Thursday, December 4, 2014

The Medieval Moral Bar

I returned from a Ghanaian hospital to my parents' basement in Calgary, Alberta. It was there I spent the better part of the month of October slowly putting my stomach and intestinal linings back together. By the end of October, I was finally back in the world of the living and able to venture back crowded population centres without being a vector for disease. There remained just one big friction point: I was living in my parents' basement. I was effectively reliving my High School social life.
Almost high school me...
Now my mother reads this blog on occasion so I am both unable to either embellish the ridiculousness of the situation nor find any humour at her expense. She birthed me, raised me, and refused what I'm sure was a strong urge to euthanize me during my teenage years (I was a brat), and I am thankful for all 27 years of support she has provided to date.

I have since graduated from high school and am now in Toronto working with Engineers Without Borders. The problem this time: I am now living in what amounts to dorm room.

Toronto-based dorm room
The good news is: I have an eight-bed (4 bunk beds) room to myself and three incredibly intelligent and hilarious roommates. On one particular evening, the four of us were talking about one of the woman's employment as an unpaid intern at two separate organizations. It was brought up that unpaid internships would have been viewed as immoral in Medieval times as apprentices were at the very least provided room and board in exchange for their labours. I believe we now have a new moral bar:

If someone in 1399 would look at what you are doing and think, "how you're treating people is awful," you should rethink what you are doing.

I bring you the first episode of: "What would your Medieval Ancestors think?"

Unpaid Internships
The U.S. Supreme Court recently found that six legal requirements had to be met in order for an unpaid internship to be lawful. These requirements can be summed up as: interns must be a burden to the company. In other words, an unpaid internship must be a training program. However, as many of us have experienced, this can be pretty far from reality. In the past year, hundreds of companies have had cases brought forward against them for illegal unpaid internships (I.E. Over 100 companies in the U.K., and Bell Canada). Proponents of serfdom and 1400s public opinion are very disappointed in us.
When I managed my Lord's Twitter account, I At least got room and board!

Money Lending
Usury is defined as the practice of lending money at unreasonably high interest rates. The moral bar on this practice dates back to at least the Old Testament (1,500 BC). Now John Oliver had a great segment on the awful state of Predatory Lending in the United States back in August, but that's the U.S.  Most of us Canadians look at the U.S. regulatory regime with a sense of smug superiority, because we couldn't possibly be that douch-y. 

It is with a heavy heart that I must report that we are no better than our neighbours to the South. As this report from Stats Canada shows:
- "There are 15 return customers or rollover loans for every new payday loan customer."
- These loans disproportionately target people and families who make less than $30,000 per year.
- Rates vary from province to province, from an annual interest rate of between 60% and 700%.

"I find your lack of respect for your fellow human most disturbing"
-Friar Thomas Aquinas, Italy 1265

Photos from: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/61/Reeve_and_Serfs.jpg http://www.biography.com/people/st-thomas-aquinas-9187231


Wednesday, November 19, 2014

A not so graceful return

Every trip I've taken that involves the words "culture shock," has been more difficult to return from than it was to take. This seems to happen for a few reasons:

1) You've seen some shit
Pardon my being crass, but until you've watched an old woman beat back a charging ram on a dusty African road with no more than a stick you won't necessarily know what I'm talking about (this actually happened, that ram lived on my street and he was a complete asshole).  The fact is, that when you travel, you see and experience things that change you. This change may not be obvious or easy to put a finger on, but it becomes pronounced as you try to slip back into your old routine.

Artist's rendering of the assailant
The prime suspect. Also, remember the gazebo for bullet number 4.
                                  
2) Life is a little bit boring when you return
Moving to a new country is a difficult experience, moving to a new developing country doubly so. From your morning commute, to finding a reputable food source, every mundane task becomes an adventure. On top of that, you lack the language skills, body language, and cultural understanding necessary to navigate social and commercial interactions. This meant, that successfully navigating your morning commute had the ability to feel like a real accomplishment. Upon returning, the senses of adventure and achievement from everyday tasks are noticeably absent.

Boring Alberta Commute
Exciting Ghanian Commute
3) You're not famous anymore
My roommate will likely attest to how much I disliked being labeled "White Man" on every block while walking down the street, but at least it was an accurate label. Nevertheless, there are some distinct benefits to being a foreigner. You are able to circumvent some social conventions, able to meet people more easily, and generally viewed as interesting simply because you are from somewhere else. I am sure this is not the reality for all foreigners and there are elements of white-male extrovert privilege attributable to the positive nature of the experiences I have. As a result, I was wondering if others might share their perspectives and experiences on being a foreigner.

If I changed my name to "Obruni (Twi for 'White Man;),"
they would all know my name.
4) People's priorities seem a little off
When you return from living in less pampered conditions, you appreciate things that are taken for granted by most people. A hot shower? Divine! Pooping shapes again? Made my day yesterday. No ants in my cereal? Slightly disappointed by the reduced protein content of my breakfast, but still very exciting.

This elation is then quickly contrasted with the everyday annoyances that face the people around you. For me, the moment that stands out from recent weeks, was when my friend's aunt began to complain about how the snow had dented the roof of their gazebo. At this point, I had been back in Canada for a week, and was just gaining back my ability to not be asleep on a couch, so the only thought I had on the subject was: "WHY CAN'T YOU JUST BE HAPPY YOU HAVE A GAZEBO!" I know, I know, I lack empathy, it's something I'm working on. The first few weeks are the hardest, but I assure you, I will slip back into being annoyed by everyday things soon enough.

I'm assuming this is the gazebo in question
A terrific place for a gazebo
5) It's unbelievably cold
I'm not sure when I became a warm weather person. I have distinct memories as a child of waiting for the bus in -15 Celsius in a leather jacket. Now, I'm walking in downtown Toronto bundled up in three parkas and I'm still miserable. Is this an age thing or a me a being a wuss thing? Ghana's weather and I got along swimmingly. The heat, the humidity, the beach, ice cold Fan Ice, typhoid. Yup, those were the days. I was rudely plucked from my tropical paradise and dropped in the middle of an Albertan snowstorm...

My location on October 2nd, 2014
My location on October 4, 2014

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Typhoid Part II: Electric Boogaloo

So the funny thing about typhoid is that it tends to come back after being treated. About two weeks after recovering from my first bout of typhoid, I came down with it again. It's an unpleasant affliction: dehydration, dizziness, extreme fatigue, and all kinds of intestinal discomfort. A lot of people also get fever, but I was thankfully spared that bit.

I went to my doctor, and another round of Cipro was prescribed. For those of you who have never had the pleasure of taking Ciprofloxacin, their tagline of "If you the disease doesn't kill you, our drugs will" should serve as a good summary. Seriously, the symptoms I mentioned above are all included on the list of side effects caused by Cipro. Don't believe me? Have a look.

This however, turned out to be the least of my problems, because most of the way through my second week of nuking every bacteria in my body, I woke up with a high fever, joint pain, headache, and a very sore throat. Now some of you will notice that these are also the symptoms of Ebola, that's because you are paranoid. They are actually the symptoms of nearly every disease you can contract in West Africa. The doctor prescribed another antibiotic to ward off what was becoming an increasingly severe throat infection. At this point, I was losing faith in modern medicine and was thinking of heading to my local witch doctor.
This is literally the sign for the witch doctor.
There are signs everywhere for the witch doctor near my work. The sign above being my personal favourite. The giant wolf attacking the woman in the bottom left corner being the most bizarre thing I have seen on a sign in Ghana. However, the sign does fail to mention that he can also cure night witches. These are women who are able to practice black magic without the aid of potions and can cause everything from tuberculosis, paralysis, infertility, and death. So, if you are suffering from a night witch making your life a living hell, I know a guy.


A few more days passed and I wasn't getting better. At this point, my throat was about four different colours and I was entering my second week of feeling like the 6 steps to my kitchen were the equivalent of walking through the desert for 40 days. As a result, it was time to go back to the hospital, where I was given a bed, an IV, and a very loud television for 3 days.

My roommate and others stopped by (my thanks to them for keeping me sane and bringing me food and water) to keep me company when I was in the hospital, but as the Ghanaians are as liberal as the Americans with their overuse of narcotics as pain killers, I mostly just slept. The one thing I remember distinctly was a soap opera that was on one afternoon that had "Three Blind Mice" as the only song that played in the background. It was just as irritating as it sounds.

At this point in time, it was determined that once I was stable, I should return home to seek additional medical treatment in Canada. I had been on antibiotics for 22 days in the last month and my weight had dropped from 175 lbs to 158 lbs. So if you are looking to lose weight, skip the tape worms and Jenny Craig and go straight for the typhoid and tonsilitis.




It is very important that things be properly labeled!
The journey home went well, no ebola checkpoints and I got a marriage proposal! Seriously, a woman checking my passport actually asked to be my wife. It was mostly a joke, I think.

Returning through London Heathrow was a little overwhelming. I always find it difficult going from a developing world context back to the West. Things tend to shift from being simple and straightforward to opulent and confusing.

Nevertheless, it is good to be back home resting and working with Canadian physicians. I know that I am extremely lucky to both have had the opportunity to work in Ghana and the ability to leave when my health was in question. These privileges illustrate the extreme inequalities that persist in the world and I will talk more about this in my next post. 

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Ribbon Cutting is Sexy, Monitoring & Evaluation is not

"If you have come to help me, you are wasting our time. But if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together"
 - Aboriginal Activists Group, Queensland, 1970s

Since I began with Engineers Without Borders in December, people have remarked to me about how proud they are of my selflessness and my taking time to help in Ghana. While I appreciate the compliment, it is not the view I have on my efforts. To me, the idea of "helping" assumes that I know more than Ghanaians. It places me in a position of power and strips others of their agency. More than that, it simplifies the complex issues that see some countries, people, and cultures flourish, while others stagnate. This post contains a series of anecdotes I have observed about the troubles with international development and aid work. It concludes with my current thoughts on how we might all be able to contribute to more effective development in our own countries and around the world.

I) Ribbon Cutting is Sexy (Ego)
In my experience, the desire to work in development is generally rooted in a mixture of adventure, curiousity, compassion, and ego. The first three elements I will leave as self-explanatory, and will instead focus on the narcissism (it appreciates the attention). Part of what drives people to move to other countries to work in development is a fundamental belief that they have something to teach or give to others that will improve their lives. It is sometimes rooted in a sense of cultural superiority, that presumes that the lives of others need to be more like ours.

The website Humanitarians of Tinder illuminates this for us in a way only pictures and a hook-up phone application truly can. Let me be clear: I am all for traveling, meeting new people, and doing our best to work with communities to tackle problems they want tackled, but something just doesn't feel right when pictures of Westerners in African villages are used on a dating application.
Source: http://humanitariansoftinder.com

I met someone when I first arrived in Ghana that was a Western elitist in pure form. She was here to help and save others out of compassion and religious duty. However, she did not often associate with those she was claiming to help, and professed a strong distrust of Ghanaians. She remarked to me one afternoon: "Ghanaians don't think like you and I, they will be nice to your face and then betray you." While this individual is very much an outlier, a more subtle sense of superiority and xenophobia that we all might carry within ourselves can be just as damaging. Here is how it can manifest:

The Play Pump
Roundabout Water Solutions released the Play Pump in 2006 to great fanfare. The idea is simple: attach a merry go round to a pump so that when children play, water is pumped and stored in a tower.
It's child's play really...
Conceptually, this sounds all well and good. Children get something to play on and provide the kinetic input for a pump that would otherwise have to be pumped by the individual in need of water.
Come on kids, play like your access to clean water depends on it!
So what is the problem? This lengthy video by AfriDev truly captures the absurdity of the Play Pump. The video is a little long, so let me provide you with the synopsis: Children do not play on the Play Pump all day, everyday (or in some cases, at all), meaning that inevitably, someone who is not playing on the Play Pump has to spin the merry go round by hand until they get enough water. In the video, this took a man three minutes and seven seconds of spinning to get a 5 gallon bucket of water.

In some villages, people have reported paying children to play on the merry go round so they don't have to suffer the embarrassment of spinning the Play Pump. On the other hand, the pump pictured below takes just thirty seconds of pumping to get the same bucket of water, and you don't have to look ridiculous while doing it. A comprehensive report of everything wrong with the Play Pump Project was released by Unicef in 2007 and is available here.
Play Pump: 3:07 + Loss of Dignity
AfriDev Hand Pump: 0:28
Why does this happen?
In most cases, communities are not really engaged before projects like this are put into place (in some cases, existing working pumps are replaced by Play Pumps). People won't say no to a free lunch, but in general, the projects are much less effective than they would have been with community engagement and often fall into disrepair quite quickly.

In addition, a lot of deference is often given to white people and NGOs. This is driven by the fact that a great deal of funding comes from these sources, and there is the view that Western education, products, and solutions are superior. As Westerners, we forget we are no longer in Kansas. We try and implement our solutions as if we were in our context, instead of allowing the communities we are working in to lead the way. We can help foster the development of projects, but if we want the solutions to be effective and sustainable, we cannot drive them.
Note: This is not Kansas
II) If I throw money at the problem, it will surely go away (Mismanagement)
Over the past 60 years, more than $1 trillion has been spent on development in Africa. At its best, this money has saved lives, improved the efficiency of governments, and worked to unlock the human potential in and around the globe. However, at its worst, it has granted power to oppressive militia groups in destabilized areas, sustained and even furthered corruption in institutions, and destroyed the sustainability of local businesses. It is a complicated issue, so in the spirit of this post, I will continue to focus on issues associated with a few well-meaning projects.

Projects for the sake of projects
Many non-profit organizations raise money to do projects. This makes some good sense: if you want to provide universal access to water, it is likely that you will have to build a well or two. The issue that arises with this mentality is that the measure of success for these organizations becomes, "how many ______ they have built." As a result, little to no thought goes into how well the systems will be maintained, nor who will operate the systems.
A report from NGO Water for the People estimates that 60% of wells
may be in disrepair.
A brand new biogas digester built by a Chinese NGO. The farmer
was not trained to use the digester before the NGO left.
The solution to this issue is easy in concept, but very difficult in practice. Monitoring & Evaluation is not sexy, in fact, studies show that 55% of audiences fall asleep at the merest mention of the term. Nevertheless, without the ability to keep track of what the impact of the project is long-term, it is possible that the project falls into disrepair, or fails to create the desired impact. Moreover, organizations need to have long-term plans for how to transition the maintenance of the projects into local hands. This requires more staff, more training, more time, and more money. The end result could be less ____ being built and less funding in the future.

Ribbon-cutting is sexy
Monitoring & Evaluation is not sexy
III) Destroying some industries and building others (Externalities)
It is often said that "the road to hell is paid with donated t-shirts and volunteerism at orphanages." Good intentions, and notions of charity have created some terrible side-effects over the years. Here are two:

The Clothing Industry
I will admit, nothing makes me happier than seeing a man riding a bicycle in a busy market in Accra wearing a "Yankees Suck" T-shirt. I am elated to see that Ghana did not fall victim to Derek Jeter's charms. That being said, the issues that arise out of donating our unwanted clothing to other countries are no laughing matter.

First, people were buying and wearing clothing prior to your donation, which means that your free goods displaced existing production. You may actually have put someone out of business.
This is Kwame, he wants you to know that your dumping
of goods is a violation of Article VI of GATT 1994.
Second, your clothes are then sold to traders, who sell them to other middle men, who then sell them to consumers. They are often not given out by the organization you donate them to. Shannon Whitehead has a great post summarizing this issue.
I bought a pair Georgio Armani trousers for $8 yesterday!
Lastly, we all know that American culture is fairly dominant across the globe, and that many American brands are in demand everywhere. The erosion of local cultures is taking place everywhere, but there is something particularly disturbing about seeing old campaign t-shirts in a crowded market in Ghana.
Source: Link

Orphans
I wanted to end this post with something uplifting, so I apparently settled on orphans. Voluntourism has grown in popularity over the years and volunteering at orphanages has been a large portion of this effort. In 2010, Projects Abroad alone sent 8,000 volunteers to orphanages in 26 countries. For its effort, the organization raised $24 million in revenue, and $3 million in profit. Now to be fair, Projects Abroad is not a non-profit organization, so there is nothing illegal about it making profit from supplying volunteers to orphanages. Nevertheless, we all might be able to agree that there is something just a little immoral about this arrangement. That's right, it creates the economic incentive to enter into the "business of orphans."

Al Jazeera and others have reported on some of the many issues that have been created by private orphanages in Cambodia. To summarize: 1) it's estimated that nearly 70% of orphans in Cambodia have at least one living parent, and 2) some orphanages paid parents to give their children up or have even "rented" children for the day. In case this needs further elaboration, "renting an orphan," is where the orphanage compensates the parents of the child for the day or week during which volunteers are visiting.

In Closing: let's all do better
It is not my intent to dishearten anyone looking to make a positive change in the world. Instead, we have to put just a little more effort in to make sure that the impact of our donations and volunteer hours is done in collaboration with the communities we want to work with. This means:
  1. Let the community drive what projects will be scoped and implemented,
  2. Use local partners and suppliers,
  3. Work with the community to put a long-term maintenance plan in place,
  4. Monitor and evaluate the impact of the project,
  5. Work with local governments and partners to transition the responsibility of these projects away from foreign organizations.
Beyond improving the projects and organizations we work for, the single most important thing we can do is to push for changes in our own countries and governments on issues that perpetuate cycles of poverty abroad. Of note:
  1. End the dumping of no cost or ultra-low cost excess goods into foreign markets
  2. Hold companies accountable for their health, safety, environmental, and social actions abroad. At this time, EWB is currently raising awareness on the "Mandatory Reporting on Extractives." This initiative will require extractive companies to report on their payments to governments around the world. This type of transparency is necessary in holding companies accountable.
  3. Read and talk about how our governments currently approach aid and then push for meaningful reform. It is a long and unglamorous path, but if we succeed, the impact may be much larger and systematic than our individual efforts.
  4. Work to alleviate poverty and inequity of opportunity in our own communities. 

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Adapting to Ghana: Proverbs and Lessons for Visitors

Adapting to life in Ghana has not come overnight. Here are some of the lessons I have learned in my first six weeks here:

1) Don't walk and text.
This may seem like a pretty simple lesson. I can hear a few of you muttering, "people get hurt and worse for doing this in North America Michael, of course it will be more dangerous in Ghana." You're right, it is more dangerous, insanely so. Here are a few examples:
     Those bridges don't look sturdy...
Why yes, my shop is guarded by a moat.
There's an open manhole up ahead. 
Can't see it? Exactly my point.
It was this manhole.
Or this one.

2) "You are never alone in Ghana" - Ghanaian Proverb

The kitchen is my battleground.





While this may sound either like a reassuring statement about how your friends and neighbors are always here to help, or some paranoid babble about stalkers and the CIA, it's actually about bugs. No, not the CIA... that's just your malaria meds talking. I meant insects. There's lots of them, they are everywhere, and they are persistent.

My roommate and I have been at war with an ant colony all week. They attack at the slightest sign of food. Everything is sealed in plastic bags or locked up in the fridge, and yet here they come... Marching in. The Ziploc on cereal was open by a sliver and the next time I grabbed for a nutritious breakfast, I almost got a double helping of pincers and protein. 

Could be worse I guess, Tamale has spiders the size of your fist and my co-worker (Alexis) has a door full of termites.







3) You do not speak like nor hear like a Ghanaian.
This may also seem obvious. However, the degree to which you can be wrong with words and names you do in fact know is astonishing. I can't tell you how many times people have told me their names only to be greeted by a look of utter perplexion on my face as I try and decipher what on earth it could be. 

This is Joe, I got his name on the second try.


"My name is Donothone." 

"Daniel?" 

"No, J, O, N.."

"Oh, Jonas!"

(Look of exasperation).




My favourite example of this so far was when my roommate was trying to figure out what junction to get off the tro-tro at to get to our new house. 
For those of you just joining us, a tro-tro is a mini-bus crammed full of half your community and their assorted wares, and is served with delicious refreshments at every intersection. It is the public transportation of your dreams. 
She asked the mate (the guy in the bus who takes your money and destination), who said she should get off a "Pane Gwain" junction. I'll let you try and work out what that might be in English. And yes, it is English.

"Pane Gwain" Junction


4) Your delicious roadside Jollof may come with a side of typhoid.

Doesn't look so bad right?

My Mother's last words to me before I left for Ghana were: "Remember, cook it or peel it." In hindsight, it should have also included something about bringing a sweater. It's cold here sometimes. But I digress, Ghanaian food is good, Ghanaian street food, doubly so. Now I came in thinking: "I ate through the streets of Delhi, how much worse could it be?" The answer... Much  worse.




 "I will have the ground nut stew, and please, hold the cholera."









North America is currently panicking about the outbreak of Ebola in West Africa. Accra on the other hand is trying to reign in a rapidly spreading cholera. Sanitation is difficult because of the open sewers. Typhoid, and hepatitis are also major issues for Ghana. Many Ghanaians I meet do not eat at roadside stalls for fear of getting sick. 

Since the typhoid, I have restrained my usual sense of adventure. Opting for places that instill confidence in my bowels. Like Ghana's first microbrewery, H-Street Grill!

5) I guess it rains down in Africa - Toto
The view from my deck in Accra.

I have mentioned the rain here before. It is downright wet. As a result many Ghanaians don't go outside when it's raining (Let the record show: Portland, OR just rolled its eyes). This means that people don't really walk in the rain, or even go to work in the rain.

I am writing this post on just such a Rainday.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Sorry I can't come to work today, I got typhoid.

It has been a very eventful couple of weeks. My work with AfriLEAD in Tamale kept me very busy as we worked to select 16 fellows from a group of 70 talented young professionals for the Young Managers Program. I was then informed that I had been evicted from my house in Accra because my roommate came home late. The next week I worked hard to put together a monitoring and evaluation strategy for YMP before I had to return to Accra this week. Everything was going according to plan (minus the eviction-but more on that later) until I got typhoid.

Despite what people may tell you, the typhoid vaccine is not very effective (only about 50%), and typhoid is not fun. Fever, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and in my case malnutrition and severe dehydration. Nevertheless, the clinics I have gone to so far are professional, clean, and well run. At one point, I wasn't sure if the antibiotic (cipro) that they gave me was any better than the typhoid, but here I am, slowly returning to life.

Tamale!
It's a very different city, one that feels almost rural. The people are very friendly, and less intrusive than in Accra (where everyone wants to be your good friend). I had a great place for egg and bread (a fancy name for an omelette on butter bread) in the mornings and a nice hotel room near the city center. The hotel fan had one speed: hurricane. The background wind storm complimented the late rains that have come to Tamale. When I say rain, I mean torrential downpour. 

AfriLEAD volunteer Mariette showing her skills as a Ghanaian electrician (or in this case using a plastic spoon to by-pass a plug's safeguard so she could plug a kettle in for coffee. She has her priorities straight if you ask me.)

Returning to Accra
Halfway through my stay in Tamale, I was notified by my roommate, Amanda, that both of us had been forced to leave the house we were renting in Accra. The reason: she had come home late on a Saturday night. Now in Ghana, you pay your rent upfront (by law this is capped at 6 months of prepayment, but that is not often followed). As a result, the land lady who had thrown Amanda out and packed up the things I had left when traveling in Tamale had 2.5 months worth of rent for the two of us. I spoke with her briefly about the incident and was informed that she would likely not return any of the money. Any further attempts to contact her were unsuccessful.

The chase
After being entirely ignored by Denise for weeks, Amanda and I went to the police. The service, professionalism, welcome and understanding of the officers we spoke with was impressive. We went to visit our land lady with police officers in tow and found the place empty. We were then told to return to the police station the following week.

This time when we returned, the police had had word of where our land lady was hiding (she had been staying at her other house in the same community). When we arrived we were shown the way, and the police crept quietly through the small community, slowly pushing open the gate and opening the front door of the house. "Excuse me Madam," said the inspector, "we would like you to come with us to the station." The whole ordeal would have made a boring episode of Cops!, but I was never much for crime dramas anyway.

The following few hours were spent in front of a Crime Officer, in which both sides told their story and our land lady was charged with two counts of "Inducing a Tenant to Quit," and informed that she had one month to return to each of us 1.5 months of the rent. Case closed.

A work trip to the town of Somenya. We visited a Mango Growers Association to speak with them about Mobile Business Clinic's upcoming training in the Eastern Region. The countryside is beautiful and Mango farmers were interested in the training; however, they were hoping we might hold it in their facility and not in a different town.

My first Ghanaian wedding: Mobile Business Clinic was invited to a wedding by the landlord of our office building. It was an interesting ceremony, very traditional. Nevertheless, about half of the ceremony occurred before the bride and groom arrived. Are you allowed to be late to your own wedding?


I now live in a different community in more central Accra. It is nice, busy and centrally located. The morning this picture was taken, Nelly Furtado was blaring from my neighbour's home on the left. In addition, there is a garbage truck that drive around the community playing the same music as an ice cream truck. When I figured that it wasn't ice cream, I was sorely disappointed.  

In addition to garbage instead of ice cream, the apartment was also devoid of electricity for many days. A substation was undergoing major maintenance in the region. This meant romantic candlelight dinners! Also, very warm, very stale air to sleep in. At least it's not snowing!


Thursday, August 21, 2014

Week 2: Tamale and the bus ride of Doom


Week one of work passed in a blur as most first weeks do. There seems to be 5 steps:

1) Excitement
You have a vague understanding of the work you will likely be doing and a vague goal and plan in mind. All these things combine into an optimism that tells you that you can change the world. Your spreadsheets will be the best, your presentations will be flawless, and the organization you work with will shine brighter than ever before.

2) Reading
You now realize how little you know of the organization, topic area, and work you will be doing, which means that you get to spend the bulk of the next couple of days reading everything you can get your hands on. Sometimes you understand it, sometimes you don't, but you consume all of the information you can and begin to try making sense of it.

3) Confusion
The documents you read and the people you speak to all begin to point to one particular problem: the organization you are stepping into is a chaotic mass. There are few processes, information is not stored logically, and the format of documents, reports, etc vary widely based on the individual who created them. You no longer understand what your goal is, or how you fit into your role.

4) Tantrum
This is ridiculous. The organization may or may not know what they are doing, and you certainly don't. The existing bureaucracy makes things at best inefficient and at worst impossible. Screw it, it's time for a drink.

5) Acceptance
Maybe this won't be so bad after all. The people around you seem well-intentioned and are fun to be around. Plus, with all the inefficiency and lack of standardization, you can't help but meet or exceed expectations. It's time to settle in and enjoy the ride.

Both my co-worker (http://amandacoxdesign.wordpress.com) and I have arrived at the Acceptance stage of our first week of work. My tasks with the Mobile Business Clinic will be to: I) assist in revising the course curriculum prior to the Clinic in Korfidua in October, II) work on developing a business model for Mobile Business Clinic to become sustainable, and III) assist in the set up of a seed fund to be added to the Clinic. This fund could be accessed by clinic participants to enable them to pursue investment ideas.

On to Tamale
After the first week, I had a somewhat relaxing Saturday in which I played a few hours of soccer with a co-worker of mine and his friends, and then went to see Guardians of the Galaxy. The sense of humour in Ghana is definitely different and I did not laugh with the rest of the audience. Awkward...


This is the view of the valley on the drive to my place just outside of Accra. You will notice the wonderful layer of smog that blankets it and the lungs of its inhabitants. My thanks to the very large garbage burning pile of garbage for the enhanced sunsets that it provides. For more information on the garbage dump: http://www.local.com.gh/pantang-dump-site-mountain-garbage-sprawling-residential-area-148559.html.

Where I play football on Saturdays. I now regret quitting soccer when I was 8.

This is Fan Ice, it tastes like soft serve ice cream in a bag. It is now my reason for being. I am eating as much as possible to prevent weight loss.

The bus to Tamale
My venture (MBC) is loaning me to another venture, the Young Managers Project, for two weeks to assist in the set up of their monitoring and evaluation effort. As a result, I woke up at 5AM on Sunday to travel 12 hours North to the city of Tamale. When I arrived at the bus station at 6AM, I was informed that the 8AM Imperial Express bus was sold out. In response, I grabbed a cab to the STC (government-owned) bus station to attempt to get on one of their three buses on Sunday. These were also sold out. An employee saw this, and promptly told me to sit down and wait, he would help me shortly.

This is one of the more uncomfortable things that happens regularly. The situation goes like this: the Obruni (foreigner/white person) comes in and is given preferential treatment/is able to by-pass the line/have an exception provided for them. The employees who provide this sometimes expect additional compensation. Sometimes it is difficult to recognize when this is happening, other times, it is blatantly obvious and uncomfortable. In this particular situation it became clear to me pretty quickly and I told the employee I was going to one of the other bus stations to see what I could find. He insisted on accompanying me back to Imperial Express Station to help. When we got back to the station, he spoke to a man, who then walked up to the counter and enabled me to buy a ticket on the bus that I was denied entry to an hour prior. I’m still not entirely sure what happened or why. Was the bus not actually full? Did somebody get bumped? Situations like this seem to be fairly common and I am still figuring out how to handle them.

The drive up to Tamale was beautiful and bumpy. The road has big speed bumps every kilometre or so, which makes sleeping very difficult. In addition, the speakers blare Ghanaian movies for most of the trip. Further exacerbating this issue is the fact that Ghanaian movies have no shortage of screaming, yelling, and fighting in them. After twelve sleepless hours, I arrived in Tamale!

A picture from outside the Afri-lead (YMP) office in Tamale.


Part of my breakfast this morning. To answer your question, yes, that is hot coffee in a plastic bag. A water fight with me right now would be very unwise.

A brother and sister fight over a basket of candy their mother got for them. The brother is clearly picking on the sister. I can relate to the plight of the boy, I remember being forced to share with my little sister. So unfair.