Sunday, August 2, 2009

Explanation

Hi everybody,

Sorry for the month-long posting hiatus. I went to Quebec to visit some family, and when I got back my computer broke. To make a long story short, we had to format the hard drive. Fortunately, I still haven't deleted all the Uganda photos from my camera, and I should be able to retrieve them. This is good, because there are still a few things I want to write about. I'll be back soon.

Take care,
Katelyn

Monday, June 22, 2009

Field Day

Tabiro, and it's neighbouring community Kikunu, were home to hundreds of children. We had originally planned to organize a few field days in Tabiro, but when we visited a church in Kikunu and saw number 14 on the list...


we thought we'd better organize one there too. (In case it's too small, the program says "14. Football. (Visitors Vs. Children))

Uganda is not a very easy place to be organized. Around fifty kids would show up to each field day. An hour later, there would be over two hundred. We originally tried organizing them into a few teams, but since more and more children of diverse ages kept arriving, it didn't really work. We still gave them the headscarves meant for that purpose, which many of them wore every day after that.

We tried explaining different games to them, but we discovered that, for the older kids, soccer was the sport of choice. In the background of this photo you can see one of the goal-posts. When the field isn't being used for soccer, cows graze on it and keep the grass short.

The little kids watched, or looked at the photos we took of them, or played with the parachute:
Can you make the balls go all the way around without switching direction or falling off?

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Wisdom Teeth

Sorry for the dearth in posts - I had my wisdom teeth out on Tuesday, and have been grappling with the most terrific headache for the past 4 days. I'll be back - stay tuned.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Shake Hands with the Devil

Vultures infest Uganda's Makarere University. I learned that they used to be uncommon, but have been prevalent on the campus since the genocide in bordering Rwanda.


Though I already knew about the genocide, somehow seeing the vultures really drove it home. I couldn't help thinking that it could happen again so easily...

Since I got back, I've started reading Romeo Dallaire's Shake Hands with the Devil. It's a sobering read, but I feel like it's a neccesary one - such tragic events could easily have been prevented or, at the very least, made less harsh. I am so glad that General Dallaire has not remained quiet about what he calls "humanity's failure in Rwanda."

Monday, June 15, 2009

Roaming

One of the great things about Uganda is it is full of places to walk. The main road which travels between Kampala and Entebbe has communities dotted every 500 metres along it, except within the Lake Victoria National Park. In between each roadside community is a network of dirt roads, and multiple other communities.

Uganda is topographically similar to Kenya; the country is, for the most part, elevated, and there are plenty of hills that help make it more so. As it is, there are plenty of hills to climb, and on our first day there, we ascended one with a witchcraft shrine on the top.

Witchcraft is practiced by about 70% of Uganda's population. It is generally practiced in tandem with Catholicism, Anglicanism, or Islam, although some practice it exclusively.

Witch doctors still engage in child sacrifice and other abhorrent practices. Last year, so many children went missing that the government cracked down, but witchcraft is still legal. One night we saw on the news that the body of a 35-year-old man had been found in a witchcraft shrine. I don't usually criticize people of differing religious faith, but I find any religion that permits child sacrifice too much to bear.

Anyway, I digress. The other things we saw on the top of the hill were also interesting.

Not me, but the view. In all the pictures I took, it looks like a great plain. It is not; it's actually a pretty strenuous climb. Note the garbage fire to the left of my head: Ugandans don't have garbage collection facilities, at least in the country, and so most of them just burn their trash. As they don't have much, this isn't a huge problem. During the rainy season, there is little to no risk that any fire would spread. I'm not sure about the dry season, but I suspect that it is still safe because any forest fire would destroy the homes of at least a 100,000 people. Uganda is very densely populated.
This is a termite mound, with Jasen standing there for scale. They are massive.


This is a phone tower. Few, if any, Ugandans own landlines, but mobile phones are prevalent, and there are towers everywhere. The little hut next to it is for the security guards, and has "security" painted on it. The guards are seated at a table behind it.

Somebody wrote "stupid" in the grass. I was immediately reminded of the second grade, where my seatmate would write the same word on pieces of paper and dare me to tell on him. Apparently, somebody a little older than that still thinks it's funny!

Saturday, June 13, 2009

What We Actually Did There I - Stitching Club

Now that I've talked about some of the cultural aspects of the trip, I should probably fill everybody in on what we were actually doing while we were there.

We were engaged in several projects, but the one that I enjoyed the most (and was likely the most useful in) was the stitching club.


The two other women on the trip and I taught embroidery to the local women, with the hope that it will become a cottage industry. The picture shows Mary (in blue), Cathy (in pink), with Gertrude and Florence. Gertrude and Florence were not from Tabiro, and walked over five kilometers to attend every meeting. Their work was phenomenal.

Every woman who came to the stitching club ended up selling her piece for a tidy sum of 50,000 shillings each. Though this is only about $25 CDN, it is a lot when Ugandan prices are taken into account. We hope there will be more to come, if anybody who reads this is interested in buying one!


A piece in progress.




Hard at work.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Across the Street

Across the street from Tabiro School stood a two-room shack. Aysha, the woman who inhabited it had three-day-old twins, as well as 4-6 other children, and a husband. Her mother lived with her too.

I took a photo of all her older children with some of her neighbours' children. Pauline, the one seated in the middle, is physically disabled; she has callouses on her knees from walking on them.Aysha asked if she could take a picture of me with Pauline and her other children because, "they love you." This photo was taken on my first day there, and remains one of my favourites.