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Megan in Mozambique |
Monday, November 22, 2010
New pictures!
My Site Placement!
Where: Macia, Gaza Province (Southern Mozambique)
We had a pit stop there on the way to the beach this past weekend, so I got to walk around the market and look around for a bit, and it looks great! I’m really excited.
Information about Macia
- The languages spoken are Portuguese and Changana (a local dialect)
- It’s super close to great beaches: about 30 minutes from Bilene (went there this past weekend; see below) and 45 minutes from Xai-Xai. It’s also about two and a half hours from Maputo, the capital.
- A main road runs through the town, which is medium-sized and has a large market where one can get everything from produce to dishes and bacías (the wide buckets used for bathing, washing clothes, xi-xi-ing in the middle of the night so you don’t have to go outside, etc.) to a new weave.
- I will definitely have electricity and cell phone coverage, and there is most likely internet somewhere in town.
- The gas station next to the market has lots of good treats, including: Kit Kats, Snickers, Pringles, Peanut M&Ms, and ice cream. Pumped.
- I will have two education site mates (not roommates), and lots of Peace Corps Volunteers living nearby. From Moz15, there are 15 of us going to Gaza Province, plus 5 going to nearby Maputo Province. Plus there are plenty of Moz14ers in the area as well.
- This is a new placement, meaning that the three of us are the first volunteers to serve in Macia.
My Organizations:
I have a joint placement, which means I will be balancing my time between two organizations. They are both small community-based organizations (CBOs), and one of them is also a faith-based organization (FBO). The descriptions I received about each organization are below, but I won’t really know what I will be doing until I’ve been there for a while. I’m most excited for the opportunities to work with kids.
The CBO/FBO, Associação Crista, provides material support (housing repair, food, home-based care visits) to about 40 people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA). They also have a beneficiary base of orphans and vulnerable children (OVCs) and youth which was increased quickly to about 110. Therefore, the development of programs and activities for OVCs and youth is a major priority. They currently meet at a local bible school but have a plot of land where they hope to construct an office.
Requested assistance:
- Assist with home visits
- Develop projects in relation to the prevention of HIV/AIDS and other chronic illnesses
- Develop initiatives to promote treatment adherence
- Develop income generation projects
- Assist in the organization’s food security activities (including diet and nutrition education)
The other CBO, AJAAB (I don’t know what that acronym means), helps vulnerable members of the population access local health care and support services (including psycho-social, moral, and material). They work with local government institutions and other community development players to do so.
Requested assistance:
- Develop/obtain/organize/improve creative psychosocial and education materials for OVCs affected by HIV/AIDS
- Train youth as peer educators in the prevention of HIV/AIDS
- Carry out community education on children’s rights
- Facilitate exchanges with local artists and authors of children’s educational materials
- Participate in meetings with local government institutions and other key players in community development
- Visit and evaluate other community pre-schools, as well as adult literacy centers
- Identify OVCs in the community to participate in the organization’s programs
- Organize a tree-planting project throughout the community using the help of the organization’s OVCs
- Construct play centers and areas for the organization’s OVCs using locally available materials
- Assist local students in further education opportunities and exam preparation
The Rest of Training
Ups & Downs
A motto of the Peace Corps is “the toughest job you’ll ever love.” As the current volunteers have warned us, the next two years will be filled with some of the highest highs and lowest lows of our lives. During training, it is not nearly that extreme, but each day brings its own ups and downs. Overall, however, I'm very happy with the experience and very excited to get to site.
Ups:
- Finding treats: We’ve found Pringles and refrigerated Kit Kats at a gas station here and dark chocolate at a grocery store in Matola, a nearby town.
- Being served chicken.
- Receiving messages, calls, and care packages. Another shameless plea: even if it takes me a while to respond, keep sending me messages. Chances are the weak internet connection on my phone will let me read but not respond or I can read them but am waiting to type up a long response on my computer. Either way, I read them.
- Getting tons of movies and TV shows to put on my external hard drive from other trainees. I’m currently addicted to Mad Men.
- Playing Taboo, Bananagrams, and my all-time favorite card game Asshole at a baraca.
- Hearing juicy fofoca (Portuguese for gossip).
Downs:
- Finding bed bug bites: Realized that I had bed bugs just as it proceeded to storm for the next few days. Not very helpful when you need to put your mattress out in the sun.
- Being served canned sardines. With onions. For breakfast.
- Larium dreams: A major side effect of mephaquin, the anti-malarial medicine I’m required to take is extremely vivid dreams, usually for a couple nights after taking my weekly dose. My dreams are frequently scary (woke up thinking there was a rat in my bed) or frustrating.
- Unwanted roommates: having a cockroach run across my back while in bed (I then killed it and left it smashed on the wall as a warning to its brethren); hearing rats during the night.
My First Birthday in Moz
Thanks for all of the birthday messages! I really appreciated them. Sorry it’s taken me so long to respond to them; as I previously said, it can be difficult to respond. We celebrated at the bar after class, and I had a great day. The only negative was the lack of acknowledgment of my birthday by my host family (yes, they knew it was my birthday), but culturally, birthdays are not nearly as important here.
Comida Americana
During one afternoon of Portuguese class, our host moms showed us how to cook a traditional Mozambican meal of coconut-flavored rice, roast chicken, and a sauce of cooked pumpkin leaves and ground peanuts. Then one Saturday morning, each language group cooked an American meal for their host moms in return. After our host moms dressed us each in a traditional capulana skirt and a lenço (head scarf), my group made French toast with bananas, caramelized apples, and homemade syrup with hash browns. Cooking American food under Mozambican conditions proved to be quite a challenge. We had no cinnamon or vanilla for the French toast, pots instead of skillets, and two “burners” on a charcoal stove. The hash browns took over 45 minutes to heat up and were more of a mashed potatoes-hash browns hybrid, and some of the French toast was a bit burnt since we couldn’t regulate the temperature. However, our moms loved it, and it felt great to serve them for a change. My host mom has since made French toast twice for me when I need a packed lunch, which is super sweet.
Beach Weekend (See pictures!)
We had three free days this past weekend for a mental health break. About 50 of us trainees rented a couple beach houses in Bilene, a beach in Gaza Province about 6 hours away. The beach closest to the houses was on a beautiful lagoon with clear water and no waves. It was very peaceful; there were very few other tourists, just a few wooden boats. My site is only 30 minutes away from this beach, so I will definitely be going often. We lounged on the beach, ate lots of pizza, drank, had a dance party with a DJ one night, and played Asshole (president three times in a row, bitches!). The weekend was great break from training, and now we have less than 2 weeks left until swear in!
Monday, November 8, 2010
Friday, October 22, 2010
Weeks 2 & 3
Typical Day
5:45 Wake up, iron my clothes, take a bath
6:45 Eat breakfast (bread with jam)
7:30 Portuguese class
10:00 Health class
12:30 Return home for lunch (either soup or salad)
1:30 Health class
3:30 Portuguese class
5:30 Return home; take bath; help with dinner
6:30 Eat dinner & wash dishes
7:15 Study Portuguese; do homework
8 Bedtime (usually relax for a bit in my room first)
I also have class Saturday mornings 8-12. We do get some breaks, though. A couple times each week we’ll go to a bar for a drink after class, and on the weekends we have time to pasear (walk around) and hang out.
My house
Hopefully I will be able to post some pictures soon, but my house is very nice. It is made of stones and concrete with a metal roof and has three bedrooms, a living room, a kitchen, a veranda, a back porch, and a garage. The living room is especially nice with multiple couches, a TV, and a stereo system. They have a car but it is rarely used and currently is in disrepair. Cooking occurs in both the veranda and porch. In the backyard there’s a latrine, a trash pit (trash is periodically burned), a clothes line, and some crops. My mom cares for various vegetable plants as well as banana, avocado, and papaya trees.
Cooking Moçambicano
Cooking is done in pots over a charcoal stove. Dinner typically consists of a sauce with vegetables, beans, fish, or chicken over rice. Often, the sauce primarily consists of various leafy greens, such as couve. A standard dish is matapa: a green sauce of couve and ground amendoim (peanuts) over rice. The amendoim is ground into a fine powder using a pilão, a giant mortar and pestle. Rice is often flavored during cooking with various ingredients, such as onions or coconut. The latter is done by using hot water poured through ground coconut to cook the rice. The result is so good it’s now one of my favorite ways to eat rice, and that says a lot, as I love me some rice.
The Circle of Life
I used to say that it was difficult to gross me out. I also used to be vegetarian. I officially resign my post of not being squeamish, but I am tempted to go back to vegetarianism. All thanks to Randall. Warning: the following is pretty gross.
This past Sunday, my mom announced that my sisters and I were going to cook dinner. When she called me out to the veranda to start, there was a live chicken chilling in a wheelbarrow. Already feeling a bit queasy about the whole situation, I followed Justina as she took Randall (yes, I named him) out back behind a shed (the stereotypical spot for killing animals). She stepped on his feet and wings to hold him down and chopped his head off. Yes, chicken bodies do keep moving after they’re decapitated. They convulse, in fact. She casually tossed Randall’s head in the trash pit, and I carried Randall inside, horrified. We then poured scalding water over him and plucked his still-warm body (I warned you). That was by far the grossest part and was the point where I admitted to being squeamish. My sisters noticed my discomfort, which they found hilarious, and repeatedly asked me, “Tens medo?” (are you afraid?).
Making Progress
This week, I finally felt some sense of accomplishment. Sunday, I was determined to do some household chores completely by myself. After running around like a chicken with its head cut off (too soon?) all day sweeping and then mopping with a rag my room, washing my clothes and shoes by hand, and taking a bath without being told, my mom was very impressed with my hard work. And I was excited to finally feel some sense of competence, although it quickly disappeared when I tried to cook with my sisters.
I am starting to feel more confident with Portuguese as well. Learning Portuguese is definitely a struggle, but my conversations with my family are getting better and better.
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Contacting Me - Update
So if you want to call me, you can use an international calling card, Skype, or Google Voice. The best time to call is 8pm-10pm here (2pm-4pm in the US) on weekdays or on weekends. Email me to set up a time. The country code for Mozambique is 258.
UPDATE: The cheapest option is Google Voice. I think it's around 13 cents a minute, whereas Skype is over 40 cents a minute. Also, Skype can have poor quality for calls.
ANOTHER UPDATE: Nobel calling cards are cheap and have good call quality but round up minutes and have weekly maintenance fees. You can buy them here: http://www.nobelcom.com/phone-cards/calling-Mozambique-Cell-from-United-States-1-570.html
First Weekend in Homestay
Como se diz “I swear I’m a functioning adult in the United States, everything is just different here”?
My host family spent most of my first weekend teaching me how to do household chores and laughing at me (sounds mean but really all in good fun). Every daily activity is done differently, from bathing to cooking to bathing again to cleaning to bathing once more. A big part of training is learning this new routine so we can be fully functioning adults once again. The most interesting facet thus far has been cooking. Under the instruction of my host siblings, I gutted several fish for Sunday dinner, which was delicious.
The red-headed stepchild of minha família
The Peace Corps Volunteer stereotype of dirty hippies most certainly does not apply here in Mozambique. The first thing my mãe said to me Sunday morning was “your clothes are bad.” Through some hand gestures she explained that I needed to iron immediately. And despite my three daily bucket baths, she still felt the need to cover my hair with a bandana she personally tied on my head.
This great pride in appearances also extends to housekeeping. Every morning, I need to sweep my floor (and occasionally scrub it with a soapy rag), make my bed, and organize my things. Upon seeing my daily care products in the bottom of a nightstand, I was told to make it look bonita. This is not your standard tidying up; the whole house must be immaculate.
The Perez Hilton of Mozambique
My health assignment here is mainly related to HIV/AIDS, but another major epidemic has recently hit Mozambique… Bieber Fever. Not only did Justina and her friend gush over him, they watched an entire montage of his clips on TV. Although they were disappointed I haven’t met him, I earned back some cred since I’ve seen Rihanna in concert. I, on the other hand, was disappointed they don’t know Kanye West (good thing I left my Glow in the Dark Tour t-shirt at home). Chris Brown is huge here, and I shocked them by saying that he’s mau (bad). I explained in terrible Portuguese that he beat up Rihanna, and I’ve since been demanded twice to tell others this (long outdated) celebrity news.
Funny Quotes
“Would you like to have a black boyfriend?”
“Is it good to be fat in America?” (trying not to take that one personally)