I just want to write about how much I miss you ALL and how much I miss Canada. If you think I have I have forgotten about you all, I have NOT. Do not mistaken my love for this country and my love for the experience I am having in Africa, it is definitely a lifetime opportunity. Even when we do not like the way things are sometimes it is best just to sit and be in that moment too. However, it must be written that I knew I was a fortunate being and I had a great life in Canada, but I did not know how profound the extent of my gratitude was of being an able body and having so many freedoms until I came to live in Africa. I am so grateful for the wonderful people I have in my life and I am grateful for my family. I appreciated the good, the bad and the ugly times because without them I probably wouldn't have been who I am today and I probably would have not be missing all of you like crazy. It is a hidden truth when we state it is only when we die that we realize how much we truly appreciate each other and it is also true that if 2 really good friends show up to your funeral, you are considered a lucky human being . One of my all time favourite Buddhist sayings is "The three most important things in life is how well did you live, how well did you love and how well did you let go." Not only I have I been so lucky to have a healthy full life in Canada, I had the opportunity of being loved and the opportunity of loving so many people in my life. My truest of friends and my family always being there for me no matter what and all the children and families I had an opportunity to help and work with in any which way I could .I am truly grateful for. Learning to love myself and others for exactly who I am and who they are has been one of the greatest experiences to learn. Not judging anyone and not wanting to change anyone is a spiritual journey I have learnt from becasue not only does it humble me, makes me realize even more we are all connected, it also makes me truly live in the moment. Life is art and living is truly a piece of art to be learnt. I have realized how much my life was not only truly blessed but also truly safe. Living in Canada as an independent women and being able to go out whatever time I pleased and wherever I pleased and being able to walk alone without feeling unsafe is just one of the things I miss the most. Women in Maputo are towards the beginning of independence movement and its is great to be here while this is occurring. There are women in Maputo that own their own businesses, more girls attend university now and there are women in government too. However, I have never been to a HOT country and NO ONE wears shorts. The youth tell me it is because it is winter but the other day is went up to 32 degrees and still no knees and thighs in sight. I have noticed that the women dress very conservative, in fact it seems very inappropriate to show your shoulders or have skirts higher than your knees. The dress is formal, conservative and somewhat of a church going apparel. I wish I brought more work wear than summer attire. However too many should have, would have's and could have's can cause harm to your health. In fact, if you do wear a "short" dress or skirt here most people add the leggings. There is way more men's fashion and better quality of clothing for men than women's. Most clothing items here made for women is made from polyester.
Another thing I miss most about Canada is the cleanliness, the recycling and are children and youth being conditioned at a young age for a healthy environmnet. Canada is internationally known for its cleansines, keep it up Canada. BRAVO!!!
I am also trying to make a connection between AEFUM university students and the AMOR recycling orginization here I met this wonderful man Antoine through my Yoga classes and discover that he is running a recycling orginization here in Maputo City called AMOR please WATCH post of "O Caminho Certo." The government here does not help out with garbage collection nor recycling so it is up to people and maybe other countries to come to aid here to start projects that help clean the city today for a healthier tomorrow and then maybe we can start putting public toilets everywhere that work.
I have aslo been given the opportunity to apply for a small grant from VSO for materials for my yoga classes with the youth at AEFUM. Last week, I began my first class of yoga with youth which was literally on the ground with pebbles and cement. Some wooden mats, some yoga mats and capalanas. I also did my first class of yoga with children with different abilities at the private creche (childcare) and I loved it and they loved it also! I also met a wonderful Dutch teacher Mije whom invited me to attend a Friday art class with her in a neighbourhood a little way out of Maputo city that is impoverished. The school is a room that an ex-maid made into a school at her house for the children in the neighbourhoods. There is about 15 children from all ages in a room not more than 250 square feet. We began the class with songs in english then they taught me some children songs in portuguese.
Es sou criancas as muuito especial nao import a meu ta manho ta manho nao importa meu cabelo ate ao chav fou Jesus que me criou.
So wish me good luck and keep sending your positive vibes so I can make a positive change.
LOVE YOU & MISS YOU ALL!!! bjs
Rosie
Sunday, 20 May 2012
Wednesday, 2 May 2012
The Simple Way of Things
May 1/2012
Today was a national day
off for workers so I sat by the pool all day with a couple of UK volunteers.
You have to pay to use the pool anywhere here; it can start from $5.00 to
$20.00 US dollars for the day and a dip. I wanted to continue with the
list of how simple things are here and a reflection of how you might have to
let go of all the things you think you wouldn’t be able to survive and be happy
without, like the Internet. Today I was lucky because the poolside had
wireless but most of the time you are scrambling or paying for any connection
even if it’s for 15 minutes to be connected. I only watched television
once here and it was in the hotel I stayed in when my flat had a flood, I was
glued to it like Jesus made a comeback! LOL Whatever you have downloaded on
your computer you watch however the streets does have movies for sale and so
far the majority have been pretty good copies. The cinemas here are now
playing “Tower Heist” and “I don’t know how she does it.” I had a good
laugh because all the volunteers who have been here for 1 year or more had no clue
who (my Hollywood boyfriend) Ryan Gosling was? I guess I will be that way
soon…Jay Blue Z who? Keri Hilson and some other Divas were just here in
concert btw. At first I didn’t believe it but it was true her and other
female singers called The Diva Show performed in Maputo. I also got to go
to a (white) reggae band performing at the railroad station (literally) and it
was GREAT. The night life here is pretty awesome.
When I say there is NO
fashion or clothes here I am not joking kids. The clothes are mostly 2nd hand
clothes. I saw a man in a furry black sweater and I thought OMG that was
mine in the 90’s! Seriously the clothes are all over the streets, I mean
on the floor, on the sidewalk, held down by rocks, the streets own Maputo even
when the government uses bans against her. Or once in a while you will
see a man or woman walking around carrying some clothes in there hands or in
the back of a trunk. People who sell from their trunks or vans in Toronto
would make a killing here and it would be completely legit! However everyone
has there certain areas and their rocks mark the spots. There are some
stores that sell clothes and even a Maputo shopping center and there is nothing
in it or anything of OK or good quality is very expensive. Most people go
off to South Africa to shop or they shop once a year in Portugal
etc. A lot of the products and produce here come from South Africa
and everything else is “Made in China.”
The” chappas” here are the
main man-made bus line that sometimes when you go on the bus, the doors fly off
or you are asked to get off on your stop through the windows because they are
so packed of people. They have become so popular that from what I
understand the government has a piece of it now and they have been downsized. They
are the size of mini vans and most times than not people are physically on top
of each other. So many of the volunteers do not take this form of
transportation and we are all too broke to take taxis, so for many of us our
form of physical exercise is walking. I love walking and actually people
use to think Einstein was nuts because he use to walk so much but man oh man do
I get tired sometimes walking across the city especially in the heat.
Don't think they sell good shoes here to replace the war-torn sidewalk shoes
you just ripped..no..no..no. Flip flop professionals are the main foot
wear experience here, hence the sock sporting fashion with the flip flops or
the socks that look like mittens on your toes. YUPPERS!
Another simple but reality
bitten fact here is that many buildings do not have elevators. If your
building does have an elevator, they rarely work and if they do work it’s a bit
too scary when it stops and you notice the step you have to climb to get off
the elevator. The best is when you start to realize that you don’t huff
and puff any more after climbing 5 flights of stairs!
Last night it was the 1st time I
experienced some time here without any running water and it was 1 of the
hottest days so far. I was so excited to find out this morning that the
water was turned on again. However, this is a common thing that happens
in Mozambique and thanks to the placement goddesses that I was placed in the
city because some placements in other municipalities the lack of water and
electricity happens a lot or the shower is the bucket outside every morning.
Sometimes it gets too
simple and you do miss many things like the civilization of protecting children
and animals. Like when you spot street kids not older than 7 yrs old on
the busiest corner lying side by side on the sidewalk taking a nap underneath a
tree or when the man in a wheel chair with no legs needs 2 big jugs of water to
hold down his wheelchair but then you realize he can't push it, or when the 14
year old or younger boy with special needs stands on the same corner everyday
wearing the same flip flop and torn up clothes. Or when you begin to
notice the beggar who is so polite. Or when you have gone to a restaurant and
decide to "take away" the rest of your food and you don't even walk 2
steps and you know they should call it "give away" because you can't
bear to see the whole family going through the garbage bins any more. I
can't sleep either at nights sometimes because of what I have seen and because
of the city dogs don't stop barking, crying and yelling at night and all day.
There is a law here that you can NOT walk your dog in the park, so they
are mainly used for guard dogs. Also, someone was hoarding a monkey for a
pet with a very short leash in his back yard and it just died. The cats
are very skinny and the roosters and chickens can be spotted in a local
downtown hood amongst anything or anyone.
I have been called
"white" women so many times here I can't believe it, I have always
considered myself and many other women of many colours not just 1. The
other day I got called "molungo" from a local women the size of 3 of
me blown up. I learned to let it go INSTANTLY. Molungo is the
equivalent of calling a black person the N word but it seems like neither is
very minded here. I was also able to go to Nelspirt, South Africa to
apply for my work Visa and it was a great experience. South Africa
appears to be in the remnants of apartheid still. I was walking to the
House of Commissions office to go and apply for the work Visa and the bus driver
was taking me there to show me where to go. As we were walking many
people spoke to him in different dialects I did not understand (Zulu and
Afrikaans). He told me afterwards that there comments and questions were
based on curiosity to why he was walking with a white women. I thanked
him for walking me and bid him adieu. I then had to wait for a few hours
and decided to walk around. South Africa is beautiful; the landscape is
mountains and waterfronts, just like I pictured Africa. As I was roaming
around I saw a market and I decided to walk towards it, it was not until a man
called out to me did I realize that I was the ONLY white person in this market
or even walking around downtown. I slowly but quickly got myself outta
there folks!
I also want to continue with
writing about my work experiences here too. I have finished helping the
youth at AEFUM by writing a proposal about educating and empowering university
students about the HIV/AIDS epidemic so they can begin activists roles within
the schools, communities and beyond. Fingers crossed that we receive some
money to get this project started. My wonderful colleague Nelson has also
applied for more money to continue with the project in helping the
orphanages. There are many projects I will like to get started here, more
interesting propositions to come soon for sure. I have many ideas but the
1 idea I would love to get going besides putting schools and day care centres
in the orphanages, is to help AEFUM have a running toilet at the centre they
are located in. Yes you have understood me well people, I do not have a
running, working, toilet paper holding, running water, soap dispenser washroom
when I go to work or when the youth and others come to the centre. YUPPERS!
Whooohoooo!
I have also made progress
with my Kundalini Yoga classes I am teaching adults and the youth asked for a
class 1 a week at the centre AEFUM. I am also able to volunteer my time
to some other causes so I made connections with a physiotherapist that works
with children with special needs and I am going to hope fully get to help her
out. Susana is going to take me to a school where parents cannot afford
private schools where they include children with special needs, so a school of
ONLY children with special needs. I truly can’t wait, but my epiphany and
challenge has been when you take your time and figure things out it will all
unveil itself perfectly.
When Susana told me that
they pay for your transportation and give you something to eat when you are
there, I nearly jumped for joy, simple but great.
Please do not hesitate to tell me about the things happening in your
lives! XO
Tuesday, 1 May 2012
After I was able to meet Princess Ann (she is a patron of VSO International) at the Royal Jubilee I then was able to see some exhibit by a local artist that was wonderful. On the weekend I was then able to visit a beautiful portuguese island that was completely abandoned and full of sand dunes and then we sailed to the island called Inhaca and sailed back home looking at the sunset. It was a perfect day and I was soo happy to be in Mamma Africa.
I am slowly falling in love with Mozambique and the simple way of living. I know if I left tomorrow I would already miss many things. I would miss the beautiful colours in Africa and the colours on every African women's garments and capalanas. A "Capalana" is a beautiful large piece of fabric that most Mocambican women buy to make clothing out of most of the times. You can use it for almost anything, from table cloths, to head wraps and beautifully tailored dresses. There are also many special capalanas for different occasions, such as the capalana for baptisms and certain ones for weddings etc. Let me give you some details of how simple life is here and how much you need to let go of very quickly in order to adapt. However just by talking, listening and observing to people that travel and live in many different continents it seems that humans tend to adapt to their immediate environments pretty quickly. So when you go to the washroom here you have to throw the toilet paper you have just used in the garbage bin not in the toilet because the drainage system is not very good. A volunteer has named me the person that rates every toilet here and the rating of 9 out of 10 which has been met maybe a handful of times consists of the following in working mode; the toilet can flush, it is off the ground, it is clean, there are no mosquitoes or major bugs in sight, there is toilet paper (always major points points bc there rarely is you must always bring your own toilet paper along) it has soap can be same major points as toilet paper and paper towels is and major bonus. Oh and forget about any dairy products like milk, cheese or cream or any other products that you're so use to buying because you know their name and trust the product is good. If you find what you want to eat in a can then you have struck gold! Buying fresh product is usually sold on the streets and believe me when I tell you that Africa puts a whole new meaning to the word "hustling." The streets sell way more products than any store does, I can only find certain products easily here on the streets than I can find in any "loga" aka store. Do not doubt for any minute the streets here are disorganized, people hustle like you have never seen before and everyone on the streets actually gets their products from a buyer.
I even took my first "chappa"aka the bus the other week, I am quite claustrophobic so when it get a bit too crowded and smelly I do get off and walk the rest of the way.
I would also miss the way women wrap their babies in their capalanas and how they carry stuff on their heads. I would also miss the simplistic way of things here that comes with the lack of fashion and no need to be obsessed with material things or disillusioned ways. There is a beautiful scene here of art and music that I haven't even barely touched as of yet. Here are some photos of the arts and crafts parks all over the city.
TALK SOON LITTLE MOONS!!!
Friday, 20 April 2012
Week 2 & Onwards In Moz
Ok, Almighty and all righty then…week 2 and onward has been
quite challenging and interesting at the same time.
Let me begin by stating that Maputo’s increase in cars and
traffic is because you can order cars online here from Japan and it gets
delivered to your door. There are
old and news cars but the older models can be very cheap from about $500.00 to
$1, 500.00. What is also pretty
incredible here is that you can get a cell phone that has 2 sim cardholders just
in case you have a sim card from another phone company. Can you imagine buying a phone in
Toronto and putting either a Rogers sim card or a Bell sim card or any sim card
you have?! However, I must say I
do miss my ipod no one here walks around with their ipods, you have to actually
pay attention to your surroundings and people here do give eachother eye
contact. Everyday you say and are
told Bom Dia for good day, Boa Tarde for good afternoon and Boa Noite for good
evening. I realized the other day
that I must have said greetings to mostly all complete strangers 50 times in
that one day. This instantly puts
you in a great mood and you realize that this is what I do not miss in Toronto the
lack of communication around the whole city. If you do not ask someone here about his or her family
before you get down to business you are considered rude. If you do not have time to stop and
chat with someone you are not a nice person. People will actually yell and belittle you for this. Of course I love this part about the
culture because I truly do love people and this makes me feel so close to
everyone and their families here.
I look forward to hearing news about my colleague’s son, daughter or
girlfriend.
I had a flood in my lovely temporary apartment and thank
goodness I had a volunteer from the UK staying with me, Andrea - who was only
here for 1 week and moving up north for the next 3 months. Our bide busted and water did not stop
flowing out from the pipes. Everyone
told me to bring a good torch, just in case the electricity went out but what I
should have brought was a good wrench! Serio!
Anyways, the great thing was that my new roomy and I stayed
in a really nice and quaint hotel with an Arabian night theme that had a
piscina and air condition. Whoohoooo!
The best 2 days of my life I tell ya!! LOL
So after my 2 nights of bliss and sun bathing every chance I
got, Andrea left and I moved into “The Palace” with 3 other volunteers. The Palace is what every other
volunteer call this home because it basically looks like a typical new
condominium with new fixtures, nice showers and NO holes in the walls or bad
ass bides or crawly friends. The
only drawback to this wonderful new dwelling of mine is that the owner wants
her place back and VSO has to find us a new home in 6 weeks. I will be moving again and hopefully the
next stop will be my permanent residence for the long run. I have gotten use to living out of my
suitcase actually and living very basically seems second nature now. All that recent chaos might have just been
one of those quick lessons in life, that no matter what trust and the universe
will always take care of you.
I am still taking Portuguese lessons that are going well and
at the same time I am still trying to find my ground. My Portuguese teacher has already asked if we can fall in love & if I can take him
back to Canada with me and I can not repeat on this family oriented read
article how I responded in sign language and taught him the word in Italian for
don’t ever ask me that again. I told
him what it meant in Portuguese and he then asked me to write it down for
him. I did with a smile on my face
hahahahahaha! The British would
say Bug Off!
I don’t know
exactly what my role is at my new placement, however they tend to throw a lot
of proposals in front of you and ask if you can help them apply for funding for
many different projects. A lot or
most of the VSO volunteers end up in fundraising roles for the organization
they are placed at. One of the
projects that I agreed to help with is with some of the university students at
AEFUM who want help funding a project to attend 4 universities in 4 different
municipalities and help raise awareness about the HIV/AIDS epidemic by
training, workshops, presentations and handed out condoms. They want to recruit 20 students from
each university, 80 students in total.
I agreed to help them do this but I needed to know some background and I
discovered that there are mostly girls and some boys who are prostituting in the
universities because they need the money for school, to feed their families
etc. The girls don’t have many
choices when it comes to protected sex unless the male decides to wear the
condom. For instance, if a girl
denies her husband sex because he will not put on a condom (because you never
know or you know where your husband has been) he can literally and physically
bring her back home to her family and even though a recent law was passed I
think around 2005 or earlier that domestic violence is illegal here it still
very much does exist.
Another shocking piece of the puzzle the youth told me was
that there is a lot of students that experience sexual harassment with the professors
in university. If a professor asks
for sex than the students must give him sex in order fro the student to
pass. So, I asked what about the
student going to the “directorio” of the school to report the professor. The youth looks at me and says very
nonchalantly the student wouldn’t do that or they will fail. Still adamantly I state “But the
professor can’t do that it’s not right, why can’t the professor be
stopped?” The youth still looking
at me with a puzzled look on his face, “But that is why we want to educate the
professors too to use condoms, he replies.” I replied, “Can we teach the girls to carry guns to school
instead?” Of course with a huge
smile on my face hahahahahahaha!!!
The youth replies and shakes his head “No.” Unfortunately, the realities here are quite gloomy and trust
me I will not write that we will promote this behavior by handing out condoms
in the proposed proposal. I
was talking to another volunteer about this, she works helping to promote girls
in the education field and she says that 10 to 12 year old girls are asked
sexually active questions and some respond, “Yes the man I sleep with uses a
condom.” I can’t stop
thinking about this situation and how unprotected the children are here and how
unfair the little girls are treated here.
I just want to yell at all the women here and say “Stand Up!”
The youth at the centre invited me to a debate at the
Ministry of Medicine next week to discuss the injustices in the job market for
women. Bring it on!
A typical day I would like to share that I had in Maputo was
when the other day I moved from the hotel to my new place. That afternoon I was to meet a
beautiful Yoga teacher living temporarily in Maputo who was from Kenya, her
name is Gatechke. It started it
getting weird when I was in a meeting and NGO’s (non government organizations)
were discussing the location of where the organizations logos out to be for the
next 10 minutes and I was instantly annoyed and bored. I wanted to scream “Are we seriously
having this conversation, right now?!”
It seems that many people here care more about the titles of their
positions or how than can get a better position or if the position will enable
for them to travel, if the ministry will hire them or if they know the
president, or whose cousin is in the ministry of so and so etc. Hence the epiphany I had to why all the
men work in this field. There are
so many associations here for everything and anything you can imagine. So after the meeting, while debriefing
the events I was anxious to help and I was looking for help to get me started
to work because I am starting to get a little stir crazy without being creative
and hand on. I was told that if I
thought I was going to be working hands on with children and families like I
have for the last 20 years back home that I need to turn around and go back
home. Yes I do understand our
roles change here and you have to be “adaptable and flexible” and yes I am very
open to all possibilities but I was shocked and hurt. It was like someone took my paintbrushes away and said you
can’t paint but you can have an empty canvas. Yes we recognize that you have a gift, but we do not want
you to use it here. So I went for
lunch with the other volunteers and colleagues and I realized at lunch while
everyone was having a conversation about being a messy person or an organized
person that I no longer have an identity I can hold onto here, I have been
living out of my luggage, moving from place to place, gave up my job, left my
friends and family etc. I can no
longer possibly hang on to any identifications, titles, roles or descriptions I
have been given myself all these years.
I thought this is friggin harder than I thought, you literally have to
let go of all things you never even knew how attached you were to them in the
first place. Oh and it doesn’t
even account for all the unhealthy relationships you realize you were in! LOL
I began my long walk to meet Gatechke, and I needed that walk
to realize some anxiety that was still in my system. I meet her in the park and in a very nice area and she asks
me if I want to see where her yoga studio is located. I walk with her and it so happens that the studio is in a
crèche/child care. I am introduced
to the owner and we discuss the children with special needs that attend her day
care. I ask if I can come on
Monday and discuss a possible volunteering there or maybe doing yoga with the
kids there too. Maria is happy to
meet with me then. Gatecke also
offers me to do her yoga class on Monday night in her studio. I asked Gatechke if I could hug her and
she said yes. I wanted to scream
with happiness at the top of my lungs “Thank you UNIVERSE!”
Thursday, 12 April 2012
Week 1 in Moz
Add caption |
My First Flat |
Week 1 in Moz
Wow what can I say!
I have to keep reminding myself I am in one of the world’s poorest
countries. Maputo is alive and
kicking all day and all night.
They compare it to Brazil because of the Portuguese culture and
traditions that has stayed in Maputo, along with the Portuguese pastries and
chicken. The other day I was
bringing my garbage out to a dumpster on my way to meet other volunteers for
dinner and I also had a pizza in my other hand that I thought I can bring to
the dinner. The minute I crossed the
road to put it into the dumpster a man came up to me and tried taking my
garbage bag and telling me he’ll will take care of it for me. I told him “nao obrigada” and quickly I
realized he was hungry. Ele esta
fome. I have seen other people
going through the garbage in the dumpsters, so I offered him my pizza and he
thanked me very much. Muito
obrigado.
My flight was very long it took 3 days for me to arrive and
there were a few times I wanted to head back home. When I arrived 2 lovely volunteers Seija and Biss were at
the airport along with a VSO employee Sansao. I went to the VSO office and then got settled in at my new
apartment quickly discover that I am staying alone in this apartment. The other volunteers that were
supposed to be here from other parts of Canada have not as of yet arrived. I am
staying in the upper part of town and a 15 to 20 minute walk to the VSO
office. The first thing I noticed
about the apartments were the caged and bolted down doors everyone has, right
away this brought up fear. I spent
my first night and the rest of the week hanging out with Biss and Seija and
getting to know other volunteers from all over the world. The sidewalks in Maputo look like
battleship grounds and if people do not find a parking spot on the street they
park on the sidewalks. There are holes and broken cement
everywhere. So not only do you have to pay attention to the cars not killing
you when you cross the streets you have to pay attention that you don’t fall
while walking on the sidewalk, some holes are very deep. There is garbage everywhere because if you don’t put your
garbage in the dumpster no one will pick it up and there is dust from
everywhere. So the first week I
was wheezing, huffing and puffing instead of breathing. The program director of VSO Quim told
me it was because I was very healthy.
So all those allergies to dust, cockroaches, mildew etc have had to
disappear or my system had to get use to things very quickly. I have also sited a gecko in my
apartment that has become very brave and friendly with me. Everyone tells me its good to have one
of those in your apartment because apparently they eat other bugs that are not
supposed to be there. So I have
named him to Nik the Gecko not even knowing if it’s a she. The fury and scaly friends here are
very brave and relentless. A woman
at VSO Zaida also told me that the city of Maputo did not have this many cars
and this much hustle and bustle as of 5 years ago. This city is so busy with traffic and full of people that
there is rarely any moments of peace except for Sundays here it becomes deads-ville
(which has been a welcoming break).
So I was invited to a celebration of the mulher de couragem at
the Embassy of U.S. and it was spectacular. I finally had the chance to see the ocean upclose from the
backyard of the embassy and the event was about presenting an award to a strong
Mozambican women whose infected with HIV/Aids and fought for her life. The women has 8 children and when she
found out she had Aids her husband left her, but her family stuck by her and
she is very alive, happy and healthy today. She was there to accept the award and to represent the fight
for everyone to know that Aids is about us all! There is so much need but there is also so much help here
too, from allot of different countries.
To my sad –triste discovery I have learned that you cannot
go into clean swimming water around Maputo beaches unless you travel about 2
hours outside of the city. To
travel is fine but apparently it is not so easy traveling around
Mozambique. Many people have told
me that it is easier to travel to South Africa than it is up north to other
municipalities. No one even
advises to walk around the beach at all because it is very dangerous and a lot
of homeless people have found residence there. So my crazy 1st week is done and I am feeling a
little unnerved by staying by myself and I feel like Jiva because I freak out
at the littlest noise or sound.
One night I am not sure if I was sleeping or not but I kept hearing a
women crying and screaming “Para, para, para, para..” which means stop. Her cries eventually weaned away into
the thickest part of the night, placed above my head and in my pillow.
On Saturday 2 of the volunteers had a BBQ and potluck party,
so it was a chance for me to meet other volunteers. There is about a dozen volunteers working here for VSO
Mozambique and they are from all over the world. All the volunteers have been very nice and helpful and some
I believe have been angels. Most
of the volunteers that are still here have extended there terms for more than 1
year they seem to like it very much that they become flared with Mozambican
swag. The swag is all about taking
it easy, if there is a delay, it’s a delay, things will get done when they get
done and enjoy your life. There is
a huge “go with the flow” kind of energy and watch how things happen. Many polarities here too, with events
and people too, you can find that you are having the worst time ever and then
something very great happens, just like that each and every day.
On Sunday the volunteers invited me to a hidden gem of a
pool in the neighborhood and I got to relax and take it easy for 1 or 2
hours.
Monday was my first day I started with AEFUM a non-profit
organization for youth and they have been long anticipating my arrival. I watched a presentation and became
very excited at some of the projects that they are doing. The project that my heart is already into
is the project that has been presented to me a few times that helps orphan and
vulnerable children in all municipalities. I then find out that there is no more money left to fund
this program that has been running for about 2 years. I am going to try to help keep this program going, because I
don’t know if anyone has noticed but they are a lot of orphans in this country
and they need all the help Africa can give and WE can give. I have also realized that there is no
specific embassy or ministry for children. There is one for youth, education, employment etc. Apparently the children fall under the
same ministry for women, I was told that women supposedly take care of
children. My guess is that all
women are born with maternal instincts here?!
Some thing else that it has been taken me some adjustment to
get use to, is that the majority of people that work in the social services
field are men! Men at work
surround me all the time, which was the reserve back home. I don’t know if I like it better at all
to be honest. I think what’s
missing besides women running the country (and maybe then we would have no
orphans) is the heart and soul of the work. I am not saying that men don’t have it here because I doubt
they do the job for the money. I
actually have discovered that some of the men that work in this field don’t
even get paid. I think I have to
delve into the history a bit more but it is definitely because women never had
the opportunity to go to school and to obtain jobs. Even though it is changing but I have also learned that the
men where told by the governs what they would do and what they would become in
their careers and if they did not follow the path they were given they could
get into trouble.
So I am attending AEFUM for my Portuguese classes they are
giving me and with one of AEFUM members for 4 hours a day for about 1
month.
AEFUM is a 5 min walk from downtown. I have NEVER seen a downtown like this it is beyond crazy in a good way and in a shocking way. I have traveled to many major cities and there is nothing, nada, ningun city I have ever seen quite like this one. There are thousands and thousands of people everywhere and there are thousand and thousand of items selling on the floor, pouring out of boxes and the sidewalks. You can find anything here; people bring their own sewing machines and start pedaling away for business. Men will shine your shoes or paint your toenails.
AEFUM |
AEFUM is a 5 min walk from downtown. I have NEVER seen a downtown like this it is beyond crazy in a good way and in a shocking way. I have traveled to many major cities and there is nothing, nada, ningun city I have ever seen quite like this one. There are thousands and thousands of people everywhere and there are thousand and thousand of items selling on the floor, pouring out of boxes and the sidewalks. You can find anything here; people bring their own sewing machines and start pedaling away for business. Men will shine your shoes or paint your toenails.
Also, women here carry everything and anything on their
heads no one uses their arms to carry a sack. I saw a woman transporting a television on her head. Not a flat screen, a huge
television. I look at the women in
complete awe! I also had the
chance to due my first Kundalini Yoga class at 2 volunteers flat. Sat Nam!
Love & Light to you all always
Xoxoxoxoxo MISS YOU xoxoxoxoxo
Send love and light to me in Africa!
Thank You
Rosetta
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