Saturday 17 December 2011

Money


I’ve just got back to the home comforts of Aksum having spent a week in the chaos of Addis. A trip to the capital is not only an assault on your senses but a threat to your wallet. In fact, the percentage increase in prices from Aksum might make you wonder whether a trip is worth it at all. For a start, a return airfare with Ethiopian Airlines came in at a cool 2,400 Birr, which was followed by a 1,500 Birr 6 night stay at a ‘budget’ hotel. And it doesn’t end there.  A cup of tea at 6 Birr is considerably higher than I am normally used to paying while a 16 Birr haircut in Addis was 6 Birr more expensive. Transport also presents financial challenges. While Line Taxis (beaten up old Toyota mini-vans) in Addis are generally cheaper than a Bajaj in Aksum, the hiring of a taxi will really test your haggling skills. I was quoted 200 Birr for a trip from my hotel to the airport but eventually secured a lift for 80. My taxi ride from the airport at Aksum into the town was a mere 25 Birr.

However, one of the pleasures of a trip to Addis is that you can have restaurant dishes not normally available in the Aksum hotels; pizzas, grilled chicken, fish and tender meat dishes are readily available, but at a price. A pizza and a couple of glasses of very presentable wine set me back 92 Birr while a tasty grilled chicken dish with a glass of wine in a very well appointed restaurant cost me 84Birr. Prices in Aksum are a little more modest and dirt cheap if you know where to go. A meal at our local injera café recently cost Viv and I a modest 23 Birr and that included a drink of sprite!

We have become increasingly sensitive to the fluctuations in prices since our arrival; more so since we now try to ensure that we remain within the budget of our 2,750 Birr monthly income. Part of the challenge in Aksum is to ensure that we are charged at local ‘habesha’ rates and not the inflated ‘farenji’ prices so often quoted. One local hotel openly displays the fact that foreigners will be required to pay twice as much as Ethiopian visitors! Thankfully, our residency permits can come in useful. I guess that you know you have been in Ethiopia for a while when you stop converting prices from Birr to pounds but every once in a while it helps to take stock and to put things into perspective. 
27 Birr = £1.00
 As my American colleague might say, ‘I’ll leave you to do the Math” and draw your own conclusions about the cost of living in a developing nation. Maybe trips to Addis and other places in this wonderful country are worth the effort.


Sunday 27 November 2011

An Early Start


We were up at 5.00am on Saturday to go to the Aksum stadium.  By the time we arrived things were in full swing. We were there at the invitation of the University athletics squad. There are some very talented runners not least Berihu the current Ethiopian Universities 800m champion. We watched a very impressive training session on a track that could so easily have caused injury; athletes were required to negotiate some serious looking ruts that had been created during the rainy season. Alongside the University squad were local athletes including a blind runner preparing for the Ethiopian paralympic championships. In the centre of the stadium some junior football squads assembled and by 6.30am their coaching sessions were underway; all this before sunrise!

It was a terrific and rather humbling sight to see so many groups showing real dedication. Facilities were, as you might expect, rudimentary and the equipment basic. In many cases, footwear was no more than plastic sandals and there was only one football per group. I couldn’t help thinking that the addition of some footballs, training bibs and cones would have made the coach’s job so much easier. However, despite these shortcomings, the enthusiasm was impressive. There was no shortage of talent either.


Saturday 19 November 2011

A Day Trip to Adwa


After 7 weeks Viv finally persuaded me to stop my ‘planning and preparation’ for what turned out to be an eventful day trip to Adwa. Adwa has huge significance in Ethiopia as it was in the surrounding hills that Menelik II inflicted the biggest ever defeat on a colonial army in Africa (Italian troups) and saved Ethiopia from colonisation. 

At first sight, Adwa is an uninspiring town that is under heavy construction both in the development of new roads and commercial buildings. It’s fair to say that much of it resembles a building site.

After a gentle stroll where the highlight was watching birds enjoying a small but gently flowing stream we were ready to return to Aksum. However, as we were enjoying a cooling drink we became more and more aware of people walking past us laden with goods from a nearby market. What a contrast Old Adwa turned out to be. Like Aksum, it was an incredibly colourful and vibrant scene set against a backdrop of towering hills. Much of the produce was similar to the Aksum markets until Viv came upon a woman selling cherry tomatoes; what a treat is in store for us! I have added some photographs of some characters we met at the market.

However, the most memorable moment of the day? Getting my wallet lifted during the journey from Aksum. Crammed into a mini-bus with 20 others the guy to my right was able to take my wallet from a deep, zipped pocket. Genius! All rather embarrassing really particularly as I have always felt that I take all the necessary precautions to avoid such an incident. He was able to get away with 200birr in cash and 50birr’s worth of phone cards but thankfully nothing of greater significance. Thanks to a reminder from the VSO office in Addis, Viv had photocopied our VSO ID cards and our Residency Permits the day before so all he was left with was two photocopied mugshots of myself. I hope he enjoys spending the money but feels deeply ashamed to have robbed a habisha volunteer. Somehow, I doubt it. All in all, a sharp reminder about the care we need to take with our belongings.

Friday 4 November 2011

University Reflections

Founded in 2006, Aksum University is one of a number of new Universities throughout Ethiopia.  Built 5k to the south of the town centre, the site houses 5 faculties and close to 10,000 students and bears testimony to the Ethiopian government’s commitment to Higher Education.  It has been an immense project of which senior mangers within the University are justifiably proud.  However, the rapid growth hasn’t come without some difficulties.  Much of the campus resembles a building site, while new trenches for threading cables of all sorts emerge daily.  Health and safety officers would be in their element here although, to my knowledge, no one has fallen down any of the holes yet!!  It seems to me that the rapid rate of building has exceeded the University’s capacity to provide essential resources.  Thus, some courses run without the advantages of purpose built facilities.  For example, there are no practical facilities for the current Sports Science students although a new gymnasium is currently being constructed, and purpose built sports performance labs still seem a long way off.

Internal communications also present challenges as there is no email system to speed up the exchange of messages.  This is left to the hand delivery of messages/letters that often involves long hikes across campus to locate your recipient.  However, progress on the IT front is being made under the leadership of Mike Hulme, another VSO volunteer.  He really is making a difference and only last week was able to celebrate the installation of a broadband connection.  There is still much to be done but progress is being made.  Developments are in good hands even if it will be a little while before access is available to all.

After what seems a very long period of preparation, I’m delighted to say that work on the Higher Diploma Programme has started.  At last, I am beginning to feel like a fully-fledged volunteer.  I am supported by Dr. Mariama Ross and Desalegn Alemu.  Mariama is an American teacher educator who has worked in a number of US universities before volunteering with IFESH (International Foundation for Education and Self Help).  For the last 5 years, she has been working at a University in Ghana but has come to Aksum to support the development of university wide Quality Assurance systems.  She has become a reassuring and calming influence as I wrestle with the ‘Ethiopian Way’ of doing things.  Desalegn is a member of the Psychology Department here at the University and has been seconded to work on the HDP for the year.  I have found his help and advice invaluable.  He is a charming man who like many others in Aksum is a long distance supporter of Manchester Utd.  He was very quiet when we attended the screening of the Manchester derby in the local cinema!!  During some of the earlier sessions with the candidates he would interject to merely repeat, almost word for word, what I had said.  It seemed unusual to say the least until he pointed out that he was translating my instructions from English to Amharic English; it seems to work!  I guess he’s lucky I’m not from Glasgow.  Its early days but I am optimistic of creating a hard working and responsive group; there are certainly some extremely capable candidates with very impressive CVs.

I’ve now been at the University for four weeks and it must be said that I have been met with considerable courtesy and a real desire to help me settle in. If an institution is to be judged by its people alone, this University has a promising future.  It is an aspirational institution that recognises the scale of the job in front of it.  The senior managers are keen to initiate change but appreciate that they are trying to make sweeping cultural changes with all the challenges that attend such a process.  The next two years will be critical as the completion of some key resources and facilities materialise.  And what is expected from me?  I hope I can make some sort of contribution to the strategic developments around teaching, learning and assessment.  I guess only time will tell.

Saturday 29 October 2011

SHOPPING IN AKSUM

12th October 2011                                             1st day of the second month 2004  - Ethiopian date.
It was always a plan, when we decided to seek a placement with VSO, that we would try to do without the indulgencies of western ‘civilisation’ and live a simpler life, but sometimes it’s really tough.  The main problem is refridgeration.  Of course we could always go out and buy a fridge, but that would defeat the object of the exercise. Food obviously doesn’t keep for more than a day in this heat.  Gone is the old home style of making a big pot of stew to last a few days. Everything has to be made fresh and then we must ensure there is no wastage caused by overproduction (Nutts never were good at throwing away food).
This job of feeding ourselves is compounded by the limited availability and variety of fresh goods.  Bananas and oranges are available in every other tiny street shop, and we eat them every day.  But if you want more variety then papaya and guavas are bought from the juice shop, and these are supplemented with grapefruit and limes from the Saturday market.  Vegetables are another difficulty; if you miss the Saturday market, then you’re restricted to red onions, avocados from the juice shop (60p per kilo), potatoes (only one variety), white cabbage and tomatoes(again only one variety);  sometimes one of the local roadside stalls will get a sack of lettuce – a loose leaf type sold on the root.  On that day we always have salad!  We try to get to the market on Saturday though (an experience in itself).  There we can find carrots, beetroot, leaf beet, and garlic.  That’s it; only one variety of each vegetable; no cherry toms, no watercress or mixed leaves or cos, no spinach, no apples, no plums, no olives, no cucumber, no ... variety.
Of course meat doesn’t appear in our kitchen, but beef and goat and, to a lesser extent, mutton is sold in small butchers’ shops, but naturally it isn’t hung to tenderize the meat in this climate, so it is killed and eaten immediately – either raw, in chunks eaten at the butcher’s or cut into tiny pieces and quick cooked; then it’s called ‘tibs’ and traditionally served with raw green chilli and onion and injera.  You buy chicken of course- it comes fresh - very fresh - and you take it home and kill it yourself!

Friday 23 September 2011

Arrival in Aksum

23rd September 2011 (11th day of the first month 2004 local date)

Our eager arrival at our new home, a spacious villa-like house within its own compound (high walls with big metal gates) was tempered by the realisation that it hadn’t been cleaned since the departure of the previous tenant some months earlier, and probably a long time before that!.  We hope that the removal of lots of rubbish, plenty of cleaning and scrubbing, and copious amounts of Vim and bleach will do the trick over the next few weeks.  Meanwhile we thought we would tell you about getting water in northern Ethiopia (by the way it is pronounced Ethiop-ya here).

There are pipes that bring water from a reservoir 5 miles away into a tank on the roof.  This tank has no cover and is open to birds and dirt – Gareth has climbed up a rickety, home made ladder to fix a cover – it may need some duct tape to hold it in place.  Anyway, that’s immaterial because when the stop cock is turned on, water gushes out of the wall and from the bendy connection pipes in the kitchen and bathroom.  Much mopping up later and we decide to give up and use the stand pipe in the compound.  At least twice a day, water is collected in big buckets and dustbins, one for the kitchen and one for the bathroom. A shower takes a little longer than usual and I have had a shower in a miserly 3 jugs of cold water – very refreshing!  When it comes to the Monday laundry-by-hand I might not have such a smile on my face.

Water for food prep, has to be boiled for 10 min. to kill the giardia and other bugs, and then filtered.  It takes the night to filter enough for the whole day.  We tried making tea with this water but it tastes foul, so we buy litre bottles of mineral water for tea and cold drinks.  We may try adding cinnamon for flavouring the tea; milk is not available so we are getting used to black tea.  We have certainly had to make some adjustments to our way of life. 

More next time on the joys of shopping without a car.

Sunday 4 September 2011

We're on our way

We've got the visas; we've got the flight tickets; we are putting stuff in storage;  we've got tenants for the house.  We're really busy but not too busy to blog.  Watch this space for photos and updates of our new life in Axum in Tigray Province, Ethiopia.

The Saturday Market

The Saturday Market
The Saturday Market Mind the traffic