Monday, June 30, 2008

3 weeks

I will be back in the US 3 weeks from today...and...I can't wait!  I love Ghana and everyone here...but...I miss Audrey and I want to get to work that makes money!  I now know that I can live here with ease...in fact it can b a lot of fun!

My host family, Fifi's family, left Friday for a week in Takoradi so Fifi and I have the house to ourselves.  Friday we cooked for ourselves with Emmanuel and Prince.  It was fun, but not that good!  Saturday I went to Cape Coast with some medical students from NYU who are doing research and our laboratory team to do CD4 counts (white blood cell count for people with HIV) and conduct a survey for the medical students.  We had about 75 people!  I did the survey and it had 71 questions!!!  Most of the people didn't speak English so it was very long and tedious to have every question translated and then the answer translated back.  I interviewed 16 people in 4 hours!

Yesterday I went to Champs Sports Bar again to enjoy the EuroCup 2008 final match.  Spain beat Germany 1-0!!!  We were cheering for Spain!  The place was packed!  There wasn't a single inch of floor space available!  After the match we played pool.

Life in Ghana is not easy for most people.  For instance one of my friends is 28 and has a Bachelors Degree from the University of Ghana in Computer Science.  He lives with his parents and makes only $200 per month working full time at WAAF!!!  By comparison, recently we had a volunteer from Britain who was here for about 9 months.  She is also 28 and has been a medical doctor for 5 years (medical school is much shorter in the UK) and obviously has a lot of money to be able to volunteer for 9 months.  $200 is less than 1/4th the rent I pay in Baltimore for my apartment!  People spend $200 on dinner for 3 or 4 at Cafe de Paris (the restaurant I work at in Maryland).  And $200 doesn't buy much in Ghana...we saw some 2 bedroom apartments, new but not all that nice, for $150/month.  A loaf of bread is between $1 -$1.50.  Plantains are 4 for $1...petrol is around $5/gallon...etc etc.

I've seen and experienced a lot on this trip that I hadn't experienced in past trips...it helps to not stay at the in-law's mansion!  What I've seen and experienced makes me know that my goals are right for me and are definitely needed in Ghana.  That is one reason I can't wait to get home so I can get started on fulfilling my goals and dreams.  It's not going to be easy but it will be worthwhile!

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Photos

Service project - painting a school in the village
The Choir with the Chief of Krobo
Farewell Lunch at Audrey's Parent's house
Audrey's Parent's house
Saying goodbye at Accra Mall
Coconuts anyone??
Elmina
Enjoying the beach
Boat ride on Lake Bosomtwe
Walking alongside the bus because the road was too bad for the bus to get through with a heavy load.

Performing at National Theatre
Cape Coast Beach
Learning how to drum!
Dinner at Hans Cottage Botel
Kakum Rainforest



Christus Chorus performing for St. Paul's Lutheran School in Accra in St. Paul's Lutheran Church.























Boti Falls National Theatre Performance Night




Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Skypin'

I have spoken to Audrey face to face twice in the past 24 hours!!!!  It's an amazing thing called Skype.  All you have to do is download it and you need a webcam and microphone on your computer, which if you have a mac is already installed.  Then you can talk to anyone else with Skype for free for as long as you like.  Yesterday we talked for almost an hour!  With Skype you can also call people on their phone but it charges you something like 15 cents/minute.  I'm using Andrea (another volunteer from Missouri)'s MacBook which is so much faster than the regular computer I use here!  The other one is probably from 1990something.

The weekend was interesting.  Saturday Fifi, Emmanuel and I drove the boss's wife and kids around to buy the boys bicycles and groceries.  The boss went to the Western region with the car and driver to play golf and whatever else.  Sunday we went to Harvest International Ministries (HIM) for church.  It is a charismatic church so there was a lot of "Amen...Hallelujah...Praise Jesus...Clap for Jesus...etc"  The music was really well done and the sound system neither squeeked or blasted (if you've been to Ghana you know what I'm talkin bout!).  The sermon was long but not too bad and the whole service was in English which was nice.  After church we picked up the boss's wife and kids again!!  Took them to the mall to buy some more groceries from Shoprite.  Then I went to the Black Stars Football Match against Gabon at the Ohene Djan Stadium in central Accra with Zahida (friend from Howard U) and her friend from work.  We had great seats in VIP!  Only $6 and we were sitting right behind the players in row J near mid field.  The Black Stars won 2-0 and continue to be on the top of their bracket in the run for the World Cup which will be held in South Africa in 2010 (first time on African soil!).  I've heard from a couple people that they saw me on TV...but I haven't seen the footage!  

Yesterday (Monday) I actually did some work!!!!!!!!!!!!!  Fifi and I have two new volunteers from the University of Ghana.  They are social work majors who have to volunteer for the summer for their program.  I am now the team leader.  Irene, Adwoa and I went to Nima to try to set up an educational workshop on HIV, recruit peer educators, and do a little survey of people's knowledge on HIV.  We were looking for the central Mosque (its a largely Muslim neighborhood) and found the Imam's house where we are going back to today to discuss with him.  We talked to some young men about HIV.  One knew a lot, one knew little, and the other two were somewhere in between.  We talked to the headmaster of the large Islamic school in the neighborhood who seemed interested in our project.  Everyone we talked to said that no one had ever come to their neighborhood to educate people on HIV.  We also talked to the leader of the Neighborhood Watch who supported us and we are going back today to recruit peer educators from the young men who hang out at his office.  We also talked to some older men (60s?) about HIV.  They wanted to know about how it can be transmitted and how it can be treated.  We were happy that they knew that stigmatizing HIV-positive people is not acceptable.  

Today we are going to talk to the chief in the neighborhood.  The neighborhood, accurately described as a slum, is largely from the northern regions of Ghana.  The people from the north are culturally different from the people of southern Ghana.  Historically they are Muslim (and largely still are), poor (most still are), and excluded from the benefits of investment.  During the slavery period, the people of Northern Ghana were kidnapped and sold into slavery in large numbers.  During colonialization, the British had a policy of "forced labour out-migration" which means they forced notherners to go to southern "Gold Coast" to work in the plantations, mines, ports, police and military.  They also had a policy of non-investment, so at independence there was no infrastructure in place in the north.  The Ghanaian government has not been much better.  The Nkrumah and Rawlings administration made some investment in the north but today it still is far far behind the south.  The electricity grid was just expanded to the northern regions in the 1990s!  So, because of these reasons, and the continued lack of investment in the north, many northerners live in the southern cities.  They were subjegated into communities with Muslim sounding names like Madina and Nima.  The communities have become slums and these are the communities we are working in to educate people about HIV/AIDS.  

Well, I didn't think I would have much to say today but I guess I did!  I better get to work!

James

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Celebrating 26 years in Ghana

Yesterday was my 26th birthday. Thanks to everyone who sent me birthday greetings on Facebook and to my parents for the cards and everyone else who sent me a message, etc. I had fun yesterday...but I would have had a better time if at least Audrey had been here with me!

Birthdays in Ghana have rituals like US birthdays...but they are quite different! When I got up yesterday I had a breakfast of Eto and Eggs - the traditional birthday breakfast - Eto is mashed yam with palm oil, onions, and spices - really good! Then I got "Pounded!" This is kinda similar to getting 26 spankings on your 26th birthday...except it involves getting nailed with anything gross...In my case it was dirty laundry water and water with dirt and food in it - 4 buckets of it! It was pretty gross and the laundry soap wasn't nice on the face but I survived! The idea is to make you suffer for making your mother go through so much pain when you were born. When I told my mom this she said, "I didn't feel a thing! I was knocked out!" But my friends didn't let me get away with that excuse!

While I was getting pounded I got a call that I was supposed to go to a UNAIDS meeting so I quickly took a shower and went to the meeting to report back to WAAF about what happened. It was a meeting about high at-risk groups - commercial sex workers (CSW) and men who have sex with men (MSM). Basically the rate of HIV among CSW is really high and it is really difficult to reach MSM because of stigmatization.

To celebrate my birthday 8 of us went to Champp's Sports Bar to eat Tex Mex!!!! The plan was to go at 6pm and then go to Salsa Dancing at 8pm which ends around 10:30pm. We got to the restaurant at 7:30pm in two cars. I was trying to park on the street and some small boy was directing me and directing me right into the open gutter! So my front right tire was in the gutter. He got some friends to help pull me out and when we gave them 50 cents they wanted $5 - even though the kid who directed me did a horrible job so it was his fault. We went into the restaurant and a couple minutes later the manager came to tell me the kids had let the air out of the tire. So I went with him and he grabbed one of the kids and was yelling at him and even slapped him a couple times. Fifi arrived now with his carload and there was more yelling and threatening of the kids (middle school aged). Fifi took the car to the gas station around the corner to fill the tire and now it needs to be replaced because of driving on it while it was flat - his spare was spoiled as well.

After all this drama we had a nice dinner...I had tortilla chips and salsa and beef and been burritos!! My friend Zahida from Howard Univ joined us and it was nice to see her again. We all watched the football game (soccer) on the big screen and had a good time. By the time we left it was 9:30pm and it was starting to rain so we decided to skip the Salsa dancing since it was outside and ended around 10:30.

It was a fun day! It would have been even better if all of you had been here to celebrate with me! Well, Fifi is spending his 4th day this week running the stupid dogs to the vet for Eddie (boss). I went the first day - 5 really stinky dogs in a mini van!! To top it off one of the dogs pooped in the van on the way back! The second day I didn't go and Fifi told me more of the dogs pooped in the van and some were vomitting!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! This is so disgusting and has nothing what so ever to do with HIV/AIDS! Well, maybe we can get back to work soon!

I miss you all and I hope everything is going well wherever you are reading this!

James

Monday, June 16, 2008

so much to say

Wow! The flooding in Wisconsin is crazy! I've been looking at all the news articles and pictures my mom has sent me and my facebook friends have been posting and I can't believe what I'm seeing! I hope everyone is alright and I'll keep you all in my prayers!

In my last post I promised something about Blakk Rasta. He is a radio DJ on Hitz FM, a Ghanaian station that plays mostly hip hop, rnb, reggae, and Ghanaian high life and hip life. He has a radio show called "Taxi Driver" during the day. He is Ghanaian but puts on a Jamaican accent and talks about politics, news, and of course Ganja (marijuana) and he's kinda controversial but Ghanaians love him! Everywhere I go between 11am and 2 pm I hear him blasting out of speakers. He has a song and music video out right now that is very popular entitled "Barack Obama!" Since most of the song is in Patuwa (Jamaican language similar to Pidgon English) I don't understand everything but basically he's supporting Obama and hopes that he will do good for Africa when he's president and that he's careful because he's concerned (as are a lot of people here) that he will be assanated if he becomes president. So, that is Blakk Rasta and "Barack Obama!"

Wednesday I went Salsa dancing in Accra! It was really fun! There were a lot of people there...Salsa is becoming very popular in Ghana and there are some great dancers!

Friday I went to Ho, the capital of the Volta Region in Eastern Ghana. It was my first time to that region. We went as a team doing CD4 counts for people living with HIV (basically it tells them how far along they are in the disease by reading their white blood cell count). It was dissappointing that only 48 people showed up when we had been promised by the arranger that there would be 500. Some of us also went to two hospitals in Ho to discuss ways to support their HIV/AIDS work with education and support for their patients.

Thursday night I moved to Fifi's house. I stay in the boy's quarters where I have a bedroom and a shower and toilet.

Saturday I played football (soccer) with the neighborhood guys. I'm not very good but it was still fun. That night Fifi and I went to Boomerang (a club) and had a good time. There was more Salsa until midnight and then "regular music".

Sunday I went to a small charismatic church in Accra where we did VCTs (Voluntary Counceleing and TEsting) for HIV. We tested about 20 people. I got tested and I'm negative (of course!).

Well, I've got to get to work...we gotta run and get the bosses dogs and take them to the vet for him...this doesn't sound like it has anythign to do with HIV/AIDS!!!! I'll try to give more details on what I'm doing later.

James

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

The Best Tex-Mex in Ghana...No Lie!

Accra is developing very quickly. There is construction everywhere! New roads are being built in virtually every corner of the city expanding dimly lit 2 lane roads to become bright four lane dual-carriageways! New buildings are going up all over the place. Many of them are several stories tall. Yesterday when we were soliciting for funds to support our community education project I got to go up one of Accra's tallest buildings. It may be only 15 stories tall, but it definitely stands out in the horizon! All this new development includes a 9-story Holiday Inn and a several story tall luxury condominium unit called "The Villagio" which boasts 84 luxury apartments and 16 penthouse suites ranging in price from $200,000 - $1 million. Believe it or not...there is a lot of money in Ghana! And soon there will be much more...Ghana has discovered lots of oil off its shoreline. I read in the paper today that production is set to begin in 2010 starting at 120,000 barrels per day and will rise to 250,000 barrels per day by 2012.

Prices in Accra are really inflated compared to the rest of the country. Many things cost about what they cost in the US. One exception was my haircut yesterday - $1.50!

You're probably wondering about the Tex-Mex?? The first time I saw Champ's Sports Bar advertisement saying "The Best Tex-Mex in Ghana!" I laughed! Tex-Mex in Ghana???? Well, last night I went there with some friends and had some great chicken and beef enchiladas!!! The atmosphere was just like a sports bar in the US. The place was packed with white people...which was a bit of an odd scene in Ghana...there were large flat screen TVs all over...pool tables...pitchers of draught beer...flags, jerseys, and other memorabilia all over the walls and ceiling...etc. Most of the people were there to support the Netherlands against Italy in the EuroCup 2008 match...the Netherlands won 3-0. It was fun and was like taking a little break back to the US for an evening.

Today I will get a better look at the Income Generating Activities as many of the people involved with them should be arriving very soon for a meeting and to pay something on their micro-finance loans. Later I will go again with Fifi to solicit for funds for our project. Thats it for now....next time...Black Rasta and Barack Obama - the song!

Monday, June 9, 2008

Randomness

Friday after I finished my last post I discovered my left foot and ankle were swollen. I caught the doctor as she was about to leave our HIV/AIDS clinic and she told me to put some antihistamine cream on it. I did and it didn't work. Audrey gave me some things to do to it and it continued to stay swollen. I realized it was a result of some mosquito bites I received a couple weeks ago that really itched! I kept scratching them and then last week I was sitting outside in the evening and a lot of flies and mosquitos were hanging out on my left foot/ankle. Well, the next day my foot swelled up! I went to see the doctor again today and she gave me some Flucloxacillin (anti-biotic) to take for five days and it should be cleared up.

Next topic, Saturday I traveled to Koforidua, capital of the Eastern Region, to take part in a case study. We were studying the deaf/dumb community to see what they know about HIV/AIDS. We gave them a survey and we had sign language translators. It was interesting to watch and Koforidua, and the ride there, is amazingly beautiful. The city is surrounded by rainforest mountains!

Next topic, burgers and pizza! In Ghana, if you want American food more than likely your choices will be burgers and pizza. Both come in a variety of forms and flavors! But I think I have found the best burger and best pizza in Ghana. So for all of you who live in or will be traveling to Ghana sometime in your life and you are looking for a great burger head to Frankies in the Osu neighborhood of Accra. I went there yesterday. The flavor was excellent, the beef patty was perfectly crafted and thick, the seasame seed bun was perfect, and the fries were great! The only down side is it took a long time to get it and it costs a little over $12 with the two cokes it took to wash it down. But it was well worth it! If you're looking for pizza go to Pizza Inn. Its a South African chain with amazing pizza!

Well, Fifi and I are about to go raise some funds for our community projects...I'll post more later.

James

Friday, June 6, 2008

More bloggin'

I'm writing this as a nice downpour with a few thunder rumblings is coming to an end. It's 11AM and I'm at WAAF waiting for Fifi so we can go to another area of Accra to do some scouting for educational workshops. Tomorrow we are going to Koforidua in the Eastern Region to do some VCTs - Volunteer (something) Testing. This is a chance for people to get tested for HIV/AIDS. We'll be back the same day - its only about 2 hours drive away. Later in the month we will be traveling all over Ghana performing these tests and I think we'll be distributing ARVs (Anti-Retroviral drugs) to clinics. I'll be returning to Wa and Lawra as well as going to Bolgatanga (capital of Upper East Region) and Tamale (capital of Northern Region).

I thought you might be interested in how I've been getting to WAAF everyday since I live in East Legon, a far northeast suburb of Accra, and work in Roman Ridge, more centrally located. I start by walking down the dirt road I live on, about 1/4 mile, to the tarred road. There I wait for a tro tro - a large van with 3 - 5 rows of 3 or 4 people across plus two people sitting next to the driver. The tro tro mate sits next to the sliding door on the passenger side. He hangs out the window calling out where they are going. I wait for one going to Kwame Nkrumah Circle - the mate yells very quickly "circle, circle, circle, circle" while moving his hand in a circle motion. When the tro tro stops I get on and tell the mate I want to be dropped at "37" which is the name of the military hospital and a tro tro station is located near there. This leg of the journey costs me 35 cents. When I get to "37" I walk over to the tro tro station. There are probably over one hundred tro tros parked in rows with the mate calling out where they are going. I walk past people selling breakfast, candy, water, etc. I find a tro tro going to Achimota and get on. When the tro tro is full we set off. I tell the mate to drop me at Roman Ridge 2nd stop and pay 40 cents. When I get dropped I walk down a residential road about 3 or 4 blocks to WAAF. The entire trip takes about 50-60 minutes depending on traffic and how full the tro tro is when I get to the 37 station and the trip costs me 75 cents! I took a taxi the first time and it costs me $8 so the tro tro is much more economical!

Well thats it for today.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Life in Accra

Today is my third day at WAAF and I haven't done much yet. Tuesday's meeting was with two women living with HIV who sew clothes to sell in Ghana and Canada and Mama Lu who is one of the employees and leaders of WAAF. She is Ghanaian but a US citizen who came back to work here and run a daycare and orphanage. The meeting was short. Yesterday I spent the day with Fifi. He works for WAAF and he took me to an area of Accra known as Madina. It's an area specially created decades ago for Muslims to live hence the name Madina - the birth place of Muhammed. Now the area is more religiously mixed but still dominated by the Muslim community - most of which come from Northern Ghana. We were trying to find some place to lead educational workshops on HIV/AIDS. The Methodist church we stopped at said they already so something like that so weren't interested. We then went to the large mosque in the neighborhood where we met the headmaster for the elementary school and the headmaster of the College of the Holy Quran. They were both willing and excited to host such workshops. The headmaster of the college is from the Middle East, probably Kuwait as I saw that name on something in the compound. We also stopped at a Taxi stand to meet with the director about inviting the taxi drivers to the workshop.

After spending an hour or so in Madina we went to get something to eat at a Mobil gas station which has the three popular South African fast food restaurants - Chicken Inn, Pizza Inn, and Creamy Inn (ice cream)! While we ate a Ghanaian tv show or movie was being shot a few tables away from us. It was fun to watch them. Apparently one of the women is a very popular Ghanaian rapper and movie star.

For dinner Fifi took me to a Chop Bar (small restaurant serving Ghanaian cuisine) where we had banku and tilapia! It was soooooo good! After dinner we went to the University of Ghana to visit one of his friends. The campus is very nice! Last night was my first night staying at the Lutheran Media Ministry building. It wasn't bad. Well, I should find something to do around here at WAAF. Apparently, you have to push to get something to do!

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

So much to say...so little time

Since my last post I've done some traveling! Last Thursday I and Audrey's friend Maame Ama took a bus to Wa, way up in the Upper West Region of Ghana. It is quite a bit different up there. The bus ride was about 7 hours long, a mix of paved roads and extremely bumpy dirt roads which are being paved. The terrain become very flat and drier as we traveled north. It reminded me of Texas around San Antonio. Wa is a small city and the regional capital of Upper West. The area is sparcely populated and Wa is definitely poorer than the cities I had traveled to in the south. For instance, no one has walls around their homes like they do in the south, but Wa has most of the conviences needed - hotel, a few restaurants, internet cafe (which was closed), shops (with some western food), etc. We stayed with Maame Ama's friend Paul's house. He works for Ghana Telecom and has been stationed in Wa for 2 years. His home is fairly nice. He has a bedroom, living room, small kitchen, bathroom, and porch.

On Friday we took another 2 hour bus ride to Lawra (pronounced Laura) on the Burkina Faso border. The ride was paved half way. The terrain continued to get drier and sandier. On either side of the road you see maize fields. They have to create small heaps of dirt and plant the maize in the heap to maximize yield and prevent the crops from washing away. Lawra is the poorest place I have ever been in any of my travels. Pigs, goats, chickens, ducks, sheep, dogs, cats all run wild (which isn't unusual for Ghana except most places don't have pigs). There are a lot of pigs and the place smells a mix of pig and human poop. The ground is littered with animal poop. Almost all the homes are made of mud. I saw a few children with swollen stomachs, skinny arms, and large heads - signs of malnutrition. Some of the children were running around in nothing but a pair of underwear, playing in the muddy, poopy, areas between houses. Everytime I would pass the children would say in rhythm "Nasado (White man) how are you? I am fine. Thank you and you?" and would continue repeating that until I had passed. They were very cute. Life is much slower in Lawra as their isn't much to do. Unemployment seemed to be very high. We stayed with Maame Ama's boyfriend Chief while we were in Lawra. He works for Ghana Commercial Bank and has been stationed in Lawra for the past three years. He should be moving soon. The three friends complained that the people spend much of their time drinking a local brewed drink made from Millet called Pito. There didn't seem to be much else to do. There were only a few small shops. Only one shop sold Coke and biscuits (semi-sweet cookies). Chiefs house is actually a compound with several apartments. His apartment is a bedroom, small kitchen and a porch. He shares a toilet and shower with the other apartments and there is one water tap for the whole house. The house is built in a square with a courtyard in the middle where the water tap is and a basketball hoop. Life is Lawra is very tough. There are virtually no cars. Most people commute on bicycles and motorbikes throughout the Upper West Region. Most of the cars I saw belonged to NGOs in the area.

In between Lawra and Wa we drove through Jirapa which is where Maame Ama has been teaching at a girls high school. Two of her volunteer friends from Japan and Germany came to wave to us on the road as we drove by.

Saturday we returned to Wa with Chief. Paul took us to a funeral for a young man who had died at 34 leaving a wife and two small children. People suspected he died as a result of a curse as he was healthy and all of a sudden started complaining of being cold and died. The funeral was held of the grounds of a school and there were hundreds of people there...maybe a thousand. When we arrived people were processing to view the body and throw coins at it. We got in the line and were surrounded by people wailing and crying. We were too late to get near the body as the Catholic Mass was about to begin. We left shortly after. Saturday the sun was very hot!

Sunday Maame Ama and I returned to Kumasi. Where I went to the stadium to see the Black Stars (Ghana's national football/soccer team) defeat the Libyan Greens 3-0. It was fun and quite cheap - only $6 for mid-field seats. The place was packed. Apparently they don't stop selling tickets so the stairs and any empty space had someone sitting in it. Thank God there were no emergencies, I don't know how we would have got out!

Monday I took a bus to Accra and found out the people I was supposed to stay with opted out at the last minute. So I ended up spending the night with a family in Aburi (quite a ways from where I'm volunteering) in their uncompleted house with no electricity! They had a generator running from 6-10pm. Well, I'm now at the West Africa Aids Foundation (WAAF), where I'll be volunteering. They have a computer for volunteers to use. I've met two other volunteers from Missouri and Norway. WAAF is going to help me find a place to stay and in the mean time I am going to stay at the Lutheran Media Ministry's compound - again quite a ways from WAAF. But everything is fine. I'm feeling great...but I'm ready to unpack my suitcase! I'll have more soon. Now I'm off to my first meeting here at WAAF to learn about Income Generating Activities. I miss you all! Please write me!

James