Saturday 29 September 2012

Atlet Atlet - Athletes


End of September, school is underway and Fall in Canada is imminent! In some parts of the country more than others, I'm sure. Here it gets hotter by the day and I am told October and early November is the hottest, just before the rainy season starts. I can feel the change as my fan is again my companion during the night and then moves with me to wherever I sit in the house. Thank goodness for electricity!

Yesterday, Saturday, I received a call in the morning asking if I would come to see some athletes with our organization's founder Mr. Fary who is now an elected official in Jakarta but home is here in Kupang. I was able to understand from my colleague on the phone that Mr. Fary was wanting me to join him as the athletes had disabilities and the event is competition for peoople with disabilites. She would pick me up later in the afternoon.

Now, as usual, there was no advance warning so I had already invited a new friend for dinner that evening but I also knew it would not be good form to turn down the invite, so a quick text to let her know my plan was to be home on time for 7pm dinner but we might need to be flexible. (I did make it) As she is a former VSO volunteer now married and living here, she fully understood. I often do not know how offical these events are and thus, what I should be wearing so decided middle of the road as at times I've been underdressed but also I wasn't sure if Mr Fary was oming in his car - then I can wear a skirt, or Mrs Rusty on her bike; then need pants ("trousers" here). When she arrived on her bike, out came my earings as my helmut and earnings are not friends and off we went to a hotel where we waited for about 45 minutes with many texts to Mr Fary. Finally the word was to go to the stadium and he would meet us there instead. We arrived to 15 athletes, 4 women and 11 men, looking like they are warming up but I'm thinking this can't be much of a competition with so few people especially for the women!  And no spectators. This is the part of being here and not always getting the full story due to language but also due to the way communication takes place.
Mr Fary speaking to the athletes (sign interpreter on rt.)
When Mr Fary arrived I learned this is a training session, the first of the week of training and these athletes are the chosen team from the province of NTT of which Kupang is the capital, and they are preparing to go to the annnual games in Sumatra, leaving next Thursday. Now it all made sense!! He was there to provide motivation and support both in word and a financial donation and his hope was that I would provide motivational support by being there also. Such a relief to finally understand and put the pieces together!!!

athletes    
What I also was able to bring was information that my VSO colleague James was going to be in Kupang for the week and he is a volunteer VSO physiotherapist in a town 3 hours away. I suggested I bring him to training on Monday afternoon - nothing starts until 4 when the sun gets lower and the heat drops. They were thrilled with the prospect of having their very own physio visit! There is even a possibility they may invite him to go to Sumatra with them - I hope this comes about. It would be a great boost to their motivation and I'm sure James would be helpful. I think there is possibility for me to link Mr. Fary to the local organization that is starting up for persons with disabilities here in Kupang as they are in dire need for some start up support. We'll see.
Tonight, Sunday, James and I are are invited to Mr Fary's restaurant with the athletes for dinner. No, we are not eating the athletes for dinner - they are invited too!!
So, as September comes to a close my friends and family, I hope you are enjoying those cool, lovely scented mornings of Fall and the colours of the trees as they go into hibernation.
bye for now - sampai jumpa lagi

Sunday 23 September 2012

Bertamu Maumere - Maumere Meeting

workshop attendee
As promised, a post about my few days on the island of Maumere for the sharing of skills. This type of meeting is called a technical visit and is initiated by a volunteer who believes another volunteer could be helpful through sharing of their knowledge with that volunteer's organization and other interested parties. So, volunteer Nyamburu (Nancy) who landed in Indonesia last January from Kenya requested that I come to her island and city of Maumere to share my knowledge through a disability inclusion 101 two day workshop. My luck was with me and another volunteer with much greater Indonesian language skills was going to be there also preparing for the end of her placement, so together we developed the workshop for Nancy's group.

mega tuna!
A fellow Canadian volunteer Meghan came from her town of Ende out of interest in the subject matter and it turned into a group event, with all hands on deck with input and ideas to make the workshop interactive and a good learning experience.  Peter, a volunteer from Uganda also working in Maumere attended out of interest and the 5 of us had an evening together before saying goodbye to Sarah. Peter picked up a huge tuna on his way over from a roadside kiosk, uncooked, then it was taken across the road from Nancy's to another kiosk selling baked fish and we asked the vendor to cook it for us. It was so big he had to do it in portions as his gril was too small. It was delicious. Meghan pointed out the lead that a tuna carries in its body being the waste management specialiist she is. It curtailed my eating too many of the leftovers the next day - much to my health benfit I'm sure! Thanks Meg!
Nancy and Pam
I stayed through the weekend to enjoy some touring and off 4 of us went Saturday, visiting a black sand beach with great surf, an old Portugese church built 1800's, a summit of a hill with a statue of Mary, not unlike the Cristos in Rio de Janeiro. The Portugese definitely liked their statues on high hills.
I tasted my first drink of Es Campur - a mix of fruits and some kind of jelly - will have to get the ingredents as it was delicious! sitting on the beach at sunset with friends. Good memories.
band at first communion celebration
Peter the "Ojek"
Just before leaving on the Sunday, went to Nancy's colleagues son's first communion which is very big here. Live band and full buffet to see me on my way, with Peter driving me to the aiport. 



Today was a home day, started with washing my sheets in a pail - have a bad time trying to get all the soap out; sweep floors, dust - never ending; read some VSO material on gender mainstreaming; listen to podcast of Vinyl Cafe. Friends stopped by for a cold drink on the balcony at sunset. Back to work tomorrow but a nice Sunday. Hope yours is too.

Thursday 20 September 2012

Ketakutan - Doktor Gigi: Fear - Dentist

One day past another of the items on my list of fearful happenings while in Indonesia; the need of a dentist. Eating my cereal, minding my own business, looking out to sea on balcony full of love and peace for the world and anticipating a visit to a new village with a colleague I haven't travelled with and voila! think I feel a pebble in my mouth and flick it away over the edge thinking to self "cheap granola with stones in it!" But no, of course, it's a piece of my back molar. Raw and jagged and cutting my tongue with every move, I feel the sick thought of needing to go to a dentist which for me in Canada is bad enough. Enlist my friends, get two references for the same doc and off I go, with housemate Anna's prodding. They are only open to 11 am then again in the evening and no appointments, you just gotta line up.
I spoiled myself and took a taxi as I wasn't really sure of where to go and this driver I know well. The reception person tells me in Indonesian of course that something is broken - I think "yes, my tooth" but she also says "no doktor" and maybe not til next week. With the driver's help - have to go find him, I learn a machine is broken, may not be fixed til next week but they will call me.
Back into the car and I am willing to put this off but my driver will have none of that so he gets on the phone and calls his boss and I gather he is asking for another doc saying it is for Mrs Pam and must be a good dentist! She is afraid.
So off we go to the next one where the MD doc works also and his daughter is the dentist but she works at the hospital all day and in the clinic after 6 but the MD phones her and she isn't busy so she comes over to the clinic from the hospital, looks at my tooth and tells me she needs to fill it and to come back at 6 when her assistant is in. I ask if she will freeze it and she tells me "no, won't hurt". Oh cripes!
But, back at 6, she has all the right looking utensils, sterilized it looks like and off we go - smooths off the rough and fills it in!!! She's right no pain and I am just hoping it all holds. I think it will! Imagine that.
beach fun
Had a good trip to Maumere Flores so will post on that soon - technical visit to share skills with other volunteers in their placement and a day of sight seeing. Here's a teaser pic at the black sand beach with volunteer Nancy from Kenya. Oh yes, she made us chipatis!!! Yum.

Saturday 8 September 2012

Ayam - Chicken

Yes it's a story about chicken but first the rest of my week - then the chicken. Rode my motor bike to the village twice, following Berty through the traffic of Kupang, grippping the handles with the the vice grip that left me wondering if my gloves were too tight as my fingers went to sleep. Managed; didn't enjoy it; didn't scare myself with any sudden moves! Guess that's progress.
bedroom/sitting room-her world in the bamboo home
comode
We met with a lovely 70 year old woman who lost the use of her legs 3 years ago and now they have seized up into a permanent bent sitting position. Her hads are also stiff, with fingers flat out and not able to bend. I don't know the cause of her original illness but my guess is that with therapy she might have a least retained flexibility. Her 33 year old daughter stays with her all the tine to lift her onto the home made comode and from bed to chair. Other than going to church and prayer groups, this is their life with the woman's husband working to bring in the income. We have completed some forms for the provincial government dependent elder pension and once we have the government representative come out to the village next Saturday to assess her, we hope there will be some income to ease the load. She is a gentle soul, initially quite afraid of me the "foreigner" but we soon had a few laughs between us with her daughter interpreting from the local village language which Berty does not understand. when I took her photo she said now the world would see her and laugh and I assured her "the world" would see her beauty and smile. I'm sure you will. She also asked if I could make her a copy which I did and delivered it the next day.

cashew  tree



While at the family home I noticed some red fruit growing on a very tall tree. New learning for me - it is cashw. I didn't know they grow on a tree, the nut grows on the outside of the root (fruit). we sliced up the red root and ate it with a little salt. Now to roast the cashew in its shell, letting the oil come out and eat! AND a pomegranate tree; oh yum they were good.  


Although there are still days I wonder how long I will manage life in Kupang, there are days like this that remind what a great experience I am able to have, and apreciate all life has to offer.

Now the chicken. There is a shop which sells meat that is kept in a cooler and some is even frozen. I bought there quite a while ago in the spring and even though I don't know the food chain of the meat, it just feels more familiar and therefore, safer. So up and out the door early to ride my bike and hopefully avaoid the heavy traffic of later in the day. No such luck, flat tire. So, plan B, get out of my jeans and jacket and gloves into cooler clothes and walk to the bus. Bought a whole chicken as no cut up available today, and some stewing beef. At home decided to wait for Anna my housemate to come home as wasn't sure the innerds were still in place and might need her to help me deal with that when cutting up the bird. But, after thinking for a while, told myself this is silly, cut up the bird and deal with the innards if need be and stop being such a wimp. So out of the fridge comes the bird, and I start to lay it out and think - stupidly forgetting where I am! - oh the innards are in a bag, cool! As I reached for the lump, realized it is the chicken's head - just no feathers of course so a little skinnier than I recognize!!! OK, chicken back in bag, back in fridge; wait for Anna. I am a wimp!! Enjoy the pics - sorry no
pic of the chicken. He's in the fridge.

cashew fruit and nut on top

Saturday 1 September 2012

Pertama Mingu - First Week

Sister Daisy, Mrs. Irna, 8 mo. old

 A samll quote to start:
An anthropologist proposed a game to a group of kids in Africa. He put a basket full of fruit near a tree and told the kids that who ever got there first would win the fruit. When he told them to run they all took each others hands and ran together, then sat together enjoying their treats. When he asked them why they had run like that, as one could have had all the fruits for himself, they said: ''Ubuntu, how can one of us be happy if all the other ones are sad?''
Ubuntu - I am because we are.

 A week has gone by since I deplaned in Kupang and I am now in the readjustment phase of re-entry to Indonesian life. A good housecleaning was in order as my housemate has been away on vacation and it is amazing how much dirt can seep into the house and how the ants and cockroaches can set up housekeeping! Only had to chase 2 live ones, the rest were belly up folllowing a good spraying of the floor after washing. I put mothballs back in the wardrobe in case they had started raising a family. No sign now, so all is good. Got a good shopping at the traditional market for tempeh, garlic, onions, carrots and eggplant. Brought bulghar wheat from home and feta cheese and can of olives from Bali so had company for dinner - started out with ratatouille recipe but finished as a vegetable stew! And, tabouli! the fruit stand yeilded a melon, sweet oranges that are green on the skin but very pale inside, and papaya, so I'm all set for a few days. I am SO lucky to have a fridge and can keep food fresh for more than a day.
singing group of students
villagers greeting politicians
My first day back to work was the official grand opening of the organization's farming school, a 45 minute motor bike ride away- no not mine but rode on the back of another - and it entailed politician speaches, the organization's benefactor and surrounding village elders and staff of our organization Increase. After lunch, politicians left and entertainment began with young people from the school providing entertainment of music and dancing. I joined in on some of the traditional round dancing and some that is similar to our line dancing. Great fun and lively music.

Then a day in the village and visited the community health facilitator who I met last January just after she had her baby - posted in my January blog. New photo here with baby who is now 8 months old, mom and Sister Daisy who is doing her Social Work research in the village and hales from the Phillipines. She is based with our organization until her expected research completion early October.
On my last day in June before the Canada trip I lost my motorcycle key outside my door so this week required a mechanic to take most of the bike apart to get the old tumblers out and new ones in but all is good now. Thank goodness once again for Berty whose father was visiting from Sumba and arranged for his friend, a mechanic, to do the work in my garage. All I had to do was go with Berty to buy the new locks and feed them and of course pay for his time. All is good and I got myself out the door and used my sometimes decent memory from end of May to find the route to our office next day. Even surprised myself! So, I have done that and yesterday pushed myself to go to a shop on a busy road that I thought I would avoid for as long as possible, but needed beer for my dinner party so need overcame fear! Home in one piece and proud of it.

Now preparing for a "technical visit" to a volunteer's posting on the island of Flores in the city of Maumere to co-present Disability Inclusion to one of the placement organizations there and to local university students who will be implementing this philosophy locally. this is a place I've not been yet wo am looking forward to meeting new folks, new experience and new geography.
All for now, til next time - hope all enjoyed the Canadian long wekend - official end of summer but hopefully not actually - lots more nice weather to come!
Sanur Beach, Bali

Oh and PS for those who heard of the earthquake in the Phillipines and tsunami warning for this area - we had no sign of it here. Thanks to friends from Red Deer alerting me via skype!!