Saturday, July 30, 2011

Rwandan Pets

            So you want an African pet?  Well, it’s as simple as going down the market and getting one, but not as simple as keeping one. 
            First off, Africans don’t have pets to have companionship or something to complain to with no backtalk.  Pets here have a purpose.  You want eggs?  Get a pet.  You want milk?  Get a pet.  You want to marry someone?  Get a pet.
GOATS
            Goats are probably the staple of the Rwandan pets.  They cost generally between $50 and $60.  If you want brochettes (meet on a stick, very popular in Rwanda) it is most likely goat meat.  If you go to any decent sized market on their market days, you can buy a goat or goat meat.  Also, goats are pretty low maintenance animals.  They’ll eat any greenery around the area.
SHEEP
            Sheep are popular, but not as common as goats.  They cost slightly less (around $40 for a good sized sheep) and are a little higher maintenance. 
CHICKENS
            Chickens are everywhere around here.  They are used from killing for meat (I’ve never met a Rwandan that didn’t know how to kill or gut a chicken), getting eggs, and taking care of nuisance insects in the area around the house.  They cost from a small chicken of $4 to a large one around $18.  Amazingly, chickens do not need to be tied up since they really never leave their home.  How this works is a completely mystery. 
ROOSTERS
            Roosters are somewhat common and you can see them roaming around a random road.  Roosters are used to come over the eggs and spray a scent that changes the eggs to chicks that will hatch.  Roosters generally cost about $15.
COWS
            Cows are the big animal around here.  They dominate everything from dowries to investments to food.  Cows start at a cost of $200 and can go up to $800 for a full sized female.  They can produce milk, manure for the fields, or better yet more cows.  Losing a cow can be catastrophic to a family. 
            If a man wants to get married, he will show his commitment (via a dowry) by giving a cow to the woman’s family.  There is a dowry ceremony that consists of the two families arguing how many cows and goats should be given up for the unmarried woman.  However, the generally accepted amount is one cow per woman. 
TURKEYS
            Turkeys are fairly common in the villages, but not as popular as chickens.  They can go from being unspectacular to massive.  Also, you can generally see a person walking a group of turkeys down the road to eat or be sold in a market.  Full grown turkeys generally cost around $15.
OTHER ANIMALS
            If you are wondering why Rwanda doesn’t have the same pets as America, there are some basic reasons.  Cats here are feral and the only people that keep cats are generally to ward off rodents.  However, some of our volunteers have cats as pets and love them being around the house.  Dogs have a much more macabre reason.  Dogs in Rwanda are generally feared and hated.  After the genocide, dogs were all over the roads eating the slain bodies.  Because of this, almost all dogs were killed in order to prevent them from being accustomated to humans.  They are making a comeback, especially in affluent families.  Unlike America, there is only one breed of dog that I have seen here in Rwanda.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Peace Corps Medical Kits




        Every Peace Corps volunteer is given a medical kit.  This medical kit stays at their site the entire time they are in the Peace Corps.  The purpose is to solve minor injuries and illnesses (or begin treatment of possible larger illnesses) without requiring volunteers to come receive medical treatment in Kigali every time.  This saves a lot of time and money for both the Peace Corps and the volunteer.  Here is what is in the kit:
Loperamide:  Used to control excessive diarrhea and cramps.  Used when a volunteer needs to travel on the bus.
Ciprofloxacin:  Taken when diarrhea is extreme and a doctor is concerned that the volunteer had dysentery.  This must be used in conjunction with major fluid intake. 
Sepasoothe:  These are sore throat lozenges for minor sore throat pain.
Miralac:  The tablets are taken for heartburn, stomach pain, and indigestion.
Diotame:  Used for nausea, upset stomachs, diarrhea, and heartburn. 
Aypanal:  A fever reducer and pain reliever. 
Diphen:  The pills provide relief for runny noses, sneezing, itching eyes, and general allergic reactions.
Cedaprin:  An ibuprofen that reduces fever and minor pains.
Swift:  Sinus decongestants for hay fever, colds, and nasal passage blockage.
Bismuth:  Pepto-Bismol tablets for upset stomachs, diarrhea, and heartburn. 
Sucrets:  Sore throat and cough formula lozenges. 
Rehydration Salts:  Mixed with one liter of drinking water, this is used for rehydration of volunteers during periods of severe diarrhea. 
Coartem:  Taken when volunteers feel that they have symptoms due to acute malaria.  This pill has significantly improved the recovery of people that are affected with malaria.  Prior to Coartem, recovery from malaria was much more extensive and difficult to administer.

There are other contents in the medical kit for various uses:
adhesive tape
malaria slide preparation kit
condoms
band-aids
gauze pads
anti-itch ointment
disposable thermometers
antiseptic
antibiotic ointment
floss
tick and insect repellent
anti-fungal cream
whistle
chap stick
tweezers
stool sample collection kit
iodine tablets for emergency drinking water
scissors
rubber gloves
    
           

Saturday, July 2, 2011

My House

American Gothic revisited with my houseboy and chicken. 

The living room complete with a painted Rwandan flag.

Eating after English lessons with teachers from my school.

English lessons with some of the women from my village.

The dining room with a painted American flag. 

The study area where I keep all my work and books.

My bedroom.  The net above the bed is used at night to prevent me from insect bites (particularly mosquito bites).

The kitchen area.

Another view of the kitchen area.  The stainless steel item on the far right is my water filter. 

My shower area.  Just add a bucket of cold water.

Bathroom.  Due to this setup, I have forgotten how to flush a toilet. 
The courtyard where we keep our chickens protected.
Mama chicken with her baby chicks.

The baby chicks getting a drink of water before they go to bed.

Baby chick posing for her close up.
My two chickens that lay eggs everyday along with the rooster that wakes me up every morning.



            When you move to a village, you are given a handful of things including a primary assignment (job), a counterpart (someone who is supposed to help you adjust in your village), and a place to live. 
            By Peace Corps standards, my house is large and nice.  However, when I moved in the house was nothing but walls filled with half finished stucco and mud stained windows.  For the first two months, I sanded down the walls, painted the walls, cleaned the windows, brought in furniture, placed a solar panel on the top of the house and electrified the house, hung pictures and artifacts, and got a person to help me out with daily chores.
            The house has high ceilings which is ideal in the hot season when the house breathes well and doesn’t become a Turkish bath house.  Some of the volunteer houses have very low roofs and small rooms which make it almost unbearable to sleep in the hot season. 
            My newest addition to the house is two chickens that lay eggs every day.  My helper brought over his rooster (which loves to crow at about 5 am everyday).  Last week, I bought a mama chicken with her eight baby chicks.  For all the chickens and rooster, we built a chicken coup to hold the chickens and protect the chicks from hawks that would swoop down and take them when we are not at the house.  The chicks are great and growing fast. 
            My house has become a social center of activity.  I teach some of the local merchant women English, I have Kinyarwanda lessons twice a week, we watch movies with my neighbors every other week, and I invite my fellow teachers over every Wednesday for English lessons and lunch.  The house generally has a good amount of activity, including neighbors coming over to play traditional Rwandan games, look at magazines, or play darts.  It’s become a great place to host.
            My favorite parts are the American flag painted on one side of the wall along with the Rwandan flag painted on the other side, and my hammock that looks out over the valley from my porch.   Enjoy the pictures!

Hotel Rwanda

The front entrance as not seen in the film "Hotel Rwanda."

The now famous pool areas.

The bar where there is live music on Friday nights.
             The most famous building in Rwanda is the Hotel des Mille Collines, better known to Americans as Hotel Rwanda.  The hotel is located in the center of Kigali, complete with a nice bar, pool, restaurant, and conference rooms.  The recently renovated hotel is a popular place to stay now thanks in large part to the movie.
            Hotel des Mille Collines is famous for being a shelter for thousands of Tutsis and Hutu sympathizers during the 1994 genocide.  The hotel manager, Paul Rusesabagina, bribed Hutu militias with money and alcohol until the refugees were able to flee under the safety of the UN.  Due to his heroic actions, thousands of Rwandans were saved from certain death. 
            The hotel is famous because of the critically acclaimed film “Hotel Rwanda” starring Don Cheadle.  However, the film was shot in South Africa and the hotel in the movie is not the actual hotel.  The films “Shake Hands With the Devil” and “Sometimes In April,” both about the 1994 genocide, shot on location in Rwanda and show the actual Mille Collines.
            Mille Collines is French for “A Thousand Hills.”  The hotel derives its name from the common phrase used to describe Rwanda, the “land of a thousand hills” because Rwanda’s entire landscape is tropical mountains.