It's been 4 weeks in Patongo IDP camp; and I feel I'm finally getting a bigger grasp of the programs being implemented here through Medair; the needs and the response to them. It feels like home now; walking through the camp every day, seeing the same familiar faces, the beautiful mother sitting with her daughter under her thatched roof, the men sanding wood in the shade of a mango tree, the excited children that give 'high 5's' on the walk home now, the same three cows tied near the burning rubbish pit, the pregnant pig that's always snorting in the mud, the mother with baby Rosie who always welcomes me to cuddle the baby on my way home from work. I'm enjoying being here with the Acholi people, and with the team we are working and living with.
Visiting the smaller settlements of displaced people outside of Patongo, we are meeting with communities to listen to their assessment of the public health issues they are facing. Most of the time they prioritize the issues as not having a place to go the bathroom--resulting in faeces out in the open--increasing the spread of diarrhoeal diseases, lack of bathing shelters, no hand washing facilities in the community, no access to clean drinking water, schools that 1,500 students and have no bathrooms or handwashing facilities. We are helping support action plans to address these in about 40 different camps in the area through the Water Sanitation portion of our program. I'm managing part of that sector, with a team of 5 national Ugandan staff. There is also a psycho-social program to support the
4 comments:
HI Love! I saw this today, have you heard of it/seen the movie?
http://www.invisiblechildren.com/home.php
Miss you! Katy
Well written Kathleen. Beautiful people. Keep up the good work, and Happy Thanksgiving!
Love, Nate
Hi Kathleen. My name is Amber, and I go to Albion College. A friend of mine read your blog and sent it to me, knowing I would be interested in the things you do.
I run a Gulu Walk here in Michigan, I don't know if you've heard of it, but its a walk we do every year to raise awareness about the war in Uganda. I'm also the president of an organization called The Nwagni Project, and we're building a school in Cameroon. I'm hoping to get to Africa and do things like you're doing, hopefully in rehabilitation of LRA children, or teaching.
The things you're doing are amazing. I know this kind of work can be emotionally exhaustive, but it always ends up worth it. :)
Good luck with everything, I'll be reading!
Peace and Smiles,
-Amber
The world always looks brighter from behind a smile...so why don't you give one today!
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