Goodbye, Kenya.
There are things I wont miss about you, namely the Nakumatt, the lack of soap, toilet paper, and seats in the bathrooms, and of course the bird outside my window at Lake Nakuru Lodge.
There are more things i will miss though. Enough things to make me want to stay longer and not go home. Nairobi, you have become a shoulder for me to cry upon and a friend to laugh with. To keep it simple, here is a list of what I will miss the most (in no particular order) about Nairobi.
Sincere and welcoming greetings, meetings, hugs, and kisses.
My friends: the sisters at St Bakhita hostel at CUEA and my boys in the kitchen.
Safaris and wildlife. I'm coming back for you, leopard.
The green national parks and the brown dirt roads.
The drivers at Lindberg.
The baboons on the side of the road.
Humphrey/Reggae Night
The chapati and chicken katakata.
The youth at Foundations of Hope in Kibera and the women of Living Positive, Amani Ya Juu, and Upendo Village.
Random Bible verses painted on the sides of matatus.
Being called mzungus.
Hearing children sing 'Howayu?! Howayu?!' upon seeing mzungus.
The Swahili songs.
Sawa Sawa.
The Ngong Hills and the great Rift Valley.
The community we built as a class.
So Kwa Heri, Kenya. Tutaunana tena.
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Day Three: Kibera
Last night we ate dinner alongside the sisters whose hostel we are staying at here at the University. They are mostly Tanzanian and Ugandan and all ate dinner together while watching the Spanish language telenovela called Mara Playa in dubbed American English. They were following the story very closely and would gasp when something surprising was about to happen. I was so pleased just to watch them watch that. :)
After dinner I accidentally took a nap and was late to the hour we have set aside every night for a group reflection. I had very little to contribute to the discussion because it just felt a little bit too early in the trip to have processed anything significant to talk about.
Tonight will be different though. We visited the Kibera slum today which is the largest slum in East Africa with an estimated 170,000 residents (some statistics say 1 million, that's quite a difference). I will write more tomorrow maybe because I have to go to an early dinner now but it should suffice to say that I've never seen anything like it or Nyumbani before.
Edit: when we were in Kibera we were first brought to the top of the hill where the slum begins. It is lined with small shops and businesses like any neighborhood would be but is crowded more than any place I have been before. The closeness of the buildings and the people and the smell of the uncollected waste and filth permeate the nose to create an almost claustrophobic setting for a foreigner like myself.
As we met a priest who is part of the st aloysius high school (created for street youth who've been orphaned by HIV/AIDS), I stood in awe of my surroundings.
We walked downhill on a path littered with eaten cobs of corn, plastic bags, and broken sandles, lined with shacks made of tin and sharp edges. We entered a line of shacks that used to be the old st aloysius location but now seems to function as a grade school.
About 20 students crowded into each tiny classroom. We wound our way up the rickety uneven wooden steps to the second floor and could see out to the rest of the rust covered slum below us. The color and shape of the roofs earn the slum the nickname 'chocolate city'
We were introduced to a man named David. David graduated from St Aloyisius having started as a street kid and is now employed. In his spare time he started and runs an organization called Foundation of Hope ( http://foundationofhopekibera.com/ )
that uses the talents and skills of participating youth to engage their community in HIV/AIDS prevention and sexual health education.
The passion David displayed for his organization and the way he talked about St Aloysius was so inspiring. After sitting and discussing Foundation of Hope with him we took a walk through the slum to the new location of St Aloysius ( http://www.sagnairobi.org ) to get an idea of where it started and where it's going. We were greeted by a very professional principal and led around to the different classrooms. We met a few grades of the students and were asked to come for a performance which we unfortunately could not make.
It was so interesting to see the contrast of the old and new locations. The old was at the bottom of a hill and slanted and makeshift. The new was, well new, on top of a hill, had the structure you would expect of a high school, etc.
It was uplifting to see an educational institution start from next to nothing and grow into something so beautiful and purposeful in a place that is reputed world-wide for its level of poverty.
Erin
After dinner I accidentally took a nap and was late to the hour we have set aside every night for a group reflection. I had very little to contribute to the discussion because it just felt a little bit too early in the trip to have processed anything significant to talk about.
Tonight will be different though. We visited the Kibera slum today which is the largest slum in East Africa with an estimated 170,000 residents (some statistics say 1 million, that's quite a difference). I will write more tomorrow maybe because I have to go to an early dinner now but it should suffice to say that I've never seen anything like it or Nyumbani before.
Edit: when we were in Kibera we were first brought to the top of the hill where the slum begins. It is lined with small shops and businesses like any neighborhood would be but is crowded more than any place I have been before. The closeness of the buildings and the people and the smell of the uncollected waste and filth permeate the nose to create an almost claustrophobic setting for a foreigner like myself.
As we met a priest who is part of the st aloysius high school (created for street youth who've been orphaned by HIV/AIDS), I stood in awe of my surroundings.
We walked downhill on a path littered with eaten cobs of corn, plastic bags, and broken sandles, lined with shacks made of tin and sharp edges. We entered a line of shacks that used to be the old st aloysius location but now seems to function as a grade school.
About 20 students crowded into each tiny classroom. We wound our way up the rickety uneven wooden steps to the second floor and could see out to the rest of the rust covered slum below us. The color and shape of the roofs earn the slum the nickname 'chocolate city'
We were introduced to a man named David. David graduated from St Aloyisius having started as a street kid and is now employed. In his spare time he started and runs an organization called Foundation of Hope ( http://foundationofhopekibera.com/ )
that uses the talents and skills of participating youth to engage their community in HIV/AIDS prevention and sexual health education.
The passion David displayed for his organization and the way he talked about St Aloysius was so inspiring. After sitting and discussing Foundation of Hope with him we took a walk through the slum to the new location of St Aloysius ( http://www.sagnairobi.org ) to get an idea of where it started and where it's going. We were greeted by a very professional principal and led around to the different classrooms. We met a few grades of the students and were asked to come for a performance which we unfortunately could not make.
It was so interesting to see the contrast of the old and new locations. The old was at the bottom of a hill and slanted and makeshift. The new was, well new, on top of a hill, had the structure you would expect of a high school, etc.
It was uplifting to see an educational institution start from next to nothing and grow into something so beautiful and purposeful in a place that is reputed world-wide for its level of poverty.
Erin
Monday, May 28, 2012
CUEA
Hello all!
Well it had to happen sometime. I don't know if it was my first day on malaria antibiotics or the severely bumpy ride to the university but I got quite carsick today. I couldn't hold down my breakfast and we had to pull over. I felt so embarrassed! But everyone was super nice about it. Not sure if I should retake the medication since I threw up or assume it was digested and processed before that happened. Guess I'll google that shortly.
Anyway, we have made it safely to the Catholic University of Eastern Africa and were privileged to have the opportunity to meet and converse with the students in their Social Justice and Ethics Program. I hope that we get more opportunities to get to know these students so that we can develop collaborative learning relationships and contacts. On a tour of the campus we got to see the new library, auditorium/theater, and cafeteria. Absolutely gorgeous. I sincerely hope that Loyola develops a deep enough relationship with this university so that more American students can have the opportunity for formal study abroad or student exchange programs; this would be the place to do it. We are being housed in a complex named after st bakhita which is where the nuns here live. I will be googling her as well tonight.
There are 2 things the administrators told us to tell American students and administrators who are considering study abroad in Kenya and investing in Kenya. 1) it is SAFE! 2) They have Internet! So should you feel called to visit, definitely try to pursue it. I've only been here 3 (?) days and I already feel that I have made a good decision. Til later!
Erin
Well it had to happen sometime. I don't know if it was my first day on malaria antibiotics or the severely bumpy ride to the university but I got quite carsick today. I couldn't hold down my breakfast and we had to pull over. I felt so embarrassed! But everyone was super nice about it. Not sure if I should retake the medication since I threw up or assume it was digested and processed before that happened. Guess I'll google that shortly.
Anyway, we have made it safely to the Catholic University of Eastern Africa and were privileged to have the opportunity to meet and converse with the students in their Social Justice and Ethics Program. I hope that we get more opportunities to get to know these students so that we can develop collaborative learning relationships and contacts. On a tour of the campus we got to see the new library, auditorium/theater, and cafeteria. Absolutely gorgeous. I sincerely hope that Loyola develops a deep enough relationship with this university so that more American students can have the opportunity for formal study abroad or student exchange programs; this would be the place to do it. We are being housed in a complex named after st bakhita which is where the nuns here live. I will be googling her as well tonight.
There are 2 things the administrators told us to tell American students and administrators who are considering study abroad in Kenya and investing in Kenya. 1) it is SAFE! 2) They have Internet! So should you feel called to visit, definitely try to pursue it. I've only been here 3 (?) days and I already feel that I have made a good decision. Til later!
Erin
Saturday, May 26, 2012
Harambee!
Hello friends!
Tell me that is not the Titanic as it crashes into the iceberg.
I'm officially in the global city of Nairobi! The flight went great! I got a whole row to myself from Dubai to Nairobi and took full advantage. I laid down across all three seats like a five year old and took about 3 hour long naps and missed the endings to both The Descendents and The Rum Diaries. Just before landing, however, I gazed at a pretty pink sun set over a sea of clouds shaped like the titanic (mid-crash) and a jellyfish. Once we were below the clouds I could view a sprinkling of orange lights lighting up the city. From what I could tell during the dark, winding ride to the guest house in which we are staying, Kenya is awesome. Just like I expected. The air is cool and crisp, there is a slight breeze. So far, all of the people we have met have been extremely courteous and friendly.
I love how they speak here. Their speech has very little emotional inflection (at least what would be detectable to an American native-English speaker) but is filled with calm and warmth. It's very soothing. This made getting through customs and immigration better than how I remember going through in Italy and the US. There is far less shouting and suspicion involved.
In Nairobi, this process included filling out a form that had a section for me to fill in my father's name if unmarried. I will be asking a Kenyan about this tomorrow, I'm sure. I should have asked one of the three people who drove us to the Methodist Guest House which is where I'm staying for tonight and tomorrow night. I hope to introduce them if they allow me to use their photos and names.
One of the drivers told us that their local football (soccer) teams is called 'Harambee Stars'. A couple of weeks ago at a fellow student's fundraiser, I learned that 'harambee' (pronounced Ha-RAHM-Bay) is a Swahili word and Kenyan phrase that means 'all pull together'. It is used to define a type of event (like a fundraiser) that brings people together to collect funds and resources and give to a community member so that he or she may go off to school or work and become successful. During this celebration, everyone will shout 'Harambee! Harambee! Harambee!' The hope is that the person will return to their nascent village and use their new skills, talents, and knowledge to give back to and serve the community. I really like this concept of help and community and was pleasantly surprised to hear that it is such a large part of their culture that it is used in the name of their soccer team.
Til tomorrow!
Erin
Location:
Nairobi, Kenya
Friday, May 25, 2012
Emirates: Whoa
So this is my first Emirates flight. I wish to never fly non-Emirates airlines again for the rest of my life. Currently charging my Kindle in-flight and washing my hands with a warm towel. There is a channel menu that includes something near 900 channels of TV, Music, and movies in just about every known human language. I get a pillow, a blanket, a toothbrush, an eye mask and socks in a fabric case that I am allowed to keep. And headphones but all airlines give out those right? Well no, American Airlines did not. Alright, Emirates, you've hooked me with your economy-class grandeur. I can't imagine what you have saved up for those first and business class ballers. The airplane even looks cool with peach colored lighting along the sides, I feel like I'm riding inside a flamingo. Those are the same color right? We're about to take off so it's probably best that turn my phone off now. But wow, just wow, and bravo.
Goodbye til Dubai!
Erin
Goodbye til Dubai!
Erin
In the air
As I sit in aisle seat 22D, I can't help but be amazed at the technology before me. With a username and a few clicks (or taps rather), I can have the world at my fingertips and update from thousands of feet in the air. And pay that gas bill for my roommates before I'm officially off of the continent.
My travel MO is quite standard as a procrastinator. Stay up all night pretending I'm packing until I actually start packing 2 hours before my aunt picks me up to drive me to the airport and stress all the way there that I probably forgot something.
But now that the first leg of my journey has been completed with hefty amounts of coffee and ginger ale, I will sign off with a request that readers please bear (bare) with me on this blog as 1) it's being written almost strictly from my iPhone and Kindle Fire 2) it's my first public blog and 3) my first attempt at creative non-fiction writing.
That said, I hope my new blog is entertaining enough to keep you reading. If not, I'm having fun writing anyway.
Until my Emirates flight,
Erin
My travel MO is quite standard as a procrastinator. Stay up all night pretending I'm packing until I actually start packing 2 hours before my aunt picks me up to drive me to the airport and stress all the way there that I probably forgot something.
But now that the first leg of my journey has been completed with hefty amounts of coffee and ginger ale, I will sign off with a request that readers please bear (bare) with me on this blog as 1) it's being written almost strictly from my iPhone and Kindle Fire 2) it's my first public blog and 3) my first attempt at creative non-fiction writing.
That said, I hope my new blog is entertaining enough to keep you reading. If not, I'm having fun writing anyway.
Until my Emirates flight,
Erin
Labels:
travel
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