Showing posts with label PST (preservice training). Show all posts
Showing posts with label PST (preservice training). Show all posts

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Homestay Songs

Here are two recordings we made of our host family singing before going to bed. This post uses HTML 5 which may not work for everyone, so I included a few download links as well. Please post a comment or e-mail me if you are having issues.

When the storms of life are raging (download):


How great thou art (download):

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

A day in the Life of a PCT

I thought all of our readers would enjoy learning about a typical day for a PCT in Tanzania (although, there really is no typical day).

5:00 am-We hear the Muslim call to prayer and Jason's alarm goes off to help start the charcoal jiko in the morning.  Our family heats water to take a morning bucket bath, which I am grateful for.  A cold bucket bath would not be pleasant.

6:00 am-Heather wakes up to take her bucket bath after Jason.  We bathe in our indoor choo, which is tiled.  There is a nice line to hang up all of your clothes and towel on while you bathe.  It is just starting to get light at this time of the morning.

6:30 am-We eat breakfast.  Breakfast here is chai with bread.  Jason and I expanded our breakfast menu by purchasing peanut butter at a local shop.  We were even more excited when we brought back jam from Lushoto!  After breakfast we finish packing our bags and brush our teeth.

7:00 am-We begin our 30 min walk to school.  Jason and I both teach 7:40 am classes most days of the week, so we need to leave early to prepare our classes.  On our walk to school we greet many neighborhood children.  They often serenade us with a chorus of "how are yous?" and "Wauzungu (meaning white person or foreigner)! "

7:30 am-10:20 am-This time can be chaotic.  Sometimes we are teaching, sometimes we are in Kiswahili class.  There are three other volunteers in our community-based training group, so more often than not someone is teaching during this time.  When we have Kiswahili class, we will often review what we learned the day before and practice our speaking skills.

10:20 am-10:55 am-Chai time!  It's the best time of the day, really!  We order what we would like for the day from a Mama who cooks at the school.  At our school, there is a row of huts lashed together with poles and grass roofs and under each one sits a different Mama who cooks.  Our Mama sits in the last hut.  Around 9:30 am one of us will go and place an order for chapati (sweet, thick crepes) and maandazi (the Tanzanian doughnut).  We take chai in the staff room with the other teachers.  We eat our bites and drink sugar with tea.  You did not read that wrong.  Tanzanians like to put a fair amount of sugar in their tea.  It is incredibly sweet.

11:00 am-1:00 pm-Teaching and Kiswahili again.  By this time we are moving into new material in our Kiswahili.  We all take lots of notes and ask many questions of our language facilitator.

1:00 pm-2:00 pm-Lunch time!  This can be less than thrilling.  One lunch last week we were given ugali and dagaa (ugali is a stiff cornflour and dagaa are little fishes that were sundried then recooked).  Only about half of us ate it and our language facilitator explained to our mama that we do not care for ugali and dagaa.  So now we mostly get some variation of rice, beans and meat.  We are also getting more spaghetti like dishes.  The noodles here are cooked with sugar instead of salt so the first byte plays tricks with your mind.  Sometimes, lunch is spectacular.  For example, everyone except Jason likes chipsi mayai.  Chipsi mayai is fried potato wedges and eggs used to stick them all together.  The potatoes are surrounded in fried egg goodness.  Heart attack on a plate?  Yes, but it is delicious.

2:00 pm-4:00 pm-More Kiswahili.  I must say, the Peace Corps language program is excellent.  We can converse about our daily activities and our families, and ask questions.  And we are only a little over halfway through training.

4:00 pm-We walk home.  We are alone on the walk as the students get out of school around 2:00 pm.  The walk home is normally hot.  We greet many people on our way home.  Our favorite people to greet are the kids.  We give Tanzanian high fives all around and try to teach them to say "good evening" instead of "good morning."  We often get followed all the way home.

4:30 pm-8:00 pm-We are home!  Heather will sweep the floor of our room and we will converse about our day with our host family.  We will study some Kiswahili and work on lesson plans.  Our little sisters will cause general pandemonium, occasionally making it difficult study without retreating to our room.  We may help cook dinner.  The most common task we are given is to sort through the rice.  We have to pick out all the chaff and stones.  Heather may iron clothes if laundry is dry.  Now, when you think of Heather ironing, think Little House on the Prairie style.  We iron with a charcoal-powered iron.  You pick hot coals out of the charcoal stove, plop them in the cast-iron iron, and go to town ironing your clothes on the coffee table.  Dark falls around 6:45 pm here, so the ironing is usually done by the glow of a solar-powered LED light.

8:00 pm-8:30 pm-We eat dinner!  I am always very appreciative of the cooks, as a meal takes around 2-3 hours to prepare.  For dinner we normally have things like rice, pilau (dirty or seasoned rice), beans, spinach, beef, oranges, mangoes, cucumbers, and salad called kachumbari made of a tomato, cucumber, and bell pepper.  Delicious!  We will talk with our host family during and after dinner; they like to ask questions about America and we all enjoy comparing and contrasting American life to Tanzanian life.

9:00 pm-We are heading to bed.  Our little sisters follow us outside and we all brush our teeth by the light of our headlamps.  We may sing and say prayers with our family before bed.  We tell our family goodnight, tuck our mosquito net securely around us, and fall to sleep to the sounds of our village (chickens, radios, laughter, dogs, the call to prayer).  Our family stays up later than us.  We are still not sure how Tanzanians do as much work as they do on so little sleep.

That's it for our typical day. Our next post will be an exciting one! Later today, we will learn where we will be placed for 2 years. Then on Saturday, we get to make a road trip and spend all next week at our site! Though if we get placed in the southern portion of the country, we may get less than 72 hours there because it takes almost 3 fully days to travel each way.

Baadaye!
Jason and Heather.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Lushoto

Tanzania is a beautiful country.  We have not seen all of it yet, but what we have seen has been stunning.  The town of Lushoto will take your breath away.  Literally.  With an elevation of 4800 ft, the huddle of homes is tucked away in the Usambara mountains.  Our travel from Korogwe to Lushoto took us up a winding mountain road past many waterfalls.  We took lunch at Irente Biological Reserve.  Lunch was fantastic!  Most all of the food is grown locally and sustainably.  We ate rye bread with homemade cheeses, homemade jam, cucumbers, tomatoes, and guacamole.  We were in American Food Heaven.  We most definitely bought some cheese and jam to bring home to share with our host family.  Irente is owned by the Lutheran Church, with a portion of the proceeds from lunch going to an orphanage, a school for the blind, and a school for the mentally disabled.  You can camp or stay in well-appointed huts at Irente.  The Usambaras are known for their great hiking, so Irente would be the perfect place to start your Tanzanian hiking adventure.  We hiked 2 km to a viewpoint overlooking the valley below and the sight was spectacular!  But the goodness of Lushoto does not stop at Irente.  After Irente we headed to Lawns, a guesti in Lushoto.  Free wi-fi and cold sodas made these two Peace Corps Trainees very happy.  Lawns was a haven of Western Civilization, which was wonderful to visit after a month in Tanzania.  I would definitely recommend a visit to Lushoto if you make it to Tanzania.  You can soak up the Tanzaian culture in town and still have a hot shower and a Western toilet waiting for you when you retire for the evening.   For now, Kwa heri!

The Usambaras

The view from Lushoto-if we live here, will you come visit us?

Jason on our hike to the viewpoint

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Our Homestay

As many of you already know, we are spending the first 10ish weeks living with a host family in Tanzania. Our family has a baba (father), mama (mother), bibi (grandmother), 3 dadas (sisters, aged 6, 4.5, and ~3 weeks), and one shangazi (aunt on the father’s side). The bibi is just here to help with the new born, the rest are residents. In Tanzania, they don’t talk about pregnancies until the day of the baby’s birth. It is also a taboo for the mother to leave the house during the first 3 months after birth. This is why our bibi has come to visit and help with the chores.
Now to the living conditions. I think our conditions are slightly above average for the typical Tanzanian PCT. Our house is ~95% complete. We have 3 bedrooms, a living room/dining room, a pantry, a kitchen/cooking room, an attached chicken coup and 3 choos (toilets).One choo is inside for “public” bathing and night time use. Another choo is conneted to the master bedroom. The final one is outside and the one assigned to primary “duty”. The house has a very nice flat concrete floor. There is a ceiling in most of the house, except our room and the kitchen.
Our indoor choos appear to have pipes in the walls, but water here functions on a very elaborate bucket system. You’ve got the big bucket (55 gallon drum) to hold the water for the week. Then there are several smaller 5 gallon buckets: a few buckets for laundry, a few for bathing, a few for cleaning food in the kitchen, a couple for moving water back and forth to the kitchen, and finally a special clean one for the water than has been boiled and cooled to drink.
Electricity is a similar situation. Our house is clearly wired with UK style plugs and light bulb sockets, but we do not have electricity. We have 1 semi-permanent light connected to a battery and a solar panel that hangs on its wire by a staple right next to the permanent fixture. This light has enough power to run for about 3-4 hours a night, if the day was sunny enough to fully charge the battery. The family had 2 portable solar lights. When the Peace Corps gave us each another light, we nearly doubled the lighting capacity in the house. All of the lights are fairly efficient LEDs. I cannot imagine how limited their life was 20 years ago before either solar or LEDs were available.
When you first stroll through the countryside, you will notice many “abandoned” looking houses. These houses might just be a foundation, maybe standing exposed brick walls overgrown with weeds, perhaps even finished plaster walls or part of a tin roof. But strangely, they all look very new. They are in fact not abandoned at all. Financing is very difficult and expensive here, even for middle class in Tanzania. Our baba mentioned he could only get a loan with +20% interest that needed to be paid back in 5 or 6 years. He has a steady job that can support a family. He said it was near impossible for anyone working less than 3 years to get a loan of any type. So instead of financing, they invests into their own homes polepole (bit by bit, or slowly). They save for 2-3 years, then buy a foundation. Another 2-3 years might get you the walls, etc. The extreme limited access to credit greatly cripples the economy here, but I will save other aspects for later post.
Until next time, Kwa heri!
Jason

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Haven of Peace

Salama!  Dar es Salaam translates to Haven of Peace.  The term certainly applies to our whereabouts at the moment.  We arrived in Dar es Salaam at the Kurasini Training Center on Friday, July 5th.  It is BEAUTIFUL here and the people even more so!  Since our arrival we have had time to learn, rest, and reflect on our journey so far.  We have learned about Tanzania's history and culture, health issues, and the history and Peace Corps method of development.  All of these subjects deserve a blog post of their own!  Our days are filled with Kiswahili lessons, history lessons, cross-cultural training, eating (seriously, we are fed five times a day-breakfast, chai, lunch, soda, and dinner), sleeping, paperwork, and shots (sad day).  I (Heather) have now been vaccinated for MMR, Polio, Yellow Fever, Meningitis, Typhoid, Hepatitis A, and Rabies.  We also take our malaria prophylaxis every night.
Can I go on more about the food?  Let me tell you, the food is tasty albeit a bit monotonous.  For breakfast (chakula cha asabuhi) we have toast, a hard boiled egg, and porridge (made out of millet-it is tasteless, so Tanzanians add heaping spoonfuls of sugar to liven up the mud-colored mixture).  Chai consists of tea (made with milk or water) and some finger foods.  Sometimes there are these pieces of fried dough called andazi.  If you eat them with sugar, they taste like a doughnut.  If you eat them with salt, they taste like pretzels!  There can also be fried plantains and something like a large fried won-ton filled with meat or vegetables.  Chai is my favorite part of the day.  Seriously America, you do not know what you are missing.  For lunch (chakula cha mchana) we usually have rice, a spinach dish, meat (chicken or fish), and a fruit (plantains or watermelon).  Soda is pretty self explanatory.  Jason is pretty ecstatic as they serve Mountain Dew.  What we eat with soda seems to vary.  Today we had roasted nuts, the fried won-tons, and tomato sandwiches.  Dinner (chakula cha jioni) is normally the same as lunch.  So we are well fed.
Lest you imagine us living right now in a mud hut, let me tell you about our hostel.  We have a nice, big bed with a mosquito net and fuchsia sheets, red carpet, a desk, a big yellow chair, a TV (have not turned it on yet), air conditioning (we are lucky-the other volunteers have dubbed our room "the honeymoon suite-it's super safi (nice!)), a cold shower (the best part of waking up?), sink, and a Western toilet.  We expect much less when we go to live with our host family on Thursday, but we are content.
Besides all of our lessons, we have also had two excursions outside our beautiful compound walls-one into downtown Dar es Salaam and one to the Peace Corps Office.  For the visit to Dar our group of 42 education volunteers was split up into smaller groups with a Language and Culture Facilitator (LCF) as our leader.  We road a daladala (little mini-buses) into town, then walked to a kanga (a wrap skirt) shop where I bought a pretty dark blue and white kanga with the assistance of my LCF.  I then had the kanga tailored.  There are little shops all over selling everything you could ever imagine.  And if you want to make a purchase, you need to muscle your way to the shop owner and be aggressive, as Tanzanians really do not form lines.  They are very polite in every other way, although I should not impose my American idea of politeness on the Tanzania.  From the tailor shop we saw different sights in Dar, including the Indian Ocean!  Lunch was rice and beans at the YWCA.  Our daladala ride home was interesting, as the daladala became packed full of us and Tanzanians!  I would not want to drive in Dar, as the traffic is a nightmare, even with uniformed traffic officers guiding all the buses, daladalas, motorcycles, bajajs (three-wheeled vehicles), and bicycles.
At the Peace Corps office we met all of the administrators for Peace Corps Tanzania.  We toured the offices and walked the grounds.  It was a wonderful day and we had the best chai and lunch while there.
We have one more day left here in Dar before we head to our homestay family up north.  We are excited and nervous, as we do not know much Kiswahili at the moment.  We have focused on greetings, as greeting are very important in Tanzanian culture.  Keep us in your thoughts and prayers!  We miss you all!
Baadaye!

The Training Center grounds are so pretty!  I love the colorful buildings

One of the huts where we have language lessons with our LCF