Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Weekends in Kigali

I just made it through my second weekend in Kigali and I really appreciate having those two days off to relax, go to the market, and explore my new city. After my first week of work I spent the weekend going to a large market called Kimironko which reminded me of the market in Praia where there  was a hodgepodge of nearly everything. One side of the market is filled with tables of mangos, passion fruit, avocados, oranges, green lemons, tree tomatoes (plums), papaya, and all the vegetables you could imagine. Then there’s a section with cassava and other types of flours and dried beans. As you move through the market you move to the random imported clothing (possibly once donated from the US or other countries) and other goods. There are areas filled with large buckets which people use to wash clothes, electronics stands, and cooking utensils.

Then you move on to the fabric area which is so bright and colorful. Tailors work away at the ends of each row while you walk by and shop owners welcome you at their booths to choose your fabric. We’ve made friends with one fabric owner, Josephine, who has many dedicated expatriate customers and because of that makes sure we get a fair price on fabric and getting clothes made. My first weekend I went just to explore and see what was available. My second weekend I returned, purchased fabric, and am now waiting for a tailor made dress which will be complete in 4 days.  

Once you move passed the fabrics, the crafts appear and shop owners call out to you to buy their products. “This is really nice.” “Do you want to try it?” “Real ebony wood, good price for you.”  To me the products seem sort of factory made, each person has the same items with a slight variation of colors, materials and quality.  After having visited East Africa twice before, the goods seem the same as they were 8 years ago on my first visit to Africa. I keep my eye out for unique objects but none of the wooden sculptures, paper bead jewelry, and colorful sandstone call out my name. 

The next day I headed to Gisozi, the national genocide memorial in Kigali. The museum/memorial was very well done, informative and shocking and really puts into your head how recent and how many people it has affected.  You are not allowed to take photos inside which is completely understandable but they are allowed outside in the gardens. The memorial center was divided into multiple parts describing the history of Rwanda, the genocide, the aftermath, other genocides around the world, and children affected by the genocide or what they spoke as “the lost generation.” Outside are many gardens, each very symbolic, as well as mass graves where over 250,000 people are buried.  The museum had a good balance of historical information, shocking images of wounds suffered from the genocide, pictures of other memorial sites throughout Rwanda, photos donated of family members by survivors of the genocide, sculptures and stained glass created by local and international artists, and what I found to be the second most chilling exhibit- bones, skulls, and clothing displayed from victims. To further drive the point, the audio tour ends with an exhibit dedicated to the children of the genocide complete with large photos of children of all ages along with a description of their favorite foods, subjects in school, favorite games, and last of all, how they were killed. The way the memorial was laid out, you exit the children’s exhibit to a balcony outside for a bit of fresh air to give you a moment to process what you just witnessed. I visited the gardens second, as recommended by other people staying at the hostel, which was nice after witnessing the inside exhibits. As you can see in one of my pictures, the mass graves in the exterior of the center lie in plain view of the city in the outside. I found it quite interesting that the gardens and mass graves were not walled in like you would find at some other sort of museum or memorial, closed off from the world. It was weird being surrounded by this sort of dichotomy of so much death and violence and the world on the outside moving on, functioning, and progressing as a society. It exemplified to me what Rwanda is today.  People moving on, having hope, living out their daily lives while this undertone still remains. While discussing other East African countries, a colleague of mine mentioned that Kenyans and Ugandans are much more friendly. Even she mentioned that Rwandans are more serious, possibly because of the genocide. I thought that was an interesting point.
Kigali Memorial Centre


Coming out of the Children's Exhibit






One of the stories up close.
















View of the eternal flame




Elephant statue representing remembrance
Flame



























Walking down from the gardens to the mass graves


















































































Wall of Names- still a work in progress















Young forest of remembrance




































When we got back from the memorial (about 5 hours later) we spent about 3 hours cleaning and chopping and mixing and cooking. It was a good way to process more from earlier in the day while giving us something to do. With one cutting board and 2 kitchen knives that we found in the hostel, we made our own “gourmet” meal. The final meal was pasta with tomato sauce from scratch, mango salsa, guacamole, and garlic bread. We also made a cocktail with a Ugandan gin called Waragi as well as green tea, lemon juice, and honey. It was awesome.

Weekend #2 we also made dinner. This time we did a taco night for the entire hostel or whoever was there. We made everything from scratch: pineapple salsa, guacamole, beans (these were from a bag but I spiced them up), lettuce, cheese, and even tortillas which turned out a little more like nan or pita bread than tortillas. Everything was delicious and there was plenty to go around. For 600 RWF a person or $1 it was the right price for all of us!

Pineapple salsa

guacamole

lettuce

cheese

tortillas

peppers, onions, and okra

beans

the spread

Rosie and Catherine chowing down!








Wednesday, June 22, 2011

First week of internship


June 18, 2011

I just finished my first week at my internship and already I’ve had a whirlwind of emotions.  The first few days were a little overwhelming. Since my bags hadn’t arrived, it made setting up a little difficult so I was bounced around to different people until they found a computer and desk for me to use.  I don’t know if I am in my permanent desk or if there are still plans to move me around but I guess I’ll find out soon. 

Over the past few days I have been meeting with the heads of every department to understand what they do, how their department fits in with the rest of them and their major challenges. The organization is going though major changes right now by decentralizing so things are a little confusing and chaotic and I’m trying to get a good picture of how things used to be and where they are headed. New departments have been created and people who have been working at the same position for 10+ years and now have to learn new jobs. It’s a great time for me to be here during this transition period and I foresee other organizations in Africa going through similar processes in the future.
After working at the ground level with NGOs for the past few years, it is really interesting to be working at a headquarters. The amount of work that goes in to creating, implementing, and supporting projects is immense and I am so glad that I am getting this experience.
I am currently sharing an office with one of the new regional managers and he has been really helpful answering questions about everything for me from work related material, to the genocide in Rwanda, to cultural events.  He told me all about weddings in Rwanda. Apparently they can last a long time (his friend’s wedding is this weekend) with a traditional portion and the church portion. During the traditional portion, the parents sit down and discuss the marriage of their children, almost in a banter, teasing tone until they finally agree on the marriage. There is a dowry in cows and as he explained, wealthy people give more cows and a high quality cow (there are 2 types of cows here—ones that come from India and others that come from Europe) can cost up to 1 million Rwf. Then they go to get marriage certificates. A week later, there can be a big church wedding, like our own in the states, with a reception afterwards. People have so many family and friends that are invited that there could be 600 people at a wedding! So at the end of the day I was maybe invited to attend this wedding with my colleague.

I made friends with another colleague Friday afternoon during my last meeting of the day. I was meeting with our external affairs person and after discussing work I tried to get to know her a little more. She offered to take me to the market so I am looking forward to going today.

This past week has pretty much been wake up, go to work, get lunch, back to work and then random activities at night with the other people at the hostel. Monday we went to a pizza place for trivia, Tuesday we went to a coffee shop/Morroccan/Mexican restaurant, Wednesday we went to an Indian restaurant for a goodbye party for someone, Thursday we went to the Chinese restaurant by our hotel, and Friday we went to a BBQ hosted by the marines that work at the Embassy.

First week of internship


June 18, 2011

I just finished my first week at my internship and already I’ve had a whirlwind of emotions.  The first few days were a little overwhelming. Since my bags hadn’t arrived, it made setting up a little difficult so I was bounced around to different people until they found a computer and desk for me to use.  I don’t know if I am in my permanent desk or if there are still plans to move me around but I guess I’ll find out soon. 

Over the past few days I have been meeting with the heads of every department to understand what they do, how their department fits in with the rest of them and their major challenges. The organization is going though major changes right now by decentralizing so things are a little confusing and chaotic and I’m trying to get a good picture of how things used to be and where they are headed. New departments have been created and people who have been working at the same position for 10+ years and now have to learn new jobs. It’s a great time for me to be here during this transition period and I foresee other organizations in Africa going through similar processes in the future.
After working at the ground level with NGOs for the past few years, it is really interesting to be working at a headquarters. The amount of work that goes in to creating, implementing, and supporting projects is immense and I am so glad that I am getting this experience.
I am currently sharing an office with one of the new regional managers and he has been really helpful answering questions about everything for me from work related material, to the genocide in Rwanda, to cultural events.  He told me all about weddings in Rwanda. Apparently they can last a long time (his friend’s wedding is this weekend) with a traditional portion and the church portion. During the traditional portion, the parents sit down and discuss the marriage of their children, almost in a banter, teasing tone until they finally agree on the marriage. There is a dowry in cows and as he explained, wealthy people give more cows and a high quality cow (there are 2 types of cows here—ones that come from India and others that come from Europe) can cost up to 1 million Rwf. Then they go to get marriage certificates. A week later, there can be a big church wedding, like our own in the states, with a reception afterwards. People have so many family and friends that are invited that there could be 600 people at a wedding! So at the end of the day I was maybe invited to attend this wedding with my colleague.

I made friends with another colleague Friday afternoon during my last meeting of the day. I was meeting with our external affairs person and after discussing work I tried to get to know her a little more. She offered to take me to the market so I am looking forward to going today.

This past week has pretty much been wake up, go to work, get lunch, back to work and then random activities at night with the other people at the hostel. Monday we went to a pizza place for trivia, Tuesday we went to a coffee shop/Morroccan/Mexican restaurant, Wednesday we went to an Indian restaurant for a goodbye party for someone, Thursday we went to the Chinese restaurant by our hotel, and Friday we went to a BBQ hosted by the marines that work at the Embassy.

June 13-14


June 13-14, 2011

My experience in Africa this time is much different than my previous ones. Instead of being in village or at least a small town, I’m living in the capital city. For all of the capitals that I could have potentially lived in, Kigali is not a bad place to be. Seeing foreigners everywhere does take some getting used to and it feels more like a vacation than anything.  The city seems calm compared to the rush of people in Dakar or the motorcycle taxis zooming around Kampala. There are large sidewalks that line all the streets, motorcycle taxi drivers and riders are required to wear helmets. There is a plethora of ethnic restaurants—so far I have had Italian and Mexican food. There’s a Chinese restaurant near my hostel and tonight I’m going with some people to get Indian food for someone’s goodbye dinner. 

The government seems to have a hand in everything here- the NGO that I am working with has strong partnerships with various government ministries. They are the ones who created the laws to make people safe and maybe my favorite thing, have banned plastic bags because of the environmental impact. Once a month everyone is required to do public service and I hear that communities all come together to do beautification projects in their towns. It is very cool to see a developing country making environmentally friendly changes.  The description of “land of a thousand hills” describes Rwanda perfectly. From every vantage point you see hills in every direction and each hill has its own name. It is very green, even in the city. Rwanda reminds me a lot of Uganda- the climate is similar and I ate some beans yesterday that rivaled my favorite meal in Uganda. I was actually told that it is the same thing. One thing that I have already come to love is the tea. They peel fresh ginger and brew it with regular tea and it is just spectacular.