Thursday, July 30, 2015

Drive to Safari!


We headed out for our Safari adventure on Sunday morning. 
The plan is to go to    today and stay at the Lodge tonight. Tomorrow we will drive out to a new Maasai school in a very remote area. The people there are not accustomed to volunteers and most likely we will be the first munchangos (white people) they see! Tomorrow night we will stay at a wilderness camp and safari in the crater, returning to Springlands Tuesday night. 

Cathy, Kelly M, Teshoy, Garrett and Jessica were in one Jeep, and Owen, Justin, Kelly, AJ and I were in the other. Our driver is Emanuel. He has been a safari guide for 15 years! 


The drive out was on paved roads (yea!!) and we passed fields of corn, sunflowers (used solely for oil) and groups of cows, donkeys and goats grazing on the side of the road along the way. 
Coffee is a big crop here as well. 

We drove through Arusha, which is the third largest city in Tanzania, and stopped at the first traffic light we have seen since we got here! 

We got a flat right in front of a service station! It was our first one (knock on wood).

Scenery while waiting for the tire to be fixed was a bit different front home...



We stopped at a rest area with a very large souvenir shop, bathrooms and place to eat our box lunches.  The guides told us to negotiate all prices, and we shouldn't pay more than 60% of the price, but they didn't seem to be lowering prices that much. I want to wait to see the goods in Maasai country!
                   
I caught Owen feeding some of his chicken to a cat....
We saw some boys dressed in black with white paint on their faces.  They are 13-15 year olds undergoing Maasai rite of passage.  Owen found them really creepy!

Our first stop! 


TAFCOM's new primary school

Jonas, who founded TAFCOM with his wife, Nia, took us out to see their new school, which has been open for only a few months. While the first location has a preschool class and kindergarten class, the new school currently has 2 classrooms with one level 1 class (these students were in the kindergarten class last year). The plan is to continue building and add a new class each year. 

Everything is done by hand. They first needed to dig a well - 14 meters deep- in order to have water for the construction. 

We visited the classroom and I made them a duct tape ledge for the chalkboard and taught a math lesson to the kids using our supplies. 

The children in all of the classrooms are extremely polite and well behaved. I invited students up to share their answers and set up the next problem. We have been giving high 5s to kids when they get something correct and Owen and I had to demonstrate it fr them at first! 



Saturdays at the orphanage

The whole gang heading out. Our hotel has a guarded gate. (Pictures are from two Saturday visits as well as midweek visits)
It's not a far walk and by now we know the way. Lots of children and animas en route. Owen leading the way. 
Kids run up to greet us during the walk there and back. Some of them know us from TAFCOM. 


The woman on the left is Shannon. She and Dr. Greg have been here for 2 years working with the kids at the orphanage. 
There is a gate at the orphanage as well. Otherwise the neighborhood kids would be constantly trying to come in! They all want to live at the orphanage. 
On Saturdays everyone is there when we arrive.
Bernard leads the kids singing songs and dancing. 



The kids all pitch in and have chores to complete before playing. 


On our last day we brought gift bags filled with supplies bought through our fundraising for all the kids. 







Friday, July 24, 2015

Swahili with Juma Jigwa

Juma is one of the waiters at Springsland. He has also become our friend, and has been helping us to learn Swahili. Juma is on the right in the photo with Owen below. Elia, on the left, also helps us. I told them that when I answer basic questions in English to tell me to answer them in Swahili.
Juma has provided us with a cheat sheet/ study guide with various words and phrases.


 I also have a running list on my phone 


We practice our Swahili when we are in the dining room, garden and whenever we see Juma and the other staff around the hotel grounds. 
Last week, Juma gave Tashoy a written test! She did pretty well. 


Justin, Kelly and I have a test tomorrow before We leave for safari. I could pass this test, but if he gives us something harder I'm in trouble. The only animals I know are paka (cat), mbwa (dog), mbuzi (goat), kaka (chicken). 

Juma walked us over to the orphanage one afternoon after work 
He helped me translate texts I started getting from Brian written in Swahili! 
It wasn't easy though. Apparently the online translator uses "hard Swahili", which is spoken in Kenya, and they use "simple Swahili" here. 

Justin found an app that has an offline Swahili dictionary. We all have it on our phones now! 








Teaching at Gunge School

Owen, Bernard and I went to teach at Gunge school.  Bernard worked with the Level 5-7 students while Owen and I worked with Teacher Hassan and the Level 2-4 students.  The school also has a 1/2 day kindergarten class and a 1/2 day level 1 class.  We were greeted by the Headmaster and teachers when we arrived and headed to the office with our large bags of supplies.  They were very greatful! It was decided that we would all visit each classroom to introduce ourselves and distribute the pens and pencils. 
Kids were excited to receive their pencils and pens.  Whenever you walk into a room, they stand up and greet you in unison.  We introduced ourselves and told them we were from the United States, in Connecticut, near New York.  In one room a student asked how long it took for us to get there.  A map was brought into the classroom and Owen explained that we started in Boston, flew 6 hours to Amsterdam, had a 1 1/2 hour layover, then had an 8 hour flight from Amsterdam to Kilimanjaro airport. This lead to a discussion about the time change (+ 7 hours) and a math lesson.  If we left Boston at 8:00 pm, what time was that in Tanzania?  If we arrived 18 hours later, what time was it in Tanzania?
After pencils were distributed to all the classes (and a round of Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes with the kindergarteners), we worked with the level 3 students on letter names and sounds. I would show them a letter, say the name and sound and they would repeat.  

For example "P says (make the p sound)" and the kids would repeat.  Then I would equate the sound with an English word.  For P, I said Papa and explained that was what Owen calls his Bubu (grandfather).  Teacher Hassan told us that in Swahili, Papa is the word for Pope.  I laughed and said my dad would like that.  Later when we came to the letter P we passed around a picture of Papa on my phone  :)

From 12:00-2:00 there is a break and students go home for lunch. Some students live too far and remain at the school. We ate lunch with Teacher in the teachers' quarters. He asked Owen about popular sports and, of course, soccer. Then he mentioned that kids there like the WWE and asked if it was real or "dramatized"!  Owen explained that it is not real and a lot of the matches are choreographed to a degree and a lot of the dialogue between wrestlers is for the cameras. Later, Hussain called Owen over to explain this to the other teachers :)


We hung the ABC borders in each of the classrooms during the break.  Level 4 students that remained at the school during the break spontaneously sang the ABCs after I hung the border in their room. 

                                 

After break a teacher used the border to teach the Swahili sounds to the younger students.  He skipped Q and X because there are no sounds for those letters in Swahili. 



We learned the Swahili word for dog "mbwa" 

We spent time in the afternoon teaching colors to the level 3 class. It was a lot of fun. We would show a color card and the students would say the name of the color. Then, we asked them to point to something in the room that was that color and say "this is ____." They were very excited raising their hands in a flapping motion to be called on. 

After classes ended students fetched water and had some free time to play before going home. 
                                   


That first day at Gunge was AWESOME!  I was thrilled to have the opportunity to work with the engaging Teacher Hussain and his students.  

Due to constant complications with transportation and being detained on Wednesday by police and immigration asking for Visas, Owen, Justin and I returned to Moshi earlier than planned.  I felt bad that we weren't returning to Gunge to finish out the week, but knew they would be in good hands with Garrett and Jessica. 

On Friday, the textbooks that were purchased with our donations were delivered to the students!!