Ready for school…

Monday (13th) will be the first day of our agricultural training course. We are training 20 students (so keeping it small) in new agricultural skills and practices. These students that have enrolled are mostly young ladies with children; and we are training them so they can sustain themselves and their family with a small income from a town plot.

One challenge to the locals has been people relocating to the towns to look for better income; but unfortunately as there are so many of them with minimal qualifications, they find it very difficult. These skills should teach them how to maximise small residential plots.

Meanwhile on site, we have 10-15 guys going hard at preparations; unfortunately we will not be physically ready but we will start anyway. I am not so concerned, however, as part of the training will be the students assisting to construct pig pens, build a cement water tank and set up drip irrigation.

Pray for wisdom as I lead this. I made a schoolboy error of paying the workers on a Friday, so half of them didn’t turn up the next day.

In the photos: Foundations of a pig pen, and ploughing – getting ready for the agriculture project.

Dan

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Swallow, I mean punch, I mean smile!

Over the Easter break I decided it would be a good time to plant my maize out. Our lovely next door neighbour had volunteered her front garden a few weeks back for me to plant the maize in. I am following a new method (for here anyway) of planting, which I tell you gets me a few laughs, scoffs, funny looks from the passer-byers. I also get my fair share of compliments as most are surprised that I know how to dig (they fairly assume we just use tractors). They genuinely ask rhetorically ‘you know how to dig’!

So I’m planting away with my neighbour’s nephew (who I have roped in to help) and Jody comes out with the camera to get a picture for the blog. We are posed ready for the picture when I see the boy isn’t smiling (very normal for Africans not to smile) so I say in Acholi what I believe is smile and the boy starts cracking up. There is now teeth to be seen but he is now facing the ground or the sky laughing (not good for a pic). I quickly assume I’m not saying it right and he tells me I’m telling him to swallow – argh…So I try again a little bit differently and get the same reaction, this time I’m telling him to box (punch)! (obviously my lessons are coming on well). Dan_garden_W

Catherine joins our team

I am sure one of the photos here will be familiar to some of you – this is Akello Catherine, a good Acholi friend of ours who recently had baby Daniel (named after Dan). I taught with Catherine for a year and a half at Layibi Techo and we team-taught remedial phonics together. She is a great teacher. Catherine has now joined me in the afternoons for teacher training and she adds a new element to these workshops. Catherine is extremely encouraging and motivating to the other teachers – it is great for local teachers to see another local teacher (not just this white-faced foreigner) teach them, I can see them thinking that they too can teach like this and many of them want to ‘be like her’. On two separate training occasions she even taught her own teachers, teachers who had taught her in P7 (year 6), and instead of there being any resentment these older teachers were extremely proud of Catherine and eager to learn new things from her.

I am pleased to say that the training in schools is going really well! So far we have trained teachers from six nursery/primary schools. Head teachers are completely onboard, most schools are changing their timetables to include phonics and many teachers/head teachers are saying this is an answer to prayer: they have really struggled to work out how they can teach their children how to read better. We are also producing learning aids (phonics flashcards) which we are selling to schools at a very reduced price (so they have some ownership). Our only problem at the moment is we can’t produce these resources quick enough! Currently demand far outweighs supply, possibly a good problem to have 🙂

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The photo above shows Catherine and Jody; some of our teaching resources; Catherine and Jody teaching at a recent workshop; and also the group of teachers we recently trained from Gulu Prison Primary School (no, none of the children are inmates :). At this school the teachers were particularly engaged in the training and it was wonderful to teach teachers so willing to learn new things (they were like sponges) and who were extremely grateful.

Some advice for primary school pupils…

Now there’s no beating around the bush here…
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Head teacher’s meeting – at long last!

Well… the long awaited head teacher’s meeting finally came! It was only about five weeks late, but hey, who’s counting? The Gulu Municipal Schools Inspector called the meeting and about 35-40 head teachers from Gulu municipal primary schools were present, that is a pretty amazing attendance rate really (out of the 59 primary schools in town).

I spoke at the meeting and had a brilliant response afterwards! I gave every head teacher present my contact details, and afterwards about four head teachers came to see me to organise me to do some training at their school. I am now booked up for the next three weeks which is pretty exciting! Starting with Gulu Prison Primary School this week. The meeting could not have gone any better. I am really encouraged by the response and the privilege I have to work with all these local primary schools in a much needed area.

Thank you to everyone who prayed for the meeting and who has been praying for my work here.

Do you have a disability?

BodaA couple of weeks ago I took a boda (motorbike taxi) home; the conversation steered to where it normally leads: ‘how many children do you have?’ Normally, I just let these comments fly past with replies such as ‘none yet, yes family planning, us muzungus wait long I know!’ But for some reason this time I thought I would try to challenge the strong local expectations of ‘breeding and producing’. My comments went something along the lines of ‘I am not sure I want to have children, maybe God has something else planned for me.’ My goodness what an onslaught I soon faced! ‘Do I have a disability?’ – No! This occurred all on the back of a motorbike. Then, low and behold, he runs out of fuel in a quiet section of road. So we continued our ‘discussion’ on the roadside, waiting for someone to pass by, then go and get some fuel and return to us (let’s just say there was a long time for discussion). I was dealt questions such as ‘where is the fruits of your marriage?’ ‘What will you show to your parents?’ ‘What does your husband think?’ For more than thirty minutes I endured (that fuel couldn’t come quick enough!); right up to my gate when his last comment to me was: ‘I want to see you in one year with a child’. I felt like punching him!

Two days ago I was in town, heading home from a school, and a boda calls out to me. I didn’t particularly need one straight away (had to stop at the supermarket first) but he calls out to me and was quite persistent and said he knows me; he comes over, pulls up – it’s the same guy! The first thing he says to me is: ‘have you reconsidered about children?’ So… I got on the back, went to the supermarket and left him with a question: ‘What do you think is the meaning of life? What is your purpose in life and why are you here?’ I told him I wanted an answer when I returned. Of course his answer was ‘to reproduce’. But this was a nice introduction to an interesting conversation on the way home when this time I steered the conversation and attempted to challenge a few of his worldviews. The best comment I heard from him that afternoon was: ‘our brains have come a long way (I was talking about Paul in the New Testament); he said we know how to love so much better now! Well that was a good opening for me. What does love mean? How did Jesus show love? Oh, but Jesus had a purpose he said to me. Purpose? I said. Now that is a key word… which brought me back around to my original question and further interrogation.

The role of a mother…

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The role of a mother is so much more than this! Ironically this was a lesson taught by a female teacher in a local school. The tick and ‘very good’ comment was from good copying from the chalkboard 🙂 Can guess what the role of a father is…

Enthusiastic learner…

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Teaching my neighbour how to read. She says this is an answer to prayer and wants to be able to read the Bible by Christmas – a lot of work to do by then though! But do feel blessed that I can be a part of her journey in learning how to read the Bible.

Hunting expedition…

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My work has started off brilliantly; I am really enjoying the work that I am doing and also really love the people I am working with.

Recently most of the office staff went out on a hunting trip to a village north of Gulu called Paicho pronounced – piecho. Some of the youth of this village recently came out to The Recreation Project (the NGO I volunteer with) for a day of team building and life skills training and invited us all to go hunting in their village. We were hunting a little animal called Anyeri pronounced – (I still can’t say it properly so…!!). It looks similar to a very big rat without the long tail. They are considered a bit a delicacy here although I’m still to be convinced.

We left late in the afternoon for the trip as we planned to stay the night so as to have an early start for the hunt. The journey was the usual bumpy ride weaving from side to side to avoid the gutters, corrugations, oncoming buses (unwritten law here of giving way to the bigger vehicle even if they are driving on the wrong side of the road which means you may have to go bush) and people who only seem to move out of your way only after you have tooted them (although that doesn’t always work…).

We arrived safe and sound (not sure all of us were sound) to the beaming smile of Bernard, who was to be our host for the next 24 hours. And host he did! On arrival we were taken on a quick walk around some parts of his farm and then down to the river which was more like a stream (primarily as it is the height of the dry season at the moment). It really made you appreciate how simple life can be but also how hard the village people work to send their children to school but also to put food on the table.

On returning, we lit the fire and hoped for a relaxing evening telling stories and yarns over a nice plate of food, well that’s what we were thinking! At about 9pm we still hadn’t eaten, we were starting to send out SOS messages to our colleagues as to if food was coming. Although the response was yes I could see they were starting to doubt also.

So Bernard joins us again around the fire and tells us we are going hunting now – for HONEY! At this I was worried as from past experience this hasn’t ended well for me. All we have quite literally are the clothes on our backs to protect us, but off we trudge into the darkness to find the hives. We eventually come across 3 hollow longs that have been placed in the fork of low trees which have been inhabited by the dreaded African bee. I wasn’t keen on getting too close as my arms and head were completely exposed but my African colleagues were all up for the challenge. Their biggest fear was about getting bees down their shirt and getting stung, so they thought it would be better to take them off! I think they were thinking the bees couldn’t see them in the dark also… So now we have 3 topless men blowing smoke into bee-infested logs trying their level best to push the bees deeper into the log. And believe it or not it was working, although there was the odd bee that didn’t follow the desired program and decided for the sake of the hive to commit the ultimate sacrifice. We ended up robbing them of about 2kg of honey. So all in all it was a successful start to the hunting.

We arrive back at about 10pm to find dinner is served. This was my second time of eating Anyeri, and although it tasted a little better I’m still not convinced it is meant for human consumption. My saving grace was that it was indeed dark and I had a dog beside me…

So the next morning we awoke or should I say opened our eyes, as I’m not sure there was too much sleeping happening. There were 6 of us on 3 mattresses and one of those was a single! So we started off on our hunting trip, we were given a spear and a few bow and arrows which we had a brief practice with; that alone was a bit embarrassing and confirmed to me that this Anyeri was going to be as safe as a house!

The Hunt

We started out on a path north with one person who knew what they were doing and 5 joy riders that possibly presented Mr Anyeri with 5 lives. While walking this path we came across the rest of the hunting brigade and their dogs (always a worrying thing meeting a group of men with spears and their dogs on a village track). Well they all seemed to be very friendly and were well up for a hunt.

From that point the hunt began immediately! This meant trudging through 4 foot high grass trying to see any movement below. If you did see any movement you would yell out to the dogs and start running whichever direction you think it went. This was pretty much a needle in a haystack job. So after about 2 hours of walking in the hot sun I had all but given up and decided to give my weapon away and take pictures. Coming down a small hill in the middle of nowhere hoping at any minute someone would pull the pin on this expedition, there is a commotion at the foot of the hill. It becomes very apparent that Mr Anyeri has been spotted. While trying to position myself for a good shot (remembering my only weapon is my size 10 boots) I see the spear from one of the hunters (professional I’m told) thrown into the high grasses and low and behold as he extends it back into the air Mr Anyeri is on the end of it.

So quietly I am still hoping that someone will give the call and it will be tools down for the day, but unfortunately the latest trophy has invigorated the group so we are off in totally the opposite direction I was hoping for! Well it wasn’t long before we stumbled across our next victim; a feral cat! This was more sport for the real hunters as it was quite literally – let the dogs deal with it. And believe me, they didn’t disappoint! I’m not going to go into detail here as I’m sure there are some cat lovers reading this that would prefer not to hear about the details. Just to say in fairness to the hunters, feral cats are very destructive to local wildlife…Hmm I think our group would be in the same group.

Enough said!

God bless,

Dan

Making resources for teacher training…

makingchalkboardsCan you guess what they will be?