*Note: many of the places are described in greater detail in this post.
My meeting with Abdullah last Friday about the plan for what to do with Worldwide Mobility in the next few weeks was great. Here's the flexible schedule (subject to changes & rearrangements):
Monday - work at KASI, make website to fill in the form, make Word Document version. Abdullah will be out, so it's a perfect day to catch up on email and do the web side of the plan.
Tuesday - meet/work with one of the wheelchair technicians at Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center (KCMC), Albert.
Wednesday - Two home visits of current wheelchair users, both in good quality, locally made chairs
Thursday - Work at KCMC, meet with Albert again, the orthopedics department, and the Motivation office
Friday - go to CCBR with Abdullah, after work, go to the KASI Finance Committee meeting.
Monday - travel to Arusha to see Mobility Care, learn their system, etc
Tuesday - visit Njoro workshop
Wednesday - home visit of a current wheelchair user in an unfitted, externally donated chair from the states
Thursday - assessment at CCBR
Friday - meeting with local PAWA people
So there's the rough sketch. I think it's an appropriate mixture of seeing each of the aspects over here and all parts of it are things I definitely would not be able to do from MIT. I'm looking forward to meeting and working with everybody, especially talking with the current wheelchair users. I think it will be very enlightening to compare the experiences of the users in locally fitted vs externally non-fitted wheelchairs.
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Definitions
There are a lot of words, names, and acronyms thrown around like you know exactly what I'm talking about, so here's a list:
Places
CCBR - A disability organization where Abdullah works part time. They do assessments of people's disabilities.
KASI - Kilimanjaro Assiciation for the Spinally Injured. The first and only such organization in Africa. They inspired several similar organizations in Uganda and Kenya.
KCMC - Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center. They are the #1 hospital in Tanzania, located in Moshi. There is a wheelchair workshop there that KASI hires to make wheelchairs (KCMC Wheelchair Workshop), and this is where Albert works. Located in Moshi, Tanzania.
Arusha Mobility - one of three wheelchair workshops KASI hires to make wheelchairs. Located in Arusha, Tanzania.
Njoro Wheelchair Workshop - the third wheelchair workshop KASI hires, located near Arusha.
People
Abdullah - my mentor in Tanzania. His website is here: abdullahonwheels.googlepages.com
Albert - wheelchair technician, works at KCMC Wheelchair Workshop
Amos Winter - my mentor at MIT, head of M-Lab
Misc
M-Lab - MIT Mobility Lab, working on several wheelchair related projects and has a class every spring semester
Tigo - a cell phone provider in Tanzania
WC, wc - wheelchair (we're not British)
Zain - a cell phone provider for a large portion of Africa, including Tanzania, Uganda, and Kenya
Kiswahili - Swahili
jambo - hello
hamjambo? - how are you (plural)?
kusoma - to study
kutoka - to come from
ni/si - positive/negative present tense form of to be
Places
CCBR - A disability organization where Abdullah works part time. They do assessments of people's disabilities.
KASI - Kilimanjaro Assiciation for the Spinally Injured. The first and only such organization in Africa. They inspired several similar organizations in Uganda and Kenya.
KCMC - Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center. They are the #1 hospital in Tanzania, located in Moshi. There is a wheelchair workshop there that KASI hires to make wheelchairs (KCMC Wheelchair Workshop), and this is where Albert works. Located in Moshi, Tanzania.
Arusha Mobility - one of three wheelchair workshops KASI hires to make wheelchairs. Located in Arusha, Tanzania.
Njoro Wheelchair Workshop - the third wheelchair workshop KASI hires, located near Arusha.
People
Abdullah - my mentor in Tanzania. His website is here: abdullahonwheels.googlepages.com
Albert - wheelchair technician, works at KCMC Wheelchair Workshop
Amos Winter - my mentor at MIT, head of M-Lab
Misc
M-Lab - MIT Mobility Lab, working on several wheelchair related projects and has a class every spring semester
Tigo - a cell phone provider in Tanzania
WC, wc - wheelchair (we're not British)
Zain - a cell phone provider for a large portion of Africa, including Tanzania, Uganda, and Kenya
Kiswahili - Swahili
jambo - hello
hamjambo? - how are you (plural)?
kusoma - to study
kutoka - to come from
ni/si - positive/negative present tense form of to be
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Kiswahili
Swahili has been consuming my weekend. Since my host mom mostly speaks Swahili and several of the people I come in contact with the most outside of KASI/KCMC speak better Swahili than English, it's definitely a good thing to know. Nothing like a little motivation. I've made some good progress in a week, but I need to practice it more. Listening to CDs and reviewing flashcards can only get you so far. When I do speak to someone in Swahili, I get the distinct impression that even though the words I'm saying may be correct written, my accent is so bad that they don't understand. I'm really feeling for those PhD students leading recitations...
As I'm sitting here, I can hear my host family talking with their cousins. It seems like people all speak at the same time. I have no idea how they understand each other. Sarah's aunt just invited me to come to her place anytime. People seem to just pop into places here without calling or anything.
Still trying to figure out some things, though. Meal times are a little weird. Breakfast is whenever you wake up, which makes sense, but lunch does not seem to be at noon, usually hits around 2pm. Then dinner is somewhere between 6pm and 9pm typically. I guess that's not too weird. Just the lunch thing. And I should be used to varied dinner times (thanks mom). A little flexibility is a good thing.
As I'm sitting here, I can hear my host family talking with their cousins. It seems like people all speak at the same time. I have no idea how they understand each other. Sarah's aunt just invited me to come to her place anytime. People seem to just pop into places here without calling or anything.
Still trying to figure out some things, though. Meal times are a little weird. Breakfast is whenever you wake up, which makes sense, but lunch does not seem to be at noon, usually hits around 2pm. Then dinner is somewhere between 6pm and 9pm typically. I guess that's not too weird. Just the lunch thing. And I should be used to varied dinner times (thanks mom). A little flexibility is a good thing.
Travel Advice #1
For travelers who are staying for a long time, even just two weeks, good advice is to get a cell phone in country, or at least a local SIM. I did a lot of research before coming to Tanzania about which phone services to use. While it is possible to get a new SIM card in each country for pretty cheap ($2 or less for cheap ones), since I was traveling to several places, and it was better to have a consistent number, I got a SIM card on the Zain network. (For travelers just in Tanzania, Tigo is good/cheap/easy to find too.) Both Zain and Tigo phone cards are available everywhere in Moshi. When you fill up, the price is on the card, so you don't get ripped off. Everyone knows Zain cards, so it's great. The rates are pretty good (5 cents for a text message in country, 1 Tsh per second calling on the network) and you can call America for roughly what you would pay elsewhere. (~$.50/minute - much better than the $4.99 Verizon wanted to charge me. Other networks have better deals, but it is hard/rare to find something better than $.60/minute).
Even if you don't have a SIM card enabled phone, you can get one for under $40. I was able to get The phone, the SIM card, and put 5000 shillings on the phone for Tsh 46000, about USD$38. Zain.com has a lot of information about the rates for each country. One of the best parts is you can buy the top up cards in each country and just pay at local rates. Zain has an extensive network, making it a great phone for travelers who are crossing a lot of borders. When deciding, I emailed a few Zain representatives to figure out which phones to buy, and they were very helpful.
Even if you don't have a SIM card enabled phone, you can get one for under $40. I was able to get The phone, the SIM card, and put 5000 shillings on the phone for Tsh 46000, about USD$38. Zain.com has a lot of information about the rates for each country. One of the best parts is you can buy the top up cards in each country and just pay at local rates. Zain has an extensive network, making it a great phone for travelers who are crossing a lot of borders. When deciding, I emailed a few Zain representatives to figure out which phones to buy, and they were very helpful.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Mimi nipenda Tanzania!
Hamjambo? Jina langu ni Danielle na mimi nisoma Kiswahili. Mimi nipenda Tanzania! (How are all of you? My name is Danielle, and I am studying Swahili. I love Tanzania!)
Tanzania has been fantastic so far. I'm settling in with my host family, and they are terrific! They're teaching me Swahili. So far I'm pretty terrible/inconsistent, but maybe in a few weeks...
It's impossible to say what has surprised me the most. So many things are different, but so many are the same. There are street vendors everywhere that want to sell you anything you can imagine. (Think New York times 10 and this isn't even the biggest city!) Yesterday I saw a single DVD that claimed to be all of the Lost seasons 1-6. I'm a tad skeptical, but that sort of thing is everywhere. There are lots of people selling shoes, but they'll only put one of each pair out! It makes sense because that way someone can't steal a pair, but it was definitely funny the first time I saw that. People will walk around with baskets and sometime one of their items on their heads. I was surprised the first time I saw a shoe on someone's head.
People here are so nice. Sarah and I went out to town for this spicy fried potato dish. (I know it sounds like French fries, but it was more like potato chunks and no crispy outside.) We were getting gas on the way back, but the car wouldn't start. There was a guy who saw us having trouble and he and his friends roll-started the car. Sarah said she knew him from a carnival or something like that. While it's important to be on your guard and act safely, it's good to remember that many people are nice.
It was great having help with that, but I'm glad I knew how to fix it, thanks to Amos's car breaking at the Yale conference. If we hadn't been as lucky with those guys there, I think I would have been able to help. It's funny what bits of information turn out to be useful. Thanks for breaking your car Amos =P
Tomorrow I'm meeting with Abdullah at KASI - can't wait to really get started!!!
Tanzania has been fantastic so far. I'm settling in with my host family, and they are terrific! They're teaching me Swahili. So far I'm pretty terrible/inconsistent, but maybe in a few weeks...
It's impossible to say what has surprised me the most. So many things are different, but so many are the same. There are street vendors everywhere that want to sell you anything you can imagine. (Think New York times 10 and this isn't even the biggest city!) Yesterday I saw a single DVD that claimed to be all of the Lost seasons 1-6. I'm a tad skeptical, but that sort of thing is everywhere. There are lots of people selling shoes, but they'll only put one of each pair out! It makes sense because that way someone can't steal a pair, but it was definitely funny the first time I saw that. People will walk around with baskets and sometime one of their items on their heads. I was surprised the first time I saw a shoe on someone's head.
People here are so nice. Sarah and I went out to town for this spicy fried potato dish. (I know it sounds like French fries, but it was more like potato chunks and no crispy outside.) We were getting gas on the way back, but the car wouldn't start. There was a guy who saw us having trouble and he and his friends roll-started the car. Sarah said she knew him from a carnival or something like that. While it's important to be on your guard and act safely, it's good to remember that many people are nice.
It was great having help with that, but I'm glad I knew how to fix it, thanks to Amos's car breaking at the Yale conference. If we hadn't been as lucky with those guys there, I think I would have been able to help. It's funny what bits of information turn out to be useful. Thanks for breaking your car Amos =P
Tomorrow I'm meeting with Abdullah at KASI - can't wait to really get started!!!
Sunday, May 31, 2009
I'm also curious about the other $84.95
Jeff Sachs:
Requoted from Nicholas Kristof's blog at the New York Times.
"Out of every $100 of US national income, our government currently provides the grand sum of 5 cents in aid to all of Africa. Out of that same $100, we have found around $10 for the stimulus package and bank bailouts and another $5 for the military. It is not wonderful that what has caught the public’s eye are proposals to cut today’s 5 cents to 4 or 3 cents or perhaps zero."
Requoted from Nicholas Kristof's blog at the New York Times.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Prepping for the Unknown
I'm one of those people that plans for all possible contingencies. That girl that had band aids at prom? Yup, that was me. So planning a trip to three different countries is a whole other experience. Finding visas, making itineraries, tracking political situations, getting immunized, buying medicine... Then you have the finances. How am I going to access money while I'm there?
It's amazing how many little details go into traveling to Africa.
- getting immunizations
- getting visas
- getting contact info everywhere you're going
- finding places to stay
I think going to three countries is making my plans more complicated, but it's totally worth it. I'll be able to get so much more done by going to multiple locations. I want to get the pilots started and that'll be possible if I go to a few places. In Tanzania, I'm hoping to be able to start a pilot program there. That will be the first real test of the system. When I visit Kenya, I am hoping to start one there as well. In Uganda, I hope to identify a partner NGO to work through and find other wheelchair workshops.
It's going to be busy, but I'm looking forward to it =)
It's amazing how many little details go into traveling to Africa.
- getting immunizations
- getting visas
- getting contact info everywhere you're going
- finding places to stay
I think going to three countries is making my plans more complicated, but it's totally worth it. I'll be able to get so much more done by going to multiple locations. I want to get the pilots started and that'll be possible if I go to a few places. In Tanzania, I'm hoping to be able to start a pilot program there. That will be the first real test of the system. When I visit Kenya, I am hoping to start one there as well. In Uganda, I hope to identify a partner NGO to work through and find other wheelchair workshops.
It's going to be busy, but I'm looking forward to it =)
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