Monday, January 25, 2010

Adventure in Africa: Part II

I was fortunate to see many sides of South Africa during my short visit there – rural villages, big cities, towns, beautiful beaches, and an amazing wildlife conservation park. But for now I will focus on my time working with and visiting the Thanda After-School project. This project, mostly funded with sales from Thanda Zulu jewelry, provides necessary resources, skills, and activities to help empower children and individuals in rural Umtwalume, Kwa Zulu-Natal where 1 in 3 adults have HIV/AIDS and a third of the population is unemployed.

Riding in the small, white Toyota pickup truck on my first day out to the village I had my face pressed so hard against the glass, as if by doing this I could permanently imprint everything I was seeing into my brain – rolling, green hills, purple blooming Jacaranda trees, dust, vervet monkeys, men in the sugar cane fields with their machetes, tuberculosis clinics – good and bad I wanted to take it all in.

But seeing is just the beginning; for me Africa was a feast for the senses. Besides what I saw, I tasted, smelled, heard, and touched. I tasted sweet tropical fruits, Rooibos Tea – a favorite at home, and pap – not at all unlike polenta, and my very favorite, Rusks. I smelled beautiful flowers and the sugar cane being burned at night is a smell I will never forget. I heard monkeys screeching, women speaking their native tongue of Zulu, where clicking sounds are interspersed with words, and I will never forget the sound of the children laughing and singing. I dipped my feet into the Indian Ocean and shook hands with the men and women that I met in the village.

On my first day, I was able to spend time at the new sewing income generation project and although the women were a little shy and nervous at first to have a visitor, they warmed up quickly and in spite of many of them not speaking English and myself not speaking Zulu, we got on quite well - they even gave me a sewing lesson! This new project gives skills and training to previously unemployed individuals so that they can sew products which can then be sold to support themselves. Later that day I got to sit in on an art class, one of many after-school programs Thanda offers to its more than 300 and growing students in its program. Valuable skills such as being able to think creatively, offer constructive criticism to their classmates, and receive constructive criticism about their work were being learned. With a full, first day behind me I fell asleep early that night, but I did so with many thoughts going through my mind as I tried, in vain, to make sense of everything I had seen and experienced.

To be continued...

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Prayers for Haiti

35 seconds. That is how long the earthquake lasted in Haiti. That is how long it took for roads to crumble, buildings to collapse, and lives to end. What a tragic reminder as to how fragile and tenuous life can be.

But this tragedy, as with others, is also a reminder at how wonderful, caring, and resilient humans beings are. How many people are as moved as I am as we witness astounding acts of courage, unselfishness, and hope in the face of such tragedy? Neighbors, strangers, and family working tirelessly together to pull people from the rubble and Haitians singing songs of hope and faith in the streets, are just a couple of the images I am referring to.

Please keep all of the victims and volunteers in your thoughts and prayers, and let us try not to judge anyone as this situation unfolds and people become more desperate for help. With a tragedy like this, there are no borders, no them vs. us - we are all just humans.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Adventures in Africa: Part I

Life is funny sometimes. When I started Most Naturally nearly five years ago, I could not have imagined the direction it would take me. This past fall, I was led to Africa. It all started several years ago when I started selling the Thanda Zulu line. I started with just a few necklaces and bracelets, not sure how my customers would react to it. Well, people loved the jewelry and the story behind it, and now several years later it occupies a prominent space in the store, the table full of different styles and colors.

As the line grew, so did my friendship with the program founder, Angela Larken, as well as my interest in South Africa. I looked forward to Angela's visits, anxious to hear of the progress, or setbacks, Thanda was making. On one such day when Angela was visiting the store I uttered the words "I would love to come to South Africa someday and see the Thanda project in person". Well, Angela and I touched upon the subject often after that - when I should go, what skills could I offer while I was there, etc. - until one day last spring when I got an email that said "the first week of October is good, come then". I landed in South Africa on October 1, 2009 and I have not been the same since.