i owe you all a blog entry
Posted: December 30, 2009 Filed under: Culture, Justice, Media, Politics, Uganda, Writing 1 Comment »Do not let me hear
Of the wisdom of old men, but rather of their folly,
Their fear of fear and frenzy, their fear of possession,
Of belonging to another, or to others, or to God.
T. S. Eliot No 2 of 4 Quartets (East Coker)
Oliotya! (You are how?).
I am sitting coffee shop where I have to dodge drops of water splashing down from the ceiling. The rain came down like crazy last night. It choked my heart’s rhythm, it roared so loud– a wild thing. I sat up straight in bed and told God, “You promised!”—referring to his words about never flooding the earth again.
Weather here is intense, almost vengeful sometimes. Who knew there was such a sky as the one I see every day? Wish I could write it down –its wideness, the towering cloud pillars, and the gold calligraphic flourishes. It seems to me like a living companion in that it comes close and is always changing. I will remember those clouds dipping down. I will remember the red communion wafer sun.
I should mention to you that UGANDAN MAIL WORKS. Rumor was that it didn’t; I’d heard that letters would take eons to arrive and that packages will arrive looted and rifled through. Well, the latter might still be true; I haven’t received any packages yet. I have, however, received some real letters scrawled in familiar handwriting — and when I saw them sitting on my desk at work, I howled with joy. If you experience the impulse to dash off a letter to me, I’d say, go for it. You can send me an email requesting my address.
I continue to try to adjust to life in Uganda. I find work especially enlivening and centering. The Ugandan staff teach me so much about courage every day. I think I mentioned on my blog that many of them have quietly done very brave things, simply because God asked them to. One coworker smuggled hygiene products to the poor during Idi Amin’s reign, risking her life to do so. For her, the way of obedience was clear. If I ever suggested she was a hero, she would laugh. She putters around the office, forgetting her shoes are off, she’s so focused on her work and her clients’ needs. After many years in social work, she still cries sometimes at her clients’ suffering. And she tells their stories in a deep, powerful voice: “When I first met C, she was so sick she could not walk. She had to crawl along the forest floor to meet me.”
My preoccupation this week is a problem analysis section for a “fatty” grant which, if we get it, will help IJM help lots of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in the North. Never did I expect to have to work on such a comprehensive research project, but I am glad for this broadening experience, glad for the challenge. I spend a lot of time in a coffee shop with BOUTS, or Binders Of Unusual Tonnage, fiddling with words and terms like “ouput,” “food security,” “customary law,” “statutory,” etc etc.
Here’s some background to the grant. Over the last twenty years, millions of people in the North of Uganda were herded into government internment camps during the conflict with the Lord’s Resistance Army. Now these IDPs are returning home, only to find other people living on their land. Traditionally, tribes would care for one another and partition land relatively fairly, providing for the vulnerable. Now that people have grown up away from their clans, social cohesion has broken down and its every person for himself, with no one to protect the widows and orphans most often ousted from their property . 65 percent of all land is now disputed in the North.1 It’s very, very sad. I hope IJM can help. If all goes well, we’ll continue our casework in Mukono County (close to Kampala) and establish a pilot office up north, too, to help individuals who have nowhere to go, no way to eat and who are alienated from their clans as a result of the years spent in the camps.
For Ugandans, land is survival. I think this concept is difficult to get across – to Americans, land grabbing doesn’t sound as bad as other injustices. However, I see the pain and devastation this problem causes whenever I go to the field. People who’ve been robbed of their land have no education, no food, and they can’t afford medical treatment, not to mention that they don’t belong anywhere.
The children still act as children do — kneeling down in the dust to share maize with me, shoving one another sometimes, laughing so that their tonsils show. In some ways, they show surprising resilience. In other ways, you can see their suffering and the waste in them not being able to attend school.
In addition to working on this grant, I’ve also been working on several writing projects, building relationships with media here, working on a small grant to secure wells for some of our clients, taking many, many pictures, writing press releases, and much more. I’m always busy, and I get to do a lot of things I really enjoy. The Independent, a popular Ugandan weekly publication, included a short article about IJM this month based off a press release I wrote and distributed.
I think one of my favorite things about IJM is the stories — the hopeful stories– I get to communicate. I see my job as telling the truth, as simply and directly and possible, and spreading hope — which sounds cheesy, perhaps, but seems real and important to me. Oh hope, unseizable as music, elusive as days passing so quickly. I couldn’t ask for more meaningful work to do.![]()
risky behavior
Posted: November 10, 2009 Filed under: Justice, Media, Politics, Uganda Leave a comment »I’ve been taking motorcycles all around town meeting with reporters, trying to find ones who are interested in IJM’s work. A few have seemed compelled and even willing to write stories. It’s a scary thing, though, because I do not have control over what they say (freedom of the press and all that), and they could very well decide to say bad things. I guess any worthwhile endeavor, including getting publicity, has an element of risk.
my first legal education
Posted: November 2, 2009 Filed under: Justice, Politics, Uganda, Uncategorized 4 Comments »
I went to a legal education seminar yesterday IJM held in a rural village church. Initially, we worried that rain would prevent villagers (most of whom work in sugar cane fields) from attending. We needn’t have fretted: the rickety church benches teemed with men, women and children.
Before the training, I drove around the village with our translator and another staff member to galvanize even more participants. The translator walked out into pouring rain and called out in a loud, ringing voice. JS (another intern) strode into a bar to let people know about the training. He’d hardly been in there ten seconds before a dozen young men emerged and swarmed the van where I waited. They hopped in with me, shouting and cheering. Suddenly enmeshed in a moving mass of unfamiliar people and strong cologne, I worried they were angry. When I realized they were excited about the training, I got caught up in their infectious enthusiasm.
(JS told us later he entered into the bar, yelled “Good morning!” in Luganda, and all the men had yelled “Good morning!” back, then charged the van.)
The training went very well. One of the staff attorneys explained property grabbing to all the attendees. She also taught about will-making and why it is so important. She then gave everyone the proper forms to draft her own will. Her presentation was thorough, well-reasoned and compelling to the audience. She had visual aids and also did a good job of anticipating objections and questions. For example, some Ugandans are superstitious that if they make a will, they’ll die soon after. She addressed fears like these in a calm, firm way.
During the Q and A session, one man asked why wives and children were not considered part of an estate—they are property, so why can’t he distribute them in his will? The attorney responded that according to Ugandan law, men, women, and children as equal. She also shared that each person is made in the image of God.
One huge, brawny young man wearing very tight tweed pants came up to thank the attorney at the end. This was a surprisingly congenial gesture given that he’d initially joked before everyone about wanting to oust his wife without giving her anything. Yet by the end of the training, he said he was thankful for IJM’s services and that his neighbors now knew about the protection afforded them under law.
After lunch, many people stayed to have their cases considered for IJM intake. The chance to sit down with widows who’d been violently evicted from their homes moved me deeply. So many of them had such sad faces. One, bleary-eyed and stooped, was obviously weakened by HIV.
During the training, I looked around at all the faces and thought to myself that that making laws and developing policy are very important endeavors – I may study these things in graduate school. However, I’m learning that the right laws don’t guarantee protection for those they’re designed to help, just as, in my life and perhaps yours, the right “beliefs” might not always shake down to action. For this reason, I found yesterday’s legal ed refreshingly practical and quite moving. If I ever do write policy, I hope I’ll stay close to the faces I’ll try to help — those who need to know about their rights and deserve the chance to walk with heads held high. Whenever I’ve visited IJM’s clients, I’ve come back determined to do a good job for the wonderful hardworking people I’ve met there.
Towards the end of the training, I walked out and met a little girl with a gingham dress falling off her skinny shoulders. We couldn’t understand one another, but she shyly showed me a plastic water bottle. We ended up kicking it around and before I knew it there twenty children wanted to play, then thirty. I didn’t know my other-ness would be such a draw, and I was kind of embarrassed by all the children who scrambled to join. I did not mean to cause a scene! But our game was so beautiful and so fun. I wish I could record the children’s laughter for inclusion in this blog entry. You will just have to imagine their hoots, hollers and their unfettered movements.





I, of all people, taught a girl how to hike. She loved hiking so much she could not stop.

LRA’s increased presence in central Uganda
Posted: September 23, 2009 Filed under: Politics, Uganda, Uncategorized 1 Comment »http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8259039.stm

