Hazel in Rwanda

'Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you've imagined.'

Thursday 4 October 2012

Dust storms and tea lights

Settling into daily life…

So it’s now my third week here in my village! Things here are good and what is funny is that some of the little things that I would initially have mentioned in my blog, are now so ‘everyday’ that it’s hard to think of them!! So I need to make sure that I keep on noticing them all! And that’s another funny thing – that even though doing VSO is something I’ve dreamt of doing all my life, now I’m here… and really living in a tiny village in the middle of Africa, surrounded by banana trees and gathering my water in buckets when the supply reaches the village, this is now my life and it’s just normal for me! But I do get lots of ‘reality check moments’ when I think, ‘Wow! I’m really here!!’

 
Fabric in my favourite Kigali cafe
 
So, I shall write about some of my favourite moments from the past few weeks, the ones that know I will remember forever. Those times when you are so in the moment, thinking ‘this is why I’m here… and I’ll never get this chance to do this again!’ And I feel very lucky indeed.

Rainstorm

At the moment it is the short rainy season, which I discovered is about how long it rains for, rather than the length of the season. I’ll admit that I initially thought it was about the length of each actual raindrop… until I realised probably not! (Lots of time to think here!) Mornings are fresh and mild, but the days really heat up until the air is steaming and sweltering and the tin roofs creak and crack and flex as they expand and the sky becomes hazy and the clouds roll in. I really love the dramatic weather that unfolds each day and from my college I can see the storm clouds rolling in over the hills in the distance, and then up the valley towards the village. Yesterday I was wandering through the village after lunch and out of nowhere a dust storm whirled up, spinning the red dust in spirals as everyone dived into shops and houses for cover.

Another day I was walking back to college with my colleagues after lunch and suddenly the air pressure changed and the wind gusted and whipped up the dust and leaves and the rain started so heavily we didn’t even have a moment to dive for shelter! We sprinted off the road, helter-skeltering along a tiny path through the banana trees to the first house we could see, to shelter beneath the porch. We huddled together, flattening ourselves against the wall to avoid the pummelling rain, which was bouncing up from the ground with as much force as it was falling.

Before we had caught our breath, and still grinning from the exhilaration of escaping the sudden rainstorm, the door had opened and we were being invited into the little house. As our eyes adjusted slowly to the dark room we were welcomed in by a very charming gentleman who seemed as happy to have unexpected guests as we were to have been offered shelter! We followed the usual Rwandan greetings and our elderly host was very bemused by my Kinyarwanda, and proudly insisted that we all speak English.

So, drying off in in his front room, as the rain pounded the roof, he told us of his life and travels, his family and history, as well as his impressive work within very high circles. It was a real pleasure to meet such a charming and interesting gentleman and certainly an example of the value that people in Rwanda place on hospitality. Eventually the rain eased, we made our grateful thank you’s and goodbyes and shook hands and hugged in the Rwandan way, and we dashed through puddles as we made our way backup to college.

Glitter and gold.

Lightning storms are another almost daily feature of life here. The sky blackens and splits as lightning forks through the air, often so close to the college that it lights the room through windows on every side of the building! The thunder can be so loud that it becomes impossible to hold a conversation but I’ve been reassured that these are just normal throughout the rainy season and would not make the national news in the same way that they would in the UK and that I probably don’t need to consider sitting under the table! (It had crossed my mind.)

One afternoon, the lightning continued into the evening and the electricity went off, which it mostly does. So I sat outside my house in the moonlight, with my lovely neighbour and we chatted in a ‘melange’ (Kinyarwanda for mix) of Kinyarwanda and French as her daughter peeled potatoes and she fried them in oil.
 

Moongazing!
 
Our evening chats have become another lovely feature of life here and I know that I am very lucky that I live in the heart of my village (rather than where it was originally planned that I should live).

Apparently my little house was not considered to be ‘agreeable’ for me, but I’d honestly say that there is nothing that I want for or would possibly change! I just feel very fortunate to be here!

There is something magical about sitting outside beneath the silvery moon, as the banana trees rustle gently, huddled around the charcoal stove which glows gently…just chatting simply (until I learn some new vocabulary!) about the day. Sitting out under the stars and ‘moon-gazing’ has become an almost daily feature of my life here. It falls dark at 6.15 every night and quite rapidly becomes pitch black.

That evening the sky flashed with lightning and the moon cast a gentle yellow light and the charcoal stove gleamed amber and my lovely neighbour insisted on sharing the chips with me. They tasted delicious sprinkled with salt and tomato sauce… and we ate together with her family by candlelight under the moon.  I couldn’t imagine anything better!

Mysterious visitor.

I tend to get up really early around 5.30 as I can do so much more on a light morning than in the evening when there is almost always a power-cut. But until I had properly adjusted to this routine, I also kept my quite late nights and often felt that I really was the last person in my whole village to go to bed as the entire village fell quiet. One evening, as I made my way back towards my house from the pit latrine that is at the end of the garden, I spotted a large creature slinking away as it heard me. I have no idea what it was, but the next night, on a similar trip, my torch picked up two huge bright amber eyes in the dark, before they also turned and disappeared. I’m really curious about my night-time visitor… and wonder if I’ll ever know what it was.

I mentioned that my village falls quiet… but actually it’s really loud here at night, with the banana trees that sound like the sea and sometimes like the rain, chirps and chirrups of night-time birds and insects and howls and squeaks and cries and creaks that, like my visitor, remain a mystery to me. I would have imagined feeling very nervous venturing outside at night, but there is definitely something very magical about my night garden and I’m reminded of Carrie Hepple, the main character in one of my favourite childhood books.

Morning walk.

My walk to college is another pleasure of my daily life here. After a breakfast of pineapple or porridge with local honey and bananas with fresh Rwandan coffee, I leave my house around 7 and make my way along my narrow, slippery path up to the main road through the village, a dusty red track that has tiny shops on each side.
 
 
Walk to work.
 
I greet my neighbours and ask how they slept, how their morning was, how their family is, shaking hands and remembering the correct greeting for the time of day, as well as the correct response, and the hierarchy of respect, as well as the level of formality or familiarity (a complex system of hugging up to 3 times, touching foreheads, shaking hands but holding your arm as a mark of respect for the other person)… which is all very important, and I greet the moto-drivers and the children and the shop keepers, I make my way across the road and onto the path that leads to my TCC. There is a house where there always seems to be a game of draughts being played – using Fanta caps as pieces – such a great idea! So colourful too!

Seems I’m still a bit of a novelty here and being stared at is part of my daily life but people in the village are very friendly and are happy to chat if I greet them and I’ve started to make friends along the way too. I love the sights on my walk to work – bright fabrics with bold patterns, baskets of bananas and jerry-cans pushed along on bicycles, children with hoops and sticks and homemade footballs made from banana leaves, and fluorescent plastic flipflops. This afternoon, as I walked home from college to meet my new Kinyarwanda teacher at a café, I even had two people greet me – a real sign of becoming accepted – as well as somebody calling my name and waving wildly from about 100m away!

There is a group of very tiny children in scruffy uniforms that love to follow me and giggle nervously and run away as I smile at them and try to chat, and one in particular who often spots me from the end of the road and runs to me, throwing his arms around my knees to give me a huge hug! Children are very intrigued when they see me and they often try to touch my skin – I’ve been told that some believe that white skin is very delicate (and might break) or that it hurts me to touch my skin!! It seems they all want to find out!

I have a purple umbrella

If I’m lucky a local teacher from the primary school falls into step with me, although I tend to walk much faster than anybody else does, and we chat until the road forks and we take a different route. It’s nice to have a more meaningful conversation and their English tends to be good. It had been really good to have done a training workshop at the primary school as it means I know so many more people here now! However, I particularly enjoy walking with my students who are very softly spoken and respectful, and we chat quietly as we walk.  They love to ask me lots of questions about England and my job, before walking me to my classroom, shaking my hand again, wishing me a good day, and continuing on their way. I’ve become known to some of them as Miss Hazel, which I quite like!

However, I realise that the people in my village are very patient with my limited conversation topics, despite being very kind and encouraging about my very simple phrases. This week have managed to tell people that ‘I had to wait outside work because I don’t have the office key’ (new vocabulary: key and because)… ironically it was while I was waiting for my colleague to arrive that I stopped some students for a quick language lesson! Yesterday I managed, ‘It is raining but I have a purple umbrella’. (New vocabulary: umbrella and but).  I know it might be a step too far to announce that I do not have a key but I do have an umbrella! They may never speak to me again! I can also do ‘I am walking fast because I have a meeting’ and ‘This morning there was no water at my house’.  Ah… I also learnt ‘I am full’ after way too may Fanta na Mandazi!!

College life

I’m getting into the swing of college life.  I made a memorable and slightly unusual entrance on my first day, having come the ‘scenic route’. I had walked what I thought was the correct route, along with a large group of students – a good sign, I had imagined! I met an important man, the head-teacher, who had asked who I was… not really a great sign! But I introduced myself and as I realised that I  had arrived at the Primary school instead of the TTC, I turned the conversation  round by explaining my new job at the TTC and  that I was trying to link up with the primary schools a part of my new job – hence being there! He kindly pointed me in the right direction, past the water tank, and I made my grand entrance across the field and through the hedge! I continued confidently across the yard where all the TTC students were congregated, head held high and walking purposefully until I was out of sight around a corner, where I had to ask another student for further directions!

 
Morning at TTC with tudents gathering for morning news and prayers.
 
My first few days at college included a ‘snogging assembly’, a mystery of some disappearing markers… a disastrous attempt to teach ‘King of the Jungle’, observing a brilliant song about ‘Polluntioneeee’ and some very shaky grammar, including the past tenses: eatedeee and readedeee, several student parties including lots of dancing.

 
 
Baptism
 
Beyond college, I have been to a baptism in the village and  danced lots, discovered that I love ikivuguto – a curd drink like lassi that I can buy in a tiny café near my house, dealt with my exploding water filter (I arrived home one day to discover water pouring out from under my front door - usually I would have expected  it to be the other way around!), eaten lots of beans and rice for lunch at a different local café, arranged to start Kinyarwanda language lessons this week, made my first and second independent trips into Kigali, catching a moto-taxi out of my  village, free-wheeling most of the way down the hill to Kabuga where I catch a mutata bus into Kigali, discovered some of the best cafés in Kigali, located Fabric Alley where I plan to return on many occasions, and worked from the poolside in Kigali,  drinking coffee in the sunshine  (writing my weekly reports)... and danced lots!

I managed to buy an entire week’s vegetables for under £1 and amused myself arranging them into a rainbow on my kitchen table!  I have also branched out from tomato and garlic risotto, tomato and garlic pasta and tomato and garlic couscous… which had already become a bit repetitive… and discovered that my weekly shop includes everything I need to make coleslaw and guacamole! Yum!

 
Off to market
 
 
 
 Learner centred methodology training
 

Local primary school
 
 
'Ita ku mwana wese nk-uwawe'
Treat every child as if they were your own
 
 I have also successfully delivered my first 2 training workshops and been asked to return to do more. I found myself slightly lost halfway to Rwamagana one morning and simply couldn't imagine a lovelier place to be lost in the whole world... in the morning sunshine, amidst the banana trees, halfway up a hill... with a full tank on the moto and endless possibilities for the day ahead!! (And a perfect opportunity for a few photographs of course!) Oh… and the village water has come back on this evening after 4 days – best day ever!
 
 
Best place in the world to be lost!

Saturday 15 September 2012

Greetings from Nzige...


Sunsets, samosas (sambusas) and storks…

I write this on my first proper day in Nzige, a small rural and quite remote village in the east of Rwanda, about an hour and 15 minutes from Kigali (mainly along a dusty red dirt road!), where I shall be living and working for 12 months.


 
My in-country training has been a great introduction to life in Rwanda and Kigali has made a real impression on me. Life at the Amani Guest House has certainly been lots of fun and a very gentle start to my placement. We have been looked after very well and fed extremely well. The meals have been delicious and have included fresh pineapple, avocado, tomatoes, aubergines, passion fruits, tomato fruits, samosas, local cakes… and Rwandan coffee. There have been hot showers and the grounds are very beautiful, with avocado trees, frangipani and stunning views and sunsets over Kigali.

Kigali is a very clean, green city, across a number of hills, so at any time you can be looking down into a valley, above the eagles and kites that swirl gently on warm thermals, spiralling against a sky that is streaked pink and grey. We have also spotted storks and humming birds. Houses are tiny, and roofs low, so it is easy to forget that Kigali is a city, and playing fields, cultivated land and banana trees are nestled between houses and shops.


The nature of the geography of Kigali also means that you can always hear echoes of church singing amplified by the hills and thunder rolls and rumbles as the rains arrive each day. Torrential, deafening rain pounds the ground, turning the red dusty roads into slippery muddy tracks. I can’t even begin to imagine travelling to or from small village schools during the rainy season!! Not bringing my waterproof trousers seems to have been a huge mistake!
 
One evening we crossed town to visit an ‘English club’ held by another volunteer working in Youth and Development for young people to improve their English (not a club for English expats as some of our group had wondered!). We met and mingled with the group of 20 or so young people and spent the evening in groups chatting about our lives, experiences and aspirations. It was truly inspirational to meet such lovely, articulate, motivated young people and it really brings it home how important projects like this are. I’m hoping to link up with the volunteer running the group as I am planning a similar project in my area to support language and literacy skills for young people.


In-country training also consisted of a welcome dinner where we met the VSO team and current volunteers and were treated to a night of team building games, an excellent buffet and Intore dancing- really spectacular traditional Rwandan dancing. It was good to meet future colleagues (so I know who to email when I’m not sure about my new project) and other volunteers in a similar role or in a local district or sector. The VSO network is certainly really strong and supportive and it’s good to know that everyone is just a text away.

I’ve never seen so many muzungos in one place’

During our time in Kigali we also opened bank accounts, applied for work visas and got to grips with the buses and mutatas (mini buses) and motos (motorbike taxis) of Kigali. Growing confident with motos has been a highlight for me and I have loved zipping along moonlit streets in a convoy with friends in the evening as there is barely any other traffic on the roads so you pretty much have them to yourself! The small buses are lots of fun – a real squish with the other passengers - and they even have fold-down seats in the aisles! They always seem to have cool tunes on the stereo which seems to make everyone feel happy! On one of our trips into the centre we missed our stop, but this proved quite educational as we got to travel round the far end of town before the bus looped back round (luckily) and we jumped off in the main area.  It was handy to see how the different parts we’d been through linked up… so next time we’re lost, we’ll know the neighbouring areas! We were also taken to the large indoor market to get a feel for it all before it was all for real! We obviously stood out from the usual crowd as we heard a local man saying, ‘I’ve never seen so many muzungos in one place’. I’m definitely planning to head back there to stock up on fabric for a quilt project I hope will fill my evenings, a crochet hook and some wool, as well as materials for dresses, skirts and tops and handmade baskets for my home (‘mu rugo’) for bits and pieces.

The day before completing ICT, we all headed to T2000, an enormous Chinese supermarket, to stock up on all things essential for setting up home. Where do you even start? I think it would be fair to say that most of us came close to having a bit of a ‘moment’ and finally, after about 5 hours and three trolleys each, we passed through the checkout, with every item labelled in marker pen with our names, hands black from dust, ready to drop! We had a relay of 2 VSO jeeps carrying our purchases (sheets, duvets, pillows, buckets, jugs, bowls, plates, cups, cutlery, pots and pans, kettles, shelves…etc.), guarded carefully as they were loaded up  outside the shop, which dropped them off at our Guest House before returning for the next load.

Reclaiming all our purchases from the heap back at the guest house was nearly as much fun (lucky everything had been named)… and then the next challenge was loading up the taxi 2 days later as my boss arrived to take me to the village. We spent a good 30 minutes looking at my luggage and at the car and then nodding and smiling and hmmmm-ing and then opening the boot and then looking back at the luggage! In the end, a larger car was called for and after a number of attempts at packing and unpacking and repacking, we were all in and off we went… waving at the last few volunteers awaiting lifts to their new placements.

Having arrived, I was immediately introduced the local government official in the village, which was an honour and felt very important. A production line was then formed along which all my possessions were passed, to my new home (which has a very strong resemblance to the small barn round the back of our home in Winfarthing… just with a lick of paint!) I was asked several times if everything was there, but as it had been packed and unpacked and repacked before the journey started, and then removed from the car randomly, I had no idea! My three main pieces of luggage were there… and so far it seems that everything else arrived safe and sound - I haven’t missed anything yet!   It was an impressive sight to see my furniture arrive from the other end of the village, transported along the road through the village, carried on people’s heads; a bed, a mattress, a dining table and chairs, a coffee table, shelves, a cupboard and two lounge chairs – quite a procession. It was hard to resist reaching for my camera!! However it’s an image I won’t forget!

In Rwanda there are no problems only challenges (Local saying)

I am writing this, snuggled in my room (on my first proper day here after arriving), as the largest thunderstorm I have ever experienced is taking place directly above my house! ‘Moving wardrobes’ would not even begin to describe the booming thunder that sounds as though it is immediately above, if not on, my roof! When I arrived yesterday, the rain became so heavy, slashing diagonally, bouncing up from the ground and gushing from next door’s roof, and it was a relief when it finally stopped! I had wondered whether it would continue for days or weeks! Ironically, despite the torrential rain, I arrived to find that there was actually no water at the tap!

Today’s storm have given me the time to lie on my bed and contemplate my new home and life…reassured that later the rain will ease and stop eventually, as it finally did yesterday… and that the cycle will continue – even if at a slower pace than I am used to.  Rains come, rain stops, water goes… and eventually comes back. Buhoro, buhoro – ‘slowly slowly’ as they say.

The kindness of Neighbours…

This morning I woke at 6am to the wonderful sound of water splashing into jerry-cans and my heart lifted. My sweet neighbours, young girls who are kind and chatty (and very bemused by the funny ways of their new ‘muzungo’ neighbour), arrived at my door as soon as they saw that I had opened my curtains, and as I stood in my pyjamas in my doorway (in my purple fluffy slippers – my one luxury item from home… apart from my cafetierre), they busily rounded up my buckets, bowls and jerry-cans and filled them, bringing them back to my house.  It was such a relief that the water had come – I had imagined that there would be none for 3 days and that I would have to sparingly ration my one jerry-can (provided by my neighbours on my arrival), and I was really touched by their kindness towards me. Water and kindness from neighbours both seem pretty essential to surviving life here!

With water, I set about filling my water-filter and boiling the kettle for coffee. Having woken up at 6 I knew that I had time to orientate myself into the day in my new home…and took my time to make porridge and enjoy a pot of Rwandan coffee, sitting with my door open and sunshine streaming in.  I watched as the girls next door swept and mopped around their house, as huge brightly coloured plastic and metal bowls and buckets were filled and used for washing, washing up, clothes washing… and all were left in the sunshine to dry on a large wooden table. Not a bad place to do washing up I thought! Chickens strutted past, and cockerels crowed, passers-by peeped through the fence and smiled as they wandered past, and my first morning in Nzige, my little village, unfolded.

 
I shared a second pot of coffee with my neighbours, and used my shaky and very basic Kinyarwanda to explain that I didn’t have milk or sugar… and did they mind, or did they have some they could use…? I’m not sure what the outcome of the conversation was (everybody nodded and said yes), but they were very sweet and polite about the coffee and were very smiley when they returned the cups later.

As I had water, I organised myself to take a bucket shower in the room round the back of the house  -  it was cold, but my relief at just having water meant that I was  very thankful to be washing at all! As they say, there are no problems, only challenges – and the shower challenge needed to be addressed! It certainly woke me up. I spent the next hour or so sweeping and wiping and tidying my house and then used my bright pink lavender scented disinfectant to mop my floor – again to the amusement of my little neighbours, who probably thought there was a much more efficient way to undertake such tasks! I shall watch them and try to pick up tips!

I washed up my breakfast things at the table in the sunshine and headed off to meet my friend and colleague, at the market. It was a really happy surprise to find so many tables piled high with tomatoes, avocados, beans, onions, pineapples and bananas and with a local friend with us, we got some good deals (and I noted prices so I know what to pay when I go by myself!) I know my knowledge of numbers isn’t too bad, but everybody fell around laughing when I used them – it seems to be that they are so surprised that I know the words… and simply expect not to understand me… and having a huge crowd of people around me meant the situation was quite surreal! People seem genuinely shocked that I know a few words!

 
I carried all my veg home loose in my bag, beans rattling round with bananas and pineapples, avocados and garlic. As we wandered back, we popped into several of the little shops along the road where I was introduced to many friendly people who turned out to be the TTC tutors and my new colleagues…many of whom I learnt have enterprising second businesses as shop owners. I stocked up on milk powder and sugar (so that I can entertain according to local tastes!), a small blue bucket (for cleaning), a two-pronged plug adaptor and some freshly bakes sweet white bread rolls.

From first impressions, village life in Nzige is probably as you’d imagine life here to be – pretty rural; hens, clucking and scratching, roaming from garden to garden, cows, pigs and goats tethered in family compounds, banana trees, small children inquisitively peeping nervously from behind pillars or grinning widely as I pass…or just staring, bicycles wobbling precariously as their owners push loads of wood, sugarcane, milk pails… and women wearing striking, colourful, beautiful dresses. There is also a small café, where I am keen to have tea and a bar where we had lunch after I arrived yesterday – a tasty omelette and inyama y’ihene, or goat – really delicious! I’m really keen to take some photographs, but I think that my new neighbours need time to get used to me being here first before I start asking if its ok if I take pictures.

Having returned home from the market, and sheltered from the storm, I was honoured to have my first guest! Lucky I had bought in milk powder and sugar - my guest enjoyed 3 spoons of each in her coffee! We had a really lovely conversation, sharing stories of home and family and I showed her my photographs, which she took great interest in. It was strange sharing tales of family Christmases and pets and walks along Hadrian’s Wall and along the coast when I know that all these are a long way away! She is the niece of my landlady and she works in the TTC – she is very kind and helpful and had popped round to check that I was fine. I also know she’s at the end of a text of I need her and I’m hoping that she can be my Kinyarwanda language teacher -  I’m determined to become at least able to hold a normal conversation (I’ve pretty much done all  my introduction conversations now) and strangely frustrated that I haven’t become fluent by the end of my second day here!! Buhoro, buhoro. I felt like an ok host – I offered tea and coffee and had the required milk and sugar. We chatted about lots of thing and had some excellent silences which are perfectly usual and to be expected (as we were prepared for in ICT – it doesn’t mean your guest is feeling awkward, rather that they are happy to be with you), and I nearly ‘gave her the push’ which is actually a polite term and means walking your guest to your gate, but I couldn’t get my slippers off and flipflops on quickly enough! I’ll practice super-quick shoe changes before I host again.

So this evening I have unpacked – it was nice to get sorted out and settled in properly but then also felt odd as it made everything seem a bit more permanent – I know it will be home for now and putting my things out made it very real. But I am happy and today has gone really well and I have a very sweet and homely little house (2 rooms and a store that was meant to be my kitchen but I’ll use instead to house water bins and mops and wellies… and has an unusual aroma!). I’m onto my last clean cup for an evening mug of vanilla chai (as I  have been so busy entertaining today that all my cups have been used…so I’ll need to tackle washing up in the morning before coffee -  a logistical challenge when you have neither a kitchen nor a bathroom and the tap is at the end of the garden near the front gate).  I have my bedroom and kitchen set up and curtains and a kettle and I have full jerry-cans and I know a cold shower is possible, that my neighbours are very nice, that I like the market and know what to pay and can ask in Kinyarwanda… and I know how to get back to Kigali, how much to pay and where to get on/off the bus or moto. I can connect to the internet sometimes and have started my blog, so that’s good! I know that the rain does eventually stop and that the water eventually returns and that in Rwanda there are no problems, only challenges, which is handy as I came here seeking new challenges!

So, what have I learnt?

I am in sole charge of where I have left my keys.

It is good to tie your keys to yourself when using the pit latrine… or wear them like a necklace – never in your pocket.

The rain stops and eventually water comes back on.

Even when speaking perfectly good Kinyarwanda people may still look blankly at me.

The colour of my skin scares small children!

Rwandan coffee is very good and a good coffee makes everything ok.

Conditioner is just not going to happen when it is an achievement even to take a shower!

I can’t worry about how I look as I don’t have a mirror big enough to find out!

Always have a torch to hand.

The internet connects eventually (Skype doesn’t!) In fact, the time it takes to connect to the internet is well spent writing an entire blog entry! Buhoro, Buhoro!

It means the world to hear from friends and family.

Avocados are amazing here… and I can buy 4 (kane) for a pound (ijana Rwf).

My new neighbours rock!

Oh…  and I can wear both a head torch AND an anorak in the name of survival (its fine – I have no mirror!)

 

Wednesday 25 July 2012

About Rwanda

Rwanda is landlocked but is noted for its lakes, particularly Lake Kivu, which occupies the floor of the Rift Valley along most of the country's western border. Although close to the equator, the country has a temperate climate due to its high elevation, with the highest point being Mount Karisimbi. The terrain consists of mountains and gently rolling hills, with plains and swamps in the east.

My placement is in the Eastern Province, in the district of Rwamagama, based in Nzige (Bicumbi Teacher training College). I'll be living between Kigali and Rwamagama, below Lake Muhazi.


Abundant wildlife, including rare mountain gorillas, have led to a fast-growing tourism sector. The largest cities in Rwanda are Kigali, Gitarama, and Butare. Unlike many African countries, Rwanda is home to only one significant ethnic and linguistic group, the Banyarwanda.
The country is well known for its native styles of dance, particularly the Intore dance, and for its drummers. Kinyarwanda, English and French are the official languages.
(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia)

 

Monday 23 July 2012

Preparations

In 6 weeks I will be starting a 12 month placement as a Literacy and Numeracy Advisor in a Teacher Training College in Rwanda - The Land of a Thousand Hills.


There are lots of preparations to make before then, including:
  • Completing my online training and preparing for my residential course in August
  • Finalising flight details
  • Improving my French
  • Learning the basics of Kinyarwanda
  • Planning what to take
  • Downloading all my favourite music and books
  • Spending time with my friends and family
  • Work out how to blog properly!!
Today I started my online language course and feel that I have a long way to go!

Feeling inspired by this link