Thursday, January 31, 2013

Best Field Day Ever!! (Ngora)

On Monday we went with the photographer and videographer to Ngora to capture more success stories and to profile one of the longest tenure business mentors working for the organization.  Ngora is about an hour to hour and a half away from the office.  Compared to Katakwi and other locations, it’s considered an easier drive, by African standards anyway.  Still navigating the roads there is tricky and requires a lot of concentration to avoid the massive potholes and numerous split second decisions about where best to go when portions of asphalt are intermittent. I didn't always pick the best routes... But we made it there and back safely.

First stop: Barnyard Bonanza! 
As we arrived at our first stop, we were told that when the business mentor attempted to mobilize just a few business groups from one of the villages to meet with us, the business owners were adamant that they ALL wanted to come to share their stories.

Business owners raising their hands when asked who had experienced improvements in their lives since receiving their grants 
 And to demonstrate proof of their success, they also brought all of their livestock (as most in this group had livestock businesses) to the one compound where we were meeting.  This was by far, one of my favorite experiences here in Africa to date.  It was so cool to 1) see everyone together with their businesses, and 2) hear about their successes and challenges and passion to continue to work to improve their lives and the future for their children.  

It was also sheer madness as everyone maneuvered around to get into their groups of three business owners, each with their animals in tow.  There was lots of baying from the goats and sheep and loads of unhappy squeals/screams from put out piggies.

Directing business owners and their animals 
Business owner wrangling her animals 
Business owners arranging themselves
More chaos
Once business owners were arranged into their business groups, stories of their trials and successes were shared and photos taken. 

Cheering business owners with their animals
Business owners with goats
Business owner with his pigs
Business owners with sheep 
There were also some baby sheep and goats that were so cute, including one sheep that had just been born 3 days ago.  

Mother and baby sheep
Business owner with her baby and a baby sheep 
And as always, there were the ever-present children there to observe all of the activity.

The peanut gallery watching the goings on
Little girl
More children
As this first visit drew to a close, all of the business owners got together for a group picture.  It was an experience I’ll truly never forget!

Group picture!
Second stop: Turkey Business
Next we went to see some business owners who had a very successful turkey business. It took a little while for them to rustle the turkeys out from the bush around the compound and bring them in for us to see (apparently one of the children had accidentally let the turkeys out of their pen shortly before we arrived). Two of the males must have gotten excited by the activity and had themselves a bit of turkey smackdown. Their fighting had to be quelled by the business owners and they were quickly separated. 

Business owners using sticks to coax the turkeys from the bush into the compound
The males all had an odd skin growth hanging down from their beaks
Turkey Fight!!!
Business owner breaking up the fight
Third Stop:  More tailoring success
After the turkeys, we traveled to one of the Ngora town centers to interview a woman who had started a successful tailoring shop. She had a similar story to the woman, Hellen, who we had recently profiled, in that she had attained great success from a tailoring businesses. She then shared her fortune with others by teaching other women how to be tailors.  Throughout the interview, her beautiful baby sat on her lap.

Former grant recipient and her baby
After the interview we drove with her to her compound to see where she lived and the improvements in her home since she received her grant several years ago. Though, I was really nervous driving with her sitting in the front seat with her baby on her lap and no seatbelt or child seat! 


Showing the home she lived in before the grant on the left and her new home she built after the grant on her right  
Inside her new home with her children
Fourth Stop: Fruit Tree Farming
Next we went to visit a business group that had started a very successful citrus farming business. It was a pretty crazy drive to get there on a foot path where I don't think another 4-wheeled vehicle had ever passed.   
My parking job in a field
Business owner with his son in the orchard surrounding their compound 
Over the years since starting their business, they had diversified into also growing vegetables and rearing chickens. 

Baby chicks
Business owner being interviewed with son 
Local kids who joined the tour of the farm 
Final stop: Business Mentor Profile
For our final stop, we went to our business mentor's family home to interview her about her 10+ years with the organization.  She is truly an inspiring woman! 

Business mentor, Margaret, being interviewed 
It was another full day, but an amazing one!!

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

A nice little Sunday in Katakwi

We currently have a volunteer photographer and videographer in residence capturing business success stories. As mentioned in the last post, one of the success stories is a former grant recipient by the name of Hellen.  On Sunday, we hit the road at around 8 a.m. to make the drive to Katakwi, to Hellen's home village to see where she grew up, meet her family and some of the people she has helped, and to see the church she is building in her community. 

The road to Katakwi isn't exactly a "Sunday drive." The landscape is beautiful, but it's about 1.5 to 2 hours of rough, dusty roads, with yours truly behind the wheel. Our first destination was Hellen's church. It was really neat to see, and we received a very warm welcome of signing and dancing when we arrived. Similar to my last church visit in Kenya, it was quite a lengthy experience -- 3 hours to be exact. And now that we're in the midst of dry season in Uganda, it was sweltering!  I think it was actually a good thing that the walls had not been built yet, as it allowed for a bit more of a breeze than we might have received otherwise. 

Entering the unfinished church in Katakwi
The choir in action
There was lots of singing and dancing, which was fun, and then testimonials about how parishioners were born again. And even though we were in a remote village, there was the requisite speaker/amplifier system running off a generator. 

Hellen giving her testimony (wearing a dress she made)
Speaker system
They also had reading of testimony, a sermon and an offering. For the occasion, I wore one of my African dresses, and was told at one point during the day that I had a body like a true African!

Church in session
The offering
With Hellen and my colleague in African dress
Next we were invited to lunch at Hellen's parents' compound. It was an amazing feast!!  As I mentioned in the last post, Hellen has a restaurant and a catering company, so she was well-prepared to put on an amazing spread!


Entering Hellen's parents' compound for lunch with the parishioners 
Feast of posho, rice, chicken, beans, cabbage, dodo (greens) and sweet bananas 
Game board made in the dirt with seeds 
Afterwards we went to a local trading center in Katakwi to interview one of the women than Hellen had trained through her tailoring school.

Tailoring shop in Katakwi's main trading center 
Afterwards, since we were in the area, we went ahead and visited some current business owners, including some that owned goats, and one that had a grinder business. 

Business owner with his business mentor and his children
Business group with their goats 
Woman preparing millet grain for the grinder
Hand crank grinder
Business owner grinding millet 
We also got to see the business savings group's cash box. Some of the groups in the area had the idea to get these savings boxes to safeguard their money as it began to accumulate.  Since there are 3 people in a business group, the boxes have 3 locks with 3 different keys--one for each business owner.  They also decorated their boxes. 

Business group's cash box 
It was good excursion to the field, though quite tiring. After a white-knuckled drive home, we got back around 7:30 p.m.  Quite a big day!  I think I went to bed by 9 that night. 

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Visiting a Ugandan Orphanage

“I’ve got to check out that orphanage and go shopping!”  Hmm… Not a phrase one tends to hear often, but let me explain where this quote came from. 

We currently have a videographer and photographer visiting with us in Uganda to help capture success stories of business owners who have been helped by the organization.  One such success story is a woman named Hellen who lives in Soroti. Hellen started out mending clothes on a veranda in Katakwi, a village about 2 hours drive from Soroti.  She received a grant in 1998, and then started a tailoring business. Over time, she received two other grants and started a series of enterprises including a tailoring school for at risk women, a restaurant, and a catering company.  She is now a very successful and respected business woman. Because Hellen so greatly benefited from the generosity of others, she feels very strongly about giving back to her community. In addition to helping women through the tailoring school, Hellen recently built a church for her community in Katakwi.  

Hellen also has ties to a local orphanage. She sews bags and laptop cases which are purchased at a fair trade price by people in Canada who then sell the bags at a higher cost and send the proceeds back to the orphanage.  Yesterday we went with Hellen to the Nurture a Child Uganda orphanage in Nyakatunya, just outside of Soroti.  (http://www.nurtureachilduganda.org/)

Outside gate to the orphanage compound
The main house for 25-30 children
View of the inside of the compound with office in the back
While there, we got to meet the couple who started and run the orphanage.  It is quite an impressive story. They began by taking in a family of children whose parents had just died.  They continued helping local children in need in the community, taking in more and more orphans, and eventually starting a formal orphanage.  They usually feed and house around 25-30 children and pay for them all to go to school. 

We received a tour of the facility and met some of the kids. 

One of the girls' bedrooms
One of the boys' bedrooms
The children seemed excited to have visitors, and especially ones that came with such fancy electronics!  The videographer let the children take turns wearing the camera headphones during the interview. 

The peanut gallery
Little girl listening through video camera headphones 

A future videographer 
The orphanage is almost entirely funded by the sale of handicrafts. It receives no support from the government. In addition to the sale of Hellen’s bags, they also sell jewelry.  When school is not in session, the children help to make the jewelry.  While they are in school, the couple hires local women to make it.  The goods are then sold to help support the orphanage and to pay the children’s school fees.  So naturally, we did some shopping to help support the cause!

Jewelry for sale
My purchases
When we were out to dinner later that night, we were all sporting our new jewelry.  One of my friends commented on our lovely necklaces.  When we explained their origins, she exclaimed, “I’ve got to check out that orphanage and go shopping!”