So hi from Tanzania now.
It's been a bit of a different Christmas here! I spent Christmas Eve in Ruaha going on a game drive, seeing lions, elephants and lots of giraffs. An amazing day that was followed by Christmas Day with another game drive where an elephant came close to charging on the car I was in. Thankfully did survive Christmas and now back in Dar, trying to do some research, but as it is so hot the pool is very tempting.
Just wanted to write a quick note to say merry Christmas to everyone who are keeping up with my blog. I've reached past halfway to the 1000 mark so thank u all for being interested in what I am doing here and learning a bit more about Karamoja.
I'm currently doing more research into the mining activities in the region. It's always struck me as a bizarre idea that countries that are wealthy in minerals are often the poorest, well at least if you look at the developing world. Coming from a country like Norway I know the blessings that can come from natural resources and it's hard to understand what a curse minerals really can be. I know I have a lot more to learn about the mining industry in Karamoja, but reading reports like the one from the human rights watch and then the response from one of the companies DAO is interesting to say the least. There is no doubt in my mind that Karamoja holds a lot of wealth, for a company to like DAO to say they will invest 90 million USD mining in the region points towards that.
Anyways as I am writing on my phone due to the lack of normal internet I will sign off now. I hope everyone has a great Christmas and New Years and I look forward to what the new year will bring :)
Friday, December 26, 2014
Saturday, December 20, 2014
A little break
So it is getting closer to Christmas now and I have made it
back to Kampala for a couple of days, before I am off to Tanzania. Kampala
seems extremely hectic now compared to Moroto. I do like it though. Kampala
will always feel as a sort of second home. The memories and the friends I have
been lucky enough to have here will make sure it stays that way. So it is back
to crazy boda boda’s, traffic jams and just so so many people everywhere!
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Red Chilli Home Kampala :) |
The ride down from Moroto was surprisingly easy, as I was
lucky enough to get a ride with a UN vehicle heading to Mbale. Again the
kindness of people in Uganda is amazing, and at the last minute everything came
together, and as I’ve been a bit sick I was extremely grateful to miss out on
the Gateway bus via Soroti.
I am trying to do some research now for a paper I am
starting to write on the sustainability of pastoralism. I love the way
Karimojong are so connected to their cattle and that their work and way of life
is really who they are as people as well, so I think perhaps an important
aspect for the future is to look at how pastoralism and the general way of life
that this entails can coexist and thrive in a modern society. Because Karamoja
will change. There is no doubt about that, but I don’t think that change has to
be negative. Driving from Moroto to Nakapiripirit yesterday I got to experience
the new road that the government has begun building in Karamoja, and it is very
impressive when looking at the surrounding roads, and the rate of their progression
is quite astonishing. A new road, if it connects all the way from Mbale, has
the potential to bring many new opportunities to Karamoja.
So I will leave it at that today. I am unfortunately not
feeling too great, so back to bed for some much needed rest now. Missing home
today as Christmas is coming near, and Christmas to me will never really be
Christmas without snow and my family close, but excited to be back in Tanzania and spend Christmas with some good food and lots and lots of research! Thanks KDF for giving me lots of work over the holidays ;)
x
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Life in Motion - Let their voices be heard
So a little bit of a different post. I wanted to show a few clips from the other day, as I know it's difficult to capture the actual atmosphere of a place through pictures. I am sorry they are not the best quality as uploading with the internet I am using here is a bit of a frustrating task, but I hope it does show a bit of what our day was like on Sunday.
Women dancing and singing followed by the fasting of the cattle by driving them in circles Animals and humans are connected, and so is the land, so this ceremony is performed with everyone linked together.
Video Credit: KDF - Two young shepherd boys dueling for their honor in a playful way
Hopefully you found the videos interesting. I will upload some more as soon as I get a better connection. As taking 2 hours to upload videos is getting at my patience level.
The last few days I've spent doing a lot of writing, preparing for some research projects I'm starting, as well as carrying on with the strategic planning for KDF. It's an interesting phase of the NGO to be a part of, the sort of launch you could say, although they have been around for a few years, but solely as an online platform. Now KDF will hopefully be able to be more visible and helpful to the communities they work with. It will be very interesting to see how they develop in the next few years. One thing is sure though, the people whom they work with and for, are grateful and in need of their assistance.
On other news the Kautakou land issue, which was the reason for the event on Sunday, has been referred to in the news.
The Monitor Article on Karimojong Protest Land Grabbing
The article shows a picture of a sign being held up saying:
'We didn't know that you removed our guns so that you could come raid our land'
An interesting message as it highlights one of the key issues I have with the land grabbing in the area. There was no interest in this area when it was 'unsafe', then after years of harsh disarmament operations which included numerous human rights abuses, the land is finally looked upon as safe. As soon as this happens, everyone is coming to Karamoja to take part in the development of the region. The people have very little to say now, because they are no longer armed, and as mentioned previously the majority of the population here is illiterate. They do not know their rights, and their idea of land ownership is very different from what we in other parts of the world might think of as normal, this makes them very vulnerable.
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The future of Karamoja is their future, they should be a part of it |
Monday, December 15, 2014
Destruction or Development? Stepping on a fine line
Yesterday was a day like no other. I found myself taking part in a ceremonial day of dancing, fasting and feasting. I learned more about Karamoja, the culture of the people and the
importance and interconnection of land, cattle and people.
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A young goat herder tending to his animals |
It all started Saturday afternoon when I was having a catch
up meeting with Teba and Simon. We were discussing the various issues with
mineral resources and further steps to take to try to highlight the issues of
the exploitation of the region. We were then joined by two women from Kautako,
an area just outside of Moroto. An area that now holds a large sign advertising
for Karamoja Industrial Business Park. I had heard there was contention for the
land, but I did not realize on what scale this was. The women were visibly
upset that their land, the land of their ancestors, where they are buried and
an area that holds such strong cultural, sentimental and historic value is now
to be turned into an industrial park. Which most likely involves the building
of factories, as the rumor is one of the main actors coming in is a cement
company. This will not only destroy this piece of land, but will also further
pollute and make the areas around uninhabitable. I say this because the people
here are pastoralist, they live off the land, they graze their cattle in this
area and they depend on what has until now been a non-pollutant zone for their
livelihood. The women we were meeting with seemed to be at the end of
solutions. They have been fighting to regain the rights to their land for a
long time now, and no one has listened to them. They are fighting against money
and power, all in the name of development. On their side are the people who
live next to the land, illiterate pastoralists who do not claim land ownership
as for them land does not belong to one person, it belongs to the community, to
the people, to the cattle and anyone who might be making use of it. So how did
this piece of land end up as an industrial park? Well it is not difficult to
get elders, or one elder from one area who holds some claim to the land, as he
is one of the people who uses it, to sign off on a piece of paper saying
someone else now owns the land. This is most often done by taking advantage of
the high illiteracy rate in the area, people simply do not know what they are
signing off on, and as the Karimojong are very hospitable people they become
easy targets for people with money and power, who do not hesitate to abuse the
rights of the weak.
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Elders begin to arrive for the day |
So this meeting led to me waking up early on Sunday morning
and getting ready to go to Kautako. The people who live there were preparing to
make use of the last traditional means of asking for help from their land, from
their god and from their people. This included a ceremony of animal sacrifice
in the form of 2 cattle, a day of fasting for the people and the animals in the
area and a traditional Akiriket with the elders to ask for advice and help in
what is a seemingly hopeless situation for the people there.
I wasn't sure what to expect walking into this traditional
ceremonial day, but whatever I had expected this was not it. It was a day of
linking to the environment, seeing the beauty of the culture of Karamoja and understanding
the strength and power that they hold in their traditional ways. I have never
in my life seen so many people so involved and passionate about what they are
doing, and the belief in how their tradition will carry them through the issues
they face. I will add some pictures here now as I think the pictures and videos
will explain more as I honestly do not think I can adequately describe in words
the feelings I associate by being given the honor to take part in this day.
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A bull has been appointed to be sacrificed, here the elders are negotiating with the owner |
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The owner has to be convinced to sacrifice his bull, a circular walk with song followed by more negotiations |
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The men have agreed and another man steps forward to offer compensation as well as the honor of killing the bull |
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The bull is killed by spearing and blood is drunk directly after the kill |
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The women have their own role in the ceremonial day and arrive in large groups singing |
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The women, young and old gather in circles |
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Everyone is fasting until the bull is prepared and prayers have been said. This includes the cattle who are herded around in circles while everyone joins in to sing and dance around the cattle |
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The local brew is consumed throughout the day ( can't say no to that) |
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Sacred cow dung is spread on forehead, chests and feet (joining in was of course a must) - then the remainder of the cow dung is spread on the cattle before they are released from their fasting |
The animals were released from their fasting, and the elders prayed and discussed various issues including the land issue and how to deal with the new challenges that face them. Afterwards the meat from the sacrificed cow was distributed and feasted upon by those present. Earlier in the day, right after the sacrifice was made the intestines of the animal was brought to an elder who read the future looking at the intestines and giving meaning to what he saw. This was a day of sacrifice, learning and prayer for the people and for me. This was unlike any experience I have ever encountered, even through my many months spent in other parts of Uganda.
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Dancing and celebrating the cattle and nature while driving them in circles for fasting |
The beauty of the Karimojong shone through on this day for
me. I have always been fascinated by cultures that have not changed to adapt to
the modern way of life. This is one of them. This culture has a power to it
that you can only sense by being here. The people are strong, they know more
than I do through my many years in school. Their knowledge is connected to
their land, their cattle and their everyday life. Looking at the Karimojong
from the outside (Western) perspective, it is easy to think of them as
backwards, living in the past, illiterate people that need the help of the
modern society. Yet that is as far from the truth as you can get. The people
might not know how to write or read, but they know how to survive in one of the
toughest regions, they know how to walk for days, how to find water in what
seems like desert areas. They know every one of their cattle by name, their
knowledge is not measured in words, it’s measured in the strength of the people
and the fact that this culture and way of life has survived until now. I look
at my home in Norway and our culture is non-existent compared to what I
encounter here, the people here are connected to the earth in a way which we
lost touch with a long time ago. It shouldn't be regarded as their weakness, it
should be their strength.
Obviously there is need for some development in the area,
but the people here know what they need and what they want. They want schools,
and they want better health care, but they do not want cement factories and
large industrial parks which will ruin the environment and essentially the
Karimojong themselves, because the land is the people there, you take their
land, you take their way of life.
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Simon joins in on the jumping/ dancing, clearly towering over the others :) |
Yesterday also gave me a great sense of respect for the guys
that I work with. They do belong to the Karimojong elite, they are well
educated and have good jobs. Yet they were so proud to take part in this
ceremonial day and learn from the people about what is essentially their own
culture. They acknowledged that because they have lived the ‘privileged’ life,
they have lost touch with many of things that we experienced yesterday, and they
are so proud of the culture and the people who live here. The strength of KDF I
think lies in this. It is an organization formed by the ‘elite’ Karimojong, but
the core of their work is the people who were never given the opportunities
which they had. They work so closely with these communities to truly grasp what
is they want from the future and how this can be done in a way which doesn’t
trample on their rights. I am very grateful that I get to be part of this for a
little while, and already just being here a bit over a week I have learned more
than any other job or internship I have had.
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A successful field day - Thank you Teba and Simon from Karolien and I, your passion is inspiring |
I know many of you reading this are far far away from the
situation that I am in here, but I hope by reading this you might think of
Karamoja for a little bit. I hope you get a glimpse into the beauty that is
here, and the uniqueness of the culture and heritage. Writing this blog is not
just about letting you all know what I am doing every day. I want to do my part
in getting the word out there for the Karimojong and the threat to their basic
human rights that they are now facing. I do not want to leave this place and
come back in a few years and see the whole area turned into a modern
development. That is not what the people want, and if my writing can help
inspire others to take a second look at this region then I am doing my part. The
people here are strong, but they have the highest illiteracy rate in the
country, and as such they need protection. What they can teach me here is far
more valuable than anything I could ever contribute with, and I hope that for
the future, projects and governments coming into this area will not just see
what they can teach the people, but what the people can teach them.
I could probably keep writing for another 30 pages about my
experiences yesterday and my views of this area, but I think that is enough for
now. This will be my last week in Karamoja before Christmas
when I am heading to Tanzania to spend the holidays there. So a lot of work to
be done here this week before I leave, so I will sign off now and get to it. I will try to upload some videos in the next few days, as internet has been a bit of a struggle today so couldn't make it happen unfortunately.
X Maria
Friday, December 12, 2014
The curse of mineral resources
Today was a bit of a reality shock of sorts. Karamoja is a
very mineral rich region, yet the people who live here have had little or no
interest in these resources until the present time. People here are
pastoralist, they live of the land and follow the patterns of the season for
grazing their cattle, and this takes them across the beautiful Karamoja region
and past many sources of great mineral wealth. Today I was able to see a little
bit of this wealth, and what it could potentially mean for the people of the
region.
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Walking through Karamoja |
I met Teba in town and we proceeded to walk for a few hours,
past the settlement of Rupa until we ran into some artisanal miners right off
the road. The search for gold here is conducted by digging holes and tunnels
and then sifting through the dirt with water which is carried for kilometres by
children. The gold, in small vials, is then sold on to traders who bring it to
town, and then it is further sold on to Kampala. The digging of the holes to
find gold and carrying water for such a distance seems so much work for what is
perhaps not even a gram of gold, yet it is the income of the people here. This
is not their traditional way of life, but as the market is now there they are
adjusting as best as they can to profit, if even just a little bit. I was told
on the other side of the mountain there is a big gold mine, but this mine is
managed by an Indian company and little profit is given to the local
population.
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One of the little girls carrying water for use to sift gold |
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Artisanal miners at work |
After seeing the artisanal miners we proceeded by boda to a
marble excavation point. I have never in my life seen such huge blocks of
marble, and when you look at the mountain it seems like the whole mountain is
made up of it. The company who owns the place I am told is an Arab company that
make use of cheap local labour (that said they had not been paid for 6 months)
to get the marble out, and then it is sent with trucks to Mombasa and shipped
out from there. I can only imagine the profit margin to be huge as the miners
who break some of the stone into smaller pieces are paid the equivalent of 40 $
per truckload.
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Huge blocks of marble |
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Discussing with Teba on the wealth that surrounds us |
It is amazing to see a place with so much wealth hidden
underneath the ground or in the mountain, yet the people have so little, and
the little they have in the form of their culture is being taken away from
them. I do believe there is hope for Karamoja, I think the great mineral wealth
can be an enormous resource for the population. However it is important that
their rights are protected. It is understandable that foreign companies will
come to the region, but companies need to be held responsible for the way in
which they conduct their business on Karimojong land. I know this is one of KDF’s
many battles, and I hope that being here I can help, if even a little to get
word out there that is happening. Karamoja has the potential to be great, but
they need a lot of help, mostly in the form of management of resources and
understanding of local culture. It is not a place that will develop over night
or become rich within months, the culture of the people and their way of life
would not permit this. My hope is that the Karimojong will gain from the
mineral wealth which their land holds, and that the people who are trying to
take advantage of the lack of control of the resources will be held
accountable. The curse of mineral resources have ruined many countries and areas, I do not want to see Karamoja become one of those.
Okay so it is Friday night so that was my serious thoughts
of the day. I am a bit tired from the long walk, so I will sign off now and go
have a beer and relax a bit before another weekend of more learning and work.
X Maria
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
A walk through Moroto
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A walk to Moroto - everything and anything can be carried on the head - Strong women |
So at the moment I am sitting here struggling to learn the numbers for Ngakarimojong, before my second language class tonight at 6. I wish I could say I found it easy, but the language is very different from anything I’ve ever tried to learn. So here goes the first 10:
1 – Ipei
2 – Ngiarei
3- Ngiuni
4 – Ngiommon
5- Ngikan
6 – Ngikan ka pei
7- Ngikan ka arei
8 – Ngikan ka uni
9- Ngikan ka ommon
10 – Ngitomon
I have also learned a few basic things, like hello and thank
you, but do feel like this is going to be slow going!
So after a morning of doing some work I spent most of the
day walking around and exploring the town a bit. I had lunch, really good
pizza, at Ekimomwor Café, 6000 UGX – Equals to about 2 dollars for a drink and
pizza. So very affordable and tasty, also a nice treat saying hi to Maggie.
Moroto as I said in a previous post is a bit of a peculiar
town. A lot of NGO’s, UN agencies and a few mission projects, mixed in with
what seems like villages crammed together to form a town. When walking the
streets you meet so many people, and everyone stops, greets and shakes your
hand before walking on, and usually a smile to my still learning greetings in
Ngakarimojong. When walking into town I had a nice woman walk with me the whole
way. She was on her way to the hospital as her granddaughter had been taken for
vaccinations but had not returned so she was going to check on the baby. She
also explained her life as someone who had worked for a long time in the health
industry but now she was mentally ill herself so she was no longer working, her
goodbye was said with a warning that next time she sees me she will probably
not greet me as her mental problems will be kicking in, although as my name is
Maria – mother of Jesus there was a chance she might remember. Very nice woman,
so do hope she remembers me next time I see her!
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Walking to town |
A stroll through town will take you to the Shell station – a
picture follows as the state of the
Shell station looks a bit like something which has been through a war in the 50’s
and not recovered, but all the same it is still open for business, so nothing
bad to say about that.
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Classic Shell in Moroto |
On my walk out of town I was picked up by a man who was
going to get water on the mountain, he asked if I would like to join, and as I
had nothing better to do a ride in his land rover to the mountainside seemed
like a good idea. We stopped off at the Karimojong cultural center, which is
supposed to inform of the Karimojong history, culture and the geography of the
area, rather it is a small room with some rocks, posters and some traditional
clothing. An interesting idea, but I do think the Karimojong culture deserves
something better than this room to represent their rich and diverse culture,
but I suppose it is a start and I should not judge. Hopefully as a start it
will be able to show the few visitors who are here a bit of the culture and
heritage that make the Karimojong people so proud and unique.
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By the mountain |
After the little stop at the cultural center it was time to
collect the water. I am not quite sure what the water was for, but the Land
Rover became full of jerrycans of water. Where the water was collected a few
kids were playing. One had made a sort of wheelbarrow/stroller sort of contraption
and was wheeling another kid around at great speed, unfortunately it ended rather
quickly as the one kid went flying into a bush. Luckily kids are the same as
wherever you are in the world, I picked him up, gave him a little cuddle, a
blow on the hurt part and he was back to normal and running around again. I was
dropped off back at the hotel with the promise of a trip to see some camels in
the near future, the diversity of this region is amazing.
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Fierce girl playing |
Anyways now I must get back to my language practice as Perry
is due here any minute and I can for the life of me not remember the first 10
numbers….
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
December but not quite Christmas
I can’t believe it's December 8th already and almost Christmas time, life
here seems so far removed from the shopping streets and Christmas parties at
home. I do miss home and snow, family and friends, but it is nice to be away
from the stress that always seems to follow the lead up to Christmas.
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Christmas tree at Nakumatt village in Kampala |
Last night I met my ‘to be’ language teacher, Perry. She
works for a WASH project for Concern here in Moroto, and her commitment to her
work and the development of her region is remarkable. She has promised to help
me with some language lessons after work whenever she has time during the week.
Our first lesson will be tomorrow, so today I will have to try to find a dictionary
so I can be prepared. I know learning the language might seem a bit of a
trivial use of my time here as I’m not sure how long I will actually be in the
area. However I do think a part of understanding the culture and people here is
rooted in being able to communicate in the local language. So hopefully I will
be able to learn a bit and you never know it might be a useful skill to carry
with me wherever I go in the world. I
have a long term goal of learning Swahili and some Arabic as well, so will see
how it goes. I realize after my many years of French it might be a bit
ambitious, but my motivation for learning is higher than it has ever been so
maybe I will manage to stick with it this time.
So today I have spent most of the day going through various
discussions had by KDF members and trying to analyse the most common themes and
how it could be possible to highlight these in a way that might prove useful to
people who have yet not been able to take part in the forum discussions. A main
theme is clearly frustration, people here are angry with the appropriation of
funds from the government, as well as misjudged NGO projects that could have
the best of intentions, but without the true understanding of the pastoralist
culture they risk alienating the people further. There has been a common theme
in looking at the failures of Karamoja from the outside, pastoralism has become
the scapegoat for why this region has supposedly lagged so far behind in
development. Yet in reality pastoralism is the most adapted and sustainable way
of life in the region. Those who have cattle know where to go when there is a
drought or when there is an excess of rain, yet what has and is being done is
limiting this mobility, and by doing so the Karimojong are put in an impossible
situation. Numerous reports have concluded that Karamoja as a region cannot
sustain its population on a pure agricultural basis, so why is pastoralism
being blamed for the issues of the region? And why is there such a strong push
to grow the agricultural sector?
There are obvious shortcomings with pastoralism in a
‘developed’ country. From the perspective of the government the pure safety
concern of having cross border mobility is enough to argue against it also
combined with decades of ‘violent’ cattle raids and resistance to government
policies. Karamoja has also been the place of the lowest literacy rates and
highest infant mortality rates in the country so it doesn’t take a lot to
convince politicians and donors that a big change is necessary for Karamoja to
join the rest of the world. Yet how can policies for a region be completely
decided without the people of the region involved? This is the issue KDF is
working with. The Karimojong want better services in the form of healthcare and
education, yet they want to keep their culture intact and live in the most
sustainable manner in which they know, through pastoralism.
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In Moroto every sign post leads to an organization |
Just walking around Moroto is like entering a bit of
parallel world. The economy of the town is made up of approximately 80 percent
NGO’s. Every compound is some NGO, with a name from Europe or the US. All those
organizations that you now see on the streets back home asking for donations
for projects for the poor in rural Africa are all here. This is where they are
supposed to make their difference, and many do. Yet I am a bit cautious of how towns
such as this will be able to implement a sustainable change in the region. It
is my hope that KDF and other organizations are successful in getting the voice
of the people through to the projects that are now being implemented in
Karamoja.
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Moroto town - the joy of gateway buses ;o |
I have been thinking about what my role in being here is. I
want to do more research into pastoralism, through talking to people here and
getting a better understanding of how pastoralism can function in the 21st
century. I learned a lot from tonights discussion of the various cross border
peace treaties aimed at resource sharing. This was always my main concern in
regards to how pastoralism could function in a modern nation-state, but
seemingly it works. The Jie and Turkana are doing it, so why cannot the rest of
pastoralist societies be able to live together in a peaceful way where
resources can be shared? I do think it is possible, and hopefully I will learn
more in the weeks to come.
Some good news from my side, I passed my dissertation for my
masters, and I am now officially done with university. That had to be
celebrated with a couple of drinks tonight!
To leave you now with my co-worker Peter showing me his
traditional hat – made out of hair…the traditional hats here are a must see.
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Peter in his pièce de résistance |
Sunday, December 7, 2014
My journey to Karamoja has begun. I survived the 12 hour bus trip from Kampala to Moroto, who knew buses could make it so far on some of the worst roads I've seen? All worth it to now be here, and get to call Moroto home for a little bit.
As you can see Karamoja is in the Northeastern part of Uganda, bordering Kenya and South Sudan.
So most of you do probably know me, otherwise how would you have gotten
to this blog? Anyways a short introduction for those who might not know me so
well: My name is Maria, I am 25 years old, I just finished my masters in
International Peace Studies at Trinity College in Dublin, and after that I
worked for the UN with the Biological Weapons Convention in Geneva for a few months. I have been in Africa for the last month and a half, first in Jinja and Kampala in Uganda and then Dar Es Salaam and Zanzibar in Tanzania. What I am doing right now is very different from anything I have ever done before, and hopefully something you might
be interested in learning more about, and follow my journey as I learn more.
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That's me - In Tanzania a few weeks back |
I just arrived in Moroto on Friday. I have spent a lot of time in Uganda in the last few
years, but Karamoja was always that part no one ever ventured to, the supposed
‘unsafe’ part, although no one I ever talked to really knew much about it. My
last night in Kampala before getting on the bus at 3 am ( 4 am to 4 pm bus ugh
:O) was spent listening to stories of how Karamoja used to be the region you
would go to, but never return, and how even though disarmament has taken place
the region still has the potential to fall back into old patterns. Everyone
seems to have an opinion on Karamoja, but very few actually know much about it.
Luckily I have done months of research on the area so I am not going in
completely blind and naive, although I am realizing there is so much I have to learn from the region and people here.
I wrote my dissertation for my masters on Karamoja, and the
failures of various disarmament operations in the region and the human rights
abuses that followed. My inspiration was meeting street kids in Kampala (the
capital of Uganda) who had been ‘trafficked’ from Karamoja to beg on the
streets to make a little income for parents who were desperate. I wanted to
understand why. How could you ever get to a situation where you would lend your
kid off to beg on a street in a big city..there had to be a reason for why so
many children from Karamoja were in Kampala. My research opened a door to human
rights abuses, discriminatory government policies and an amazing region that
has the greatest of potential
Learning about Karamoja is difficult as the more you learn the more
frustrated you get. Karamoja is a region of pastoralists. Pastoralism equals
nomads with cattle, who move around to support their livelihood. Pastoralism
has been the way of life in this region for centuries, yet now with the state
boundaries and closed borders it is no longer a viable option for the states in
which the pastoralists live. This has caused conflicts throughout the years,
and has made it very difficult for the people of this region to embrace their
culture, heritage and live in a sustainable manner. Many have lost their livelihoods, and as the region is becoming a hot spot for mineral exploitation the people of Karamoja now face a new and difficult challenge.
I am here working with an NGO called Karamoja Development Forum (KDF).
Their main goal is for the voice of the people of Karamoja to be heard and
provide a forum for the Karimojong to express themselves . There are numerous NGOs in Karamoja, yet many of the projects that have been initiated have brought little to the actual people who live and work in the region. One of the greatest struggles have been in that many do not view pastoralism as a viable livelihood in the region anymore. KDF is a local organization that wants
development of Karamoja more than anyone, but they want it in a sustainable
manner where the voices of the people are heard. I am here to learn, to learn
from KDF, from the people I meet, the other NGO's in the region and hopefully
by the time I leave Karamoja I will have a better idea of what the future holds
for Karamoja. This blog will be a way I can share this information
with others who might never make it to this far away region.
So that was the serious part. I want you all to get to know Karamoja not
just the politics, because it is a region which most people have heard nothing
about and it is a truly beautiful area. I have been here for 3 days now and I
love everything about it so far. I know 3 days isn't a lot, but stay with me on
this blog and hopefully in 2 months time I will still be saying I love it.
People here are amazing, they are genuinely nice and open to talk, and argue
with you about their position in politics, and in life. I had my first day
meeting some of the guys at KDF yesterday, they were great and welcomed me in with
open arms. I went straight into a meeting where details of their future and
current updates on various projects were discussed, also great news in that they
received their first grant, which will hopefully help the organization grow and
aid them in their mission to give a voice to Karamoja.
The view from Mt Moroto Hotel - the Beauty of Karamoja
Walking the road into Moroto Town
My second night here I ended up at a reception for a hotel in Moroto as that was the only place with power, to watch the Chelsea – Newcastle
game..unfortunately I was supporting Chelsea, and then later on at the bar
(once the generator got kicking) the Arsenal – stoke city game…again I was on
the wrong side. Yet it was a great time. After the game I headed back to the
hotel I am staying at the moment, Mt Moroto. It was disco night here, so that
provided some great entertainment with lots of dancing and very loud music. If
only I could move my body like the women here (like the rhythm lives in their
body), but I had a good time just watching and having a few drinks and getting to know some of the people here.
I know this is a bit of a random introduction to my life and work here,
but I do hope it might catch your interest. I will try to update every night
and add some pictures and show you what life is like in a very remote corner of
the world.I am writing this in the morning Sunday, but unfortunately I can't
upload the blog until tonight as the generator here is only on at night, so no
power at the moment, also no warm water....but happy and enjoying life despite
the lack of some luxuries.
To my friends from International Studies and International Peace
Studies, being here is also challenging a lot of what I ever thought I wanted
to do in the world. Aid work – does not work unless you know the people and the
culture in which you are working, a lesson I know we have all been told over and
over again in class, yet it seems there is still a lot more that could be done
in that area.. If anything from reading this I hope you all try to understand a
bit more of who are you are working with and be critical of projects wherever
they might be in the world. We all want to make a difference, but understanding
the people who you work with is perhaps the greatest way you can make a change.
Anyways a good night from Moroto!
X Maria
Learn the local language with me: My words of the day:
How are you? - Ejoka?
response: Ejok
How are you? - Yei a?
response: Ayei
Thank you very much: Alakara nooi
My name is: Ekakiro
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