Monday, June 7, 2010

Fun facts about chimpanzees:
*They share 98% of our DNA
*They are 5 times stronger than a man
*They are highly social and live in communities
*There are an estimated 4-7,000 living in Sierra Leone
*They are super cute!!

We spent last night in the jungle at a chimp reserve that works to rehabilitate abandoned, injured and sick chimps. Today we hiked to a lake and then waterfall (with the help of our two small but knowledgeable guides). It is certainly a beautiful country. I will miss this place.










Thursday, June 3, 2010


picnic on leister peek overlooking freetown










stephen's death grip on his first motor bike. to be fair it was pouring rain for most of it and the roads really do take horrible to a whole new level.








the beach!!!!!!












me blending in at the market. stephen was a bit overwhelmed with the 'white man' shouts every 10 seconds. i am looking forward to the return of anonymity (plus flushing toilets, a real bug free bed, cheese, real chocolate...)









celebration dinner after our wild adventure in the bush. yes, that is real champagne we are drinking!!!

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Bintumani

Disclaimer: this post is written by Stephen who has had a more recent introduction to Sierra Leone
After 6 hours of walking, Becca had given up on the car coming to get us. We had spent the previous days navigating through Sierra Leone to get to Mt. Bintumani and were tired from walking in the African sun and humidity. The route to the mountain is not simple. A six hour bus ride from Freetown to Kabala is the first and simplest step. Then the haggling begins. Finding a way to travel the 40 odd miles from Kabala to the village of Sinekuro is first hurdle. Having been here for six months, Becca is a master negotiator, and dove into the task of talking with every motorbike and 4x4 driver in Kabala. After hours (and hours) of searching we finally found a car willing to take us to Sinekuro. Or rather, close to Sinekuro. It turns out that in rainy season the Seki River level rises enough that it is impassable to cars. We were assured by the guide book and by the drivers that our village was only an hour and a half walk from the river. After 4 hours of bouncing down a nasty dirt road we arrived at the river and happily bid our ride goodbye with plans to meet them a few days later back at the river. The 1.5 hour walk from the river ended up being 3.5 hours in full African sun, including a meeting with the chief and elders of a small community we mistakenly took for our destination only to discover it was another hour this time in the rain until we arrived exhausted in Sinekuro where, once again, meeting with the chief and hours of haggling were required to agree on a price for the guide to take us to the mountain.

Once on the mountain we had an amazing time. The hike started in the village farms and thick forest but as we came to our camp the forest opened to lush grass looking more like Scotland than Africa. The air was cool (finally), the views amazing, and it was fun to compare with our last hikes on Mt. Adams in New Hampshire and in Utah. We also got to try some local flavor including an 8am dose of palm wine, which smells like rotten egg, the ubiquitous rice and sauce, and snacks of groundnuts (peanuts). Unfortunately we did not get to try the tortoise.

The route back also proved interesting as we trekked the 7.5 miles back to the river and debated whether or not our drivers would return for us. After crossing the river, we began to get nervous that our diver might have forgotten us. When we arrived at the next village, our fears were confirmed when a woman told us that "The white car come to the river and look for you yesterday. It go home." Our driver had come a day early...

We still don't know what the hell this lady was talking about. After another hour or two of dejected walking we heard the roar of a land cruiser. Our driver had had a flat tire. After filling the car with people and food to sell at the market (including chickens that kept pecking at Becca's feet) we arrived in Kabala and took the next bus to Freetown. Now to celebrate with a nice bottle of champagne that managed to find a way from London to Freetown in my bag!!!

Stephen sucking on a bag of water in Kabala getting ready for the next round of negotiating.










Becca holding a bird that the village kids brought her.








Our guide and his dinner (who peed and pooped on him in one last act of defiance)...











Mount Bintimani in the morning light.









Our camp on the mountain.









View from camp.










View from near the top.







The trail to the top going straight up.


















Becca crossing the Seki River.













Happy to see the driver (although not as happy to start negotiating the price again)

Friday, May 21, 2010

dehn ple futbol (they play soccer)

Yesterday, we put on a football game at the juvenile prison. If you remember, I posted a while back about interviewing boys from the prison. Their requests were so simple and really stuck with me, especially their desire to play football. CVT often puts on community activities. Football is a great way to build community and provide a positive outlet for one's emotions. So, I got permission from my supervisor and the prison to organize a match.

The boys are not allowed to leave the prison so they cleared the field in the back. Everyone was out working, some hacking away with machetes, others removing large rocks and debris, and a few fashioning goals out of sticks. The results were passable, although a little worrisome as most of the boys do not own shoes and thus had to play barefoot. I refereed the game. The boys were great, really great. No fights, very little fouls and not a single person questioned any of my decisions!!

We even got a few drops of rain. As most of you know, playing soccer in the rain is one of my all time favorite things. All in all a good time and a perfect afternoon.




Sunday, May 16, 2010

Here is some of what I see: an expensive house in the bush (possibly where the chief resides), a more typical grass and mud hut, a young girl dressed in tribal clothing followed by one impressive woman, a family walking and lots of beach (filled with people and harmattan haze the day before Easter, locals playing soccer at sunset and today with claire and looming thunder clouds).







































































Tuesday, May 4, 2010

"Justice"

Last week, I saw a person being stoned. Hardly recognizable as a human, covered in dirt and blood, he moaned. People threw stones and a large crowd watched.

The UN Convention Against Torture defines torture as ” ...any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him, or a third person, information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person.”

Could this fit the definition any more precisely?

The irony and horror of our position, 2 counselors (who specialize and work with torture victims) driving in a car plastered with the logo “Center for Victims of Torture”, was so clear me. Our mission is to “heal the wound of torture on individuals, their families and their communities and to STOP torture worldwide” and yet we merely drove past.

I was stunned. I felt sick to my stomach and appalled.

My bottom line is that I do not think that stoning a person is ever ok no matter the alleged crime. Yet, it is a form of tribal or vigilante justice, and even I, on reflection, have to admit that ‘justice’ has some merit. There is no formal, functioning justice system here. If you want to file a police report you have to pay them and still nothing happens. So in this void, vigilante justice prevails. A society where there is no punishment or consequence for crime is a dangerous society, especially in a place where poverty and suffering are so ripe. These very public displays of punishment do act as an effective deterrent and crime rates here, I would wager, are lower than in NY City. I feel perfectly comfortable walking down the street alone at 2am.

This topic led me to the inevitable comparison with our justice system. Our’s certainly is not without flaws: the death penalty (where we have killed innocent people), our skewed death row populous, skewed overall populous of 'criminals', disproportionate sentences for similar crimes (i.e. crack vs cocaine)… Even sadder is the fact that we spend more money to incarcerate people in the US than to educate them. “It costs approximately $52 a day to house, feed and secure a prisoner. Surprisingly, we spend approximately $25 a day to educate a student in a public school.” Despite extensive input of financial resources, we still have some of the highest crime rates. How can warehousing individuals do any good for our society? A black man is more likely to go to jail than go to college in the US. Is this the kind of justice we want to export abroad?

Clearly our model is not one to be held up on a pedestal and neither is their’s. The removed nature of our system makes it more palpable for sure but arguably no more humane or fair and perhaps even less effective. It is a depressing subject with no easy solutions on any side of the oceans.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Today was one of those days that make all the frustrations and doubts worthwhile and reminded me just why I am here. According to one of my 13 year old clients, “We call ourselves the ‘Helping Group’ because that is what we do” and that sums up what I am doing or hoping to do here. These ten girls walked into our office as shy, self-conscious, unassuming girls who would not look me in the eye, let alone speak to me, and in ten weeks transformed into loud, passionate young women who know how to move and even managed to remember and apply every week's topic!!