Sunday, July 19, 2009

I’m still figuring out my goals and projects for the five months I’m here…things move very slowly in Uganda. One meeting can take an entire day…depends on how far the locals have to walk to get to the meeting place and how well they understand English. At yesterday’s meeting with the director of the Disability Rights Fund (from Boston!), I realized the focus needs to shift from the parents to the children. My co-worker Natalie, the Dutch founder of Silent Voices, wants to keep the focus on the parents (because she thinks the parents can educate the children), but DRF probably won’t continue funding SV if the focus doesn’t shift to teaching the deaf kids how to advocate for their rights. Also, the children tend to know more English than the parents. Natalie seemed annoyed by this, but couldn’t say anything because she obviously wants the money for next quarter…quite frankly, I think she’s tired of being in Uganda. Ten years is a long time, especially when you have four kids and another on the way. She’s always cranky and negative (good thing this blog is private!). She told me last week I was like all the other Americans she’s met, “loud and flamboyant”. Haha!! Thus far Silent Voices has focused on educating and teaching the parents about deafness, sign language, etc. Good things, of course – the parents are important members of the village. But the children need more sign instruction, the children should be telling the elders what they need and want. And eventually (hopefully??) the deaf children will want to make their own life. The most difficult part of the meeting was teaching the parents about the importance of advocacy…many want their deaf child to learn how to sign and speak, but they can’t imagine them having a life of their own (i.e., getting married). To them, the child will stay behind and help with the farming.

At the moment, the deaf children of the Bushenyi District (over 100) are isolated in their respective schools; most haven’t met their fellow peers at other schools. This is mostly due to lack of money for transportation costs. The Kigarama School has the highest number of deaf children – maybe 25 – and one teacher for the deaf. The others have a few teachers who know a handful of signs, but no one specific teacher. Anyway…so far I’ve been to all five schools in the district: Rugazi, Ruhandagari, Kigarama, Isheyke, and Butare. It takes an entire day to get to the school (most are located hours from town in rural areas), hold the meeting, eat lunch (matooke), and get back home. We usually sit under a tree and go over the simple agenda: sign language lessons and auctioning (the parents bring home-grown vegetables – usually avocado – to the meetings to sell to teachers --this is in lieu of paying Silent Voices membership fees). I had an interpreter b/c many of the parents don’t speak English. The interpreter translated what I said into the local language – for example, I might say, “this is the sign for ‘house’” and the interpreter would say “house” in Runyankore and then I’d give the USL sign for “house” – which happens to be similar to the ASL sign.

Next week I’ll start developing subject-specific curriculum for the deaf classrooms. For example, a math lesson that can be taught in sign language…so the kids are learning new words as well as basic algebra. Natalie will think this is too ambitious, but who cares? These are smart kids!

Photos to come soon!!

1 comment:

  1. hmmm... Natalie sounds set in her ways and a little tired from being there... but I think putting the focus on the children while still educating the adults is the right way to go.

    After all, the kids already KNOW what they need and desire on a day-to-day basis; and while the parents might understand some of those needs, they can never truly understand 100% until they walk in the same shoes as their children.

    Plus kids just plain respond to education better, and learn faster than any adult ever could.

    I think the adults are slow to respond to changes in their lives. And they idea of their children being self-sufficient independent children is a huge change in their way of thinking.

    But that's where the kids can help! When these parents see their kids start to get excited about their own education, I bet they will respond faster than any prompting from a local aid agency. No parent can ignore a youthful energetic child standing in front of them saying "look what I learned! And I want to learn more!"

    That energy is contagious!

    Hopefully Natalie will see the wisdom in children advocating for themselves.

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