YOUBUNTUBE
Thursday, October 20, 2011
SKILLZ Plus
I mentioned in one of my first posts that GRS Zambia is working
on developing a curriculum geared towards HIV positive kids. Once this is complete GRS will offer
comprehensive coverage in the fight against HIV. As I mentioned before, this comprehensive coverage is
education, pretest counseling, testing, referrals to treatment for
people testing positive, and finally an HIV positive curriculum, which is meant
to educate HIV positive people on how to live smart, healthy, positive
lifestyles. This will be HUGE for
the fight against HIV and a big step towards reaching our goal of an AIDS free
generation.
Recently we have been making a big push to complete this
HIV positive curriculum. And I’m
lucky to be one of the 3 people involved in creating this curriculum. We have realized in the past few days what
a large task this is. Because of
the psychological volatility of the situation, nearly every detail of what is
said to these kids must be analyzed 10 times over because we can’t risk
triggering a negative reaction.
One misstep could cause a patient to stop going to the clinic or taking
their ARVs, and could cause their lives to spiral out of control. If 1,000 kids go through our SKILLZ
curriculum (our standard curriculum delivered to kids whose status is unknown
but the vast majority are HIV negative) education and prevention curriculum and
10% reject it, not a huge deal. If
1,000 HIV positive kids go through our HIV+ curriculum and 10% reject it, there’s
now 100 kids whose lives we have effectively ruined. That simply cannot happen.
It’s an incredible experience and its been a blast trying
to come up with fun and effective games.
We still have a few kinks to work out but if we keep going at this rate
and with this quality were going to nail it. I look forward to reporting back the results once we get it
into the field.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Planet Earth: Lake Malawi
If you like camping on the beach, crystal blue water, hanging out with crazy people and three days of amazing worldwide music then Mangochi, Malawi is the place to be in late September every year for Lake of Stars music festival. It’s truly as awesome as it sounds. BUT if you want to track monkeys, hear stories about black mambas, and watch a nine year old kid swim 5 kilometers then go to the village just north of Mangochi any time of the year and ask for the coolest kid in the world named Hossua. He’s never ever left his village so he should be there waiting for you.
On Saturday afternoon, while the music was on hold for a few
hours, we decided to trek north of the site of the festival to where we heard
there was a swimming area with even clearer blue water and a big hill with tons
of monkeys. Jackpot. When we got to the swimming hole we
were lucky enough to have some entertainment as 4 young local kids in their
whitey tighties were launching themselves off a nearby rock into the
water.
After a good hour of cooling off in the
water and watching the kids still jumping and screaming, we decided to see what
these monkeys were up to.
When we walked past the kids they were in awe of white people
who would venture outside the walls of the festival into their village. When their wide-eyed stare didn’t fade,
I invited one of the kids to come on a hike with us to find monkeys, not
expecting them to understand anything I said. They quickly answered in very good English, “Yes,” and came
charging up the hill with us in nothing but their underwear and whatever they
could quickly grab before following us.
Right from the get-go the second oldest brother took nature’s
center stage, Bear Grylls-style.
He quickly introduced us to his older brother and two younger sisters
before stopping dead in his tracks and jutting his arm out in front of me (Mr.
Costanza’s move) to stop me from stepping on something with my flip flops. He picks up what looks like a coconut
but with thousands of micro needles on it and says “these ruins sandals.” Then threw it aside and proceeded to
step on a couple of the “sandal ruiners” with his bare feet with no
reaction. The thickness of the
calluses on the bottom of his feet, showing he clearly had never worn shoes,
made me wonder how he even knew what sandals were.
We continued up the trail to where the monkeys were and became
sidetracked by a huge bald eagle in the distance.
As we moved off the trail into some green
bushes to get a better picture of the eagle, Hossua comes running towards us
yelling for us to get out of the bushes.
Apparently a week ago he saw a green mamba (read: one of the deadliest
snakes in the world) slither into those bushes and he said it would be
impossible to see them in those bushes until it was too late. We quickly hopped out of the bushes
into salvation on the dirt path and continued our search for the monkeys. A few minutes later Hossua, whose
excitement constantly took him at least 20 yards ahead of us, stopped and waved
us towards him.
He pointed down at
the ground to a “fresh monkey foot,” and just as we got closer he ran 10 feet away
to show us a half eaten string-bean-looking-thing that monkeys love. He handed it to me and I had it about 3
inches away from my mouth to taste it as he casually slaps it out of my hand
and tells me its poisonous to humans.
Without Hoss I’d be dead times 2.
After thirty seconds of walking in the direction of the tracks
we look up and see the coolest looking little monkey just staring down at us as
he eats his monkey dessert, human poison bean.
I noticed that Hoss gave the monkey what seemed like a
really heartfelt snarl so I asked him if he liked monkeys. He hates them. Apparently they steal the corn meal
(the base for every traditional meal in this region of Africa) from homes in
the village so the locals hate them.
While we were dreaming of catching the monkeys to make them our pet and
play with them, he was dreaming of bringing it back to the village so his
family could get their revenge.
He said that the only way people ever catch monkeys is if they
have a dog. When we asked him if
he had a dog he laughed and said they couldn’t afford it but they had a cat
that would catch birds. He tried
to explain the type of birds that his cat (named “cat”) catches but we couldn’t
understand what he was saying. One
of them flew over our heads and landed on a branch about 100 feet away but only
Hoss saw it. He tried to point it
out to us in the branches but the bird blended in too well for any of us to
see. He picked up a rock and gave
it a hefty sidearm throw into this tree.
As the rock curved right on target he casually says, “its right there”
as the rock hits the bird dead on and it flew away. He just as casually moves onto the next topic of
conversation, disregarding the amazing fact that he has the arm of a right
fielder and the precision of a brain surgeon. That mixed with the fact that this kid has the mind of a
scientist, I’m pretty sure if he ever gets out of his village he’s going to
take over the world.
As he was telling us about his 5 km swims that he normally does
in the crocodile and hippopotamus infested lake, he told us the story of
getting out of the water and finding himself in between a black mamba (read:
the deadliest snake in the world) and the fish it was catching. With a rock in his hand as a last
resort, he hopefully threw it the snakes way and swiftly avoided it, leaving
the encounter a large scrape from an underwater rock. It had just happened a few days earlier so he proudly showed
off his cuts as a trophy of his triumph over the deadly snake.
Feeling sufficiently inferior as we trekked back to the water, I
quickly tried to think of something to bring to the table and teach these kids
who had at least 13 years less experience on earth than me. Should be easy right? So I picked up a flat rock on the
shoreline and whizzed it off into the horizon, getting about 3 skips on the
water before it sank underwater.
Hoss exclames, “WOAH” and comes closer to see how to hold the rock to
skip it. I show him and he grabs a
rock off the ground and rears back and unloads. He got a minimum of 25 skips before the rock settled
underwater. This kids a freak.
When we accepted our inferiority we sat on the beach and watched
as the kids performed nothing short of a high priced circus act. From balancing on each others arms to
playing the butt bongos on each other to having a fashion show with our clothes
to making slingshots that shot bamboo sticks with deadly accuracy.
Finally when we had to get back to our campsite we said our
goodbyes and started to walk away before Hoss invited us to his house to see
his father’s workshop where he makes different crafts out of ebony wood. We gladly accepted the invitation and
were not surprised when Hoss’s father showed us some of the coolest crafts I
have ever seen. We all put in an order
for what we wanted and came back the next day to purchase so very cool African
artwork. We then said our
goodbyes to Hoss and the family and left Mangochi the next day with the coolest
story of anyone in attendance at Lake of Stars.
Saturday, October 8, 2011
The Hitchiker's Guide to Africa
The strong scent of fish and the incredibly weak sense of personal
space filled the air on the bus from Lusaka to Chipata (the Malawi-Zambian
border town) on our way to a worldwide music festival called Lake of Stars on
the shores of beautiful Lake Malawi.
There were five seats across with a center isle packed high enough to
feel almost like a fence dividing the right cluster of three seats from our neighbors
in the left cluster of two. The amount of bags in the aisle would make Pablo
Escobar jealous. I sat with two bags between my legs, neither of them were my
own. The only reasonable explanation
for that many bags was that every person on this bus must have been moving to
Malawi.
From what I've heard and now from what I've seen I'm sure that
at least one of the large duffel bags at the base of the aisle wall holds at
least some drugs that the driver is smuggling across border to supplement his
measly 50,000 kwacha (~10 dollars) per 11-hour trip income. That's why
our plan is to get off at the Zambian border town and walk by ourselves across
the border to a separate bus that will take us the rest of the way- because the
immigration officers at the border know just as well as I do the chances that
this bus (and most buses like it) is attempting to smuggle drugs across the
border. So buses like these will be stopped at the border for 6 hours at a time
for all the bags to be checked - often times unsuccessfully finding the
drugs because a thorough search of all the hundreds of bags in this bus would
take probably 12 hours.
A sign pasted on the window to my right reads 'CAUTION. No over
speeding / overloading on this bus. If noticed please call the following number
+260 977 794043.' I’m contemplating calling it just to see if that’s even a
real number. As much as this would suck normally, I
think since I just expect things like this, they don’t really bother me too
much.
The driver’s helper (or copilot, if you will), who up til now
has been pointing out potholes and animals crossing the road for the driver,
just switched roles to the bus attendant.
As he gets up, he grabs a huge plastic crate of drinks and snacks starts
jumping over around and under the bags like an Olympian to deliver refreshments
to the riders. As he got closer I
realized he was handing out glass bottles of soda and on his first trip handed
out the drinks only to come back on another trip to use another bottle to pop
off the tops of everyone’s drinks.
He only had to go to the front half of the bus because a guy in my row
was bossing the back half of the bus using his wedding ring to open the
bottles.
The bumpy roads have forced the overstuffed overhead bins to lose
their grip on the bags that they had been carrying for the first three hours of
the ride, surprising the person sitting in the aisle of the three seat side
just barely too late to react before it lands in their lap or on their head. Sitting near the back, I watched the
bins ahead waiting to see the next suspect for a lap cannonball. A couple times the person was within
speaking distance to successfully warn them but when the unknowing person about
to get crushed was in the front row, the last thing I wanted to do was accidentally
incite a riot by shouting from the back of the bus. When I didn’t notice early enough to successfully deliver a
telephone-style message to the front row, I just had to watch and hope it
didn’t do too much damage. One
rogue bag jumped out without warning and landed smack dab on the head of the
driver. A collective “ooooohhhhh” rose
from riders that could have been out of sympathy or because the bus was jolted
when the driver was domed by 50 pounds of clothes. Feeling like Troy Aikman after the 2000 NFL season, he parked
the bus and got out to walk it off on the side of the road. A woman sitting behind me thought it
was a good time to pass her baby up the rows of people one by one and out the window
to the driver who was still walking off his concussion. The driver, without skipping a beat,
grabbed the baby and put her down on the ground next to the whole bus as she
peed behind a 2-inch wide tree.
Only in Africa.
This type of transportation took us 19 hours total from Lusaka,
Zambia to Mangochi, Malawi, about 2 km away from the site of this year’s Lake
of Stars. With a 2 km walk with
our bags ahead of us, we decided to throw our thumbs up and see if we could get
picked up. Within 30 seconds we
were in the back of a truck laying on our bags and as comfortable as can be for
the short trip into the concert grounds.
As smoothly as the hitchhiking went for the final leg of the
journey to the concert, we decided that for the trip back home we would try to
hitchhike the entire way- thinking it was going to be cheaper, more
comfortable, and faster than taking the official transportation.
We threw our thumbs up on the side of the road and just as we
had expected from our previous experience, a truck stopped within 30 seconds to
pick us up. Happy as can be we set down our bags and laid down saying to each
other what nice people Malawians were.
Within 5 minutes we were asked to sit up
and make room for more people.
Still comfortable, no big deal.
Then 5 minutes later, more people.
Then more people and more people until it’s a standing room only ride in
the back of a regular sized bed with 15 people all holding onto each other so
that no one flies over the edge as we cruise at 40 miles an hour down the bumpy
road. I had what you could call
front row seats to this ride of a lifetime. This meant that I got to hold onto the top of the cab of the
truck, but it also meant that I was the windshield for everyone behind me and over the course of the next 2 hours my
glasses and beard turned into a bug graveyard.
Being in the front row also meant I was the one who had to
answer the questions of “what was that noise?” from the rest of the group when
we hit a guinea fowl (bowling ball shaped flightless bird about the size of a
turkey) going about 50 miles an hour.
The faces that I got in response to that answer were the sort of
surprised face you would have if you were in the bed of a truck that hit an
animal going 50 miles per hour and without slowing down even a little to assess
the situation, continued to go 50 mile per hour.
As we cruised into the black market gas station (because
Malawi’s currency is powerless in other economies, they have a very difficult
time getting foreign goods, including gasoline), we were asked for about as
much money as we would have paid to take a bus.
3 hours later, the driver said we had reached as far as he would take us
and we realized we had somehow gone at an even more painfully slow pace (probably because we kept requesting coconut stops) than we
would have if we had taken the public transportation.
With no improvement in safety or comfort and a growing bug
graveyard in my beard, we decided we should just go the rest of the way on the
public buses. Conditions didn’t improve.
In fact, because we barely made it in a sprint onto the final bus back
to Lilongwe, we got standing only tickets for the final 4 hour trip.
Saturday, October 1, 2011
Sports Saves the World
Sports Illustrated recently published an article called “Sports Saves
the World” and it features organizations that are using sports to tackle issues
in the developing world. Grassroot
Soccer got a great feature story in it.
Its very cool to see that even though GRS is very much a grassroots
movement and is on a smaller scale than many NGOs, the best organizations in
the world are recognizing the effectiveness of community level work. Our recent success cannot be
refuted. Here’s the link to the
entire article:
And the part about GRS:
PORT ELIZABETH, SOUTH AFRICA
Tommy Clark figured his sojourn in Zimbabwe to play pro soccer after college would be a joyous homecoming. He'd spent part of his teens in that southern African nation while his father, former Scotland international Bobby Clark, coached Highlanders F.C. in Bulawayo. But what he found upon returning in 1992 left him mystified and heartbroken. Seven of his dad's finest players—seemingly invincible footballers whom Tommy had idolized—were dead or dying. Worst of all, no one dared say why. "I was there for a year," says Clark, who also taught school and coached, "and I didn't have a single conversation about HIV."
Clark hit upon the idea of using soccer to break down this wall of silence and educate Africans about HIV. He embarked on a medical career, with a residency in pediatrics and a fellowship in HIV research in the U.S. In 2002, Clark launched Grassroot Soccer with three ex-Highlanders, including Ethan Zohn, the Survivor: Africa champion who donated a chunk of his $1 million prize money to the cause. Today the organization operates in South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe and shares curriculum and resources with partners in nine other African countries. Studies confirm that graduates of the program wait longer to engage in sex; have fewer partners; and are more willing to talk about HIV with peers and relatives, take an HIV test and stay on treatment if they test positive. Those proven results have attracted such patrons as Elton John, whose AIDS foundation contributed $1.4 million last year to fund the program in Zambia. There's no way to tie the 50% drop in the HIV infection rate among South African teens from 2005 to '08 directly to Grassroot Soccer, but foundations are showing their confidence in the program with more grant money. This week the Clinton Global Initiative announced a $1 million commitment to a Grassroot program for South African girls.
Among the organization's most effective tools are the voluntary counseling and testing tournaments that it uses to reach the men who drive the disease. Clark invited me to a tournament in Motherwell, a township in the South African city of Port Elizabeth. For years locals had hidden behind euphemisms, saying of an HIV-positive woman, "She has a House in Veeplaas," a play on the name of a local neighborhood. But there had been a breakthrough a week before my visit, when South African president Jacob Zuma—a father of 22 children by multiple wives—announced the results of his own HIV test. (They were negative.)
The grounds outside a school teemed with players who ducked into a makeshift clinic between games, and Grassroot personnel touted a posttournament dance contest to flush more prospects out of a nearby supermarket. By the end of the day 289 more people knew their HIV status. "Five years ago, if you'd bring up HIV, everyone would shut down," one of the tournament workers, 27-year-old Mkadi Nkopane, told me. "Now a 10-year-old will tell you of an uncle or mother who's positive. The stigma will always be there, but it's much less now."
As the game that launches countless conversations in Africa, soccer is a natural idiom to cut through the taboos surrounding one of the continent's most pressing problems. In one popular drill, each soccer ball stands for a sexual partner. A player dribbling two balls is easily chased down by a defender who represents the AIDS virus; a player dribbling only one ball eludes that defender much longer, and a memorable point is made. Grassroot Soccer distributed thousands of "red cards" during the 2010 World Cup to help teenage girls, who can be up to eight times more likely to become infected than their male counterparts, use sass and humor to fend off unwanted sexual approaches. "The culture soccer creates around this topic is our 'secret sauce,' " says Grassroot Soccer COO Bill Miles. "By focusing on intergenerational sex and multiple partners, you try to shift social norms. And if you shift social norms, you change the epidemic."
Clark and his fellow ex-Highlanders work in part to honor the dead of Bulawayo—men such as the former star of the Zimbabwean national team who was refused service by bank tellers because of the stigma of AIDS, and the ex-player who trained as one of Grassroot Soccer's first coaches only to die before he could work with kids. "We're trying to be both bold and humble," says Clark, 40, whose program is nearly halfway toward its goal of a million youth participants by '14. "We ask for millions of dollars, and we're trying to change behavior and norms on a huge scale. But we also know we're not always going to have the answer, and that there may be a better answer tomorrow."
Saturday, September 24, 2011
John Q. Zambia: 1, Bribery & Corruption:0
After only 5 text/email alerts to US citizens about elections riots, the Zambian Presidential election has been decided in very peaceful
terms compared to history and the potential for violence. Much to the utter joy and sheer
surprise of Zambian citizens, this election sees the political party MMD
(Movement for Multi-party Democracy) lose power for the first time in Zambian
history since independence in the 1970s.
And they didn’t go down without a fight.
Four years ago the same election battle was fought between MMD’s Rupiah
Banda and PF’s (Patriotic Front) Michael Sata. If there were pre election polls (there aren’t here) than
Michael Sata would have been a pre-election lock to win. And with about 50% of the vote counted
it was looking like he was going to win, carrying about 70% of the vote. Then the live counting stopped for a
day and the results were announced; the incumbent Rupiah Banda was the
winner. The nation was shocked. Everyone knew Banda rigged the
elections but couldn’t really say it because he now had unchecked power.
This year, Sata would have carried 90% of the entire nation if they all
voted but because the memory of four years ago still haunted voters, many of
them were discouraged from voting because they believed no matter how they
voted, Rupiah would rig the elections and win. So with only 1.2 Million votes casted out of a total of 12
million registered voters, the vote was counted again live on television. At about 60% of all districts counted, showing Sata in the lead by 80,000 votes, the counting stopped yet again. Riots broke out in the streets in the
middle of town and near a public mall as a feeling of corruption deja vu overcame the country.
The riots died down at around 1 am when the results were announced. Sata wins by a landslide. And the crowd goes wild.
Since it’s against Zambian (maybe all of Sub-Saharan African) campaign
procedure to discuss a platform while campaigning (I have heard this is out of
fear that the opponent will then use your ideas while in office if they win?)
no one is really sure what Sata is going to do while in office but the thought
of most Zambians is that any change from the corrupt Rupiah is good. Lets hope its good change. There’s a lot of room for improvement.
Addendum: So new news has
emerged that Rupiah didn’t lose as peacefully as everyone originally
thought. Apparently after a failed
attempt to rig the elections the same way as he did in previous years, he was
reported to have been begging a vote counting official to do anything to help
him win. This official didn’t and
is now talking about his pitiful conversations with Rupiah just before the vote
was about to be announced….Also, I listened to Sata’s speech to parliament as
they recently opened for Sata’s tenure and with equal parts determination to
change Zambia and cutting humor aimed at the missteps of his predecessors he
has won over the people of Zambia.
He is very anti-corruption and his main goal is to put more money in the
pockets of Zambians. I’d say both
of these things could do wonders here.
Monday, September 12, 2011
Village Vacation
Last weekend Tommy, Mike Z, and I were invited to go to our
housekeeper, Sharon’s, village for the day. Sharon is like our Zambian mother. She is hired by Grassroot Soccer to clean the house and
office and cook Nshima (I could do a whole other post about Nshima because of its importance in Zambian culture, but in short
it is a corn-meal dough that is the staple meal in sub-saharan Africa because
it is very cheap and filling. Its
usually combined with a vegetable relish and a liquid tomato soup/sauce type
thing and meat if you can afford it. Its delicious.) for lunch in the office
every day. She was born in a
village about an hour drive outside of Lusaka and moved into the city for work
when she was older. She and her
sister now live near us in Lusaka with their husbands and kids. We gladly accepted an invitation to see
the village and decided to meet Saturday morning at 10 in the parking lot of
the gas station to pick them up.
Expecting just Sharon and her kids, we were very surprised to see that
Sharon, her sister, their kids, and their cousins all had come to the parking
lot of the gas station to visit their grandparents/parents and cousins in the
village. We piled them all in the
car and headed off for the hour journey.
I was the driver of the kids car and was entertained by the 10 year old
children in the back yelling for me to drive faster because every time I
accelerated was the fastest they had ever gone in their lives.
Many of them had never
been in a car let alone a plane. When I realized that many hadn’t been in a car before I asked
a question that I had originally though I had known the answer to, “Have any of
you ever seen the village or your grandparents?” Only Maggie, Sharon’s 14 year old daughter had been to the
village (but didn’t remember seeing it) and none of the other kids had ever
been. No one in the family has a
car so this was the first time most of the kids were ever getting the
opportunity to visit their grandparents.
And they lived only one hour away.
Wow, no wonder all the Lusaka family members showed up to ride
along. This was the only
opportunity they were going to have to see the village ‘til god knows
when. And this is when I realized
that not only was this an incredible experience for me but an even bigger day
for the family.
We arrived at the village that consisted of 2 four walled buildings and
2 huts and housed 12 of Sharon’s family members. The next closest village was a 20-minute walk away but
asking the family if they ever go there yields a confused look and a response
of “why would we ever go there? We have everything we want here.” They grow their own corn (which they
harvest and keep for themselves for the year), ground nuts (peanuts), mangos,
and they make their own charcoal which they use to grill their corn, cook their
ground nuts, and occasionally to cook one of their chickens that roam the
village. That’s it, that’s
all. That’s their life. We brought a Frisbee and a soccer ball
with us and although it provided temporary entertainment, they refused when we
offered for them to keep the items.
They only wanted what they had and they were completely
happy with their minimalist lifestyle.
This also became apparent when I pulled out my camera and started
snapping pictures of the village kids who seemed very uninterested. Then when I started taking pictures of
one of the cousins who we had taken from the city, Joshua , he was mesmerized
by the camera.
When I gave it to
him he walked around the rest of the day with the camera pressed against his
face and kept making the sound of a camera flash with his mouth. When we finally showed him how to actually
use the camera, he played with the settings and took this picture all on his
own.
He might have a future in photography.
After a day of hiking, sitting around, talking, and eating groundnuts,
we were getting ready to leave when I heard a loud whistle. As quickly as I turned, the dog and two
other village children were already sprinting towards the whistling kid. And off went one of the chickens
running for its life as the ringleader of the chicken hunt whistled signals and
hand motions to the dog and the other two boys in a very well executed hunt
that corralled the chicken into one of their huts with calculated commanding
from the leader and acute listening from the dog and two other children. As the kid emerged from the hut holding
the chicken upside down by his legs he walked directly to me and handed me
their catch and told me it was a gift for coming to the village. After trying to refuse because they
rarely got to eat chicken, they insisted we take home one of their 5 chickens
and have it for ourselves.
Incredible.
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