometimes you can tell he's nervous. We're paying for his last 4 terms of "high school" (Forms) and the accompanying exams. He's extremely grateful for this gift, and having talked to several people about him, I can say for sure that he's a hard worker who will use his schooling to the best of his abilities. I've also told him that since Daddy Zikomo helped him out, maybe he can throw some volunteer time our way sometime. He agreed and wrote it down.

Thanks for this one go to Jack and Jasmine in Pasadena (right?), Matt and Brielle in Eugene, Erika in (crap. crap. i'm horrible. tell me. i'll edit the post when i figure it out.), Jill in Minneapolis, and Rebecca and Mike in Vancouver, B.C. Now that's teamwork, gang (picture that with a denim ballcap on backwards and a thumbs-up).

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

The Kids


This is Clement, Henry, Mdiuzani (sounds great on the tongue when you get used to saying it), and Rita. They took a "nicer" picture than this, but I liked this one best. These four have received their school fees courtesy of Nick and Jori in Twin Falls, Idaho. Also, courtesty of Tom and Shanna in Twin Falls, their all-important national exams at the end of the term are also paid for. They're all polite, attentive young folks, and I especially like the girls--they're not afraid to speak up (even though culturally girls are more shy), their English is great, and they have things they want to do after Forms (high school). Generally, these are four great people.

Matthews Jimu, the fifth who was going to get money from this donation, hasn't been coming to school. This happens a lot, and I was firm, telling him we wouldn't pay for a student who doesn't show up. He was crestfallen. I told him that if he can get the Head Master to write me a letter, convincing me to give him a second chance, we'll see about getting him some funding. Stay tuned on that.

***

Things are going really well with the Zikomo Project. There is a transfer fee of $30 plus 1% for the money to get from the U.S. to here, but we minimize the effect of that by sending BIG amounts all at once. On this last transfer, in the end we paid 2.5% to get the money here (that doesn't include PayPal fees), if you figure the $30 in. I don't think that's too bad, do you? More photos are on the way. So far everything that was requested has been covered. This is good.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Hence the Silence

I've been having visa problems lately, and am being pulled in a lot of different directions, not the least of which is settling into a new home out in the village, an hour bike ride away from technology. Hence, I haven't gotten other photos up yet. Do not fear.

All gifts that have been sought up to this point have been given right away. So this is great! In fact, I have to turn several willing donors away each time. I hope no one gets frustrated with that, because it's AWESOME. Most recently, the requests for clothes/shoes for Mattis and a Hope Kit (HIV/AIDS awareness teaching aids) for me and whoever I can find to replace me were met.

Photos soon.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Steven's Bike

Steven was really excited when I told him about the bike. The idea came from me and Sima, a woman who also volunteers her time for the orphanage. Nowadays, he saves about a buck a day (which is definitely appreciable, believe me) that would have been spent on minibus fees. For short trips, he can save time too. Equally importantly, it gave him a little morale boost. I can't tell you how many flaming torches this guy has to juggle. He has to deal with a cranky (and sometimes lazy) board of trustees, snot-nosed kids coming out his armpits, and a budget that exists only in spirit, and that's just the beginning. I like Steven a lot. He's a good friend, a really hard worker, and completely deserving recipient. If you were wondering, the grass structure in the background is the kitchen. The one who's not smiling is named Georgina, and she's got a great voice. Thanks to Bret from Chicago for this one.

As of now, we've also got funding for Alfred's management certificate, and for 5 students at Nyambadwe school to finish their "senior year of high school" (aka Third term of Standard 4). I'm contemplating a request for an HIV/AIDS kit that Peace Corps makes, which I'd learn how to use and then (fingers crossed) get someone else to take it over.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

nothing here yet

But, there will be.

On this blog you will find updates, photos, and archived requests, to chronicle the gifts given to this program and the progress of the program in general. Comments welcome.

The first request for $75 for a bike for Steven Makwisa was met right away. In fact, our generous numero uno donor kicked in an extra $25, which I'll probably spend on warm clothes for the kids.

PayPal will be up and running in time for the next donation request, so credit card users, rejoice.