Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Greetings from Kenya!

Hello America! Irene was nice enough to let me out of the country and I’ve been in Kenya since Sunday evening. Though the ride was a bit turbulent, I finally got to the airport, and after a bag scare, retrieved my luggage and met up with the group. Our ride was a pimped out old bus called the “Jazz Quartet” fully equipped with neon lights lining the ceiling.

So about 20 of us SIT students and the Jazz Quartet made our way to the Mary Ward Center, which is a catholic monastery. We’re staying here for the first 4 days of orientation as we begin to acclimate to Kenyan culture and learn more about our program.

Monday we woke up (to a freezing morning!) and headed over to the giraffe center to kiss some giraffes (see the picture below). I figured that once was not enough (I kissed some on my last trip to Kenya) and decided to kiss some more this time as well. (Don't worry, their saliva is an anti-septic)

After learning about giraffes in Kenya (they can kill you with one kick and they only sleep 2 hours each day) we made our way over to Nakumatt, Kenya’s version of Walmart where we bought our Kenyan cellphones. I chose a pretty snazzy Nokia phone that looks like it was made around 1995…but it gets the job done. Kenya’s cellphones are pay as you go and when you run out of minutes you “top up” on your minutes and purchase more. It’s super cheap..calling the US even is about 3 cents a minute and doesn’t cost anything to the person receiving the call. (Nance and Jimbo must be happy about that)

Tuesday we were all split up into groups of three and dropped off at various locations around Nairobi. Two other girls and I were dropped at a women’s hospital where we spent the day learning about a program started there called the Gender Violence Recovery Center. The Center was started by a well-known doctor at the hospital to give battered women, men and children a place to recover from abuse and receive counseling, free of charge. Prior to this center (which was the first of its kind in Nairboi) people who couldn’t afford the hospital fees were turned away and forced to return to their homes which often left them vulnerable to more abuse.

After returning back to the monastery, we had our first Swahili lesson and were told that our language classes (which are 3 hours each day) will consist of about 5 students and one teacher. There are 6 swahili teachers that rotate to a different group of students each day. I was pumped to hear that our class is mostly oral speaking instead of writing or reading because conversational Swahili is what I really need to work on. There was hardly any interaction between students and the teacher in my classes at UNC. I’m excited to be able to communicate with locals and improve my Swahili a tonnnn!

Today was our first day actually seeing downtown Nairobi. Again, we split into small groups and, with our Swahili teachers, were guided around the city. Nairobi is definitely a city—I don’t know what I was expecting, but I guess all my experience in Kenya thus far has been in rural areas so I’m not used to seeing skyscrapers and tall office buildings—but I learned that they do indeed exist here. The air quality is atrocious. There isn’t the regulation over here on emissions so the air is definitely SO dirty compared to that of your normal US city. Besides that though, I really liked the city. There’s this huge park in the middle that I’m excited to explore and tons of cool shops all over.

On our way home from the city we were shown where the SIT school buildings are (which are on the outskirts of Nairobi) and learned that we will be visiting them for the first time on Friday. Tomorrow we leave the monastery and move to a hotel for the night in Nairobi, in hopes of become more “acclimated” to Nairobi-living. Saturday we actually get to meet our host families and move in with them. I’m SO excited to meet my family. I feel like once I move in with a family it will actually feel real that I am here studying abroad. It still kind of just feels like I’m visiting for two weeks or something.

I guess those are all the updates for now…more to come later for sure. I’m loving every single person in my program. The students are all so different, yet we mesh so well together as a group. There are students from Columbia, Davidson, Duke, Colorado College, Rollins, UC San Diego, UNC (duh)…and more. Everyone has such a different idea for their independent research at the end of the program and just listening to what people are passionate about is really fascinating. Even though we’ve only been together for 4 days, I feel like I’ve known everyone for weeks now. It’s such a fun group—we’ve been joking around a ton and just have been having a blast here alone in our little monastery compound (imagine when we hit the big city..watch out Nairobi)

That’s all for now I suppose. Sorry this was so long and detailed—my updates in the future will hopefully be shorter once I settle down into my homestay (so pumped!)

Until next time—

Megan


All packed and ready to go :)



Group shot (of most of us) at the giraffe center


My new Kenyan boyfriend


Friday, August 26, 2011

I'm leaving!...maybe

Tomorrow I leave for Kenya!...on second thought, maybe not…

Hurricane Irene is angry and trying to get in the way of me making it to Kenya on my scheduled flight. As of now, my flight is still on, but a few people from my program have already had to change their flights to Monday night…fingers crossed I can fly out of Dulles tomorrow.

It’s crazy that I’m going to be in Kenya in two days. Even though I’ve been there before, this experience is going to be so different than my first two. My previous trips were through a non-profit that works with poverty-stricken areas in Kenya to build high schools and start social businesses. But this time around I am in Kenya as a student, participating in a SIT program (school of international training) that is focused on health and community development.

I’m not too sure all of the specifics of my program yet—we received a rough schedule and a general overview of the program—but it seems like I’ll be well informed after our initial orientation week when I first arrive. My program consists of 28 students (26 girls and 2 guys—looks like I haven’t left the Carolina ratio after all) from colleges and universities all over the US. I’ll be staying with a family in Nairobi for 6 weeks, a rural family in Mombassa for 2 weeks and then the last month’s (a period of time reserved for our individual research projects of our choosing) living arrangements are TBD based on where I choose to research in Kenya. For 2 weeks we are also traveling to Tanzania and/or Uganda.

I really have no idea what this semester holds, but I couldn’t be more excited. I’m thrilled to be living in country for 4 months rather than a tourist passing through. I hope this allows me to learn about the culture and norms of Kenya much more than any 3-week trip could ever teach me.

I’m sure that in addition to all the great times ahead of me there may be some more difficult times, as one might expect living in a 3rd-world country for an extended period of time, but I know that they will all be worth it. I have a quote written in my room by Paula Rinehart that says, “life even in the hardest times, is full of moments to savor. They will not come this way again, not in this way.” This experience is a once in a lifetime opportunity and I am so thrilled. I hope to savor each moment I’m there because these moments will truly never come again in such a way.

I’ve been given this amazing opportunity to travel to this country that I love and to be a student in Kenya for a semester and I feel so blessed. I can’t wait to see what this semester holds.

Until next time :)

Megan