Friday, February 24, 2012

Started My Secondary Projects!!

2/24/2012

                The past week or so since my last blog has been the busiest I have been since coming to Mozambique.   I gave a test last week to all of my English classes and since I have 5 different sections of English each with around 50 students I ended up with almost 250 tests to grade!  250 TESTS!   On top of having to grade these tests I started one of my secondary projects (projects that I do for my community outside of my duties as a teacher..more on this in a bit), my pedagogical director gave me these planning sheets I had to do for my classes, and I had to plan for the following week’s lessons along with laying down the frame work for a club I was going to start up on this week.  You can add to this list taking a trip to Muxungue to buy more supplies for the house, and then redoing my entire kitchen which took up all of my February 17th’s afternoon.    It was by far the busiest week I have had, and by far the most productive!
                On Friday the 17th I left on a bus to Muxungue and hung out there until about 2pm in the afternoon, I managed to buy a ton of food for the house and some shelving units for the kitchen.  (I also scored Ian and I a new “double boca fugao”  i.e.  a charcoal grill two places to burn coal, a serious upgrade from the little ground grill we were using before to cook our rice and beans.)   Once I got back from my trip to Muxungue I tore apart my kitchen cleaning and rearranging things until around 7 or 8 at night.  The following day I woke up and preceded to grade tests all day (except for the 2 hours in the morning I found out, very last minute, that I had to watch over one of my classes as the swept and weeded the school grounds, there is nothing like being told last minute on a Saturday morning you need to be at work:-P ).    I finished all of my grading, and inputting of the grades into my computer by around 11pm (There was a random break for a few rounds of UNO with some of my students around dinner time).   The next day (Sunday now)  I woke up and the rest of the work was smooth sailing, I planned my classes for the following week and talked to some people to get the ball rolling on the REDES group that I will be starting here in Mangunde.
                At this point I have mentioned two secondary projects and have yet to tell you anything about them, here goes nothing.    Right now I have two secondary projects that I am working on, the first is a simple project where every week I am giving computer classes to the local nurses and hospital volunteers in an effort to make some of the inner workings of the hospital more efficient.  I’m excited about this project because I feel like I am teaching something to the nurses that they are immediately putting into use in their day to day lives at the hospital.   I am also so amazed at the lack of knowledge here in Mozambique surrounding computers, but when you take a minute to think about the situation for an average Mozambican it shouldn’t be surprising at all.   The vast majority of Mozambicans may have seen a computer from afar but have probably never used or even touched one.  The students in my computer classes along with the nurses I am teaching are starting out with how to use a mouse, and how to operate a keyboard.    Given that some of them had never touched a computer before my class, I have to say that I have been amazed at how quickly they are picking it up, they are always so excited to be learning about computers.  Most of my students are enchanted with all of the little things a computer has to offer (the fact that you can change your font of the letters on the page at will always seems to invoke a little gasp and a giggle form my students). 
                My other secondary project that I am starting is called REDES (Raparigas Em Desenvolvimento, Educacao e saude)  This translates to “Teenage girls for Development, Education and Health).   The club is a woman’s empowerment group for girls between the ages of 12 or 14 up to their mid 20’s.   I talked to a few other volunteers about things that I could do at my school and a few of them mentioned about how lacking the resources for women at Mangunde have been, so I took that along with the fact that I really wanted to start something here that I could call my own and decided to open a chapter of REDES.  I’m very excited about the group because the first meeting which I had last Tuesday went very well.  The girls seemed very interested, and enthusiastic about the group.   The club is still in its preliminary stages and I still have a lot of work to do with it but I have high hopes for it.  The main goals of a REDES group are to empower women and give them experiences that they wouldn’t have had elsewhere.   There are conferences, workshops, and group get together where girls in other REDES groups across Mozambique come together meet each other and talk about issues that they face in their day to day lives.    I honestly have no idea where the girls in my REDES group are going to take the club, but I’m excited to see where it goes.
                On a completely unrelated note, yesterday was my 24th birthday and as with all birthdays it was a day filled with reflection and that funny newness that you sometimes feel on your birthday.   It’s hard to believe that I just turned 24 and that I am going to be here in Mangunde for just a little under two more years.  Time is such a perplexing entity it seems to have the ability to make you feel as though you are going a million miles a second and crawling at a snail’s pace all at once.    I feel like just the other day I was receiving my invitation to serve here (that was 9 months ago), and Mangunde, though I like it, still doesn’t quite feel like home to me yet.   However with a few more months I think things are going to pick up.
               
                

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Happy Valentine's Day!

February 14, 2012

Happy Valentine’s Day!!!!  Yet again it has been quite a bit of time since my last blog post so I will do my best to summarize the events of the last few weeks.
The last time I posted I was on my way to Maputo for a Volunteers Advisory Council meeting (VAC for short)  I was elected to represent the volunteers in my training class from the central part of Mozambique.  VAC is something like how a student council (idealistically) functions in a high school, we are basically there to bring up the concerns, or grievances of the volunteers in our region to our superiors.  All and all, this gave me a weekend trip to the capital city to meet a bunch of cool people and to see Ariel and Laurie (the two other VAC members from my training group… and some pretty amazing people!)  On my way to Maputo I ended up staying the night in Chimoio and ran into Adrienne and Dylan (two volunteers located in Sofala), Adrienne had just gotten over a weird sickness that brought her down to Maputo for a checkup, and Dylan had been temporarily evacuated from his site due to a Cyclone (Hurricane) that seemed a little too threatening for Peace Corps.   It was a big treat to run into these two and I was excited to stay with them at Hoang’s (another member of my training class who has a very nice house in Chimoio where he does his work).  Hoang, Adrienne, Dylan, Shane (yet again another volunteer , this one however was in the group before me and does his work in the health sector) and I spent a wonderful evening eating tacos and boozing it up before Shane and I left for Maputo the following afternoon.     Once in Maputo I had a great time catching up with Laurie and Ariel, eating some amazing Indian food (though I was really pushing for Thai) and buying some art work for my room here in Mangunde.   Over all it was a great weekend trip to Maputo.
After I returned from Maputo, I got right into the swing of things with school and I have been going pretty steadily ever since.   School is starting to pick up pace as the little kinks are starting to get worked out.  Students and teachers are both starting to attend class more (sometimes teachers here will just take off for a few days and there classes are just left unattended) and I’ starting to feel some forward moment.  I gave my first test today and the 200+ tests are now sitting ominously on my desk waiting to be graded.  I made the test fairly easy so I am hoping for some good results! 
Some random adventures I’ve had recently were a day trip to Muxungue (that is my big market where I can buy more than Mangoes and Cucumbers) with my roommate Ian, and a weekend trip to Mapanhane and Vilankulo.  Ian and I’s trip to Muxungue was basically just a big shopping spree where we splurged on ourselves.  We managed to buy onions, garlic, mangoes, bananas, eggs, cabbage, green beans, and pineapples.  I also managed to purchase a shelving unit for my room which was a great success.  The chapa ride back from Muxungue was pretty tough though.  Ian and I were crammed in the back of a pickup truck with all of our groceries and the sun baked us to a crisp.  I was hurting pretty badly the following few days, but it was so worth it considering how well we ate that week. 
The following weekend I took a trip to the Inhambane province to visit with some friends I have who live in Mapinhane.  I left on Friday afternoon ( I wanted to leave Friday morning early, but apparently the chapa decided to not show up so I was stuck in Mangunde, putting me 6-7 hours behind schedule)    I don’t have classes on Friday so making the trip down to see Chris, Laurie (yep, the same one from VAC, her and Chris are a married and are the volunteers stationed in Mapinhane), Mac (the really tall, goofy, blond dude you will always catch me hanging around in PC photos) and TJ (a wonderful PCV stationed in Inhassoro, Inhambane) was a very doable trip even though they are about 5 hours away.   We spent Friday evening (when I finally arrived) and all of Saturday just hanging out and catching each other up.  I had a few great conversations with both Chris and Mac that has put me on a much more positive path when it comes to teaching English, and made me feel much better about my experience thus far.  Switching the subject to food, we had pineapple fried rice, banana chocolate chip pancakes, and Matapa(a wonderful Mozambican dish), SO GOOD!   I even managed to go running with Chris (a fellow marathoner) to cap of a wonderful (though very hot) Saturday afternoon.   Traveling back to my site on Sunday was a bit of an adventure.   Mac and I got up around 5:30 in the hopes of getting out of Mapinhane and on our way to Vilankulo (a huge travel destination for tourists visiting Mozambique and also where there’s a big market and a bank).  Are plans got delayed because of the pesky weather and we ended up leaving about an hour later than expected.  Once we got out to the street we were quite a sight.  Mac is 6’5ish and was wearing a bright orange shirt and getting soaked.  I am 5’6ish and was wearing two huge book bags one on the front of me and one on the back of me and was covered in a poncho, it took us a few minutes but we eventually waved down a ride and then off to Vilankulo we went.   Once we got to Vil we made our rounds to the bank and the market and then headed off to another volunteer’s house for breakfast.  The volunteer’s name was Camilla and she lives in a fantastic house in Vil and cooked us some wonderful breakfast burritos.  After that Mac and I left and parted ways as he was going back to his site in Machanga, and I to Mangunde.    It took me a few hours to get home but I managed to catch a very quick moving chapa up the intersection that heads down to Mangunde and was at home eating dinner by 8pm.    A lot of traveling for one day, but I got back in time to get a full night’s sleep before my jammed packed Monday.
For the next few weeks I plan on just hanging around here in Mangunde.  Things in my life seem to be settling down a bit, which is a welcomed change from the constant movement of long term travel, and starting a new job.    I hope all is going well in the states!
If you’re interested in getting in contact with me in any way here is how:
Cell phone:  82-354-8433   Mcell     84-901-0289 Vodacom            you can use skype or google voice to get cheap rates.
Normal Mail :  Michael Skvarch (Peace Corps Volunteer)
Corpo da Paz/Peace Corps
C.P. 331
Chimoio,
Mozambique