Showing posts with label Camp BUILD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camp BUILD. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 August 2014

LIVE from Camp Lion!

Bagonza from InMovement warming up our staff
Reporting live from Camp LION! Things are buzzing right now from the Staff room at Grace Primary School where I am co-directing Camp LION (Leaders In Our Nation) in Mbale, in eastern Uganda.

Our camp is focused on developing leaders from neighboring communities in a week-long, jam-packed camp with sessions on community organizing, youth development, HIV/AIDS awareness, public speaking and the importance of volunteering. Peace Corps volunteers have been running youth leadership camp for girls (GLOW-Girls Leading Our World) and boys (BUILD- Boys of Uganda in Leadership Development) for years now, as a way of directing reaching out to youth and giving them a safe space to discuss issues like reproductive health, sex, condom demos and HIV, as well as developing their leadership, public speaking, and self-esteem skills. Our staff and camp counselors ranges from Peace Corps Volunteers to teachers at primary schools, youth and health workers and a few members from BPU. We are also working with InMovement, a youth organisation for social change through the arts. They're known for doing amazing youth work through dance, drama, circus, poetry and art.


Our InMovement facilitators (Ife, Bagonza, Mark and Tara) helped lead our staff training to prepare for a powerhouse week of camp. We discussed and practiced facilitation skills, how to engage youth in a meaningful way, gender-equitable practices and how to make camp FUN!

Tomorrow our campers arrive from Tororo, Mbale, Soroti, Kumi districts and our camp will officially kick off! The day I'm looking forward to most is our Volunteer Day on Wednesday, where our campers will go out and do community service work in Mbale, such as tree-planting, street sweeping, and volunteering at the local hospital and orphanage. I'll keep everyone posted!

As for Peace Corps' Blog It Home contest, tomorrow is the last day to vote on Facebook to help my blog win the contest! Send me to DC by going to this link, and Clicking "Like". Please share the photo as well and encourage your friends to vote. Thanks!

Ife, one of our InMovement facilitators, leading a session on Reflections




Teambuilding with our camp staff and counselors


Bagonza from InMovement!
Patrick, one of our staff members, here to teach conflict resolution






Practicing facilitation



Playing the game "Crazy Taxi"




Friday, 6 June 2014

Addressing Gender-Based Violence

One of the biggest problems facing Uganda is gender-based violence. Uganda has made some tremendous progress in terms of development, but will not get over that extra step without addressing the gender inequities that exist here. Men hold most of the power (in an effort not to generalize, I will say most and not all), in and outside of family life. Yes, women are voted or chosen as Local Council for the community and members of Parliament, but I feel these are figurehead positions rather than a position of true power. At the village level, women hold even less power.

I was astounded at the different gender roles I observed in Ethiopia. Men and women both had their assigned tasks--men to do the hard labor and plow the fields, and women to collect water and firewood and maintain the home. Seems like more reasonably assigned gender roles than Uganda, for example. In Uganda, from what I've observed, women do all the work. They are the ones walking on the edge of the road at sunrise, carrying various items-- a basket on their heads with the day's lunch, a hoe resting on their shoulders, a baby tied to their backs. After a day toiling in the fields, they return home where they are expected to rear the children, make dinner and maintain the household. What are the men doing, you ask? That's a very good question.

Gender-imbalanced societies exist all over the world, even in the United States, but especially in developing nations. One of Peace Corps Washington's initiatives is Student-Friendly Schools addressing and strategizing against school-related gender-based violence. What is gender-based violence? Briefly, it is any physical, psychological or sexual abuse against a person on the basis of gender. Usually, girls and women are the targets of GBV, but boys/men can also be victims.

We held a regional workshop in Mbarara to discuss gender-based violence, gender inequities and corporal punishment in schools. It was a successful and thought-provoking workshop that I will highly value as a part of my Peace Corps service. I helped to organize the workshop with another PCV, Jenn, who is very passionate on the subject of GBV and raising awareness in Uganda. We invited several Volunteers in the new Education group from the western region, along with their counterparts. We also invited several Ugandans to serve as keynote speakers and facilitators. This made an enormous difference to the workshop and helped foment discussion surrounding these issues, open up the dialogue between Americans and Ugandans.

Our first speaker we met at the regional HIV/AIDS in Masaka back in November-- Jenn and I both loved and remembered her. Hope is a firecracker, I wish there were more women like her in Uganda. She says herself that she breaks every mold made for Ugandan women. She's bold, brazen and passionate, a champion against domestic violence and GBV in Uganda.
She led our first session at the workshop and did a fabulous job of educating what is GBV and how to look for it in schools. With the counterparts, we analyzed several scenarios of GBV at school and how to address them. A common one across Africa goes like this: a girl is good at math, her male teacher notices her. Her offers to give her extra tutoring lessons and insists she carries his briefcase. One thing leads to another, and soon the girl finds herself being molested by the teacher. Who is in power, or who has none? In most scenarios, the girl won't say anything for fear of being failed in class or whipped as a liar. This might seem like an outlandish scenario but it is the reality in many schools.

Our next speaker was a representative of Mifumi, a Ugandan organization devoted to combatting domestic violence and GBV. The name comes from a small village outside of Tororo, to the east, where a local woman started an organization and a shelter to protect local women from domestic violence. We had some interesting discussions surrounding corporal punishment in schools, wife-beating (statistics show that more Ugandan girls than boys say that wife beating is acceptable) and types of abuse.

Our afternoon sessions involved break-out sessions where participants could choose according to their interest. Jenn and I have made some key contacts in the last year, and we invited them to facilitate. We had Hassan from Breakdance Project Uganda (you may recall them from my post about Camp BUILD), my counterpart Bright to talk about gender-equitable games using the Base Pack, PCV Taylor to give a session on making reusable menstrual pads (many girls stay home from school when they have their menstrual periods, therefore putting them more at a disadvantage), Jenn to talk about gender roles, and Tush from InMovement to talk about using music, dance and drama to inspire youth. Tush was also one of our speakers on the second day and used movement to talk about gender and GBV. Her organization will be working with our Eastern Camp BUILD/GLOW in August, so stay tuned!

Jenn's exercise with gender cards was insightful. We looked first at the difference between sex and gender (sex is biological, gender is constructed by society). Therefore, gender roles in America differ greatly from gender roles here. Next, there are three categories--Female, Male or Both-- and several cards that must be placed in each category. Things like "beautiful", "asks for sex", "aggressive", "enjoys sex" and "raises children". You can imagine where many of these cards are placed. But eventually, Jenn talks through each one and argues why it should be placed under "Both", including "gets pregnant" since it takes two to tango. This game is really interesting to do with youth, it gives great insight on how gender is viewed. For example, one of the cards says, "Beautiful". Boys will argue that a man cannot be beautiful, nor can a woman ask for sex. The keyword is "can". The point is to challenge beliefs and ask, "Well, why can't a woman enjoy sex? Why can't a man raise a child?"

I learned a lot from the workshop, issues surrounding gender and power in Uganda. I was an outsider at the workshop, an organizer not a participant, yet I came away from it realizing that I've only scratched the surface of the culture here and there's still so much to learn and understand. But one of the biggest takeaways was how strong the women are in Uganda. They can be treated like second-class citizens sometimes, and it drives me mad, but their strength indubitably commands respect.

Tuesday, 21 May 2013

Camp BUILD & GLOW

"Everywhere we go! People want to know....!"

Welcome to Camp! (Photos by Jim Tanton)
It was back to camp this week for Camp GLOW (Girls Leading Our World) and BUILD (Boys of Uganda in Leadership Development), a Peace Corps-sponsored camp for Ugandan youth in empowerment and leadership development. I never thought I would see the day that American-style camp worked successfully in Africa, complete with camp songs, cheers, field day and teambuilders (the only thing we were missing was a lake and swimming lessons). In the past, the girls' and boys' camp would operate simultaneously but separately, giving the girls their own space to learn how to be more assertive. The directors of our camp, who are  fellow PCVs, decided to experiment and run the camps together.  At the beginning of the week, there was some awkwardness with the girls refusing to sit or talk with the boys, but by the end, they were all getting along great. During the morning and early afternoon, the campers would have sessions focusing on topics such as domestic violence, net repair, gender roles, family planning (we even had a condom race on wooden penises--some girls were horrified) and a whole day devoted to learning about HIV/AIDS. This day was the most insightful into rumours and widespread beliefs around HIV. The questions campers had about how HIV is spread ("I heard you can get it from someone sweating on you...!") was a revelation about what a large knowledge gap exists.

Teambuilding: The Spiders Web
That's why camps like these are so important: we are able to give the right information and stamp out any myths surrounding the disease in a controlled setting. There's no church behind our shoulder condemning condoms or telling us they cause cancer. On Thursday, we had a Ugandan organisation TASO (The AIDS Support Organization) come in to do a performance for our campers. All the performers are living positively, and shared a little of their experience. They also conducted HIV testing for anyone who wanted to know their status. I'm proud to say that my entire group was brave enough to get tested, which shows some real initiative.
I got tested!
In the evenings, we had teambuilders, endless games, frisbee on the pitch, bracelet-making or learning origami. It was amazing the see the transition in the girls, who went from being docile and quiet, to being more assertive and confident. The results were surprisingly positive.
A little teamwork goes a long way: The Human Knot!
There isn't really a culture here of people of the opposite sex being friends; platonic friendships between the two genders isn't a thing, especially not in the village. I was a counselor for the boys' side, along with my Ugandan co-counselor, and we had 8 happy campers. They ranged from mid-pubescent and voice-cracking teenage boys to older, more mature boys who could be eligible to be counselors next year. It was a blast and we got along great. I thought boys would naturally be more assertive and confident than girls, but I still had to get the boys to come out of their shells. Our animal group for the week was the Hyenas (we always had an excuse to laugh and cackle, which I really liked), including 8 girls from the GLOW side.


Breakin' it down, BPU shows us their moves


A big presence at the camp, including campers, counselors and staff, was BPU- Breakdance Project Uganda, a youth empowerment program in Kampala, Masaka and Gulu. I can't stress enough how awesome these guys are. Not only do they have major swagger but the kids who come out of these programs are determined, inclusive, polite and good leaders. I assumed that a lot of these kids came from well-to-do families in the big cities, but apparently a lot of them are orphans or come from poor families. They have great role models at the Project who help shape them into young leaders, and the best part-- to teach them how to dance! When the BPU campers arrived at camp, I figured they would be the troublemakers and we would need a disciplinarian on Day 1. Instead, I quickly found out what great kids and role models they were. I had two BPU boys in my group, one 18 and the other 19, and they were the natural leaders of the group, sometimes doing my job for me by encouraging others to speak up. Another great message from BPU was their living proof in gender equality; girls are encouraged as much as boys to dance. They all performed a skit for us where they showed that breakdancing isn't just for boys, but girls can be just as good. Take that for breaking gender roles!

Girls learning how to make their own reusable menstrual pad (RUMPS)

After three months at site preparing and eating muzungu food, I had a harsh re-awakening to eating Ugandan food three times a day for a week. I forgot how potent the beans are here and the profound effect they have not only on me, but all my fellow staff members. We could have powered a hot-air balloon with the amount of beans we were eating. I realized how rather spoiled I've been at site with my porcelain throne toilet and hot bucket baths, I missed those two things dearly after using stinky latrines and having cold bucket baths for the week. (In truth, this is how most PCVs live, but some of get lucky and are blessed with a toilet!)
By the end of the week, after spending so much time with our Ugandan co-counselors and campers, all the PCVs were fluently speaking some weird form of English we call Uganglish. For example, instead of saying "Come here," we'd all do that backward hand-wave thing they do and say "You first come!", or instead of saying "Me too", we'd all say "Even me!"