Monday, August 20, 2007

online again

I'm online again! This is now a rare luxury. Actually, I'm at an internet cafe in Williamstown with my team. We've had so much research to do for our fundraising trip coming up in September and our internet has been down, so fieldtrip time.
The last few days here have been busy however, this week-end was a free week-end and after finishing my papers and presentations which I will talk about later, Tamika, Valeria and I headed for New York. It's great showing people around New York for the first time. Valeria is from Argentina and her mouth was wide open the entire trip. Tamika who is from Baltimore was excited too, I think this was her second time in the City. Thanks Krista and Dawn for entertaining us on the Lower East side and super thanks to Krista for putting us up for the night. It was fantastic to be back in town, even if it was for one night only.
My time at IICD has been divided into many parts:
1) Planning the IICD Olympic Games which our school in Massachusetts will be hosting (there are two other schools in the US - Michigan and Cali). The games will be held this week-end and the activities are crazy (scavenger hunt in the woods, paint ball, sprint up the side of the mountain, biggest splash in the pool, tug of war, etc...) I'm conducting the opening ceremony and have prepared a speech and will be donning a toga.
2) Preparing for our first fundraising trip which will be to Washington D.C. from September 3-16th. We need to secure permits, accommodations, strategies etc... We need as a team to fundraise approx $86,000.00. We will have four two week fundraising events. The strategies include door to door begging in residential neighborhoods, setting up tables in front of stores such as Wal-mart and Trader Joe's, setting up booths at colleges and universities, speaking at churches, and anything else that we can come up with. (YOUR IDEAS ARE VERY WELCOME!!!!)
3) Preparing a presentation on the Berlin Conference. Basically the Berlin Conference was when the various European nations decided to get together and slice and divide the African continent. The country borders that we see today are a direct result of this conference which marked the beginning of Africa's official colonization. You'll notice that certain countries around Lake Victoria in particular are cut irregularly because every European country wanted a piece of the lake or a piece of a particular beach/coast. It was a terrible thing obviously, families were split apart, apartheid became the political norm, Africans were virtually enslaved all over again and subjugated and forced to work for the Europeans in order to make money to pay the taxes that were imposed on them, Africa's natural resources were robbed and used to fuel Europe's economy and further their industrial revolution, farmers were forced to abandon growing the crops that fed their families and were forced to grow cotton so that it could be shipped to Europe and starvation grew rampid and soil was leeched, to name a few consequences... Don't get me started, I could go on and on all day!
My focus is on Portugal and how they received Mozambique, Angola and Portuguese Guinea. Which is perfect because I will be going to Angola.
My presentation will be on Tuesday.

As I've said before the classes are very interesting and we are very busy. The people on this mountain are interesting, some are fantastic and others are completely crazy and I wonder why they are even participating in this program. Certain people and things are larger than life and you wouldn't believe me if I told you so I'll spare you those details.

Last night was so fun. A group of about ten of us decided to play flashlight tag around midnight. Have I mentioned that our mountain is pitch black at night, it was a crazy game. Then some of us went for a walk in our "haunted woods", as protection we took Bear, one of our dogs with us in case we ran into a bear or something else. So four of us, including myself are brave or stupid enough to enter the woods while everyone else waited outside. At first things are great, we're walking and joking and singing and suddenly, Bear stops leading us, he gets really quiet and still. He looks left and then right and then looks at us and whines. This crazy dog then jets, he left us, so we followed suit screaming and running wildly with vines and branches smacking us in the face. It was really funny.

2 comments:

CameronB said...

Wow!! You have to raise soooooo much money in D.C. based primarily on charity? Doesn't your organization apply directly to non-profit organizations that fund these type of projects (Rockefeller Brothers Foundation, Robert Wood Johnson, and probably thousands of smaller NGO's)? I guess it is good for you to have a direct investment and contribution to IICD! I wish I could come down and visit you in D.C.; but Sept is probably going to be crazy busy for me (ok, it will be crazy busy, but I might find a weekend to bop down anyway)! I wonder if you'd even have time to kick it! If you need a free place to stay, I could maybe look into that for you!

I am very interested in this conference that divided up Africa. Maybe you can email me the word document when you have time. Of course we learned NOTHING of African history in school, and although I knew that Africa was divided up amongst the European nations, I had no clue how or when! The scars are still so very visible. I was reading an article about China's new industrial revolution and how it is the most polluting of any developing countries in known history. The argument being of course that the world powers are to blame for the current state of the world, and you have to be rich to care about the environment (the Chinese argue "why should we stunt our growth to stop global warming when it's not our fault"). I see similar parallels with Africa and other old colonies in how they should proceed! I think history has been actively forgotten in the case of Africa, and that it is only now that some countries feel enough shame to help fix the damage we have done.

Keep up the good work!!

Sojourner Williams said...

Cabessa
Welcome back!
Let's see, IICD is registered as a non-profit 501 c 3 however the money that they receive doesn't cover all of their expenses. So hence the fundraising, but you're right, it is good to get us directly involved in our fundraising.
The Berlin Conference is the conference that literally divided Africa between the European super powers. I'll try to e-mail more information to you. The Africa history that i've been learning is so amazing because you're right, you don't learn about it in school and so many things make sense when you learn about the history and you can understand why Africa is where it currently is in its development.
ok gotta go cause I have Portuguese class now, more later.
Tchao!