Thursday, June 28, 2007

Who is visiting Zambia?




“I’ll take International Visitors for $100 please, Alex.”

“The answer is : Visitors to Lusaka in June, 2007”

“Who are: Alex Trebek, Laura Bush, Chris and Katrina Shore and Vince, Stacey, Madison and Carter Boschman.”

"That is correct!"



What a busy week for Lusaka! Our first guests were John’s cousin Chris and his daughter Katrina from California. We enjoyed having dinner with them at our house on Monday night and then at their hotel on Wednesday night. Chris is with World Vision and brought Katrina along to see some of the projects in the area and they will also be visiting Tanzania. We saw plenty of security at their hotel because Laura Bush (first lady of the U.S.A.) is also in town because of her involvement with malaria and HIV/AIDS prevention.



While waiting and waiting for Vince (Charlene’s brother) and Stacey and Madison and Carter, who should come walking out but Alex Trebek (host of TV’s Jeopardy and spokesperson for World Vision)!

It was great to see everyone but only 80% of Vince and Stacey’s luggage arrived. 80% might sound like a lot unless it is your suitcase that didn’t make it. Fortunately for us, all of our goodies arrived from home and we’ve had fun going through it all. We'll have to post a picture of their family soon but Stacey is out shopping for some new clothes.



Speaking of percentages, we are very proud of Danica for achieving an award for academic excellence in her studies in Year 7 at the International School of Lusaka.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

My School Trip - by Danica

On Monday morning I left on a trip to Wild Tracks in the Lower Zambezi with 11 other classmates. We left at 8 a.m. on the new school bus. Unfortunately, the bus broke down about 2 minutes into the ride and we ended up having to wait for 2 hours while the bus got fixed. Once the bus got fixed it was a four hour drive including when we had to cross a river on a pontoon.

The accommodations were called tree houses, but they were actually cabins on tall stilts. This is because there are lots of animals there and we even had elephants walk through our camp at night! Other animals we saw were: kudu, duiker, hippo, crocodile and monitor lizard.

During the day we did activities such as fishing, climbing the giant baobab tree and abseiling down, an obstacle course and a walk using a GPS to find geocash – a hidden treasure. We also did lots of teambuilding activities, we watched the sunset from a boat and we had a night of stargazing – did you know that there is no big dipper in this part of the world?

The food was good (surprisingly), although they gave us way too much. Thankfully they didn’t serve any Nshima - the local maize product that’s really gross.

Overall, it was a really fun trip and we wished we could stay longer but I was really tired when I got home.

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Ecumenical Peace Building in Zambia

Last week I had the privilege of attending the graduation ceremony for the Africa Peacebuilding Institute at the Mindolo Ecumenical Foundation in Kitwe, a city about five hours north of here. MEF was founded a long time ago by the World Council of Churches and the African Council of Churches (I hope I got that right), and is a training center for African church leaders. Once a year MCC sponsors a six week training course in Peacebuilding for African church leaders. This year there were participants from as far away as Ethiopia and Nigeria. The twenty nine people who took the course this year are from a wide variety of church and faith backgrounds, including at least one Muslim participant. Inter-faith peacebuilding is a topic of great relevance as it seems that all you hear about on the international news these days is tension between Muslims and Christians. It’s interesting to note that from our perspective that this doesn’t seem to be as big an issue in Zambia as in other countries, or as big an issue at the grass roots as at a political level.

It was great to meet the participants; they all had very interesting stories to tell and were very nice folks. Peacebuilding is an important subject to study and apply, there are lots and lots of people doing the opposite (i.e. conflict building) in Africa, especially in trouble spots like Sudan, northern Uganda and so on.

What do you get when an American MCC worker, a Tanzanian pastor, a Zambian Nun and a Congolese Professor have a barbeque together? A peace of meat... er ... sorry.

Spot the Canadian with the inappropriate footwear

The Happy Graduates

MCC is placing a couple at MEF in August to continue peace related training there. We took the opportunity of delivering a piano to the house where the couple will live.

Here is a picture of our country rep Siggi making like Elton John before we left. Note the MCC predilection for sandals. (see previous picture as well) Thankfully the piano made it all the way without any problems.

One of the interesting things about driving in Zambia is all the stuff that is sold on the side of the road. This trip showed us that it was watermelon season (heaps and heaps of watermelons, for about $.50 to $1 each,) and sweet potato season. We also saw: bush honey, little red fruits called “bush onions”, lawn chairs, legs of unidentified animals (bush meat) and of course loads of tomatoes, which are always in season here.

People also sell very large bags of charcoal, which they make in the bush. Charcoal is what most people use for cooking (and it makes an excellent barbeque), but it raises concerns about deforestation. The economics of charcoal are very interesting. Far away from the city a very large (50kg) bag of charcoal costs about $8, but in the city it costs about $16, so if you can get a big bag from the country and sell it in the city you can make some money. So, every day you see men on rickety old bikes, with three 50Kg bags of charcoal riding hundreds of kilometers into the city to sell their charcoal, all for about $25 of profit (and of course, they have to ride back). Still, $25 is probably about 10 to 15 days average wage, so it pays. When the charcoal gets to the city, it goes to any one of one hundred charcoal markets, where it gets divided and subdivided into smaller and smaller bags, which are sold for some profit. The final stop is that ladies sell small plastic shopping bags of charcoal, with just enough charcoal to cook one meal, which is typically the most people buy because that’s usually all they can afford. There are a lot of people in this supply chain, and each takes their small cut.