Search This Blog

Showing posts with label South Sudan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Sudan. Show all posts

Friday, 24 July 2015

My neighbours in Kampala

Before I came to Uganda I wondered what it would be like living alone in Africa. In Rwanda in 2007 I was with Mal and in 2011 with Sue. 

I'm really pleased to say that it has been an extra bonus living alone. Because there is no-one at home I tend to visit more. And I think the neighbours visit me more because they don't really understand a person living on their own and maybe they feel sorry for me!

Whatever the case I have really enjoyed my experience of living alone in Africa this time round.

The shopowner across the road and I have become friends. His name is Martin. When I leave and return each day we greet each other.

  
Whenever I am purchasing something he gives me local prices plus extra peanuts or bananas or whatever I am buying.

 

One day he thought I looked tired and so he dusted off the bench out the front and suggested I sit for a while. I did.

  

Sometimes I buy something small just to interact with Martin. 
Today I bought a small packet of local chips for that very reason. 


He was pleased to see me because he had a gift for me. It was a HUGE avocado, perfect and ready to eat. Someone had given it to him and he had kept it especially for me because he knows I like them and buy them often. How cool is that!

In my building I have neighbours from a  number of different nations - Sudan, South Sudan, Malawai and Uganda. 


My Sudanese neighbours invited me to their Eid celebration at the end of Ramadan. As usual,  the women ate in the kitchen. They were such a lovely bunch of women.



 The following night it was their 4 year old's birthday party 


and I was included, of course.


In the unit beneath mine a new family has recently moved in and they are from Malawi. We have just begun to connect.



One Sunday afternoon recently I went to visit the neighbours downstairs. They are from Uganda and South Sudan. The only person home was 16 year old Joanne. She was watching the movie ‘The Life of Jesus Christ’. We watched it together and had a lot of fun trying to race each other to complete the scriptures that were part of the script. 

I have taken lots of photos of neighbours from my compound and they love it when I print them and give them when I visit. Often as I come in the gate now, the little ones come running and say: “You photo me”.

Perhaps some of those photos will be good for a blog post in the near future. 

The power has gone out again tonight and so I will finish this before my computer battery shuts down.

Friday, 17 July 2015

A wonderful Kampala day

Well, I just wanted to tell you about my special day earlier in the week so full and rich with Ugandan experiences. My apologies up front for this longer than usual post, but I just wanted to share my day with you and I hope you will enjoy. 


  I caught a taxi right outside my front gate and headed for the city, not the office first thing that day.


When I got off the taxi in town I went straight to a Christian Bookshop where I bought a Bible for my  beautiful 16 year old downstairs neighbour who left hers in South Sudan when she left there. Tick

From there to another Christian Bookshop (there are many in Kampala) to find the person to custom make a cover for my own Bible. It is common, easy and relatively inexpensive here.  Tick


On the way to that bookshop I passed an electronics shop and went in to see if I could buy a 2GB flash drive to put my photos on to have printed next time - don't want to take any chances with viruses and so use a new flash each time I want to take photos to printers. When I asked the price I was told 30,000/- (about $12 Australian). I told him that a young friend of mine had bought me one earlier and had paid 15,000/-. He told me 18,000/-. We chatted about Australia, Ugandan politics and how I am enjoying being in his country. I said that I had to walk along the street to have photos printed and if I was unable to find another flash for 15,000/- I would be back to buy his. He immediately said 'You can have it for 15,000/-'. (What do you think, Alan Wilkinson? Did I do well?) I was happy with that and very happy that I had successfully entered into their bargaining/relationship method of purchase and succeeded. Tick


From there to the photo printing place where I had been with my young friend previously. First price is usually 500/- per photo. I was not accompanied by a Ugandan this time and had to manage to get the right price on my own. I told the man that I had been another time and because I had printed many photos he had given me the price of 300/- per photo. When I said I had many again and asked if the price could be 300/- he agreed and charged me accordingly, plus one photo thrown in. Tick!


On to the shop where I can buy delicious vegetable samosas that I had eaten before and knew were reliable. I hadn't eaten breakfast and so I bought three. I sat outside that small shop and watched Kampala life while I ate them. Tick


As I was finishing, the optician who owned the shop next door to the samosa shop arrived to open up for the day. I asked him if he could fix my glasses that had been sitting on my nose crooked for a couple of weeks. He was very happy to do so free of charge. Tick


Off to the Craft Market to buy my last few things to take back home to family, supporters etc. I had made good contacts on my previous visit and was beginning to know the prices. I chatted with three stall holders as I sat on the stools they pulled out for me as I arrived, bought a few things and said my farewells to these 'new friends'. Tick

Walked back to the office where I showed my photos to some of the YFC staff. They don't print many pictures and most of these were for them. They were very happy to see them. I took some more while we were enjoying our time together. Tick

I drove with Luke to the Post Office to collect two parcels that had arrived for me. I was pretty excited but that was short-lived as I realised that I needed my passport for ID and hadn't brought it with me. Not tick. I had to go back the next day with my passport.


Back to the office in time for lunch. Miriam, our National Director in Uganda, has been really busy lately and we haven't had a lot of opportunity to catch up, and so I asked if she had time to stop to eat her lunch and could we sit and have it together. She said that would be good. We had SUCH a lovely time together catching up on and sharing many things. Tick


One of our young mums left with her little boy that day. I had my last cuddle of little Mukiza. 


 This mum and bub have gone to a good situation with an organisation that brought her to Mirembe House in the first place. What a beautiful mother she is. It was so good to see her leaving in good hands with her healthy little boy and knowing that she will be supported well and that her little Mukiza will be well loved and cared for. Tick

After I arrived home quite late I called in to see my Sudanese neighbour, Rachma, who
 had damaged her eye quite badly on Saturday. I am glad to see that she is improving. This family is Muslim and it is Ramadan and they fast until 7pm each day. It was almost 7pm when I arrived and her husband invited me to eat with them. I didn't think that I could refuse, and why would I? 


That invitation means that I eat in the kitchen, sitting on the floor with the women of the household, 


while the men eat in the dining room at the table. I also noticed that their food was a little more 'special' than ours. Learning all the time! It was traditional Sudanese food as I had eaten with them before. Conversation is improving as the weeks pass and we are becoming good friends. I often bring photos I have taken of them and their children and Rachma always gives me food when I visit. They welcome me with open arms. If the baby she is carrying is a girl she will call it the Sudanese version of Jane. How special is that!  Tick

What a very satisfactory, diverse and wonderful Kampala day. I am so thankful to God that He gives me the capacity to embrace and enjoy such diversity in a foreign country. Tick