Thursday, July 23, 2009

There and back again

It happened again, the same thing that happens every year... We had to leave Uganda and go home.

This post was supposed to be my re-cap of how this years AIM Programme has been carried out, challenges met and challenges overcome etc., but if you don’t mind, I think I'll instead let my thoughts wander on some of the things seen and some of the questions asked over the past month in Uganda.

1. When we meet people in insane situations, like a teacher teaching 250 kids without desks on the dirt floor with her own 1 year old kid strapped on the back, or a ten year old lifting buckets of cement up and down a ten meter high scaffolding all day long, the beggars without neither legs or a pot to piss in, a pregnant lady in a region without water who has to bring and boil her own water to the hospital when she’ll be giving birth in two weeks – the only way we are able to cope with stuff like that is because some minutes, hours or days later, we can have a sit down with a full stomach, a beer, some music, a coke, a piece of chocolate or a cigarette and contemplate it. The only way we are able to stand the crazy things in Uganda, is because we have the opportunity to get it at a distance and think about it. So how the hell are the people teaching 250 students at once for 100 dollars a month or a beggar without legs able to cope, when they seemingly do not have that luxury?

I have no idea, but my guess is that it’s because of this, because people are so insanely occupied with just getting through one day after the other, that things like planning way ahead, reflection over progress and innovating shit is something you basically don’t do in Uganda. You don’t have time for it. (And this doesn't exactly reek of development is my point).

2. Sustainability and doing stuff from the inside out
This is something frequently discussed by some of this year’s AIM participant’s, and it’s some of the most important stuff to discuss when you’re involved in aid work in development countries, no matter how small your projects are. Because if the sustainability of the aid projects are lacking, this means you just have to keep on coming back and coming back, and very little gets developed or goes forward. But does this mean aid work is ridiculous? Of course not. But aid work that makes people dependent on it, without possibilities to get up and away, that’s pretty lame. Aid work that is the equivalent of giving a guy a fish hook to fish for himself however, rather than just keep giving him fish - that is pretty smart.

3. Not that this is the goal of the Aid In Meeting Programme, but how do you manage to get a country to develop and grow from within? Another deadly important question, with a ton of aspects within, and one frequently discussed at Bushenyi Guest House with its owner Arinda Gordon. Education and innovation seemed to be the key words to that one.

I could go on and on, but I think it's time to wrap this whole blog up. I can just say first that the above mentioned stuff is what first came to mind, so maybe that means it is the most important. I don’t know.

Anyway. I will end by saying this years Aid In Meeting Programme has been the most successful so far. A piggery has been opened in Bushenyi, school buildings will be built in Arua and buckets of other aid contributions have been carried out because of AIM 2009. Besides this, cultural understanding, cultural exchange, learning about aid work and friendships formed is just some of the side effects of AIM 2009.

Thank you so very much much to all the contributors of AIM, and thank you to the readers of this blog!

Lion Terry out!

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Piggery Grand Opening and Leaving Uganda (for now)

Since 2007, Lions Club Bergen Student have, in great collaboration with a number of other Lions Clubs in Norway and LCIF, been working towards building a piggery in Bushenyi. This is to increase the income of the Community Based Organization “Silent Voices”, an organization consisting of parents and carers of deaf children in the Bushenyi district. Silent Voices is raising awareness about deaf children and enhancing the education of deaf children. The piggery we’re building will both provide an income for the organization, but also raise each individual household of the members of Silent Voices. Because the pig farm will be run by the parents in Silent Voices, where they will learn how to look after pigs, feed them etc, etc, and when they’re done with that, they will get a piglet home, to have in their own household. Pretty sweet deal.

And last Saturday, on the 18. of July, something pretty awesome took place in Bushenyi. Silent Voices had their annual meeting on the site where the piggery will be built, and at the same time we also had The Grand Opening of The Piggery.

The different partners involved in the project and a Member of Parliament (!) all dug into the ground with a shovel as a ceremonial start of the project. The different partners also signed the Project Plan which states what each party is responsible for, what needs to be done when, etc etc. (The students from Norway situated in Bushenyi have been tirelessly working on finishing that plan over the last weeks).

The day was long and hot in the blazing sun, but it was also an exceptionally good day, with speeches, dancing, singing, a drama play and to great acclaim - four manly men from Norway dancing the traditional “halling”-dance.

In the evening on the same Saturday we attended Lions Club Busenyi’s (an important partner in the piggery project) Installation Ceremony where the new chair members got their new positions, and it looks like this Lionistic Year will be a good one!

Next morning, on Sunday we all left for Kampala where we are currently tying up loose ends and finishing up part II of evaluating this years AIM Programme. Today is in fact our last day in Uganda, we’re all leaving for Entebbe tomorrow and by Wednesday morning, we’ll all be back home. Sadly.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Evaluation time, happy times. Great success!

The Aid in Meeting Program is coming to a halt and the group has now moved from their worksites to other parts of Uganda in order to relax and evaluate the work that has been done during the last two weeks. This includes comparing this year's experiences with last year's, assessing what has been done right and whether or not there are areas where there still is room for improvement.

Some have left for Jinja in order to try rafting on the Nile, while others have moved south to Lake Bunyoni, said by some to be the true gem of Uganda. This area is decidedly more rural, something which is evident in the fact that the night watchman at the hotel carries a spear instead of a gun, and that there is a tribe of pygmes living just across the lake.

Yet some work still remains. On July 18 there will be a grand opening of the piggery project in Bushenyi, where some 180 guests and dignitaries are expected. We are hoping to have a member of the Ugandan Parliament make a cere,monial gesture by putting the first shovel in the ground. Later in the evening we'll be celebrating the new Lionistic year together with Lions Club Bushenyi and other Lions from all over Western Uganda.

And by the way, our work in Arua received a small but very positive mentioning in yesterday's New Vision, one of the biggest and most important newspapers in Uganda. We are also expecting radio and print coverage of the opening ceremony in Bushenyi. A radio station which broadcasts all over Western Uganda, including Kampala, already mentioned the project two weeks ago and did an interview with Gordon Arinda of Lions Club Bushenyi as the students from LCBS were not available at the time. D'oh!

Friday, July 10, 2009

AIM:art

Over the last few days three schools in various parts of the Bushenyi district in south western Uganda have received visitors from Norway and Denmark, carrying gifts. The Aid In Meeting participating students have carried out the AIM:art project (read older posts if you’re scratching your head) and with great help from the teachers, staff and our driver Robert the pupils, both deaf and “ordinary” made some pretty awesome cards we’ll sell back home, come Christmas time. (100 kroners pr card = 32.000 UGSH or roughly 15 Dollars). We asked the kids to write what their future dreams were (in addition to the drawing on front, name etc) and although doctor, nurse, teacher and lawyer seemed to be most common, some of the kids also wanted to be vice president, minister of agriculture and driver.

However, what’s more interesting to notice than what the kids want to be when they grow up, is the response the teachers give you when they hear of the AIM:art project. You would think that when they hear that just one card will generate one sixth of a teachers monthly salary, they’d be kind of amazed, but it seems like a combination of not really grasping it, not really believing it and not being used to plan that far ahead (six months) usually results in them just going “oh, ok”. And this is interesting, because so many of the people I’ve talked to over the last weeks have told me just how beneficiaries are used to big words and huge promises, but also not getting shit of it. When time passes, all those fancy words falls apart and nothing comes out of it. So I guess that visits from some random mzungo students promising millions of shillings for some weird looking Christmas cards warrants some skepticism. But what’s most important isn’t getting the “holy crap!” response we (or at least I thought we’d get), but getting the kids to know that it’s them that’s actually creating a vast income for their school, that, and being sure that we have the right people on the ground to receive the money and distribute it in the right way. Hopefully though, I think we’ve succeeded in doing just that.

On a side note, what I’ve learned since last time: Getting rid of the feathers and stuff from a chicken, hen or some other feathery creature − is best achieved if you first dip the animal in hot water. Then the feathers just rolls off.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Sports galla and schools

Outside Entebbe, at Nsumba Orphanage, some of the students participating in the Aid In Meeting programme, are located. And on Saturday and Sunday, the students organized a massive sports galla for the kids - to great success. I was not present myself, but from what I've heard, the spirit went through the roof. Especially when the winning football team ran rounds around the football field, carrying the grand prize on their backs - a live goat. They basically all went nuts, the girls cheering with palm leaves, the other teams shouting and waving their shirts around their heads, and the poor goat being tossed around between the members of the winning team. And the football was just one of three diciplines, they also competed in volleyball and netball.

In other news, the guys in Arua went back to Kamapala during the weekend and left behind them some pretty awesome work. In collaboration with Lions Club Sandnes/Riska in Norway, Lions Club Arua and Lions Aid Norway - Eruba Primary School will get a spanking new school building, which they sorely need. Oliba Seeds, another school in Arua have now got cement floor in all the dormatories, thanks to swift action and collaborative efforts between the norwegian students, the Oliba Seeds school board and again Lions Club Arua. They also had time to hand over magazines, playing cards and games in braille, for 12 blind children at another school, in addition to really get to know some of LC Arua's key members.

I also bumbed into Merethe which is working in the Kamwokya slum with KCCC yesterday, and she told me things were going pretty great. Today, for instance, they are organizing a youth health day for the kids/youth in Kamwokya, having work shops and free medical treatment. The group also brought with them 2000 condoms from Norway (I think they got them from the Red Cross) to distribute, but one of the not so fortunate things about KCCC is that they promote abstinence, not condoms, to prevent Aids and HIV (long story, catholic church etc.). So those condoms have yet to be put to good use, but they were confident they'd get them out to someone who wants them somehow.

I see my time is up, so that's it for now!

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Chicken and cars

I have to tell you about what happened the other day in Bushenyi. It was just all kinds of awesome, bizarre etc.

I went to Bushenyi a couple of days ago to interview people and shoot some footage of what the Norwegians are doing there (working on the piggery project and what not)… And last night, we were all having dinner at Bushenyi Guest house, in the garden, under a tree, right next to Gordon’s (the owner of guest house) brand new car.

And as we are sitting there, eating and laughing, some guys show up, opening the hood on Gordon’s car and are seemingly checking out the engine or something. I at least didn’t pay any attention to this, this being a new car and all, they were probably just curious on the new engine. Or not. Because then a chicken entered the picture, or rather a hen, it was pretty big.

The guys started to wrestle a bit with the hen, but I just thought, they’re not going to kill that here are they? Surely, they would do that somewhere nearer to the kitchen? But no, a knife the size of a golf club was pulled out and all of a sudden the hen was headless AND THEY POURED THE HEN’S BLOOD OVER THE CAR’S ENGINE.

It should be specified that all this happened really quick without any of us really paying any attention to it, because it was kind of dark, and it all happened so matter-of-factly, but the moment that hen’s inner fluids were poured over Gordon’s new car, a united “what the HELL just happened?” was heard across the table.

Now, of course, this was neither an elaborate scheme to sabotage the car or a way to startle some mzungos (at least not deliberate), it all was a little ritual to make sure the car never crashes. Good luck with that.

Gordon and the car-baptizers ate the hen a few hours later and, at least to my knowledge, the car runs smoothly.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Of schools and pigs

There have been some terrifyingly interesting days of late, and I haven’t been able to find Internet since Sunday, I think − but finally I’m hacking hard at Bushenyi Internet Centre.

I traveled to Arua last Saturday, with Øyvind, Magnus and Siri, and arrived at awesome Heritage Park Guest House in the afternoon. We met some of the members of Lions Club Arua, but they were off to their installation ceremony 60 km away, and although they invited us to join, we were too tired after the trip from Kampala. And considering they held it going till around noon the next day, I think that was a pretty healthy decision.

Next day, Sunday, we met with Lion Tom from LC Arua, and discussed our involvement in the three school projects to be carried out in Arua, what they are about etc, and the next day, on Monday, we went to Eruba Primary School where we met and discussed with the teachers and chair members of the school − of just how exactly we are going forward with building a new class room and dormitory. Later that afternoon we began what’s called AIM:Art, where pupils are making Christmas cards to be sold in Norway, and the money generated goes straight back to the school. One card will generate almost 35.000 Uganda shillings, we are aiming at selling two thousand cards from ten different schools − and to put things in perspective, 35.000 UGSH in Uganda is a hell of a lot of money. The kids and teachers were pretty enthusiastic (it was the 50+ kids at The Unit for the Deaf that made the cards at Eruba Primary) and from what I saw, it looked like some pretty cool cards will be sold to students in Norway this Christmas.

Øyvind, Magnus and Siri are still hard at work in Arua, together with LC Arua and the different schools; I however left the fair city on Tuesday. I got up at 3.30 am, went by bus to Kampala, arrived around noon and went off to Bushenyi with David Mutayisa from Lions Aid Norway around 2 pm. We arrived in Bushenyi around 8 pm, just in time to join Lions Club Bushenyi in their club meeting, were Maria, Andreas, Anette and Sofie from LC Bergen Student were also present. The reason for my going to Bushenyi is because of the documentary I’m making, and a very interesting two day seminar about our club’s Piggery Project was to be held in Bushenyi over the next two days. So today and yesterday representatives from Lions Club Bergen Student, Lions Club Bushenyi, Lions Aid Norway and of course Silent Voices, the organization consisting of parents of deaf children in the Bushenyi district (the ones that will ultimately run the piggery and receive the income generated), met to discuss the piggery project, how to go forward, who will play what role etc. It was hugely satisfying and elements of the project one never could think of back home came into light and were solved. Brilliant.

I don’t really have any more news from the students in Kamwokya, working with KCCC and the guys at Nsumba Orphanage outside Entebbe, but I guess no news is good news. Last I heard was what Tuva (part 2 of Terrys Film Crew) wrote in the previous post, that the grand prize of the sports tournament to be held at Nsumba was a goat. (Although I heard three goats, one for each discipline)… But how awesome is that? I want a goat! By the way, since I mentioned that each Cristmas Card sold through AIM:Art will generate almost 35.000 UGSH: one goat costs 60.000 UGHS. Don’t know how much the knife needed to slaughter the little fellow costs, though.

Monday, June 29, 2009

ready, steady, go!

We have now started on the two weeks of work in kampala, Busheyni, Nsumba and Auroa. At the orphans home in Nsumba they have planned a sports tournament with a goat as the great price! In Kampala the group that is working with the organization KCCC have started their work today. They will be working in the health department and the law department, which are the student's fields of study.They also have plans of a health day and a sports tournament. We are now staying with host families and during the weekend some of the students participated in the family activities, including a weddings and going to a local church.

Except from some stomach problems, we are all doing good, and are looking forward to the next two weeks of learning and sharing!

Friday, June 26, 2009

African Time and LC Kampala North

Today, we really got to experience the frustrations of African Time. Time does simply not exist in the same form in Africa as it does in the western world, and despite that being sometimes very comfortable, it’s mostly a real pain.

AIM: Art is one of our club’s largest aid projects this year (I’ll let the man in charge write a few words about that later) and at ten o’ clock today, Oyvind was supposed to meet the lady from the printing house we’ve collaborated with during this AIM: Art project. She would bring all kinds of stuff needed to execute the project and it was vital that she’d be on time because at around twelve the groups going to Nsumba and Bushenyi were leaving, and they would bring with them a lot of the stuff needed to the project. But she confirmed several times that she’d be on time, at ten o’clock - European Time, not African Time. Then at eleven o’clock, she phones and asks when she should come.

And the whole day was basically like this, time being simply an instrument to give you stomach ache, not an instrument to help you keep appointments. But around three o’clock, finally most of the things that was supposed to be resolved was completed, and Oyvind soberly concluded that in the five days now spent in Uganda, one and a half of them has consisted of pure waiting.

But on a happier note, the AID IN MEETING program is really kicking into gear around now. The group going to Busheyi and Nsumba left today, as I mentioned, and tomorrow the group working in Arua is leaving, while the Kampala group have had several meetings today with central people in the KCCC organization about their future collaboration.

Another thing worth mentioning is our meeting with Lions Club Kampala North! At the end of the symposium on Tuesday, Andrew, the president of LC Kampala North invited us to their last meeting this Lionistic year, held last night at the Imperial Hotel. (The meeting was apparently from six till seven; at six o’clock not even one person had entered the conference room). But it was a very interesting fellowship, and perhaps the most rewarding bit was the president being really impressed with what our club, LC Bergen Student are pulling off - as he said it, “You have both inspired and us, and scared us”. We also gave the upcoming president a book about Norway to much appreciation.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Kamwokya, Minister of Agriculture and Ndere

Warning: If my spelling is off this time around, it's because I'm screwed when I can't rely on auto-spelling, auto-correcting etc.

But anyway, yesterday we visited the peer educators at Treasure Life Centre, a branch of KCCC in the slums in Kamwokya, Kampala.. And while there, when we walked around the area, about five of us passed the music studio of "The Fire Base Crew", which Bobbi Wine, probably Ugandas most famous music artist, is a part of. It sounds kind of funky having a music studio in the middle of a slum, but Kamwokya is kind of strange that way. We met Bobbis right hand man, "the minister of agriculture" which is a fitting title concidering what he was smoking when we met him. It was a totally bizarre experience, because suddenly he began to speak of his crusade against homosexuality, and how his next songs would be about how being gay is an abomination and how it's destroying Ugandan culture etc. Polite as we are, we did not persue that discussion, but it served as a pretty clear reminder of just how different Uganda actually is to the western world. Something you should not forget if you're in the business of successful aid work.

After visiting Kamwokya we went to a place in Ntinda, called Ndere, without really having any clue what was going on there, other than some "Ugandan Culture Stuff". Turned out it was a 25 years old performance group called The Ndere Group, that put up a show with traditional dancing and music from different parts of Uganda. It was pretty cool, and at one point, we the audience, was dancing with the group at stage as well. But what was really brilliant was having pork and chips at the same time as watching the music group.

Today people are preparing to leave Kampala, buying stuff that will be needed at their work places, the students going to Nsumba Orphanage are for instanse having an art project to generate money back to the orphanage, and are buying all sorts of equipment to see that through.

And speaking of buying stuff and fixing things, I need to find an ATM. So then I'm off!

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Commence blogging!

It is an audacious task to commit one self to, being a blogger in Uganda. Getting online can be quite the challenge, but finally I have succeeded! The group arrived safe and sound Sunday evening, I followed the next day, and we have had some very interesting days so far.

First our hostel manager thought our group would arrive the next day, but after a couple of hours of haggling, things was worked out. On Monday the group spent the day exploring Kampala, but it was yesterday, on Tuesday, things really kicked off.

Some of the students in our group, together with David Mutaysa from Lions Aid Norway’s office in Kampala, have been planning and putting together a symposium concerning Uganda’s culture, history, politics etc. A professor from Makerere University, whose name escapes me right now, had a presentation about everything Uganda, and we had a great discussion afterwards, us Norwegians, the professor and other participants, about aid work, circumcisions, economics, change and other juicy topics. Truly a cultural exchange. Other presentations in the symposium concerned the work the volunteers in Kamwokya Christian Caring Community are doing in the slum areas of Kamwokya, and LC Bergen Students soon to be president Oyvind Johnsen held a beautiful presentation about Aid In Meeting and just what exactly it is we’re doing here. (A lot of awesome aid work etc. if you were wondering).

After the symposium, lunch and tea, the president in LC Kampala North and another guy taught our group how to play the Ugandan drums. Or tried to. I won’t lie and say we learned really fast, played beautifully and had a concert later in the evening, we pretty much sucked really really bad. But it was a lot of fun and a great way to end the symposium.

Today, Wednesday, in ten minutes actually, we are going to Kamwokya and meet up with the guys at KCCC (Kamwokya Christian Caring Community) and see what they have been up to since last year. For the people in the Kamwokya slum areas, these guys are doing an amazing job.

I think this will be it for today, I can throw in before I leave, that we’re going to some sort of Ugandan Music Culture Something Arrangement this evening, and according to what I’ve heard, we’ll see and hear how you’re REALLY playing the drums.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Info through lovely moving images

It might be a bit confusing what this blog is (or rather will be). Aid In Meeting, Lions, Terje Boklund and all sorts of stuff is written all over it.

That's why I thought it'd be a good idea to show you a little film of what this whole thing is about.

But before we get there..... In 2007, yours truly, Terje Boklund, and four other wonderful students traveled to Uganda and back again. Now, we didn't exactly know what we were thrown into, but we ended up visiting a lot of Lions Clubs, learning what they were up to, and various ways in which to do aid work. Some good, some not so good. And so we returned to Norway filled with high hopes and ideas, and to do a long story short, Aid In Meeting was born in 2008. Based on our experiences from the previous summer and collaborators within Lions Club, LC Bergen Student has conjured up Aid In Meeting as a cultural exchange program for students in Norway, where Cultural Understanding, Integration, Self-development and Aid where the main elements.

Now we embark on a third journey, this time around focusing even more on the aid work. We will contribute with volunteer work in different institutions and help them carry out projects the locals themselves want to see fulfilled. We think it is vital to not only understand what is needed in development countries, but to be able to do something valuable you have to work together - to work together with those who ultimately will benefit from these projects and to make sure they are part of it, to ensure the project's long term survival.

But these are things that can be focused on in later posts, what I wanted to show you initially was this:

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Right here, but not right now

This is the place to be, if you want to know more about AIM 2009 - Aid In Meeting, and what we're up to in Uganda this summer.

AIM is a cultural exchange/aid work project carried out by Lions Club Bergen Student, the only student Lions Club in
Norway. (But with great help from Lions Norway and LCIF.)

This summer, sixteen students from
Norway and one from Denmark will travel to Uganda in East Africa, to follow up various aid projects we are currently involved in through our club. Our biggest aid project is a piggery project - we are establishing a piggery in Bushenyi, a small town south west in Uganda, to benefit the families of over one hundred deaf children. Other projects involve orphanages, schools and youth centers.


We depart for
Uganda around June 20th; we'll stay approximately one month and we’ll be divided in four groups - Kampala, the outskirts of Entebbe, Bushenyi and Arua.

Please stay tuned for our daily adventures, work and experiences!