Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Last part of the story for now



The Agrisol website still says the following although IA State reported they pulled out in February 2012:

"To design the small farmer, outgrower and community development programs, we consulted with agricultural experts from Sokoine University of Agriculture, the leading agricultural institution in our country, as well as local and national officials from our government and others, in a process led by experts from The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Iowa State University, one of the worlds’ leading agricultural institutions. Going forward, we will continue to work with leading agricultural academic institutions in Tanzania, the U.S. and globally to advise us on the small farmer, outgrower and community development elements of the project.
Bruce Rastetter President Pro Temp IA Bd of regents co-founder and managing director of AgriSol  Energy an investment company that specializes in argribusiness. Mr. Rastetter also is the Chief Executive Officer of Summit Farms, LLC which started as his family farm and has grown to become a diverse farming operation. Mr. Rastetter also serves as the co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Hawkeye Energy Holdings, LLC, which grew to be the third-largest pure play ethanol producer in the United States, producing 450 million gallons of ethanol annually, prior to the sale of its four plants to Koch Industries. Prior to that, Mr. Rastetter had founded feed management, construction, and swine production businesses which in 1994 he merged to become Heartland Pork Enterprises. Mr. Rastetter served as Heartland’s Chief Executive Officer until 2004. He had grown the company into the 13th largest pork producer in the United States before successfully guiding the company through an acquisition by Christensen Farms."

"Mr. Rastetter is a philanthropist, endowed a chair in Agricultural Entrepreneurship at Iowa State. nd supporting a variety of efforts that encourage thoughtful public policy. He currently sits on the boards of directors of Hawkeye Energy Holdings, LLC, Advanced Bioenergy, American Ag & Energy Council, and Growth Energy. And in July of 2011, he was elected President Pro Tem of the Board of Regents, State of Iowa. He earned a BA in political science from the University of Iowa"

Agrisol's website says it will "help" these folks farm better with "new" seeds (gmo likely--look at the Oakland Institute if you haven't yet), "new" forms of farming where they will be able to make $$ off their farming in addition to feeding their families. After all, they were only farming on 1 or 2 hectares. It really does contradict itself, initially saying the farmers' land is only about 1 or 2 hectares each, as if this is a very small amount. So, they have made a deal in which each farmer will farm....1 or 2 hectares. Much better.

So Agrisol bought more than 13,000 hectares where they will have farmers farming 1 or 2 hectares each (which is the same number they were saying they were already farming before the "purchase"). They promise to train the farmers, make it a sustainable environment, etc.  AgriSol is partnering with Monsanto (remember, they got one of those tax packages from IA to come there) and John Deere.

This land is close to Uganda, I don't know who they expect to have farmers sell to since they are on the edge of the Serengeti and roads in TZ are not real good or paved. Oh, and it's not like other poor villagers would be able to buy the maize.    Current there is good availability of fresh fruits and veggies that are essentially organic (ok, except for water and bugs). The folks I talk to in Dar are aware of this. In fact organic products in general are much cheaper and easier to find here.

More from Agrisol:
"Eric Peterson, a principal of AgriSol Energy, focuses on project development and management and operations. Mr. Peterson also is the General Manager of Summit Farms, LLC, and is responsible for the operation and management of Summit Farms. Mr. Peterson also is a co-founder and manager of American Heartland Development, LLC, a wind development company started in 2009. Mr. Peterson received a BBA in agricultural business from Iowa State University.

Mr. Peterson currently serves on the advisory board of the Iowa State University College of Agriculture as well as the Iowa Finance Authority Board."

Another connection: Rastetter  and a group of mostly local IA guys own the Rural American Fund   http://www.raflp.com/ , a firm that makes investments in agribusiness. Roger Underwood is a principal in this firm:

"As an Iowa State alumnus, Mr. Underwood was active in forming the College of Agriculture Alumni Association, serving as its second president and founding member. In 1996, Mr. Underwood was named Outstanding Agribusiness Alumni of the Year by the ISU Ag Business Club, and was named Order of the Knoll Outstanding Young Alumni in 2000 and in 2008 received the Floyd Andre Award for outstanding accomplishments in business and service to the College. Roger is a Board Member of the ISU Foundation Board of Governors..... Underwood has served on the Boards of the Ames Economic Development Commission, the Gilbert School Foundation and the ISU Research Park and is currently Chairman of the Iowa State University $800 Million dollar fund-raising campaign: With Pride and Purpose." 

Did I mention previously that the director of Agrisol Tanzania is a former Minister of Trade who left his position due to claims he committed fraud, it seems it is just coming to trial I noticed in the newspaper here).  I saw advertisements in the newspapers here from the government looking for for-profit agribusinesses to come to Tanzania. Sad, the poor get more poor, the vegetables and fruit become more toxic as does the water and soil, and the companies make a lot of money and pay little in taxes if anything. I've been told by several people that hotels do this often, they have about a 5 year break, either fewer or no taxes so the company leaves just as the 5 years come up. The hotel is then taken over by another company, refurbished and the cycle continues.

Not all of these corporations are US companies, there are Saudi, Chinese, Emirates, and on. And it isn't only Tanzania, it's Africa and Southeast Asia, Central and South America. I believe I saw that George W. recently bought a lot of land in Paraguay. Anywhere there is money to be made, anywhere there is access to minerals, gas/oil, a place for fracking (the Kochs again).  And we already know about the deals companies get to move into states-there's Monsanto again; and the increasing connection between corporations and universities.

Some sites that may be of interest and also what I used as resources to learn all this:
Rural American Fund    http://www.raflp.com/  




All Africa is a good news website and ran some stories going back further than this one
http://allafrica.com/stories/201202170856.html

I can't get the article to open  but this may be of interest since it's a biofuel news site:   http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2011/09/14/tanzania-warned-of-farmer-impacts-from-agrisol-energy-land-deal/

I think you might find this blog very interesting about the history of Agrisol, Serengetti, and  Tanzania:
http://udadisi.blogspot.com/2011/09/agrisol-energy-serengeti-advisers-land.html 

Another source, search engine for Africa news: http://www.afrora.com/site/news/index.php?id=462632&cursor=0&blogs=0&sort=tv&loc=en_US    

The land in question is very close to the Uganda border.
IA State was invited to TZ because of  their work in Uganda, I don't know if there is still a possibility of IA State connecting with the TZ project, don't know how close their Uganda work is to the Tazanian one.

WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION document:
www.wto.org/english/thewto_e/minist_e/min01_e/...e/st23.pdfFile Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
n - 2001 - Related articles
13 Nov 2001 – Statement by the Honourable Iddi Mohamed Simba. Minister for Industry and Trade.
A quick look at Simba finds that he was involved in a banking scam, was a co-founder of Serengeti Advisors with another guy who may have been in the government so it seems to me the way to stay clean is to have all the locals do your dirty work since Serengeti may have done the footwork on getting the land and the govt to move the farmers.  .  Simba also worked with the World Trade Organization..
 
http://www.thecitizen.co.tz/news/-/22761-iddi-simba-in-court-over-uda-sh24-billion-scam 
Suff on Simba, now in charge of Agrisol Tanzania, and fraud.  I think the sugar deal that is mentioned here was another land grab in the northeast where sugar plantations were to be used for ethanol. There is also a plant, mentioned in the agrisol articles as well. It was decided this plant would be great for ethanol, land was taken,I think in this sugar deal, but it never went anywhere and the company left before it got around to improving the area infrastructure.  US agrisol website says they have no intention of making ethanol at least for a long time because food is critical.  On the other hand, in one article this plant was mentioned as one of the crops they will grow.  And in all this is John Deere and Monsanto to help that access to new equipment, wonder how they will teach farmers to deal with tractors and such, seems time consuming particularly since there is no mention of actually giving the equipment to the farmers.

Ok, returning to my last days in Tanzania tomorrow.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Once upon a time...this is no fairy tale

I've decided to continue talking about agribusiness in Tanzania by sharing a story, a true story. I have researched all information on websites from the corporations, news sources (including a biofuels newsletter).  There is an entire report apparently, that Dan Rather did on this particular transaction which I was not able to watch, there are several pieces on youtube from his report. I can't download it here, videos take forever.  I start the story:

AgriSol Energy is one of these agricultural investment companies. I am putting this piece in 2 posts, one tomorrow, due to the convoluted relationships of people involved.

From the AgriSol Energy website, about the great stuff planned:

"Tanzania has 43 million hectares of arable land, of which only about 10 million hectares, or 23 percent, is currently being farmed, leaving more than 30 million hectares available to produce food for the people of Tanzania and, eventually, the rest of Africa.

Our programs will support and encourage small farmers and outgrowers, whose crops can be combined with ours, to produce value-added products including animal feed, cooking oil and meat. In this way, they can share in the benefit of the value-added products we produce.

Jobs will be developed in numerous places:

  • On our large-scale commercial farms;
  • On the small farms and with the outgrowers as they expand their operations;
  • In the markets that will be developed for selling our crops, and those of others, as well as value-added products;
  • In the infrastructure development that will take place on our farm and in the surrounding areas and communities – roads, electricity, wells, storage, etc.– and which will also have to be maintained;
  • In the various suppliers of goods and services that will be needed to support our commercial operations and the surrounding, growing agricultural zone; and
  • In the community centers, medical clinics and schools that will be developed in local communities.
AgriSol Energy has a close affiliation with Summit Farms in Alden, Iowa, which has a very successful integrated crop and protein production operation. Summit Farms' founder and CEO, Bruce Rastetter, is one of the founders of AgriSol Energy and has a long track record as an entrepreneur building agricultural businesses, as well as being a leader in sustainable development and education.

Our programs will support and encourage small farmers and outgrowers, whose crops can be combined with ours, to produce value-added products including animal feed, cooking oil and meat. In this way, they can share in the benefit of the value-added products we produce."



Reread that list of jobs they will develop, all low paid worker jobs doing the work for them on their farm. On the small farms "selling our crops"  "infrastructure development that will take place on our farm".  Well with that much acreage, they will need to build roads and "infrastructure" to maintain the farm. 

There is also that issue of water. This is close to the Serengeti, pretty dry there. And that reminds me of an article in the news today, that small farms near a river, down river, from paint manufacturers, paper plants, etc. the article title was something to the effect of are farmers growing toxic crops.





 


Wednesday, July 25, 2012

What a deal! Evict 160k people to get a 800k acre 99 year lease at $1 per acre


Just imagine a government, for private interest group, expels 160,000 people to provide 800,000 acres to a private enterprise for a 99 year lease at about $1 an acre.

I have collected the following information from a few resources that are noted in the text. Quite a few are quotes, partly because I am tired in the evenings and I decided this is not a research paper.  If it becomes one, I’ll adapt it then.

Land Matrix http://landportal.info/landmatrix/get-the-idea is public online database on land deals around the world.  Although some, tied to Iowa, were not listed, but since people volunteer the info, perhaps no one has done it yet.

There few laws in developing countries with laws requiring transparency in land deals. Governments are making deals with little input from people who live or farm on the land. Some of these families have lived on the land for generations.
This also makes it difficult to keep track of the land, investors, or deals.

“The deals in the database amount to 83.2 million hectares (205.6 million acres) of land in developing countries, or 1.7 percent of the world’s agricultural land, according to the Land Matrix. Information on 51 percent of the deals is considered to come from a reliable source, the group said. (http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-04-26/land-rush-continues-deals-target-poor-group-says, April 26, 2012). The deals in the database amount to 83.2 million hectares (205.6 million acres) of land in developing countries, or 1.7 percent of the world’s agricultural land, according to the Land Matrix. Information on 51 percent of the deals is considered to come from a reliable source, the group says” 
"Most of the investors are private companies, accounting for 442 projects covering 30.3 million hectares, followed by state- owned companies with 172 projects and 11.5 million hectares, based on the data. Investment funds were behind 32 projects covering 3.3 million hectares, according to the group.”


Some projects lead to governments evicting people, “local authorities such as village chiefs who often play a key role in allocating land rights appear to frequently fail to act in the community’s interest,” Promises of improved infrastructures are made by investors but it often does not occur, sometimes the investment is given up before any is completed, sometimes started. “Reported land acquisitions in Africa cover the equivalent of about 4.8 percent of the continent’s agricultural area, a territory the size of Kenya” “2/3 of reported deals go to countries with a high prevalence of hunger.” At this time, 70% of the deals occur in 11 countries—Sudan, Mozambique, Zambia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Indonesia. Countries in Asia, Central, and South America are also invested in.

Monday, July 23, 2012

the stuff we don't hear about in the US, first of a series


I may have mentioned early on that as I was leaving CF I saw an article about Iowa State withdrawing from a land deal put together by Bruce Rastetter of the Board of Regents and his agribusiness. Since I’ve arrived here I have become increasingly aware of the poverty and the beauty.

My office is downtown, almost city center Dar. It rained awhile today, forcefully. There is no sewer system that I can tell; there are occasional holes in the concrete sidewalks that seem to be for something, metal plates from the curb across a few inches of street. There are areas with no sidewalks, just dirt areas where people park cars perpendicular to the street making it interesting to watch people try to pull in and out of spots while other cars are driving on two way streets. I walked into the sidewalk, red mud everywhere, with lots of the dirt areas pooling water into mud and pools, not puddles, in the road. Cars did not slow down when driving past pedestrians, just threw waves up onto whoever was nearby.  Now, this is not the rainy season--that starts in March. How could there not be flooding, dangerous flooding even along the streets that have large dirt ditches, I wonder where the rivers of rain flow to? And how toxic they must be, carrying all sorts of sewage. Does it make the water even more polluted? 
Chickens are skinny, fed with grains mixed with small sardines.  There are a good number of people living in put-together homes made from concrete blocks, corrugated tin, no windows, no plumbing, on and on. A lot of kids are on the streets rather than school, malaria, polio, AIDS, and more are still a problem.

But the people are extremely friendly, a smile, a hello, many are selling things-shoes, shirts, books, cigarettes (though I realized today that I have not yet seen a smoker!), and fruit--amazing amounts of fruits-pineapples, bananas, watermelon, oranges, papaya, mango, cashews, squash etc. It’s the fruit that brings me back to Mr. Rastetter and agribusiness. And post-colonial colonization, the return of the company town.

The fruits and veggies here are essentially organic. Yes, one still has to wash carefully-I now use baby bottle sterilizing wash, they are not perfectly consistent in roundness, color, but the taste is wonderful. Pineapple and mangoes that ooze the juices as they are eaten, there are completely different tastes across fruits. Pineapple that tastes like….pineapple! Not some tough stringy fruit that won’t spill it’s juices on the counter.

And now, in the last 5-10 years, the wonderful folks from agribusiness are coming in to “help” the farmers so they can feed all of Tanzania and everyone will be healthy and happy. They will bring in new seeds! teach farmers how to get more crops from their small farms!  Teach them how to store food! Give them access to new farming technology and equipment!.  Translation: “lease” or “buy” land from the government, move the people off of it, set up big farms, give farmers a hectare (the company owns millions), build food storage, bring in Monsanto and John Deere and introduce farmers to the wonderful world of agribusiness. Nowhere does it say the farmers will be given this, just that they will have access to it. They claim they will help with infrastructure—roads, clinics, plumbing, etc. But not when this will happen and other companies that have done the same thing tend to leave infrastructure for last, or maybe not get around to it at all.

There is no mention of how the farmers will be taught, in what language, who will teach (I guess this was where IA State was to come in) them. There are claims that it’s the government and UN that decided to move @160,000 Burundi refugees who have lived off this land for more than 40 yrs, it was not the company and besides the people are going to be re-patriated to Burundi or will become citizens of Tanzania. This is happening all over Africa.  No acknowledgement of culture-no one has deeds or mortgages on the land, they farm it for thousands of years that’s all.

The cradle of civilization.   I’ll be writing more about this, it is extraordinary the things we do not learn in the US, and fascinating that some of the plunder is right from Iowa. It is amazing how interrelated these powerful extraordinarily wealthy people are.  Did you know that the Christensen farm, which was just in the press for abusing hogs and is the biggest Walmart supplier is the company that Rastetter sold his hog operations to? Part of the millions he made.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

I sat in front of the computer at the office for 4 hours trying, among other things, to post articles to the consortium's website. I managed to get 1, just 1 article up. When I get home I think I will be amazed at the speed of internet all over again. How spoiled  I was those days tapping my finger thinking I was waiting sooooo long for the page to load. HA!  3 minutes, 4 minutes even. How about 15 minutes to load a page before it decides it can't load?

When we drive along Ocean Rd. I just watch the Indian Ocean at high tide kids are swimming and playing and every now and then there is a tree, closer to shore but sprouting out of the ocean.  At low tide the ocean is crowded with people. I'm no good at guessing distance, but it seems the tide is so low people walk out 1/2 mile or more. They are fishing, digging for, I imagine, whatever edible creatures are there but I don't know enough to say what. I thought clams but I've never seen clams on a menu anywhere here. Can scallops be picked at low tide? Maybe it's seaweed they are after.  I enjoy watching the ocean high, low, the kids, the adults.  I really want to spend a day relaxing on a beach but I don't know where, isn't that nuts? Along the road we take downtown there are a lot of people, barbecue stands/restaurants, people looking like they are living there, etc. Just not a peaceful beach. Also from this beach the humongous oil tankers and other industrial type ships are on the skyline, moving in or out of Dar. 

I am adjusting to life here. I do still take quick breaths or "ohs' luckily no "shit!"s when we are driving. The car that suddenly stops in front of us, or turns into traffic, or when we make a right hand turn and all these cars are coming at me in the passenger seat because there are no streetlights so drivers just go for it whenever there is a break in traffic.  I have come to trust our driver though, now I can apologize when a noise comes out of me or I grasp my chest. He has been driving 20 years so knows the streets well, and the traffic. This is also another reason I try to show up in the office later in the morning and leave early afternoon, to miss as much traffic as we can.  So many photos I'd like to take from the car but they rarely turn out well.  Today, in the middle of 4 lanes of traffic plus turn lanes, motorcycles and bicycles running between cars, guys selling and begging in between cars, there was a policeman standing in the middle of all this. He had a walkie talkie in one hand and he was dialing or texting on his cell phone at the same time.

 Last week a young man was walking car to car begging while an old man, blind, shuffled along behind with his hand on the younger's shoulder. Begging with props. Most beggars are missing 1 or 2 legs, or paralyzed--polio is a problem still existent here.  My landlady told me some rich people provide housing to poor people who pay "rent" by turning over all the money they get from begging. There is, of course, no way you could give $ to one without a) being surrounded or b) have repeat "customers" daily.

Time for downtime. Everyone take care.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Escape!

I did it! I did it!  I walked out of the compound on Saturday, I walked! It was probably less than a mile one way but can't tell. If I walk a 15 minute mile, and although I did walk faster than some folks, it was slower for me. Anyway, that's not the point. the point is....I got out!  First I prepared...since the landlady told me it isn't safe, I put my cargo pants on. Then removed unnecessary cards and funds from the wallet and put various bills in various pockets and just a little in the wallet.  Hmm now I've told my secrets. Ok, so I took a bottle of water and the guard opened the gate for me. And I was free! I walked over to a small restaurant called the Black Tomato. I had been told this was a really good place to hang out, even has wifi.  It also provides space for outdoor booths for folks selling arts and crafts.  All of the items are fair trade, mostly done by a group called womencrafts. A little bit of heaven for me---food and shopping! I brought my Kindle so I was able to sit outside for several hours after eating my sandwich just reading then I did some shopping. I had a ciabatta sandwich with cheddar cheese, red onion "marmalade", and lettuce and tomato that I removed - got to be careful of those raw/fresh fruits and veggies. And scraped off the mayo as usual.  Pretty good, great for a place to hang out for hours. They also serve fresh fruit smoothies, dinner and breakfast and drinks-the alcoholic kind. Some of these looked very interesting-the special on Sat. was a mango mojito, then I saw a watermelon martini. mmm. Better since they do use real fruit juice in most of these places so there would actually be mangoes and watermelon. yum. I may go later this weekend or next weekend and try one of those. maybe both :-). That 3 or 4 hours made a world of difference in how I felt even today. yay! 
Speaking of food, a favorite hobby of mine, I am just sending 1 photo today.  Zanzibar, I've talked about, was disappointing in several ways. One was that I did not get to partake in some of the higher rated restaurants even though I could have on the per diem I was given. Here is my last meal. I sat at the sunset bar reading, had a drink and decided I can bring back something to my room for dinner since we were leaving early on Sat. Sooo I ordered the "spicy guacamole" to go.  It took close to an hour-I thought I was ordering something quick. I knew trouble was coming when the wait person came over and said they were making it fresh. uh-oh. So an hour later she returns with two packages wrapped in aluminum foil, a medium sized one and a small one on top that was cold. Silly me. I figured it was a dollop of sour cream and was glad since I'm avoiding most dairy too and I could toss this. Well, back at my room, packed up, ready to relax. I sit down, pour some of the wine I bought at the store I found a couple of days before. I open the chips which are triangles of crispy dough, an Indian thing, kind of the dough used in Samosas (very popular here). There is no guacamole in the middle of the chips or underneath them. I open the little package. And there it is! not quite a dollop of greenish brownish guac. Brownish = avocado left out awhile. I pretty much had to scrape the guac off of the foil where I could.  I took this photo to show what I thought was unbelievable (but maybe I should have thought first--guac? Mexican? in Zanzibar? Silly.  I laid the pen next to my guac serving to show the size.  I also laid a tube of lip gloss that's even shorter. Learning by food ordering.


a little dark, I was trying to capture the brown overtone that did not show up on the next photo. This is the guac when I opened the little package. Pen on the left, lip gloss container on the right for size.



Friday, July 13, 2012

sunset and dawn

sunset from my room

woman, fruit seller

Sunset (yes I have many)

Dawn (these did not load in order, the darker clouds are first)


dawn



dawn

morning as dawn lifted

dawn






a little risk

Ok, so a school sent me their field manual draft. It looked very good, they borrowed some stuff from other manuals in the US, which is fine. But there was a little thing......a cut and paste about discrimination and equality which mentioned gender, disability, race, etc including sexual orientation. -homosexuality is illegal here, there tends  to be no mention in any school so should I point this out? hmmmmm. Heck, schools have it in the US but don't practice it; no, after all,  I'm so used to seeing the statement it made sense to me. So it stayed. This will likely be the template for all social work programs here since it's the first field manual. Of course it is a draft they will go over several more times, let's see if it remains. Maybe I could write an article about it!!

Well, this will be my first weekend in quite awhile that no friend is around to do something with.  I am going to venture out of the compound on foot! I will not take a purse and I will hide wallet, $, etc in all different places on myself.  I do see people walking I have no intention of being out anywhere near dark. Safety of this seems to depend on who you ask.  I'm comfortable walking in the downtown city from work so I will use my "standard" NYC I belong here" attitude.  A few other kids came up to me to touch my hair again, maybe my hair has magic power to only attract good people :-).  I'll let you all know how it goes.
I need to get out before I run out of photos and people lose interest here.  Photos in the next post. see ya. Still annoyed that My Verona is closed!

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Zanzibar faculty
another Zanzibar sunset


Feeling better today so I went to dinner with Saundra and Rick, her husband. Our last meal together here, they leave Saturday. So the last month of my stay is looking a bit more empty, but that's really for the weekends, gosh, does that mean I'm gonna end up shopping? oh my.

I bought some stuff to sterilize food, not trusting much water or any food right now--seems to be mostly bleach but the bottle says to use it for baby bottles and it's safe to not rinse off before giving it to babies. I washed the carrot with my germ x wipes then peeled it. I'm going to be more careful with everything, not just boiling water, all water will come from one bottle brand (here's to you coca cola, spoiling the land in Africa and making $$ off the people). I've also been taking doxycyclin that I bought here but I could not find the same brand/name on Mayo or webmd so I think I'm stopping that today, going back to just lotions which has worked well. I saw on Lonely Planet advice to only get Vibramycin which is doxy because the brand name non-generic from US is better, other countries haven't the same controls (even fewer??) on ingredients.

I'm much disturbed about the scam debacle in CF with that investment guy. It has actually made international news. I do feel bad for his employees. I wonder what his tactic was for marrying so close to suicide, surely not to leave insurance, doesn't suicide preclude the possibility of insurance? Anyway, what really pisses me off is My Verona closing. 1/2 price wine from 4-6 daily, those yummy breadsticks, and the role of the pizza section in my life as respite from work. Dang it!
In other news, Postville made it to the NY times today, long article about the ICE raid followed by discussion of the new population of legal refugees. Still making poor salaries, likely treated no better. And Mark Grey was interviewed. Why don't they ever talk to the people on the ground-the nuns and the social workers (tip of the had to William Deutsch, our graduate) who worked so hard with the aftermath. 

ok, need to try to sleep now

 some photos, sorry if I duplicate:

tingatinga art in an alley

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

photos

from the window of the plane  the Indian Ocean. That is a plane tire bottom left.

Sunset

alley way in Zanzibar, lots of these in Stone Town. I hear the beaches and the islands are beautiful. I got this

tree in the national spice farm

Tanzanian "crow" I call it, big black with grey head and neck

sun setting on the Indian Ocean, people playing, kids always playing soccer

Zanzibar market fruits & baskets




Zanzibar markets


truck of bicycles, I just really liked how this looked

The social work faculty at University of Zanzibar and me


One more note: remember I said I've learned stuff about food and since my stomach is upset I was eating more simply. So tonite I boiled water and took out the bag of rice from the fridge. I poured a cup out and noticed something looked wrong at the open corner of the bag. Sheesh, it's string! A child's handful of curled up string! in the bottom 1/2 of my bag of rice!  I considered---do I cook rice? People are starving right here, wouldn't they eat it? Shouldn't I? I decided to toss it, if they get string in there I don't know what else might get in there. Went for plain pasta instead.
There are all sorts of little things I am learning that I wish I knew when I first arrived--if you eat bananas cut the tips off; chickens are fed dried fish so watch out for eggs; yogurt is runny, there is some brand of what claimed to be soy milk on the container but had smelled like sour cream and was full of lumps, there was no English on the carton, Arabic, French, but it was called Soy and the store guy told me that's what it was. It was not out-dated either. I was told today by the landlord who puts lemon in his beer and I've seen him with ice also that Castle is decent beer and light Castle is only 4% alcohol and tastes decently. And now, B. at the office told me to never buy the 6 liter containers of water...which I've been doing for 2 months now. For the second time I became  ill Sunday a little bit but more so yesterday. (don't worry, just intestinal) She said it could be the water that I've been drinking, that I should never buy those large containers, she sticks to water under the Kilimanjaro label (owned by coca cola as most sodas seem to be here) and only buys the small bottles, then I'm talking to the landlord and I told him I was home yesterday and will stay home and rest  tomorrow. He says that I should NEVER buy that 6 liter bottle of water, I should only buy the Kili 1.5 liters or smaller.  Well, now I know. He gave me several bottles to tide me over. B said I can boil the larger water and use it but never drink it directly. So I guess getting sick just 2 times in 2 months of drinking the stuff is really pretty good!

And I've been so careful, washing and peeling fruit and veggies (staying away from tomatoes and all salads even the lovely looking ones with good looking tomatoes and red onions sliced small in a vinegary dressing with herbs. Fresh fruit peeled and cooked veggies or peeled and cooked. Well, I'm feeling a little better, watching what I eat since Sunday, Love that melba toast and so glad I found some here.  I think just need some rest for a bit though I've been sitting for 2 months pretty much with my face in my computer.  Oh well, it's good to learn something new and that it's just the water, thank goodness not anything I need. Oh. wait. :-).

Friday, July 6, 2012

photos

fruit seller & kids



Another OSHA photo Don't just look at the guy on the right, notice the one on the left. What is he standing on?
this is the explanation of the crucifix. Apparently Dr. Livingstone (remember, Dr Livingstone I presume?) said his heart will always be in Africa. When he died his body was shipped back to England via Zanzibar; but his heart was removed and buried near Lake Victoria. The crucifix was made out of the tree under which his heart is buried. there's a story.

Dr. Livingstone's crucifix we presume

Zanzibar street/market through car window

This is a Masai young man. People hire them as guards because they have a reputation as great warriors. But every one I've seen is young and very thin. They do carry large blades and sticks though. He is watching at the Sunset Bar at the first hotel we were at

Me and social work faculty at Univ. of Zanzibar

State University of Zanzibar faculty. The tall guy on the right is our social work volunteer who travels and assists me



Last training day. I am so impressed with these people!  Tuesday when we started they had no idea what a syllabus is, had never done one; they had no field manual and no idea of what they could do in the classes with students, some online and some classroom classes.  By today at 4pm, they had a very nice first draft of a practice manual, 9 syllabi, and had begun to look at resources for their classes. wow!!!  That's all I got--wow!  A group of people from a couple of different programs and they can sit down and work intensively, about 8 hours a day for 4 days, some discussion, some disagreements but came to consensus and have great products.  They make me look good! Now I feel that I've accomplished something really concrete. And I can rest a little too.

It amazes me that folks without backgrounds in social work could believe so strongly that it is an important profession that they are working from nothing, committed to getting programs up and running. I'm lucky to be able to watch and be a part of this; it's inspiring. It is not a matter of these people all being new faculty who are young and are new to teaching, these people have been teaching here, the salaries people get are low, lower than the US, social work is not even known in much of the country so it's an uphill challenge.  Inspiring, and we complain when we have to teach in another building, if our "smart" classrooms are not totally working. etc.  Some of these schools do not have updated bathrooms, no air conditioning, no computers in classrooms, no subscriptions to online search engines or journals, and their students cannot afford textbooks. There is not an existing career in "social work", the same time programs are being instituted a social work education group is gaining strength, a national association is struggling to start, and they are trying to get a council under the government that will grow into a legal structure for social work in the country. wow. A good week.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

sunset sailboat Indian Ocean

Zanzibar market

Zanzibar bus

OSHA training photo. This is the scaffolding put together--tied with rags & ropes, used for many construction projects in Zanzibar & Dar

truckful of bicycles. The guy stands on the roof of the truck to hold up and off the bikes the electric wires that run through the streets. I imagine if they got caught on the metal bikes..fireworks and all Stone Town Zanzibar electricity would be out

artist working on his tinga tinga painting. The colors are wonderful and they do not first sketch it out on the canvas

slave holding cell for women & children, hold @75 people on this raised stone bed with a narrow walkway in the center. No way to stand, hard to sit without ducking from the roof, a few slit openings are at ground level outside so water can be tossed in to "wash" the waste

slave holding cell for men, for @50 men. chained to the stone platform, narrow walkway/waste way in the center. All of these pictures taken with flash so it is very very dark.


slave memorial outside, next photo is whole view.




memorial, statues are chained together, each represents one of the tribes taken from villages inside of Africa--Congo and other countries

training days

wow! The training is moving along. The school we are working with starts MSW in October, their faculty are here along with members of another school that has not yet started their BSW program so it is all new to them as well, they are learning by working with the first school faculty on developing  their syllabi. A good way to collaborate and build on existing relationships.  They had @11 syllabi to complete (aka start on and learn what one is) yesterday at 9am. By 3:30 today, they have just 1 left, for field. Great work! Tomorrow we finish discussing issues around the syllabi, move to the field for awhile, then go to the big challenge--what assignments, activities, etc can be done for each class.  That is going to be a challenge on several levels--I don't know what content they need as some course descriptions are very general, most of them have taught BSW so that's good, but they are not social workers, in other areas of academia, and I'm sure they would prefer if we gave them lecture notes and activities for all classes.  Thus comes the difference between me being the worker bee doing stuff for folks vs. being a consultant. I have collected over the years a lot of sample syllabi, activities, slide packs, rubrics, etc so hopefully these will help them get started. So the last steps will be to let them peruse content materials I have and links to various websites to help them determine what feels comfortable and may work for them which will involve what fits the course, what fits their ability to teach in social work, and what fits their style of teaching.  I'm finding this very interesting, personally challenging--different meanings with same words. We discussed whether participation and attendance counts at all since many people miss many classes here for many good reasons (sick, no gas $, traffic, work, etc). It became a benchmark discussion, where I was talking about individual grades for individual participation one school discussed their use of what is to me a benchmark i.e. 80% of students in each class are present.  Also so similar to our conversations at home in the US about benchmarks, measures, competencies, and practice behaviors. Two to 3 more days to go.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

training challenges

So, I spent most of the weekend putting together a training that I thought was a day or two of my stuff but learned Sunday that it was not just Tues. and maybe Wed. it's Tuesday through Saturday. Oh my. It's for the schools that are starting MSW programs in the fall, I was going to train on what a syllabus is and then on what goes into a field manual (for non-social workers--not a gardening book, but the manual for internships). Two things I've never done. I gotta say, this work is increasing my confidence! I also collected a ton of internet sites, links, and some articles and rubrics for them to use as research for class lessons. We started today, I did syllabus training because they have not used these here before, education is based on the British system. 

It will be a challenge, they worked on developing syllabi today, they need them for 11 classes and we hope to have them all completed in the next day or 2. Then we move to class info and resources. We were pretty sure that the faculty were thinking I was going to write all their lecture notes. ha. I don't use lecture notes myself so I certainly can't do it for classes I don't teach. Besides, it's not my job, it's theirs, they have to own what they are going to do in class. So, after the syllabi are done, we will provide them with resources and they will have to search through them to determine what might fit their individual courses.  A BIG challenge all around.

Language, jargon, conceptualization across cultures and teaching styles and  remember, there has been just 1 school of social work here so they have a few people with experience teaching but there are only 2 people with PhDs in the country (1 whose degree is actually in sw, the other is Ga Young's friend (for those who know her) and his is in something related I was told but not specifically sw. Although talking with him he sure seems to be a social worker! He and I are determining how to use the time this week so we have big expectations for 4 or 5 days. Especially realizing how much is lacking.  For example, one school has distance education online. I explained that the syllabus should include the times, room number, and days of the classes. Someone asked me what they are supposed to put if it's online. I hope they didn't spend a lot of time trying to figure that out.  I'm thinking this is likely the last intense week although a few faculty want me to travel with them. There really are lovely people here.  And lots of concern that people don't know what social work is, think it's the same as volunteering and one doesn't need education. Well, I can empathize, certainly it plays out differently but the attitudes are very similar so maybe one thing I can do is normalize their experiences.

There is something that could help a lot--they would love to have social work professors from the US come here even just for several weeks to co-teach classes. I think this is a great idea, if any of you can think of a $$ source, let me know.  More photos on another page....

Monday, July 2, 2012

Photo post

the plane. hot. stained seats. close

lovely.not. Africa House Hotel

Sunset at the bar, best part of the hotel

traditional fishing boats Dhows
Hairy lamp with brown stains next to the bed. Might have been coconut but I would not get close enough to figure it out


the alley next to the hotel to get to the front. When I knew things were going downhill the more we walked uphill...