Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Meeting Etiquette
Kenyans love meetings. As a result I go to a lot of them. You can
have a meeting for pretty much anything. Sometimes it's a regularly
scheduled meeting for a community group or staff meeting, other times
there may be a guest coming to talk to people, outreach by a health
clinic etc. Regardless of the reason meetings provide people with a
chance to see friends and community members. Sometimes I genuinely
enjoy meetings, but there are some key differences from meetings in
Kenya, some of which drive me crazy.
My biggest issue with Kenyan meetings is time. People will generally
tell you a time a meeting is going to start. I have yet to see a
meeting start on time. If a meeting starts within an hour of the
proposed time I'm impressed. Now I tend to show up about an hour
after the "start time" and still tend to be the first or second person
to arrive. I am concerned about what this will result in when I get
back to America and people intentionally show up early.
A few days ago I was waiting for a meeting to start. When it was over
3 hours late starting I had to leave as I had a prior obligation. I
feel like 3 hours is excessive. By that point I've usually run out of
tasks to occupy myself and have become hungry, not unlike a small
child. Meetings once they start take a long time. Several hours
(2-3) is pretty standard. Part of the reason is that not only is
there some sot of agenda, but the meetings tend to be more social and
everyone must be properly greeted.
Another reason meetings can seem never ending are the speeches that
people give. If at any point a government official, community leader,
special visitor, shows up a meeting the meeting will come to a halt as
people expect that person, who is viewed as as honoured guest, to give
a speech. The speech is almost never tailored to the group or subject
of the meeting and can go on for a long amount of time. Thankfully
the groups I work with no longer have me give introductory speeches.
If there is a visitor however, I am expected to introduce myself
through a speech to that person. It can be awkward. All visitors are
expected to introduce themselves, which is typically a sentence or
two, something that I think is fairly universal. When I specifically
am dragged up to the front of the church to introduce myself, instead
of being able to do so from the pew like everyone else, it can feel a
bit uncomfortable. The most awkward was when I went to a pre-wedding
(kind of like an engagement party but more formal) and my Canadian
room mate and I were made to sit in the front of the church, in place
of the bride's parents. Then we had to give a speech. My language
skills were not sufficient, I had been at my site for less than a
month and Magan (my room mate) refused to stand up. Afterwards the
parents of the bride thanked us for coming and supporting their
daughter, they were not upset about giving up their seats.
That brings me to another quirk of Kenyan meetings---seating. Where
you sit is important, as is what you sit upon as it shows your status.
People are thrown off by the fact that I generally don't care where
I'm sitting as long as there is shade. I am not a fan of the sun's
ability to fry me. Most times I end up giving up and sitting wherever
people tell me to, usually at the front near the chairman. I feel
terrible when someone gives up their chair for me, but typically the
refuse to keep it in spite of my insistence.
The "committee" is usually seated in the best places. The committee
is usually made up of the chairperson, secretary and treasurer of a
group. Any guests or village leaders are given good seats as well.
Next come men and then women, usually young women are the ones
standing if there aren't enough chairs. Seating in such a way gives
respect to important people and also can help direct a meeting as
those leading it are clustered together.
During meetings there are often several interruptions made by phone
calls. Sometimes the person receiving the call will step a few feet
away to take the call or even ignore it, but more often they will
carry on a conversation. There is a group I work with whose chairlady
has yet to take less than 3 calls during a meeting. I think it
wouldn't bother me so much if she wasn't answering the phone while she
was in the middle of a sentence. We all wait patiently until she
finishes her calls and completes what she was saying. People don't
think taking a call is rude. It may have something to do with the
importance of greeting people, the newness of cell phones and the fact
that placing a call costs money, but receiving one doesn't.
Women who are breastfeeding bring their babies to meetings. There is
no formula in the village, so until a child is old enough for
porridge, the baby is entirely dependant on breast milk. Often other
women want to hold the baby, much the in America. It's very different
once the baby starts crying. The easiest solution is to feed the
child, so the woman will begin breast feeding, sometimes in the middle
of a speech, and that is totally normal. Breast feeding happens more
often here likely due to the fact that n one in my village owns a
pacifier. It is not scandalous to breast feed in public, unlike in
America. Personally I don't understand why people freak out so much
about it, maybe my view has been influenced by my time in Kenya.
Meetings are generally fairly solemn affairs, sometimes there's soda,
but otherwise not all that much happens. For that reason I will never
forget the time a fight broke out during a dispensary staff meeting
over how much money people should contribute for food. On that note, I
think that's all I have to say about meetings in Kenya.
Monday, June 4, 2012
The Weight of Water
One of the most common sights in rural Kenya is a woman or girl
carrying water on her head. People here will tell you that "water is
life" and it is for that reason that women will walk for miles if
needed to keep their families alive.
In America water comes out of a tap in your kitchen, bathroom or a
hose you hooked up to water your lawn. If you're lucky your water
comes chilled out of a tap on your refrigerator door along with
several kinds of ice. As an added benefit the water coming out of the
tap and into your glass has been treated, meaning you won't be exposed
to water borne diseases such as dysentery (I can tell you from
experience you should count yourself lucky if you can avoid that one).
Americans tend to use a lot of water. We use it to cook, wash clothes
and bathe like people do here but in larger quantities. In Kenya you
might use 10 liters of water for a bucket bath. I don't know how much
is used in the average shower, but it's more than 10 liters, as is the
capacity of your standard bathtub. Perhaps if Americans had to carry
their bath water on their heads even just 1 or 2 blocks, they too
would use less. I know I would because water is heavy.
A liter of water has a mass of 1 kilogram, or roughly 2.2 lbs.
Typically I never carried more than a 1 liter water bottle with me in
America, but I did notice that it made my purse heavier. In Kenya I
carry considerably more than 1 liter and I'm only an amateur. To get
the water I use I have to options. I can leave buckets and basins out
when it rains (which I do) or I can use one of the wells near my
house. If the well outside my house has relatively clear water I can
carry my water using my hands in small (10 liter) quantities making
multiple trips if needed, which would only happen if I was doing
laundry (I use 10 liters when washing my clothes by hand). So when I
haul water out of the well by my house I am hauling roughly 22 lbs of
water. 10 liters is also the smallest amount of water carried on
one's head here, and typically it would be carried by a child.
If I have to get water from another compound, like almost everyone in
my community, then I carry it on my head. Carrying 10 liters is not
too much of a problem, the hardest part for me at least is getting the
bucket on my head because my arms can barely reach the top of the
bucket once it has been lifted onto my head. I generally don't have
to walk very far and there are no hills in my way so it's not too
complicated.
The more standard amounts of water to carry are 15 and 20 liters. If
you're using a bucket it's more likely you would be carrying 15 as
many don't hold 20 liters and you are less likely to fill it to the
brim as you wouldn't want any of the precious commodity to spill. I
can carry 15 liters on my head, which I think is acceptable
considering that the water weighs roughly 33 lbs and is about 1/3 of
my body weight (I was 105 lbs at our Close of Service medical). There
are girls here though that must be 15 lbs lighter than me carrying 20
liters (44 lbs) which is insane because that's half of their body
weight. When I was preparing to climb Mt. Kenya I read that it's not
good to carry more than 25% of your body weight when hiking, which is
what women and girls here are doing when carrying water. They are
going up and down hills, though fields, down roads etc. balancing
large quantities of weight on their heads and making it look
effortless. Between carrying water, working in the fields, hauling
and chopping firewood and all of the other tasks that make up their
daily routine the women are hard working and strong yet friendly and
eager to help out.
Water isn't the only thing carried on heads here. I have carried
firewood, baskets of dried corn kernels, brush etc. but here's a list
of some of the common and/or strange things I've seen: food to be sold
at the market, bundles of clothes, gas tanks, giant clay pots, a desk,
tin sheets for roofing--I'll let you know if I see/remember anything else!
A Dollar A Day
I know it has been months since my last post but I'm aiming to make up
for the lack of activity today. Let's just say I've been having
technical difficulties.
My time in Kenya is coming to an end. We had our Close of Service
Conference a few weeks ago and ever since I've found myself reflecting
on my time here when I'm not freaking out about what remains to be
done. I have been taking pictures, something I had long been avoiding
due to the riot caused by a camera in my village, which I hope to post
once I am in an area with decent internet (realistically that may not
happen until I get back to America in the first week of September).
I had considered myself integrated into my community and thought that
I was doing a better job of living like a local than the majority of
Peace Corps Volunteers. I was however living off a larger budget than
most of my community. To try and better understand the lives of
people in my village I have been living off a dollar a day for a week
and will continue to do so until I live my village in July. In the
past week I have already made changes to my lifestyle, trips to town
have been reduced, phone use has become virtually nonexistent,
store-bought food has been reduced to a bare minimum of staples. I am
primarily eating fruit, vegetables, corn flour and beans like most of
my neighbors. Because I don't eat a lot I am able to purchase a wider
variety of produce, provided it's available.
I have not been having huge problems with keeping to my daily budget
so far, 85ksh is plenty for me to eat, buy soap etc. but I am having
to plan for my next trip to town. The cost for the journey is 100ksh
round trip, so more than my daily allotment and as a result I have to
save up for a week in advance, just like my neighbors who also have to
save up for school fees, clothing, fuel etc. Many of them have small
farms where they can grow some corn and beans, which helps, but
recently there has been a sharp rise in school dropouts in my area
because it has been months since the last harvest. Until we harvest
again the food prices will remain high, some items will be
unavailable, and many people will deplete their food stocks to
dangerously low levels.
Here's an example of what I spent/used yesterday:
Oatmeal (5ksh), coffee (10ksh), sugar (2.5ksh), bananas (6ksh), beans
(10ksh), kale (5ksh), onion (2.5ksh), garlic (2ksh), tomatoes (10ksh),
soap (5ksh), oil (5ksh), other toiletries (5ksh), phone use (10ksh)
money saved for next trip to town: 2ksh. Clearly I need to do a better job today.
It adds up quickly. I doubt I'll buy another soda in my village, at
25ksh they're pretty steep! The fact that I can't buy a soda only
helps me to understand the frustration of women in my community who
can't send their children to school, or even feed them, because their
husbands spend too much money on alcohol (a beer costs around 100ksh,
local brews are cheaper but extremely dangerous).
I'll keep you updated on how well I do keeping to the budget.
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