Sunday, February 22, 2015

Let There Be Light

Over a year ago, John Tembrock, a solar engineer from Boulder, CO, designed a solar system that would be installed on St. Paul School’s new school building, which at the time was no more than a drawing itself. This week, John joined me here in Uganda to watch his plans come to life! We spent most of the week at St. Paul School overseeing both the electrical and solar installation. Despite a few minor setbacks we were able to complete the system and test the connection before John returned home. Fortunately, with just a few adjustments and 12 panels, 8 batteries, 24 light bulbs, and 45 meters of wire later, the entire school now has light!
When we weren’t busy with the solar project, we were in the classroom writing pen pal letters with the students. This has always been one of my favorite projects so I was happy to be able to share this experience with someone who has given so much to the school. Fostering cross-cultural exchange is a critical element to our successful relationships between our partner schools. Plus, the students just love getting their letters and writing back to their friends in Colorado. 
But it wasn’t all work while he was here… on our last night at St. Paul, we took a 15 minute boda-boda (motorcycle) ride to a fishing port on the shore of Lake Victoria and for $0.50 got a 20 minute boat ride with one of the fisherman along the coast!
I am so grateful to have spent this week with such a hard-working, lighthearted, and compassionate person. This week wouldn't have been half as productive without his expertise.   


St. Paul School Solar Array

St. Paul School Solar System

St. Paul School with electricity!

The view from the front of the school building at night

Pen pal letter delivery
Pen pal letter delivery

Pen pal letter writing

Pen pal letter writing

Fishing port at Lake Victoria

Fishermen at sunset on Lake Victoria 


Sunday, February 8, 2015

Gulu Town, home of the Acholi

“Kop ango?” says the man working a little stand at the bus park who sells airtime (cell phone credit). I smile because I know this greeting and respond, “Kop pe.” I had finally arrived in Gulu, where I will visit my host family from three years ago when I traveled to Africa for the first time as a student. When I arrived at my host family’s compound three years ago, a bunch of uncertain yet welcoming faces greeted me, now when I pull up to the compound, all I see are familiar faces full of excitement. Paula, my host mom, is an older woman with a toothless smile and a soft chuckle. She is raising her late daughter’s three young children, Gabrielle, Joann, and Joshua.  During my first trip to Gulu, Mama Paula’s other daughter, Caroline, was happily married. She had just bore her husband their first child, a son, which she carried proudly on her back. However, as I’ve returned over the years Caro revealed a dark reality of abuse that began only after she became a mother. At first, when the topic of abuse arose, I told them I would leave the man that ever raised his hand to me and they laughed so hard as if I they thought I was joking. Then during my next visit, Caro was 8 months pregnant with her second child and as we sat in a crowded hospital hallway, waiting for a doctor who we never saw, she cried on my shoulder saying, “I’m afraid I’ve found a bad man, but I have his children.” I won’t claim to understand the intricacies of relationships in Ugandan culture, but as she explained the details of her abuse to me in that hot hospital room, I knew I needed to do something to help her protect herself. Before she could even contemplate leaving him, she needed to ensure that she could provide for herself and her children. That is when we became more than sisters; we became business partners.  For two years now, she has been making traditional paper beaded jewelry for the Mwebaza Foundation that we purchase from her and sell in the US to raise money for our partner schools back in East Africa.

This time when I arrived in Gulu to pick up my order of jewelry and spend a few days playing with the children, I was surprised and proud to learn that Caro had taken her two children and left her abusive husband. She has been working in the market and renting a room in her mother, Paula’s, house. Another lady, who had also escaped from an abusive relationship, was also renting a room in Paula’s house with her two young children as well. I told Paula she is practically running an unofficial safe house for abused women. She just chuckled and said, I don’t mind living in poverty as long as I live in a happy home where we will not be disturbed.  And a happy home is exactly what she has created. I spent three full days sitting on her veranda, making jewelry, playing with the children, and laughing the entire time. My last night in Gulu, I laid down outside on a thatch mat next to the fire. Joshua laid on my left and Juilet on my right and little Franklin found a spot right on top of me. We all looked up at the sky and whispered as we began counting the stars. Within 10 minutes Joshua and Franklin were asleep and Juilet’s little voice continued to whisper, 79… 83… 54… as she counted the stars.


Caro sitting on the veranda with her beads and jewelry
Caro pouring lacquer over the paper beads


Gabrielle, Franklin, Joshua, and Joann playing together with some safari toys I gifted to them

Joshua washing his hands before lunch



Franklin, Ruth, Sam, Joshua, and Juliet sitting waiting for lunch to be served

Franklin


Joshua and Ruth (Caro's youngest child) 


Monday, February 2, 2015

Patience is a Virtue

For the past week and a half I have been busy scheduling the logistics of the various projects I am here to accomplish. In the next three weeks, the roofing will be finished at our middle school site and St. Paul will have solar electricity! There are other projects that wont be completed until after I leave due to the functional progression of construction. For example, the gutters and the glass for the windows can't be installed until after the plastering of the building is complete, and the plastering can't be done until the eaves have been built. I am happy to say that the construction of the eaves has begun today. The eaves can be built in two weeks time but the plastering will take a month and a half to finish. Therefore, by mid-April the school will finally have windows with glass and a fully functional rainwater collection and sterilization system!
Today was also the first day of school for many schools across Uganda, including St. Paul School and Mwebaza Primary School. Classrooms that are usually packed from wall to wall were half full today because many students don't show up for school until the second or third week of class. Many parents think their children can miss weeks of class around harvest seasons or at the beginning of a term and it won't affect their performance. However, this idea is something that is slowly beginning to change as they realize the importance of education.