Thursday, May 31, 2012
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Rooibos and work
Work at Khayelitsha was fantastic, but I have also already had some cool things come up at work on my other days at the desk. I have been assigned to take some video and photos for two separate videos. One is a thank you to GRS donators and the other a thank you to soccer players Sagna and Pires of Arsenal for their work as GRS Ambassadors. I am going to Khayelitsha tomorrow to get some of this footage. I have also been assigned to do a lot of the operations work for the new interns who are set to begin in August. I was also assigned to do a short three paragraph article to highlight GRS’s partner in Kenya that will be in the GRS newsletter. So I am very excited about all the things that I will do. I will however say that 40 hour work weeks are tough! Once I am done with work I do not feel like being productive but rather prefer just sitting on the couch. And getting up in the morning is also tough. But I think as most things in life, it just takes a bit of time to get used to and then it should be okay. Anytime I am bummed out that I have to be at work, I just think to myself, I am in Cape Town! What an opportunity! Soon the haze of sadness dissipates and rays of sun shine bright.
Moving onto the weather (what a segway!), evidently it has been rather great weather considering that it is winter. There have only been about 2 days in the 8 since I have arrived that it has rained (and it is the rainy season). I would say about 5 days have been almost perfect weather: 70-75 degrees during daytime with not a cloud in sight, including no “table cloth” on top of Table Mountain. During the night, it definitely gets much colder, maybe 50 degrees, I did not bring warm enough clothes to be in during the evenings especially considering no one really has heaters here.
I am truly thankful for Rooibos tea (Rooibos literally means red bush), especially based on the temperature. I usually never have tea in the U.S., only coffee. But everyone has instant coffee here and that stuff is awful! So I have between 2 to 8 cups of Rooibos tea per day. This tea is only native to the Western Cape of South Africa. It is starting to become popular around the world because it has high antioxidents and no real negative effects. It also is supposed to have an effect on clearing up acne and pimples… which I will say that I was trying to figure out why my face was clearing up so nicely and I think I might have found my answer! I will definitely be bringing a lot of Rooibos tea home with me!
A post from my first weekend in Cape Town is soon to come!
My day in the township of Khayelitsha
Wednesday, May 23:
KHAYELITSHA
My day in the township of Khayelitsha.
Khayelitsha, which is Xhosa means “New Home” is said to be
the largest and fastest growing township in South Africa. The township was
established in 1985 and large numbers of people were forcefully relocated there
under the Apartheid system. Today, Khayelitsha has between half a million to 2
million inhabitants. About 90% of the residents are black with the remainder
being colored. There is a lot of diversity in terms of housing. There are a lot
of shacks and informal housing, but there are also small houses built of sturdy
material, often having a shack attached to the back to add additional space.
There were stray dogs running about everywhere. The township is so large that it has now been
split up into 22 sub-sections. The place that I was mainly in was called Harare
and it is a newer section of Khayelitsha. Around 70% of residents still live in
shacks and one in three people have to walk 200 meters or further to access
water.
In
2010, FIFA built the Football for Hope centre in Khayelitsha which includes a
building with about 10 different rooms and a turf mini soccer field. Grassroot
Soccer (the organization that I am interning with) was selected to run the
Football for Hope centre.
In the
morning, I was given a short tour and then allowed to sit in on the staff’s
logistics meeting. The staff includes two year long Grassroot Soccer (GRS)
interns and about 10 or so coaches and logistic coordinators that come from the
townships. At the logistics meeting, they were planning a HCT event (HIV/AIDS
Counseling and Testing Event). They also were planning new programs to
implement including Generation SKILLZ (which is a program for kids aged 13-18)
and a SKILLZ Holiday (which is like a summer camp for the week off they get in
“winter”).
The
next part of my day was spent following around a young woman (who previously
worked for UNICEF) who is currently working on a grant from the London School
of Tropical and Infectious Disease on a RCT (Randomized Control Trial). This
money from this grant is being used to precisely calculate if the Grassroot
Soccer programs are increasing the knowledge of HIV/AIDS and reducing the
number of HIV positive young people. This
will be one of the first RCT’s that is trying to quantitatively measure the
effectiveness of Sport for Development.
The RCT
will test 3,000 South African 9th graders in 2012. The testing
involves getting consent to go into a high school in the township (the
Department of Education of South Africa is strict in terms of when you can come
in, but they leave it up to the individual school to decide if they let NGOs
and non-profits into the school), receiving parental consent, and then is the
testing. I went into the classroom on a testing day. Those who have permission,
get their finger pricked and get 5 drops of blood onto the testing kit and then
take a roughly twenty minute survey on a touch screen phone. The survey is so
cool! The questions change based on your previous answers. It Is so neat that they are using touch
screen phones and a free google application which I believe is called Open
Data. It was awesome to see this in actual practice. We read about and learn
about monitoring and evaluation, and policies, but to be on the ground and see
what worked and didn’t work was an experience I will never forget. I actually just got word that I might be able
to help this woman somewhat while I am here J
and be allowed to work down in Khayelitsha one day per week.
Anyways
to continue with the details of this RCT: half of the schools/participants will
be chosen to go through the 11 week Grassroot Soccer Generation SKILLZ
curriculum in 2012. Then this same group will go through one or two refresher
courses in the three years of the project. Of this half, half of them will get
encouragement SMS text messages throughout the year. Then at the end of year 3, they will take the
test again, both the phone one and the blood test. At that time they will test all the blood
samples from year 3 for HIV and for herpes (I think). If a participant is
positive, they will go back and test year 1.
They hope to show a significant difference in education level and actual
effectiveness (less HIV/AIDS) in the kids that had GRS.
The
incentive for the students to participate is the potential to be a part of the
Grassroots program, as well as free snacks the day of the testing. Originally,
they thought the incentive could be free airtime (for their cell phone – the number
of people with cell phones in the township is rather high, or they will have a
Sim card that they put into their friends’ phone every once in a while), but
they found that these students might use the free airtime to participate in
risky behavior, especially with the girls.
What an
experience to be able to go into a South African high school in a township, one
that I am sure that my sister is way jealous of! So I posted a picture of the high
school from the internet. I went into Uxolo High School. It was just two
buildings with a courtyard in between. Maybe three to four stories each
building. No inside hallways, all exterior, like a cheap motel. All the kids
have to wear uniforms. Evidently it is the Department of Education policy to
try to tackle social problems like HIV/AIDS, STIs, poverty, etc. through a 30
to 60 minute class called “Life Orientation.” Schools can then choose how long
they want the class to be and how many times per week. The school can also then
choose if they will allow NGOs and other guest speakers to come in during that “Life
Orientation” time. Evidently, this leads to very mixed results as one would
presume. You have some teachers that truly care and make use of that time and
you have other teachers that basically get paid to babysit the students.
The
classroom that I went in seemed to have a teacher that might not care too much.
He had a nice stick that looked like he might use to threaten or scare the
kids. But I do not want to judge him based on 5 minutes seeing him in the
class; however, based on his absence during the testing it seemed like he was
very happy to leave the kids and the classroom. The class was about half the
size of a US classroom and had about 45 to 50 students in it. The old desks
took up the whole classroom with barely any walking space left. The students
were very loud and very boisterous, and it didn’t help when the teacher left.
The students are taught the class in English, but I didn’t hear a word of
English spoken while they were waiting to take the survey. In the Western Cape
and Khayelitsha, the predominant language and ethnicity is Xhosa (pronounced Co-sa).
The turnout for this class was very low, with only about 12 students
remembering to bring their forms. Some said that their parents said no, but
mainly most of them forgot.
Moving on, after
the testing we headed back to the Football for Hope centre. All the kids got out of school and congregated
at the “safe place” of the Football for Hope centre. The GRS interns said that the other NGOs like
“Love First” and another HIV/AIDS one have buildings but they remain rather
empty. They can’t attract kids, or get buy-in. But the soccer field continued
to become more packed as more kids got out of school and came to play on it.
Anyone is allowed on the field as long as a session is not going on, pretty
cool!
I got to meet some
cute kids… 2 little girls playing on a nearby jungle gym. Then we talked with
and played a little with about 3-5 little boys. They were too young to be
allowed to play with the big boys on the soccer field. I showed show of my soccer little to the
little boys… I think they were impressed.
This one little boy, Seeba hangs out at the center
every day and is Rebecca and Andrew’s little helper buddy. See-ba even goes on sleep overs at the intern
house sometimes. Seeba’s friend Alex also hangs around every day. Alex’s dad is
a rugby player but he must not get paid enough to move out of Khayelitsha. It
was the understanding of the interns that once you get enough money, you move
out of the township and do not look back. You get yourself and your family out
of the situation and offer them better opportunities.
Anyways, I asked Seeba how many juggles he thought
that I could get… he said 50.. I said seriously?... he said 25… I told him my
highest is around 800-900 and he didn’t believe me. Of well, I am going back to
Khayelitsha tomorrow and I will have to prove him wrong hehe.
Next we went to new
GRS run program of “Champions League,” which is for 18-25 year olds who are
unemployed and at risk of substance abuse. UCLA and a South African university
received a grant and approached GRS about doing a study of incentives and
soccer with men at-risk of alcohol and drug abuse.
The program is 8
teams of 6v6. They have two practices during the week… one is soccer practice,
one is alcohol curriculum, and then they have development course (CV, interview
help, etc) on Fridays… finally they do a tournament or have games on the
weekend. So each team has a Champions league team name. Evidently the guys got
super into this. In order to get the
participants, they went door to door. Then they had to consent and come take a
survey which then ranked their risk of substance abuse on a scale from one to
three. They then split up teams in order
to get equal 1, 2, and 3’s on the teams. If they show up to practice on time
then they get 5 Rand in airtime. They also get incentives if they test negative
for alcohol, cocaine, weed, and other local drugs. They test at practice every
week or every other week I believe.
It was interesting
to hear Andrew (a GRS intern) talk about how these guys play. They have fantastic foot skills in small
tight spaces but they lack the vision once it is 11v11. Basically 11v11 turns
into a nutmeg competition.
All in all I had
an amazing experience in Khayelitsha and I am very excited to go back tomorrow
and hopefully about once per week throughout the summer. Throughout the day I felt
totally safe in Khayelitsha. As we drove home on the N2 highway, it was cool to
see kids and adults playing soccer in the grass between the township wall and
the highway. Soccer truly is the world’s sport!
Pictures from
Khayelitsha to come!
Friday, May 25, 2012
Hey everyone!
I’m in South Africa. Katie finally made it to Cape Town
after a 14 ½ hour flight from NYC to Joberg! I found that I enjoyed travelling
alone (though I wish the best travel partner and best friend a girl could have,
Beth, was here with me!) because I managed to meet a lot of cool people!
Once I
arrived to CPT, on a plane full of the U20 Argentine National Team, it was so
nice to be picked up at the airport by people from my internship, as well as
taken to get a phone and check my email.
I am
fortunate enough to be staying with a friend of a friend. I am staying with 3 very nice, cool guys.
Their place, which has two balconies, is in Seapoint and is literally half a
block from the ocean! From one of their balconies, you have a clear view of the
Atlantic Ocean.
I was
quite jet lagged the first couple of days, but I quickly got into the rhythm of
things. On the second day, I decided to be brave and ride on one of the 15 passenger
shared mini taxi/buses. They are quite awesome and so very cheap. From Seapoint
to City Centre is about 2 miles, the shared taxi costs me 6 Rand, about 70
cents. And you don’t have to wait for the transportation; it usually takes
about 30 seconds tops for one to stop for you. They are everywhere! This is the first time that transportation
policy actually seems interesting. In a
city of almost 4 million people, to not have a more formalized system of
transportation is incredible to me.
There is actually a new movement by the government to register all the
mini buses and make it a formalized, regulated system. Usually, the drivers are
black males that blast music that has a lot of bass, but on my 3rd
morning, I got into a mini bus of a woman driver who was also Muslim, pretty
cool!
When I
came home after my first full day of work, I had my first lost in translation debacle.
I knew the apartment was on the 2nd
floor but had only taken the elevator to it. So I walked up the stairs and
started trying to use the keys to open the door. I was standing there for about 5 minutes
trying to get in, then texting Ryan to ask how to open the door, when suddenly
an old woman appeared at the door. I was
on the 1st floor, trying to “break in” to this woman’s flat! We just
don’t have a ground floor in the States!
After
figuring out that I needed to be on the 2nd floor (3rd
floor in American standards), I walked the half block to the ocean and walked
along the promenade. After work, this walkway is packed with runners, walkers,
and cute gay couples with matching outfits and dogs (hehe). I try to go down
and either walk or jog along the promenade after work each day. It is an
amazing way to relax and truly realize how great life can be.
Beth
and Jeff, I have already sampled a myriad of beers that we had while here for
the World Cup, including Castle, Hansa, and Windhoek. I also have found out
that not everyone is in love with that crazy group Die Antwoord… but most
young, white South African people have at least a couple of their songs on
their iTunes (haha). Also, I found out what the green tea is!!! It is called
Easy-Med… they knew exactly what it was when I described it. I can’t wait to get some! Haha.
I’d
like to end this post by saying that I have not yet seen a Zebra on this trip.
Monday, May 14, 2012
Hello everyone!
This summer I was fortunate enough to find an internship in Cape Town, South Africa. My internship goes for 10 weeks (mid-May until the end of July) and is at a NGO/non-profit that does HIV/AIDS awareness and education for youth by using soccer as a hook. Then I will be in South Africa for two more weeks after that for a study abroad trip with my master's program. I wanted to write this blog in order for family and friends to be able to keep up with how I am doing. The countdown has begun, less than 7 days!
Katie
This summer I was fortunate enough to find an internship in Cape Town, South Africa. My internship goes for 10 weeks (mid-May until the end of July) and is at a NGO/non-profit that does HIV/AIDS awareness and education for youth by using soccer as a hook. Then I will be in South Africa for two more weeks after that for a study abroad trip with my master's program. I wanted to write this blog in order for family and friends to be able to keep up with how I am doing. The countdown has begun, less than 7 days!
Katie
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