Hello from Uganda!
I apologize that it has taken me this long to post, but I haven't had any Internet connection since I've been here (except for a visit to the internet cafe). I do get electricity from my homestay, but I have not yet figured out how to go about accessing the Internet.
To say my Peace Corps experience thus far has been exceptional would be an understatement. I am having the time of my life. Language training is, at times, very stressful, but Ugandans are some of the most welcoming people I have ever met. I am currently living in the village of Kisimbiri in the town of Wakiso with my homestay family. I have a homestay mother, sister, two brothers, aunt, and a housegirl. They are awesome! They live in a house compound with their own vegetable garden and animals (goat, rooster, hen, chickens). I am grateful for everything they have provided me, and how they have seemingly welcomed me into their family.
To best understand Peace Corps training, here is generally what our daily schedule looks like:
6:30AM-8:00AM - Wakeup, bathe, eat breakfast, walk 2-3KM to the training site
8:00AM-10:00AM - Language training
10:00AM-10:30AM - Morning tea
10:30AM-12:30PM - Technical training
12:30PM-1:30PM - Lunch
1:30PM-3:30PM - Technical training
3:30PM-4:00PM - Afternoon tea
4:00PM-5:00PM - Language training
5:00PM-11:00PM - Walk back to homestay, eat dinner, play soccer with homestay brothers/sister, go to the bar, study
11:00PM - Bed
Technical training has ranged from sessions on diversity and safety/security to sessions on cultural integration and banking. I, along with six other volunteers, am learning the Ateso language, spoken in eastern Uganda. Eastern Uganda is where I will be placed to work for the next two years. We do not recieve our official site placements until late September.
Observations:
1. I have gained a newfound respect for the meaning of hard work. Ugandans are some of the hardest working people I've ever met.
2. President Obama, religion, and soccer are three popular things to talk about in Uganda.
3. I have been referred to as a "mzungu" (white person) at least fifty times, but I've learned to embrace it.
4. Despite tasting and liking many new foods (ovacado, pumpkin, goat meat, black beans, cabbage), eating the same food everyday has been my biggest challenge to date.
5. I have never liked pineapple as much as I do now.
6. I have already made the time-effective decision to hire someone to help me cook/clean.
7. One thing that I do not miss is Washington D.C.'s humidity. Let the 70's/80's weather in Uganda continue...
8. Learning the Ateso language will be more challenging than I previously imagined.
9. Kampala is like no capital city I have ever been to before.
10. The 2011 Presidential Election is incredibly important to Ugandans!
11. Due to the stress of Peace Corps training, time has seemed to move at a much slower pace.
12. I plan to go to church with my host family at least once (hopefully more).
13. I feel incredibly fortunate to serve in a country with such great people and potential for growth, and to be a small part of the Peace Corps Uganda team.
Things that have surprised me:
1. The British influence is still widely prevalent in Uganda (language, British football).
2. Peace Corps volunteers are treated like heroes amongst the people of Wakiso.
3. How quickly I have adjusted to the Ugandan culture, integrated into the community, bonded with my host family, and DO NOT miss the technological comforts back home.
4. The Ateso and Lugandan languages are similar to Spanish in many respects (emphasis on certain vowels, pronunciations).
5. The mosquitoes haven't been bad...yet. Malaria is still a significant issue of concern.
6. Ugandans, at least our homestay families, watch a lot of television, primarily Mexican soap operas and the local news.
7. Ugandans have very different eating habits than Americans. Not only is it their norm to eat dinner at the earliest 8:00PM, but also they eat much larger portions of food. Members of my host family eat nearly triple what I eat.
8. I have perfected the art of bucket bathing, despite the electricity constantly going on and off in the morning.
Friends and family: I miss you all, and am thinking of all of you!
Thanks for the update, Bryan! It sounds like hard work, but also tremendously rewarding and educational. Julie and I will have to make a dinner of goat meat, cabbage and pineapple to think of you :) I enjoyed the pictures you posted on your facebook page. Do you know what kind of monkeys those were? I was guessing maybe Vervet but I'm not sure. Sometime tell us more about the wildlife. Good luck finding internet, and keep in touch!
ReplyDeleteWe miss you too, Bry! But it sounds like you're having an amazing time. Give your host family a big hug from us...it's so nice of them to treat you so well. Can't wait to meet them when we visit.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear you're making progress with Ateso. I bet once you're in your placement and speaking it every day, it will feel easier and more natural. Hope you've gotten some of our letters (2 letters and a padded envelope), and expect more soon.
Lots of love, Jules
Bryannn!!!!
ReplyDeleteWow, now I want to go to Uganda!! haha. I bet people there are really nice and I heard that they drink tea like Indians do (boil tea leaves in water, then put loads of milk in it and boil it more). Is that true?
How's learning Ateso? keep the updates coming! even though you are probably very busy..
Kirtana
Bryan,
ReplyDeleteThanks for finding the time and energy to post. Reading about your experiences is a wonderful reminder to step outside of the narrow focus within which we all live our daily lives. I know that you and your Peace Corps colleagues are doing more to help our country and the world than most of us can only dream about. Be well.