Wednesday, July 18, 2007

A Good Time Was Had by All

We finished up the Pangea part of the trip on Monday, when we drove from Kisumu to Nakuru where our driver dropped Allan, Jerry, and myself. Bob and Duane Edwards (Pangea's newest member who joined us for the last 5 days) went on to Nairobi where they caught their planes home that night. Our last few days continued the trend of visiting very interesting and inspiring projects.

We spent Friday with GWAKO, a group that does water projects for communities who are providing comprehensive services to orphans and caregivers. They are a faith-based group, which made some of us nervous, but they assured us that their water projects were to help everyone, with no strings attached. To be realistic, this part of Kenya is so Christian that any evangelism would be preaching to the choir. In the end, even the most skeptical were impressed by their work. They took us to visit a women's group in a fairly remote village--their proposal to us last year was to put in this well, but we turned them down; luckily they found other funding. Their services are very complete and very organized...we saw some of the best record-keeping we've ever seen among African groups. While we were in the obligatory ceremonial welcome, the venue was invaded by a "small snake", which freaked me out and that, in turn, amused them. As has happened several times on this trip, the women "bonded" with me, especially the leader of this group. She asked me how many children I had. When I replied "two", she looked sad and said "why so few?" She really didn't understand when I tried to explain that it was a choice and quite common in our country. Later, when Bob introduced himself and said he had 2 kids, she pointed at me and smiled, as if to say "I guess you were telling me the truth."

We got back to Kisumu about 2:30 and spent the next couple of hours roaming the market, shopping for a gift for Rabuor Village, and relaxing. The next morning, we headed out with two representatives of World Neighbors to visit one of their projects. We were all impressed by their approach, which is to provide lots of training to build the capacity of the local organization. In this case, the CBO works in 18 villages that are working together on a reforestation project to rescue their land from some severe soil erosion (there are big gullies that "eat" the land whenever there are heavy rains upstream). Again, we connected with the community members (maybe we're getting good at this?) and had some very interesting side conversations.

That afternoon, we arrived in Rabuor Village (Loyce's home) where we spent the next two nights in her parents' home. They've outfitted the former homes of her two oldest brothers as guest houses, and that's where we stayed. We toured the many aspects of the Rabuor project, had a chance to really talk with people about the sunflower project, and have the rare privilege of seeing how the family lives (pit latrine, bucket showers, and all). Loyce and her crew on the ground are starting to expand their dreams, already working with 10 neighboring villages and expanding the sunflower business.

We look forward to showing some of our pictures and telling some of the best stories when we see you all in Seattle. Best, Chris and the rest of the team

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Kitale - Common Ground Project

Hello from Kisumu, where it's a hazy day in the mid-70s. I hear it's hot in Seattle. Tuesday we left Dar es Salaam on a 5:25 a.m. flight (groan) and flew through Nairobi to Kisumu, where we met our driver Kennedy. We did a little shopping, and met with Rose Waringa, who heads a new organization named Precious Tears Initiative. Kennedy had nixed our plan to visit her site before driving to Kitale, so we had her join us for lunch to hear about her program working with orphans and grandmothers. It sounds like an interesting approach, so we arranged to go there at the end of the day today. After lunch, we drove 3 hours to Kitale, where we were greeted by Joshua Mashinga, the director of Common Ground. The children from Pathfinder Academy, the school run by CG, entertained us and presented us with a beautiful woven wall hanging of the Pangea logo. After a quick cup of tea, we went to our hotel, which is a golf club most assuredly built by the British. The facilities were straight out of the 50s...the shower has an on-demand heater built into the showerhead. You turn on the heater with a switch outside the bathroom door, but a big sign says you have to start the shower running first or "the boiler will blow up!" The club is too far from the center of town to walk there for food, but there is a dining room with very cheap food. This is a case of "you get what you pay for"--the chef must be British trained, because the food was bland and poorly prepared. Oh well. Yesterday we spent the entire day with Joshua, touring numerous community sites and meeting with quite a few self-help groups. Most of what we saw was centered around bio-intensive gardening, which is really effective. It increases yield by 5x, it emphasizes a balanced kitchen garden that will provide all the nutrients, and each group that is trained sees an immediate increase in health and revenue from their small farm. Joshua is somewhat of a renaissance man, who has incredible energy and must not sleep much. We feel that anything he does will be helpful to the community, but currently much of his time is absorbed by running the school. He wants to get out from under that, and we hope he can, so he can return to his passion. We talked with him about the future and about ways we might be able to help him leverage his time. All in all, a very impressive program and an amazing leader! Best to all, Chris

Sunday, July 08, 2007

Days 3-6: Mombasa and Dar es Salaam

It's just before 8am on Monday morning and we're in Dar es Salaam. Chris, Allan, and I (Bob) have finally found an Internet cafe that works (!) and has a ferociously fast net connection, at least by African standards.

We met with Harvest of Hope on 7/5. Impressive. Dr. Okemwa, an oceanographer, has made this school his retirement project. The school has been in operation for five years, and the grounds are a former farm. The chicken pens have been turned into classrooms, and the stable is the meeting hall. That sounds jury-rigged, but the result looks tailor made for a school -- maybe a dozen nice-sized and tidy classrooms going from primary school through secondary. The kids looked happy and healthy. The administrator asked them to introduce themselves, which they did (shyly). She said that introducing themselves to the "distinguished visitors" was a big deal for them.

Our flight on Thursday from Mombassa was uneventful, though delayed. We stopped in Zanzibar en route and got a nice view as we flew in.

On Friday (7/7/07) we saw Mama Rhoi's One Stop Center. Had a nice BBQ. We brought Nerf footballs, a Frisbee, and horseshoes. We had to show the kids how the games were played. I had a lot of fun showing the kids how to throw the various toys (too bad you throw a football the opposite way from a Frisbee). And here I was worried that I wouldn't find kids my own age...

Once some of the kids got it, they'd then show the others. There's quite an age range at the school -- roughly 6 to 16, I'm guessing. It's a surprisingly big orgnization. 150 or so students, a couple of dozen or so who are boarders, teachers and admimistrators. Rhoi has big plans to build a new 3-story schoolhouse.

Friday was the last day of the week-long HIV training (for both students and adults) that Pangea paid for, and we were at the "high table" at the awards ceremony. Looks like good community presence and participation (which we're increasingly seeing as important). There appears to be the inevitable friction between an organization and the local government, but perhaps our presence gave the One Stop Center a higher profile in the eyes of the officials.

Sunday was a break day. We visited a crafts bazaar and shopped in the local grocery store. Today (Monday) we're going back to visit the Teens Against AIDS camp. Rhoi had wanted to run a water pipeline (the well runs dry around December), but it seems to make more sense to drill a new well. They'll be able to irrigate more crops and perhaps sell water to the community. She should be able to get a much deeper well with a water tank to hold two weeks of water (electricity isn't reliable, especially in the dry season) for the grant money that we have given.

More football and Frisbee, perhaps? Allan has been asked to teach a yoga class and we'll also install the software we brought as gifts, and maybe do a little computer training. We met the three young adults who lead the Teens program on Saturday, and we'll start with a longer chat with them to learn what progress they've had.

Tuesday we have a 5:30am (!) flight back to Kenya. Won't be getting much sleep that night. Duane Edwards, a new Pangea member, is planning on meeting us when we get back to Kenya.

Everyone's healthy here and jet lag is behind us. Wish you were here!

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Days 1 and 2: St. Marg., MMAAK, EAC

As I sit typing this, a small lizard is crawling on the wall in front

of me. We're in Mombasa, Kenya and it's Tuesday evening, the end of

our second full day.

Our first visit was with St. Margarita's. (That's the group on the

shore of Lake Victoria, and we bought them tractors and pumps to work

their idle fields.) We met with four of them (at the hotel rather than

on site, unfortunately) and the discussion was quite informative. They

began in 1986. Sounds like their success has been contagious, and

neighboring communities are clamboring for the government to provide

what St. Margarita's has done.

Their focus is on the upcoming generation, not the present generation

of adults. Even though ARVs (anti-retroviral medicine) is becoming

available for free from the government, stigma has kept many adults

from even getting tested. Seems like tough love, but practical.

From a big picture standpoint, their focus is evolving from water

(success) to health (success) to education (the current focus), and

they're working to get kids from primary school into secondary school

and then even to college.

Later on Monday we met with the Movement of Men Against AIDS of Kenya.

This is a group that we *didn't* fund last time, and one new twist on

this trip is to see a few of these almost-but-not-quite groups.

We were quite impressed with this group also. Their focus is behavior

change in the HIV+ men (getting them to help with the nursing tasks of

relatives, reducing domestic violence, etc.), boosting their optimism,

and reducing the stigma. "Positive masculinity" is their motto, which

sounds odd to American ears, but seems to work here.

They work in 5 provinces and have a total of roughly 3000 clients

(either direct or indirect). They're loosly affiliated with similar

groups around the Lakes area (DRC, Burundi, Rwanda, Tanzania).

[Seen on the way to dinner last night: the Jesus is the Answer Dental

Clinic. (I don't think so, unless Jesus has a DDS degree...)]

Today (Tuesday) we flew to Mombasa, on the coast. We visited the East

Africa Center and Suzanne Jeneby showed us around. Their current

location is well used but cramped, and she showed us a new 6-acre plot

nearby. No buildings yet, but they have plans and are working on the

permits. They expect to break ground on the Pangea-funded clinic in

about a month. Suzanne is returning to Seattle to work on a Master's

program at UW, and she's eager to visit us at one of our meetings or

lectures. We met Francis and Kennedy, the two men who will be taking

over day-to-day operations. Looks like the EAC will be in good hands.

More soon!

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Lift-Off 2007

Today begins the prelude to our adventure: the long trip to Africa. Jerry and I are already halfway there (France), Bob Seidensticker leaves Seattle tonight, and Allan Paulson is the last one out tomorrow afternoon. It takes about 24 hours to make the trip: 9 hours to London, a few hours layover, and another 8-9 hours to Nairobi--crossing 11 time zones in the process. Obviously, jet lag will be an issue the first few days.

We have a very rich (and exhausting) itinerary planned, including visits to all 6 projects funded in 2006, to 3 groups who submitted proposals in 2006 but weren't awarded a grant, to 2 new groups, and a return visit to Sauri Millennium Village. And we hope to do a little sightseeing on our one free day in Dar es Salaam.

We'll do our best to update this blog every few days, depending on availability of internet access, so check back often and feel free to share it with anyone you think would be interested.

Asante sana,
Chris Doerr

Friday, June 01, 2007

Preparing for the 2007 Trip

It's June 1st, and we're a month away from our arrival in Africa for this year's site visit. There will be 4 Pangea members traveling: Allan Paulson, Bob Seidensticker, Jerry and me. All the arrangements are made, we've all gotten the shots we need, and we have tickets and visas in hand. We'll be in Africa a few days longer than last year, which gives us more time to spend with each grantee. We'll actually stay at Rabuor village in Kenya for two nights, and will spend two days helping at the Teens Against AIDS summer camp. We'll update the blog just before our departure, and then as often as possible during our trip. Feel free to share this blog with others who might be interested. Wish us luck! Chris

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Visits to CARE Tumaini Projects and ARK School

Our Africa trip is winding down. Yesterday, Chris and Jerry left for the peaceful shores of Zanzibar. Sydney and I spent the day with staff from CARE International visiting two Tumaini projects. Tumaini means hope in Swahili. It was an interesting contrast going from our small grantees to organizations benefitting from PEPFAR money. Both programs follow specific funding guidelines, reporting requirements and continuous monitoring by CARE staff. The first one we visited, UMAKI, was about an hour out of Dar es Salaam in an area called Kibaha. It was actually located on a military base and at least one of the program managers was in uniform. I learned later the military plays a much different role in Tanzania. They have not fought in a war since Edi Amin left Uganda and have had no internal conflicts so they spend their time doing community work. The second organization, Jipeni Women and Community Organization, is closer to Dar but still felt rural. The program manager is a dynamic, young woman named Beatrice Janda. Both organizations are charged with indentifying people living with HIV/AIDs (PLHA) and most vulnerable children and orphans (MVO), providing psychosocial support, mobilizing communites, finding volunteers in each village and training them on home based care, food subsidies, transportation for receiving ARVs and education including uniforms and supplies so orphans can go to school. They cover large areas with populations of 50,000- 100,000.

Sydney left today after some whirlwind shopping and 10 minutes on Coco Beach (we had to see the ocean before leaving). Mama Rhoi (Executive Director of ARK Foundation) met me back at the hotel and took me to visit the Teens Against Aids(TAA) office at the ARK secondary school. Victoria (TAA office support) was meeting with two of the team leaders (Sargent and Leandra) from the TAA camp we visited on Tuesday. They were discussing how to follow up with participants to encourage membership and then went over the flipchart notes they had taken during the sessions. The three questions addressed during discussion were what is a teen? what is the role of community? and what are teen rights? The general theme across all groups was education, poverty and health(including HIV), having a voice in their family, the community and government, freedom/responsibility to organize and survival. Mama Rhoi's role with the teans and the secondary school are quite amazing. She motivated Charles Dingo to mobilize teens and start TAA, she continues to be their mentor. The secondary school was started by Ark. It sits on a piece of property donated by the government and provides education and room and board to about 300 orphans and most vulnerable children. It also houses a community nursery where single mothers working in nearby mines leave their children for care. Mama Rhoi is mom to many of the orphans living at the school.

This has been a truly exceptional trip and look forward to sharing photos and more information when we get back.

Linda