I arrived in Arusha, Tanzania on August 17, 2011 and joined
the staff of The School of St. Jude
as a teacher-librarian in the Upper Primary Library at the Moshono Campus. I am
here as a volunteer but in the upper primary library there are two local
teachers who have been working as teacher-librarians at the school for a while
and a full-time guard who shelves, repairs books and seems willing to do
anything else he is asked. The majority of the staff at the school is Tanzanian
(plus a few from neighbouring East African countries) but there are some
volunteer teacher mentors and quite a few volunteers working in various roles
in the business office. The majority of the volunteers are Australian.
I visited the school for a few days in June 2010 so I knew
the drill of flying into Nairobi, spending the night in a hotel and taking a
shuttle bus to Arusha the following morning. I have my own room with an ensuite
bathroom (with hot water) and I’m sharing a kitchen with some of the other
volunteers. Although there are frequent power outages in Arusha, the school has
backup generators so we are rarely without power for more than a few seconds.
We also have wifi across campus so I can use my laptop most anywhere. The
signal isn’t strong enough for my iPhone to pick it up from inside my room (and
I’ve put my SIM card in my Nokia) so I have mainly been using it to listen to
podcasts.
The most surprising thing so far has been the number of physical
and social activities going on. There are groups of people that walk in the
mornings before school and on weekends so I’ve walked nearly every day since I
arrived. One volunteer leads yoga sessions twice a week though she has gone
back to Australia for a month or so in order to be there when her first
grandchild is born so yoga is on hiatus. The lower primary PE teacher was a
personal trainer in Australia and she leads cardio and Pilates sessions once a
week. There have been several birthday celebrations since I arrived which have
involved dinner or lunch at various restaurants. There is a Sunday night
tradition of going out for dinner to a complex where there is a movie theatre
and a very western style grocery store (most anything you could possibly want is
available but at a price) as well as a variety of restaurants around a
courtyard including a very yummy Indian one. We had last Monday off as a day in
lieu for Eid and a large group of us ventured out to the Arusha
Cultural Heritage Centre followed by lunch at Shanga (a glass bead making workshop that
employs disabled Tanzanians and has a fabulous restaurant). I’ve been into town
numerous times with various combinations of people to grocery shop, run errands,
watch rugby matches and eat at a variety of restaurants and cafes. All of this
has left me with no chance of being bored and no real time to blog until now.
(I’m not complaining but I know there are people who have been waiting for
updates.)
As well as working on finding my place in the upper primary
library, I have spent a bit of time in the lower primary library, visited the
secondary library at our Usa River campus and been involved in the student
selection process for next year’s grade one students. (I plan to write about
the latter on my other blog at some
point).
I haven’t taken many photos as I am reluctant to wave my
camera about in public – both out of respect for locals and for fear of having
it snatched. I did take some around campus the first weekend I arrived and I
posted most of them in this Picasa web album.
So glad you're writing here, Megan. It's wonderful to get a glimpse of your new life and work. Please keep posting!
ReplyDeleteHi Megan
ReplyDeleteI've been waiting for this! Thanks so much for sharing your experiences. Will be following along interestedly and hoping to collaborate in some way once you are settled.
looking good megan. I can't wait to hear more.x
ReplyDeleteMegan it sounds such an amazing place - I'm sure you'll take up all that is on offer! How wonderful that your working with aussies!! Stacy too - a little bit of me might live on he..he.. What a different world to Singapore where "flashy" is what it's all about - living and working in Orchard has been an eye opener. I envy you in a way that life can be centred around more natural ways. Take care and hope to read more soon when your schedule allows.
ReplyDelete