Showing posts with label Tigre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tigre. Show all posts

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Time Marches On

Hey all, I was online and realized I had not written in quite a while.  I wish I could say it was because I have been so busy, but that would be a gross misstatement.  That is not to say that I have been doing nothing; I am continuing with language training and have started a garden.  A normal day consists of me going to breakfast, where I get the special ful (think refried beans, but with fava beans and local spices with egg and yogurt) and a macchiato.  I am aware of the oddity of me drinking coffee, for those of you close enough to me anyway, but I’ve become quite the connoisseur.  In fact, I’m afraid I might be something of a coffee snob when I’m done here.  After breakfast, I would go to the district ag office and see if they’d prepared a desk for me yet, which, I can now say, has been accomplished,  more than two months after it was supposed to be done.  After a normally disappointing attempt to procure a desk, I would either go home or to a coffee house where I would read.  In the afternoons I meet with Dawit, my language tutor.  He is an English teacher at one of the local primary schools with whom  I’ve played soccer, gone hiking, and hung out with him quite a bit; he’s also agreed to help me with my community needs assessment, so that will be really nice.  After language, I return home and read, watch shows or movies, listen to podcasts or music, and cook dinner.  Mixed into a normal day are bunna (coffee) ceremonies and run-ins with children, both inspiring and uplifting, and annoying or upsetting.  Kids more than anyone else seem to be really interested in foreigners.  Most just want a little attention, a head nod or shake of the hand, but some of course beg for money or food, and a small minority just wants to annoy me, or at least so it seems.  I’m slowly trying to teach all the children of Maychew my name, so that instead of "ferenji, ferenji”, “you, you, you, …”, “money, money”, or “china” the kids will yell "Jake".  It has worked with some of the kids, and I must remember, as the saying goes “kas bi kas”, step by step.

Most every day is positive in its own right, but going to the office across town was getting disheartening when all I would hear was no one that can help me is here or that there is no time to give me a desk or there is not a desk to give me.  Over the last two weeks though, I have been in contact with a representative of an NGO (non-governmental organization), ACDI VOCA, based out of Vermont, who work with farmer’s co-operative unions in rural Ethiopia through USAID.  They sent a team up to Tigray from Addis Ababa to introduce me to the local co-op, or FCU, and look for ways I could help both the co-op and ACDI VOCA.  On the same trip, they visited a friend of mine an hour south of me for the same purpose.  Those meetings were very fruitful, and I believe I will probably be spending the vast majority of my time working with the FCU rather than the district office that could not find a desk for me for over two months.  It feels good to be excited about working here again, rather than just being excited about being here as I’ve maintained throughout.

Maychew remains beautiful as the hot, dry months turn into the rainy season.  It might be hard to believe, but while you all are enjoying the sweltering heat of summer, I’m buying an extra blanket.  It has cooled off a little, and it rains more days than it does not.  People tell me it will begin to rain daily, and the farmers are complaining about the late rain already, so I’m preparing myself.  It feels oddly familiar, which of course has made the transition here easier.  Maychew has a temperate climate.  The only thing I might start to struggle with is the roughly eight months without rain.  I start to get nervous if I do not see rain often enough.  I can’t decide if that’s due to where I’m from, or am I from the Willamette Valley because of this nervousness. 

Anyway, life is good here in Ethiopia.  I continue to meet amazing people and am inspired by their work, talents, and intellect.  The one worry I might have expressed a week ago seems to have vanished as new opportunities have arisen.  I could wax philosophically about my time here, Ethiopia itself, or what-have-you, but that just does not seem to be what this is about.  I mean, I got in trouble in philosophy class for bringing anthropology into the mix, so maybe philosophic prose is not my style.  Either way, I hope you enjoy reading my blog.  I appreciate it.  Take care for now!

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

A Month In

First, I have a new mailing address, in the case that someone wants to send a letter, or package, or dry salami ;)

Elizabeth Pelz
Attn: Jake Reedy
PO Box 123
Maychew, Tigray, Ethiopia

Tonight I am sitting on the roof of an apartment building in Mekele, the regional capital, drinking a beer, hanging out with some other PCVs and a couple Frenchmen who are running a wind farm here.  Ethiopia has been good to me.  I just tried Foie Gras for the first time as an accordion accompanied a guitar, people fire danced and played with long exposure photography.  My life in this moment is insane.

Needless to say, this is about as far from the normal evening as I could dream up.  Mekele is a city of about 400k; Maychew, my site, is a town of about 27k.  In Mekele you can find foreigner foods, like fried chicken and pizza, and faster/free internet, and other amenities that do not exist at site.  Normally I'm alone, or mostly so.  On occasion I meet one of my two sitemates for a meal, or coffee, or any other excuse to get out of the house and interact with people.  Meals at site consist of injera with one single dish in the middle; redundancy is a killer. I have slowly settled into one of my rooms. The other, and the rest of settling into the first, won't be 'homey' until one of my sitemates leaves the end of July, as I am inheriting many items from him.

On the work side, it has definitely been a mixed reception thus far.  I already sent out invitations to my site installation meeting, where a couple Peace Corps officials come and introduce me to likely stakeholders.  Hopefully that meeting will spark some connections.  Other than that, the only thing I have really done is to start language tutoring here.  I meet with a local English teacher three times a week for an hour each time.  I'm sure it has already begun to help, but so far, it feels slow.  I will start a community needs assessment in the next couple of weeks.  I have to have it completed by the first of August.  That should help me to meet people and get me going.

Friday, March 28, 2014

Nab Maychew

Today I'm on the road to my site: Maychew, Tigre, Ethiopia.  Unfortunately it's only for a couple days visit.  We landed in Mekele at about 8.30 this morning.  After a quick brunch, we found the bus station and started on our way.  I'm joined by my friend Chris, who will only be 30 minutes south, Abigail who's site got cancelled and is joining along to get a feel for Tigre, and Chris and my community liaisons.

Community liaisons are intended to be, as I put it in one session, our social lubricant.  They're tasked with holding or hand through introductions to our professional communities, setting up bank accounts, post office boxes, etc.  More or less they are our ticket to integrating into the community, both as a professional and a general community member.  If, during this initial trip and through our first three months at site, they continue to be helpful, they will become our counterpart, who would be tasked with helping us in community assessment, identifying potential projects, and implementing those projects.  My liaison's name is Hagus.  He is roughly 32, has a young wife and five year old son.  He's an expert at the local agricultural office.  He seems enthusiastic, but also sounds busy.  That makes me worry he may not have time, after I move to site, to be very involved in my service.  Time will tell, but it sounds like having a good, understanding, and involved counterpart can really make one's service.

Tigre is much more dry than the parts of the country I have seen to date.  However, it is also mountainous.  It us absolutely beautiful.  Parts have looked like what would be considered national park back home.  We have mostly followed a river, I use that term loosely at least at this time.  Along the river, a green oasis exists.   Tigre is an interesting place.  They get significantly more annual rainfall than the Willamette Valley in Oregon, but are constantly struggling for water.  That is due to the fact that nearly all of their rainfall comes in a two to three month period.  I'm more than confident that I shall have more to say on this come the rainy season at site.

We almost just hit a camel.  A real, one-hump camel.  He walked out into the road, and stopped; looked at us, and waited for us to stop.  Luckily we did, but it was a pretty aggressive stop.  There were a few packs of camels just south of Mekele.  Interesting. 

My house is nice.  I have two rooms of decent size.  Included is a private hot shower and western toilet.  The lone downside is there may be only very limited space for a garden. 

Maychew itself is set in a beautiful valley, surrounded by high mountains.  It's mostly green, but cacti are also prevalent. Strangely, agave is widely grown, but not put to use.  I may have a good diy project on my hands! It seems like a nice town, much nicer than Addis or Butajira.  Some of the roads are paved, and others are in the process of being paved.  It's hard to believe this will be home for two years.