Thursday, 3 May 2012

Naked Ugandan men...


Hello loved ones!

Things are still going phenomenally well here in the “Great Lugazi!” (this is how Valence says it…) and am feeling more and more comfortable here each day.

I have also seen enough naked Ugandan men to last me three months! Spotted about a dozen today. I was not at all prepared! I was driving along with Valence and another gentleman, out in the forest. As we came over a hill and into a dip in the road I noticed a small channel. And then, there they were! A dozen naked men, washing!! I’m not sure who was more shocked. Myself, or the men, who were certainly not expecting to see a white girl in the back of a car drive past! Some of them looked really embarrassed and tried to cover themselves up.. but most of them realized it was pointless and just started laughing! I didn’t know whether to laugh back or look away or what to do??!

Five other volunteers are here for the week and it has been amazing to watch them settle in, interact with them, and also a nice reminder of how far I have come in three weeks. They are a really eclectic mix of people with lots of energy and varied experience. Their focus is on building a health clinic at the organisation’s Hope for Africa Children’s Village. Valence has been waiting six years for this clinic so he is very excited. We won’t be able to finish it as YOFAFO still needs another $3000 for the roof and medical supplies, but the walls will be up! The clinic will service so many people from surrounding villages who would otherwise not have access to a doctor. I helped them lift bricks on Monday, but my feet became so sunburnt I had to spend the night with my feet wrapped in wet towels! On Tuesday I tried to film as many shots as possible from the shade. I was so impressed with how much they achieved in two days!! They have had a pretty big helping hand from the community – people have been pouring in from everywhere to help out.

Amongst the group there is a Colombian girl; a London woman, who grew up in Zimbabwe, but whose Mum is Australian and Dad is European; a Kiwi who lives in Sydney who was a lawyer working in media law, but is now working in communications for the National Broadband Network.; an Australian man called Ralph, who has been the IT architect for ANZ; a weightlifter called Julie who is from Wisconsin in America; and a British girl called Erin who has already been in Uganda for three months.




Ralph is in his 50s or 60s, has three children (one of whom is my age and works as a general manager/ personal trainer at the gym where Eleanor used to work) and is currently in a relationship with a yoga instructor. Ralph doesn’t really look like a yoga man, but it doesn't surprise me that he's giving it a go. In his day he was a pretty good runner and cyclist (Arron and Eleanor will appreciate his time of 28 minutes for a 10km run). He is lovely and has spent a lot of time helping out with projects in West Africa. He is well travelled and has been an amazing resource while we are trying to revamp the organisation’s website. Ralph, Valence and myself took a day away from lifting bricks to work on the website rebuild. We set up office at the most beautiful place in the rainforest near the village where Valence was born. The rainforest is called the Mabira National Forest Reserve and is the one I have mentioned previously. It is such a special place and it just seems so wrong that the sugar company may be allowed to destroy part of it.



I have been doing a bit of research and asking some questions around town about the sugar company and was able to go to the site last week. The people I went there with have some major concerns with the way the company is using and storing chemicals. I also spoke to **** about this, as *** did some research on the factory when at university, and claims to have discovered some really awful things about the way they are exploiting the community. Some of the workers have protested about the lack of minimum wage or permanent positions by burning sugar cane, but none of the issues about workers’ rights at the factory seemed to have gained much coverage in the media. I am still unsure as to why, but expect it is because there is not enough political will from the right people. There is also the issue of the government controlling the media.






Am getting along with the Kiwi/Aussie (her name is Selma) quite well and she is now considering changing her flights and staying! Apart from having some similar professional backgrounds, the New Zealand / Australian rivalry kicked in straight away. But we pulled together, in true ANZAC spirit, to make biscuits of the same name. After all, they would just be alled ‘AACs’ if it wasn’t for the kiwis… and who knows how to pronounce that??!! Unfortunately the biscuits turned out more like a crumble, but since Ralph was the only one who knew what they were supposed to taste like, I think we got away with it. We had to improvise a lot… there were no rolled oats – just these really small, fine, quick-cooking porridge oats. The golden syrup was so clear it was barely even yellow. And we didn’t have an oven or baking tray. I had to make an ‘oven’ putting two massive cake tins together on top of the coal fire, then putting the ANZAC mixture in the bottom of another smaller cake tin, then baking. Was pretty hard to tell if it was cooking at 110 degrees, or 300.  The 18-month-old, Beth, was the biggest fan and wasn’t happy for the rest of the night unless she was munching on our Uganzac Crumble. Jo’s assessment was that it “tasted like sugar”. Doreen described it as ‘that Australian / New Zealand scrambled biscuit’. So while it might not have been as good as my coconut/honey/ginger/citrus cake royale from last week, or the chocolate/banana extravaganza… it was still an upgrade in Doreen’s eyes. I think it's because of the cakes she is suggesting marrying me off to one of her brothers! And Beth is much more of a fan of mine since I made cake (half of the ginger cake went missing and Doreen thought I ate it… then we realized Beth had discovered a way to climb up on the table and had spent the day grabbing handfuls and munching away at it!) I now have an extra shadow. She is very small and walks around saying my name, attaching herself to my leg, trying my shoes on, and chitter-chattering away to me in a mixture of English, Lugandan and creative Beth language. We have dubbed it ‘Bethuganda’.

The British girl called Erin who has already been in Uganda has been volunteering in a town not far from here for three months. But she loved Uganda and didn’t want to go back, so was able to change her flights and visa. She has a Masters in Health Psychology and will spend six weeks working with YOFAFO on health promotion and public health initiatives. She is really sweet and bubbly and I am glad to have her company.

In my last email I told you about how challenging I have found it to try and run while I have been here. Everyone was staring at me and laughing and sometimes it is hard to tell if people are laughing at you in good humour, or if they are making cruel fun of you! I was also feeling very vulnerable as a single, white, female and was attracting a lot of attention I really did not need while I was running and didn’t feel very safe. But I have now convinced Valence to come jogging with me! We went for the most beautiful run this morning, through the sugar cane and the jungle. He is really enjoying it, and I have also managed to convince him and Dickson to participate in a run along on the Nile River in about four weeks time!

I have to say, even though I felt a little vulnerable when I went running… I have been blown away by how friendly and trustworthy people are here. Despite the fact this is a developing country, more than half the population are unemployed and many live on less than $1 a day, I have barely been asked for any money. I once had some money hanging out of my pocket, and instead of pinching it, some young children came and told me about it. Also, I nearly destroyed my phone on the weekend. I was on a boda boda and trying to carry too many things…. and the phone fell out of a bag and onto the road!! It was in the middle of the roundabout and I thought I was never going to see it. Three man ran into the roundabout and I figured they were going to pinch it and run. But they joined forces to stop the traffic, and one of them jumped out in front of a car as it was driving over the phone, and then reached under the car and saved it for me!


I have enjoyed visiting Kampala, but my favourite places to go (thus far) are out into the villages. They are situated in what would have to be some of the most spectacular places in the world, and the people there are so welcoming. They know you have come as a volunteer and just keep saying ‘Thankyou’ all the time. They cook for you and are always so impressed if you can have a go at helping or just say two or three words in Luganda. I am learning slowly (mpola mpola).  I really love all the sounds of the words, but they are just so different! And words can mean such different things if you emphasise the vowels or syllables in different places. For example, the word for water is actually the same as the word for s**it, but changes depending on how you say it!

I did have a very relaxing weekend in Kampala last weekend though. I headed over on Saturday morning and was able to find a 50m metre pool! It was at a resort about 15km out of Kampala, and there was a wedding happening right beside the pool. I discovered it is the only full-sized swimming pool in Kampala. And in all of Uganda. And in fact.. in all of east Africa! I have a new-found respect for any East African trying to qualify for the Olympics now! This is the only full-size swimming pool they can train in, so most of them just train in 25m pools! So had a big swim and then jumped on a boda and headed off to a meditation class. It was with an organisation called Isha --  http://www.ishafoundation.org/   Am looking at doing a two day yoga workshop on May 12/13 with the founder of Afrikan Yoga. http://afrikanyoga.com/

 I will go and check out Jinja this weekend. Am also helping out an arts organization called Bayimba with a bit of media / marketing this week. I was put in contact with the organization through a friend of Minerva’s, in South Africa. They are holding some events / workshops / exhibitions / concerts in Jinja this week and on Saturday. I will head over there on Friday to help them out and participate in some of the workshops, and then Valence will join me on Saturday. Can’t wait!!


Hope this finds everyone well and not too cold… although you can be happy knowing that too much sun is sometimes too much (see photos of my sunburnt feet).

Lots of love,

Amy.

Friday, 27 April 2012

I say 'banana', you say...?


In Uganda Matooke (mar-took-ay) is served with almost every dish... at least every second dish! I have eaten it straight from the tree, served with a ground nut sauce, as an accompaniment to Nile Perch, or just with posho (cornmeal), rice or beans...
For the first week I thought I was eating sweet potato. 
Then someone said: "Did you like the banana?". 
I said: "I liked the potato". 
She said: "No, the banana we had for lunch". 
I said: "Wasn't that potato?". 
She said: "No it was banana! Potato is sweet!".

Go figure.

So Here's an explanation of how to cook it.... enjoy :) 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

One popular local dish is matooke (bananas of the plantain type...ie when they are green) which are cooked boiled in a sauce of peanuts, fresh fish, meat or entrails. Matooke really goes with any relish, except that the best and most respectable way the Baganda cook it is to tie up the peeled fingers into a bundle of banana leaves which is then put in a cooking pan with just enough water to steam the leaves.

How to fold Uganda Traditional Luwombo

Real process

When properly ready and tender, the bundle is removed and squeezed to get a smooth soft and golden yellow mash, served hot with all the banana leaves around to keep it hot. In Buganda, the food production process revolves around the banana tree.

Tender banana tree shoots are removed from the plant and singed over fire to make a fine foil into which chunks of pork or beef are tied up and steamed on top of a bundle of bananas.
This style of cooking preserves all the flavours and cooks up food like a pressure cooker, if not better. Dry banana leaves are used like bandages when bundles of matooke are being wrapped up for steaming.
Strips and chunks cut from the banana tree stem can be used as a foundation at the bottom of the cooking pan so as to avoid the boiling water touching the bundle of the matooke being steamed.

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

Uganda Snow


Hello all! 

Apologies for lack of descriptive Ugandan content in your inboxes, but I have only just secured internet access for my phone and computer.

I am yet to spot any signs of Kony (surprise, surprise), another white person or any Allen’s snakes. For those who know me well, you will no doubt be laughing at the thought of me without hot showers for three months, and you are probably having a giggle at the thought of me washing my underwear in a basin with soap. My Girl Guide skills are also making a resurgence in the kitchen, where there is no oven, stovetop, fridge, kettle, toaster, sink and basin, benchtop, coffee maker, dishwasher … etc. etc … think coal in a bag, chopping board on the floor, and washing dishes in a bucket. So I’m camping for three months! At least the kitchen is indoors and there are plenty of utensils, spices, and it is kept super clean. Also, there’s usually at least one lady or a young guy here who is cleaning up and helping watch children or cooking, a guard, and a lady who comes to do the washing… Thanks to Mum’s recipe I even managed to make a delicious cake. Doreen and the children will vouch for me, I swear!

My arrival in Uganda was an initial scrummage for lost luggage but I had an amazing introduction to the city…
Valence, who is the director and founder of the Youth Focus Africa Foundation, arrived at the hotel with open arms and smiling face and all of my fears were settled. It is almost impossible not to be inspired by this man. His ability to consistently deliver inspiring conversation is astounding, and it is easy to see how he makes so much happen with such little funding.

Over lunch under some banana trees where I tried to not be distracted by all the funny looking birds and big bright flowers, I learnt Valence is 34 and grew up in a village called Kitoola. It is just outside of Lugazi (where I am staying), which is about 50km east of the Ugandan capital of Kampala… which is in the south of Uganda and sits right on Lake Victoria. His father died when he was nine, leaving his mother with four children. She remarried and had another three children. Almost everyone I have met in Uganda is one of about seven siblings! They don’t seem to have any problems breeding and the population is a triangled skew of high birth rates and high death rates. Before Valence’s mother remarried, someone had spoken to her about the value of education. She later heard about an organisation which was sponsoring children and became determined to access a better future for her children. With her four children, Valence’s mother trekked 30 kilometres into the mountains to find the organisation and ask if they could sponsor her children. They told her they could, but they would come and see her. She trekked back home and waited. After three months, she became sick of waiting and walked there again. She did this four times before they finally arrived at her house and offered to sponsor just one child. The child was Valence, and he is determined not to be the only college graduate from his village in 15 years. 

It was through a lot of hard work and resourcefulness Valence was able to make it through secondary school and university, where he studied development. He made a promise that if he made it through, he would use his education to go back and help his community. After secondary school there were many other temptations. There were plenty of other professions which could earn him good money and a much easier life. On top of this, his mother died when he was 14. But the grieving teenager headed off to college. It was here he also met Doreen. Doreen, 32, is the daughter of a radiographer and midwife. She was also studying development and grew up in an underdeveloped village near Valence. They became great friends and she even used to confide in him about her boy problems! After one bad experience she even vowed she would not marry an African man and Valence tried to set her up with one of his American friends (although he failed to mention to Doreen that he was doing this). After many years of friendship, Valence proposed. Proposals are different in traditional Uganda. They are basically a proposal to start a relationship, or take the friendship to ‘the next level’. But it is understood this will lead to marriage and there is not really an engagement as such.
Doreen, who is now 32, was working as a community development officer for a government organisation when she married Valence and agreed to be his partner in his dreams for YOFAFO.

Despite the temptation to find a well paid job, buy some land and a house in Kampala, Valence and Doreen went back to their community where Valence started mentoring young people and attempting to inspire them to think beyond their current situation. The poverty here is rife, most children do not make it through secondary school, corruption and bribery is inherent, youth unemployment rates range from 10 per cent to 83 per cent, people die young of preventable diseases, and many workers are exploited. Valence is encouraging young people to dream big. The organisation has grown in leaps and bounds and many children have completed secondary school and even gone to college thanks to child sponsorship. The foundation also runs health education, free health clinics in remote villages, a microfinance program for women and a primary school/children’s village. Valence’s current big dream is to build a first class secondary and vocational school next to the children’s village (where there is already a primary school catering for 450 children, most of them orphans). His vision is that this will mean the organisation will not have to rely on child sponsorship, as the costs of running the school will be subsidised by school fees from parents who can afford them.


While in Kampala, we still had time to kill, so we spent the next couple of hours at the beach discussing Valence’s belief in the power of the recognising the past does not exist, and if you want to change the world you must first change yourself (Mahatma Gandhi quote) etc etc. 

Yes, I did say ‘the beach’. It was a pretty surreal experience to be sitting in the middle of Africa on a beach. Driving in, there were statues of a waving Nelson Mandela, and one of Queen Elizabeth chatting to the former president. Valence thought the Queen “looked hot”. I am pretty sure he was not referring to her body temperature... although it is very warm here, being on the equator and all. There were also old aeroplanes painted up (although a little run down) for people to look through, camels to ride, volleyball nets, and funny shade huts dotted along the shoreline. Sitting down and a young guy comes over to ask what we’d like to drink. There weren’t many people on the beach, but Valence said it would become busy with the after-work Friday night crowd a bit later. And then, with some scratchy reggae playing in the background, a group of about 30 secondary school students turned up. They had come from about 300km away and most of them had never seen a beach, let alone gone swimming! Some jumped in early and started splashing around and trying to navigate their way through the water like frogs! Others stood on the shoreline, undoing their belts and just waiting for 20 seconds of dutch courage which never seemed to eventuate. Some girls giggled, while others who had nothing appropriate to swim in just looked longingly as their classmates splashed and jumped around, leaving their teenage self-consciousness in their clothes on the sand.

Collected luggage and baggage and went skittling through Kampala en route to Lugazi. These people are crazy drivers, and the boda boda drivers (smallish motorbikes) are completely insane. Pedestrians and bikes have no right of way, and vehicles just keep charging through. It's like they just close their eyes and hit the accelarator or step out on the road and hope for the best! But somehow it works and they all miss each other??

Over the past week or so I have spent most of my working time with Doreen’s younger brother Dickson. Dickson is a clinical medical officer (a doctor) and gives two days a week to YOFAFO. He lives and works in Kampala for the rest of the time. YOFAFO provides health outreach to 10 villages, visiting one village per week. Running the clinic requires a lot of improvisation! At the first village we went to, they initially asked Dickson to consult with patients and dispense medication under a tree outside! It would have been lovely to sit under the tree… but there were of course a few confidentiality issues! So someone lent the main room of their house. This week he treated people inside an old classroom. HIV/AIDS is obviously a massive issue, and there are reports the prevalence is on the rise. The official rate is now about 7 per cent, but Dickson says the rate in some rural areas can be anywhere between 30 and 70 per cent. The other major issues are intestinal worms and malaria. Doreen’s three-year-old son Joe had malaria last week. Doreen took their 18-month-old daughter Beth to the doctor today and she was diagnosed with it. I am sure we are sharing mosquitoes! But they don’t take medication every day … and I do. So it should be okay ;)

The villages are so remote and people would miss out on health care if YOFAFO didn’t run these clinics. For old people with arthritis it is impossible for them to make the trek into town and it would be too expensive for them to pay for transport. But they are living in a most spectacular part of the world. The tropical surrounds take your breath away, and they are sitting on views of Lake Victoria you would pay a small fortune for in Australia! So strange that in contrast, these people don’t even have electricity and live off what they can grow ie. matooke (mar-toke-ay ….. steamed plantain / green bananas), beans, ground nuts (like peanuts), posho (cornmeal) and rice.

Dickson and his patients have been extremely generous with me and allowed me to pester them with a video and still camera. Have almost finished the first film, but will do another interview tomorrow. Dickson also wished to pass on a message that he drove very carefully when I was on the back of the boda boda and we were slipping and sliding around the mountains in the mud (it is very warm here at the moment, but is wet season… so usually buckets down once a day). He said to me: “Amy, have you ever been to the snow?... Well welcome to the Ugandan Snow”. He also said that if something did happen, he would give Valence the honour of explaining it to my mother...

I also spent a day at the women’s microfinance centre. Doreen explained to me how they have used donations from volunteers to change the lives of many women in the community. In Uganda, a female is unable to secure a loan without collateral – ie the support of her father or husband. But many women have lost both their fathers and husbands (some husbands have died, others left…). And when a man dies, his family usually comes and takes everything from the woman and leaves her with nothing. And she cannot get a loan. The women are given a minimum loan of 100,000 schillings (about $40) once they can prove they have some skills in managing money. They are placed in groups of five. Each woman is given a loan but they have to look after each other and guarantee each other. For example, if one person cannot meet their loan repayments for the week, the others will pitch in for her. The program was working so well, the women were paying off their loans much sooner than they needed to! It also made them realise the more they paid off, the more they could borrow, and the more money they could make. Empowering women is very important to Valence and Doreen. Valence refers to his mother as his hero and is more than aware of the power a mother has to instill ‘big dream’ values and a sense of self belief in her children. The microfinance program has seen women start up small businesses selling fruit and vegetables, clothes etc etc. Some have gone on to purchase boda bodas which others drive for them and make money for them. It has meant many women have been able to build themselves a small house, and feed their children.

I have been a little uncomfortable with the male / female relationships here. It is not so much the case in the city, but in Lugazi, things are still very traditional. Doreen does not wear pants in Lugazi. Only skirts and dresses. It is okay to show a bit of cleavage, but never the thigh! The majority of women kneel to their husbands, and the man does not help around the house at all. Valence has told Doreen she does not need to kneel before him when she speaks to him as they have a mutual respect for one another. He said he felt if she knelt before him she would really be laughing at him on the inside.

Although Valence does help with washing the children and wiping their noses, he is still happy to read the paper while Doreen is on her hands and knees with a cloth, mopping the floor, washing clothes by hand, sweeping, cooking, doing dishes, and trying to keep small children away from knives, fires etc etc… It’s such a massive job!! She has help during the week, but does it all by herself on Sundays.

But Doreen and Valence have a lot of respect and love for one another and Valence plays a much bigger role in the house than most Ugandan men. He also works very long hours and the pair of them run the organisation as a team. I also have to remember that I am in a different country with different rules and upbringings…

I have been trying to go jogging, but am attracting a lot of attention. Not only am I the only white person in town, I am the only one who jogs, and I am a female. Children run out in large groups, shouting and jumping “Mzungu! Mzungu!” (moo-zoong-goo = white person). So everyone knows I’m coming from 100m away. Some of the women smile and laugh (some wait until after I’ve passed to laugh) and some have stone faces I can’t crack no matter how much I smile! And I don’t feel so safe when I am by myself and six men on boda bodas are yelling at me to stop and are asking for my phone number. So I am trying to rope Valence into jogging with me, and in the meantime I am skipping at home. I can deal with waving every 20 seconds, but feel uncomfortable enough when I am around lots of people speaking in Luganda and the men are yelling out things at me. I’m sure it’s harmless, but I really have no idea what they are sayng!! Most of the time I really appreciate all the friendliness, but sometimes I just want to put a bag on my head.

In Lugazi, many people are ‘employed’ by the Mehta Group – an Indian corporation which has subsidiaries across the world, but in Uganda, runs the Sugar Corporation of Uganda Ltd. The sugar factory was established in 1924, but the Mehta Family lost their Ugandan assets in 1972 when former president Idi Amin dispossessed  all Asians of their businesses and personal property. The assets were returned in 1980 with a change of government. The organisation claims to be playing a major role in the development of Uganda and points to how it provides in-house training and schooling for the children of employees. It earned ‘Employer of the Year’ and ‘Best Employee Relations and Welfare’ awards. I am finding this rather baffling though. I can see the Mehta Family has built a golf course / botanic garden / soccer field / hockey pitch / large house in Lugazi for their own very private use. Meanwhile, local people tell me the Mehta Group's ‘employees’ are all casual and are paid less than $10 a week. From what people have told me, the money for the schooling is taken out of the ‘employee’ wages and the company is actually making money on this. Apparently they only train / provide education to the students to a certain level, and do not encourage them to attend college. Some politicians and local leaders say the workers and this community are being completely exploited by this company. But nothing is being said about it in the media or elsewhere (from what I can tell) because a) the people are not educated about their rights b) they are desperate for any kind of employment and cannot risk the small pay they receive from the organisation c) the government/president potentially has some financial interests in the organisation  d) the government owns and has a lot of control of the media. The one time the corporation did attract negative attention was when it tried to acquire part of the Mabira Forest near Lugazi for sugar production. Mabira Forest is one of the largest natural forest reserves in Uganda, is one of the most environmentally valuable forests in Uganda and in Africa in general. President Musevini tried to give some of the forest to the corporation in 2007, resulting in violent demonstrations in which two or three African-Indians were killed. He retracted his stance on this, but has recently reinstated the offer. Late last year, Musevini announced he would give about 7100 hectares for sugarcane growing...  so there seems to be political will when it comes to national environmental issues, but not worker's rights?

I went to Kampala by myself on the weekend which was really lovely. I had to sort out the internet on my computer, so jumped in a maxi taxi thing (matatu) without about a dozen other people and went rocking and rolling to Kampala. It took about two hours to go 50km! Sorted out the internet, went to where I was staying and had the best hot shower ever! Then just spent some time enjoying a good internet connection, a big comfortable double bed, normal floors, my own uninterrupted space. Went to a small swimming pool at a hotel in the morning and had the pool to myself. Well so I thought… at the end of the swim I looked up and about 30 men were standing on a balcony watching me!! It is uncommon for people to swim here. There is only one 50m swimming pool in all of East Africa – at a resort outside of Kampala. Even the Ugandan swimmers competing for Olympic spots train in 25m pools…

Met up with a friend of a friend of Minerva’s for lunch (for those who don’t know Minerva… she is a dancer who used to work with Gerard at Phunktional). Ellady is a really interesting guy who is a member of the Arterial Network, of which Minverva is connected with. The organisation is based in South Africa and aims to build and develop regional / national / continental / international networks in support of Africa’s cultural and creative sector. Ellady is currently heading a campaign to save Uganda’s national museum. The museum has been collecting important artefacts from across East Africa since 1908 and yet this historically significant resource is not funded by the Ugandan government. It is also important to note the site was the location for the 2007 CHOGM conference. The Government of the Republic of Uganda wants to build a 60 storey commercial trade centre on the site of the museum, and is suggesting its demolition. Ellady’s civil society is taking the government to court… their next hearing is on Thursday. Ellady also used to be a member of Uganda’s ruling party, but says he became very disillusioned with the corruption and policies. He recently ran for parliament as an independent and intends to do so again in 2016. He was very generous with his time, is doing a lot of phenomenal advocacy work in the areas of heritage, the environment, tackling government corruption, and malaria prevention. He was also able to answer many of my questions about some of Uganda’s political issues which I am interested in (I had a lot of questions…!) and provide some insight into key issues which I am hoping to look into and perhaps start some stories on while I am here. 

After lunch Ellady took me to the museum and then to a baptism for the young son of a friend of his. I wasn’t really prepared for what would happen at the baptism and Ellady gave me no warning. I was in jeans and t-shirt and when we turned up, I realised Ellady was quite close with this family. Everyone was dressed up like they were going to wedding/nightclub and I found myself in the front row of the ceremony, seated next to the parents! I am in their family photos forever now…  Everyone was speaking Luganda so I didn’t have much of an idea what was going on, but as usual, I just smiled and laughed, bopped along to the music a bit and threw in a few Luganda words which everyone is always impressed by. People are constantly laughing at me and I have no idea why. 

By the time I made it back to Lugazi I was soooo happy to see Doreen and Valence. They are such genuine and generous people, and it is starting to feel like home. Plus Doreen puts extra ginger in my tea...



Lots more to tell and many more descriptions of Lugazi, the villages, Kampala, Doreen, the kids, politics, the ebb and flow of each day etc…but have probably weighed your email inboxes down enough with this one!! Will try to log in a little more regularly now… I figure since Gran is giving Facebook a go to stay in contact, I should be able to manage a few more emails.

Lots of love and thanks for all your correspondence,

Amy xox

Saturday, 14 April 2012

Just a splash...

dear all,

AM AT INTERNET CAFE SO CAN'T STAY LONG. JUST LETTING YOU KNOW AM SAFE, HAPPY, FAMILY IS BEAUTIFUL, AND I DON'T HAVE HOT WATER. HAHAHA. SO SHORT SHOWERS...

LOVE YOU ALL AND WILL WRITE PROPERLY SOON

XX

Thursday, 12 April 2012

Luggage and Baggage

Hello all :)

The big bird has landed me in South Africa and I have made my way to my hotel in Johannesburg. Unfortunately my luggage got a little nervous about the journey and decided to stay behind in Australia. And it won't be arriving until Friday! Not sure how it will all work out...but it has given me an excuse to buy new socks :)

In the dark, Johannesburg doesn't look very different to the eastern suburbs of Melbourne at the moment - but my eyes are a little droopy so are struggling to see. I stepped straight off the flight and into Woolworths at the airport, found the nougat and toothbrushes and felt much better :) I was a little jittery and excited / nervous on flight so didn't really sleep much. Did a bit of curling up (one advantage of being relatively small ) and snoozing, but spent most of the time watching films and writing. I would recommend 'A Dangerous Method' and 'My Week with Marilyn', and will be writing to Qantas and making a firm suggestion about including films about a girl who has her heart broken when she leaves Australia for Africa because the boy she loves doesn't ask her to stay. A little inappropriate when we are all en route to Africa! ;) But just so you know...it has a happy ending (the film does anyway...)

The hotel bed looks SUPER comfortable, and the staff are so lovely you score a bonus marriage proposal with your internet connection! ("Here is your password, and I can come and install it for you. Just for you though. And then I will marry you")  

Thanks to everyone for all your help and generosity in ensuring I left the country. I have been super spoilt with dinners, catch-ups, packing assistance, lifts, hugs, beds, company, chats, advice and a terribly good supply of hand sanitiser :)

Love,

Amy xxx