Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Sometimes You Just End Up ETing

Well here it is folks... I ended my service as a PCV on December 8, 2015. I never thought I would write those words but I have been home for about thirteen days now and I am really happy with the decision I made to end my service early. I had just hit my 19 month in Uganda and the thought of trying to make it another eight months well lets face it, it would not have been healthy for me mentally and physically to stay there. I was really unhappy, all I wanted to do was stay in my house and read instead of doing my job and dealing with the outside world and people in my community. I am stubborn and I was like "I am going to get that RPCV status no matter what - I am not going to leave!" I didn't want to let myself down for leaving early...well I started to experience panic attacks and was dealing with PTSD symptoms following some events that took place. There are also a bunch of other things involving my org, people in my community, and events that happened which also played into my decision to leave but they are boring and I really don't want to bore you with the details.

When my mother came and visited, I broke down and finally admitted to myself that I really wanted to go home (Mother's are good like that). I finally realized I was tired of being unhappy, stressed out all the time, frustrated, and I was starting to hate Uganda (which is something I never wanted to do). After much tears and talking to a wonderful friend back in the US, I realized it was time for me to head home. Sometimes a simple sentence can change the path in ones life. Once I made that decision to end or Early Terminate as PC calls it - I felt like the world had lifted off my shoulders, I could breath again, the panic attacks went away, I started eating again, and the fog was lifted from my very frazzled brain. When it comes to ETing - it is never easy and by far it was one of the hardest decisions I have had to make thus far in my life but Life Happens and we all have to do what is right for each of us. I am so happy that I had the chance to serve with the Peace Corps and work in Uganda. I really loved my time in Uganda and the experiences will be with me the rest of my life. Below is the post from my FB account that I feel sums up how I feel about my time in Uganda.

With a heart filled with so much love, gratitude, and many wonderful memories and experiences, I leave this beautiful country of Uganda. I have met so many amazing people, stepped way outside my comfort zone, learned a lot about myself and this country, witnessed some things most will never see, and loved another country with my whole heart. These past 18 months have changed my life in so many different ways and for the better and I am so very grateful for the opportunity to serve with The United states Peace Corps and with the people of Uganda. I look forward to what the future brings and also the moment when I can again step on this beautiful red earth. Thank you so very much Uganda, Thank you!

So far the transition back to life in America has gone really well - I did ask the cashier at Noodles and Company if they had soda the other day and I find myself wanting to thank everyone in the local language or ask them a question in Rutorro, I find how big the cell phones have gotten a little ridiculous. I do wake up sometimes in the middle of the night going "holy shit! I am not going back to Uganda and I am not longer a PCV!" but I am okay with that and looking forward to what the future brings. I will say it is too cold for me in Minnesota - I do miss the 70 degree weather and sunshine. Since I have been back we have had one day of sunshine ugh. 

Since this may be my last blog post - I wanted to say thank you to all you wonderful readers for taking the time to read/comment on my blog over the past 19 months. I really do appreciate it. For all you "possible soon to be PCVs" - Peace Corps in the ride of a lifetime and it is so worth it!

Katelyn - Abooki :) 

Saturday, November 7, 2015

A Fellow PCVs Blog Post

I have to give a shout out to my friend Carmen, a PCV in the Southwest and her wonderful writing and blog. I want everyone to check it out and read these great thoughts when it comes to beauty! Carmen's Post

Thanks Carmen!  

Friday, October 30, 2015

Here Comes The Music Man!

The who? The MUSIC MAN! Well the Traveling Music Man actually. Education PCV Paul from the Southwest came up and visited five of the KFSP schools to do his Traveling Music Man Show.  His show is all based around positive living and loving one another. He did 8 shows in four days in the Fort Portal area and performed for over 2,000 students. Super Star if I ever saw one! Paul has been performing all over Uganda and it would be hard to not find a child who has not heard him or heard of him. Kids from all the schools and communities are still singing songs from the show and they will come up to me on the road and start doing the hokie pokie.

Kigarama -Doing Head Should Knees and Toes

Rweteera - Learning The Hokie Pokie

Kasiisi - Singing Along

Kigarama - P4 class with PCV Margurite and Paul

Lots of Laughing From Kyanyawara

A Rweteera Student Got To Strum Paul's Guitar
Paul and Patrick - Patrick Translated All But One Of The Shows


















Another Student Strumming the Guitar

Cheer For Uganda

Kiko - Clapping and Dancing Along

Monday, October 5, 2015

Half Down And Another Half To Go


At the end of August, my Health and Agriculture June 2014 group gathered together for our Mid-Service Conference. This conference happens roughly halfway through ones service and is different in every country but it still has the same meaning and message: “You are mid-way through your service – congratulations!”. We had a couple days of discussions, activities, learning about different topics that we had requested to have more information about, what to except for our final year, starting the job search, and just hanging out and chilling with great friends. It was a great way to look back over my first year of service and evaluate where I am and where I want to go for the final months of my service. This past year has gone by quickly and the final now nine-monthsish are going to be crazy busy and I am sure will fly by. I am a little worried, I wont be able to get everything done by the time I am finished as a Peace Corps Volunteer but that is okay. After going back and forth, I have decided to not extend my service to a third year with my organization because I feel it is time to move on to a job with a salary and start paying off my student loans.

The first photo below is from our group at Staging about 14 months prior to our MSC right before we headed off to get on a plane and fly into Uganda. The second one is of our group at MSC (Minus a couple people who were on vacation). We started out with 40 people at Staging and now we are down to 27 volunteers.

Staging June 2014
 
MST August 2015
We have lost a total of 13 people for a variety of reasons from health, security, family, or personal issues. Finishing ones service is not always in the cards for people and there is nothing wrong with leaving early. At times, Uganda is a very challenging and rough place to be and live. I have thought about early terminating or 'ETing' a couple times over the year but it had nothing to do with Uganda or her people it actually has mainly to do with issues at my organization which most of the times have ended up clearing themselves up.

It is amazing to see how people have changed and grown over the past year. All of my fellow volunteers have grown into their own and I am sure there will be more growth to come in the final months. I have enjoyed my service thus far with of course the few bumps in the dirt road but that happens with any path. 

The final months are looking bright as they tick down to our Close-Of Service Conference which will be around April and the start of the job search in the coming months – I really enjoy job searching so I am looking forward to this part. Nine months left! That is CRAZY!

Some Music, A Little Dancing, and A Few Drama's

Back in July, KFSP held it Music Dance and Drama Competition between seven of the 14 schools. Each school put together a dance, a song, and a play all around the topics of Malaria, Early Marriage (which turned slightly into Early Pregnancy), and HIV/AIDS. They performed each of those categories for the other schools and where judged based on their content and information provided to educate others on the topics.
Iruhuura Primary School Singing

Kiko Primary School's Dance
Kasiisi Primary School's Dance

Kigarama Primary School's Song
Ugandans love Music Dance and Drama competitions as a way of getting information and also for entertainment purposes.

BEST SECRET GARDEN: Iruhuura Primary School

BEST POEM: Kasiisi and Iruhuura Primary School

BEST SONG: Kasiisi Primary School

BEST CREATIVE DANCE: Kigarama Primary School

BEST SKIT: Kasiisi and Kyanyawara Primary School

OVERALL WINNER: Kasiisi Primary School

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

The Good and The Bad

The Rift Valley in Western Uganda
Thankfully after two horrible weeks of I would say depression and not great thoughts, life has taken a turn for the better. I really had a hard time coming back to Uganda after my time in the USA, I do not know why but it was hard. I didn’t want to be in the USA but I also didn’t want to be in Uganda either – a hard place to be when the two places you call home do not feel like home at all. Coming back everything seemed to be falling a part from ex-pats heading home, to fellow PCVs having to leave, myself having a few accidents and other people getting hurt, people you trusted stealing things, it was starting to really freak me out. However, this past weekend that changed YAY! I am the Satellite Liaison for the West, which means I get to hang out with the new group of soon to be PCVs in the West and do some language and cultural information sessions. The group is wonderful and I am very excited to hopefully see them swear in as PCV Health and Ag Volunteers in August and move to their sites and I cannot wait to see them grow over the next 24 months (there is a lot of growth during the 27 months in country – sometimes it is hard and hurts but mostly it is good growth). The PCT’s Peace Corps Trainees have been staying in Kyenjojo, which is about a 45-minute drive East of Fort and this past weekend they got to come to Fort Portal for the day. Oh the bright and alive faces ready for an adventure – takes me back down memory lane the time before I received my permanent coating of red dirt on my feet. We started the day off at the Tooro Palace.
The Tooro Palace
The view from the Palace looking down towards Fort Portal
The history of the Tooro Palace and the Kingdom is really fascinating, dating back many centuries. The current king has been king since he was three years old and is the youngest ever monarch in the world – down side of that is he lives in Kampala, speaks very little Rutooro as he was educated in the United Kingdom and hardly every comes to the West. I read an article about how he wants the West to be the best and prosper and his people be the best – wellllll I’ll believe it when I see it. He cares more for his money and not smiling then his people – oh I said it. The Palace is run down and if I were Queen, man that place would be looking smart and in fab fashion but it is currently lacking the Katelyn flare where palaces go but anyways the tour was nice but we did not even get to go inside the palace and see the thrones which was disappointing. Our next stop on Tour De Fort was Sweet Aromas for brownies and cookies (for course come on you cannot go through Fort without getting sweets from Sweet Aromas those who miss it are really missing something in their lives), this brightened everyone’s mood and fight off the hangrys (hungry and angry people). About 15-20 minutes West of Fort Portal are the Rwenzori Mountains, also called the Rain Makers, they stretch high into the sky so we put 15 people in a nine passenger van in true Uganda fashion, they were complaining and I was like ‘another day in Uganda’ and we heading West to the Great Rift Valley where two different lines of mountains are parallel to each other and create a valley.


The Rift Valley!
It was amazingly beautiful and reminded me so much of Kisoro and parts of Colorado. We goofed off there for a while as kids from high up in the mountains yelled ‘Muzungu’ at us and we had a fun time spotting and waving to them. Then we climbed back in the van and headed back to Fort for Pizza and Croc Burgers at Duchess and they got to explore Fort, buy some fabric, and ended the day with ice cream at Gardens. It was such a wonderful day and I had such a good time getting to know the soon to be volunteers. So I am inspired to finish these last 12 or so months with fire and energy. It is always good to check in on if you are making an impact or even should be in the place that you are and I have spent a good amount of time checking if I should be here or if I should move on but I am going to stay I want to and I want to keep doing what I am doing.

On Sunday night, I pulled my first jigger out of my right big toe – yes I did it all by myself. As a PCV, things that used to make you squeamish now you just shrug and go okay lets just get it over with. The only thing that makes me squeamish is coming across a large snake on my way to the pit latrine at 4AM or finding large spiders in my bed net – okay and also needles being stuck in between my toes. I have made it 13 months without a jigger and I was proud going that far as another PCV has had like four or five but I think I got it while I was in Kyenjojo where it is very dusty, and there is trash lying around. Fort Portal can be dirty but there are sidewalks and the trash is kept to a minimum. Jiggers are little bugs that borrow into your skin and lays eggs – gross right? If you are feeling brave feel free to google them. They are just one of the many things you can get while living I here in Uganda. I just stuck a pair of tweezers in and grab the black dot and pulled the sack out – yes a sack of white small eggs they looked like tiny dip and dots. Okay I’ll stop grossing you out. Oh wait here is a photo...
The little white and tiny black dot is a Jigger
This week is a busy week for the org as we are running around going to dress rehearsals at seven of our 14 schools for the Music Dance and Drama Competition or MDD on Saturday. Each school will present a Dance, Song, Poem, and Skit during Saturday’s competition and these schools get crazy competitive so it should be fun! 
 

Girls and Boys dancing during a dress rehearsal for the MDD
I will leave you with this quote by Kevin Kruse which I think sums up life as a PCV rather well… 
“Life is about making an impact, not making an income.” 

 Have a wonderful rest of the week dear readers!  

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Returning to the land of Peanut M&Ms

Well as you can see, my blog looks slightly different and I have not posted anything when I said I would (big surprise there). Things have been a little wild the last couple weeks and I just have not had the energy to write something.

A week ago, I arrived back at site in Fort Portal after a three week vacation in America. People have asked me if I had culture shock coming to Uganda a year ago and of course I did but I feel like I had more culture shock going back to America after a year of being in country. I remember walking through Target for the first time and thinking to myself ‘why do people need this much shit?’ That basically happened every other place I went and also just driving through neighborhoods in the land of suburbia. At times during my trip, I really felt out of place in America.

I landed in America after about 18 hours of flying in Minnesota and it was rainy and freezing out (okay it was only like 55 but to me that is cold). I had a couple days of sleep and trying to get on a time schedule (Uganda is 8 hours ahead of Minnesota time). I then jumped in the car and drove 950 miles to Denver, Colorado to visit with some friends and also see my older brother who is working at the Denver Art Museum for the summer. I also went out to Buena Vista and Colorado Springs to see friends and attend Association before heading back to Minnesota. I forgot what it was like to have long days with lots of sunlight – Uganda has 12 hours of light and 12 hours of darkness every day, every year so it was amazing to have the sun rising at 5AM and finally getting dark around 10PM. With all the traveling and driving around people would say 'that is so far to travel' but I would compare distances with traveling in Uganda. It takes 16 hours to drive from Colorado Springs to my house and I would look at it as that one time it took 16 hours to travel from Kigali, Rwanda back to my site (if Kigali and Uganda had been in America it would have taken tops seven hours).

Traveling takes a lot out of you and I did have a few hours of sleep on the different flights but I got to sit next to a woman who refused to close her window shade the whole flight from Brussels to New Jersey and my TV screen was not working (an eight hour flight with a broken TV screen sucks). I became a pro at falling asleep at random times and places when I was in America because my body never got accustomed to American so I was just tired and cranky all the time.
I think what got me the most was how out of touch everyone was with the world.

Media plays a large role in giving misconceptions of what is going on in the world and also its now entertainment and it is not so much news anymore. Also smartphones – my smartphone broke about seven months into my service and I never replaced it so I went most of the last year without one and I forgot in America people spend their lives on their smartphones and forget to live. I had dinner with a friend who spent most of the time texting another person throughout dinner and I sat across debating if I should just leave or throw the smartphone and that was not the only time - if a situation got awkward they would get on their smartphones where here in Uganda you end up laughing and living with the awkward situation. Be present people come on. I brought a smartphone back with me and I have mix feelings about it already. I don’t want to pay for internet on it and two I do not want to be glued to it again like everyone else in the world. Ugandans find it extremely rude when you pull out your smartphone when they are talking to you (Americans have forgotten that I guess). Currently I am switching out sim cards and checking my smartphone once a day – otherwise still sticking to my Ugandan burner phone.
It was great to have American food again that was not boiled to death or bland with no flavor – Yes I ate a whole box of cheez-its and a couple bags of potato chips and I am not ashamed. I had a great time eating different foods again but it was also an eye opener to how unhealthy Americans are when it comes to eating. 

It was nice to be in America when the Supreme Court ruled on gay marriage and I got to share some joy with fellow friends during that weekend and it is a step forward for the world. It was a good trip and good to see people but at the same time I could have gone elsewhere in the world and dealt with less stress and saw some cool sites and after doing two roughly 20 hour flights it is not really worth it and I do not plan on taking that flight again for at least another year or two too much flying.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

4th of July!

Happy (Belated) 4th of July to everyone back in America! PCVs celebrated in true American fashion by gathering together, dressing in Red White and Blue, eating some good food, and just having a good old time!

Some of the Health and Ag June 2014 group celebrating

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Bang Clang Crash - My Blog Is Getting A Slight Face Lift

Hello everyone! My blog is currently undergoing some changes over the next couple of weeks so thank you for your patience as I make a few much needed changes! Some pages will be half finished and not very well edited just heads up! I will post a bunch of blogs when I finish up the changes hopefully by the end of week! Happy Travels!

Thank you!

Many hug!
Katelyn

Saturday, June 6, 2015

A Few Thoughts On Rwanda and Genocide


Having the opportunity to travel to Rwanda and learn about her long life was such a wonderful experience that I will not be soon to forget it but it was also not easy. It is a tough subject to write about and it has taken me a while to put these words to page as the emotions from the trip have been a challenge for me to process (plus I have been really busy at site). The people are very kind, the streets clean, the air goes silent after 9PM, the shops do not sell the same things, the cars and motorcycles drive like normal, and the countryside is beautiful. Rwanda like many countries around the world has a history that is both heartbreaking and challenging to understand.

In 1994, Rwanda experienced genocide of ginormous proportion where from April to July, just under a million people were brutally murdered because of their ethnic background. Rwanda’s majority ethic group Hutus led the extermination of the minority group Tutsi who accounted for roughly 14% of the population. Hutus made up about 85% and the remaining goes to a small group called the Twa. The country has seen violence since before the 1960s but nothing on the scale of the summer of 1994. The Belgium colonial period that lasted until July 1962, when Rwanda gained their independence, had always favored the Tutsi that lead to jealous and a hate of their Tutsi neighbors from the Hutus. Extreme Hutus started training for mass extermination and ending the Tutsis. On April 6th, a plane carrying Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana (a moderate Hutu) and the Burundi’s President Cyprien Ntaryamira was shot down near Kigali’s international airport, no one survived and within an hour of the plane crash the killing began. Roadblocks and barricades were set up and Tutsis began being slaughtered as well as known moderate Hutus in Kigali. Over the next three months the killings spread throughout Rwanda from Kigali into the countryside. Finally, in early July, the Tutsi-led Rwandese Patriotic Front (RPF) was able to gain control of the country. Almost three quarters of the Tutsi population had been murdered as well as thousands of Hutu’s who were against the killing campaign. Thousands of Tutsi had become refugees in neighboring countries and after the killing had stopped, over two million Hutus fled Rwanda into the neighboring countries fearing retribution and created a massive humanitarian crisis. After the genocide came to a close, Rwanda was placed under military control; the RPF put Pasteur Bizimungu, a Hutu and Paul Kagame, a Tutsi in power as President and Vice-President. Kagame would later take over as President and has served in that position ever since. In my opinion this is a dictatorship that in many ways has worked and helped a broken country become functional again. I know people have very mixed feelings about Kagame with his policies and upcoming election. I know he is not horribly popular in his country but the guy had a tough situation handed to him those some of his rules and polices are a tad behind and over controlling he has done an okay job. Hopefully, he will hand over his position peacefully to someone else in the coming months because this country has had enough hurt for a lifetime and it is time to move on and start a new chapter.

When I was in high school, I had the opportunity to enter the National Peace Essay writing contest for AP English and that years topic was on child soldiers and this was the first time I was introduced to the history and concept of genocide as I focused my essay on the genocide in Burundi (which took place at the same time as the Rwandan genocide but got way less press and is all but almost forgotten when discussing genocides) the second genocide that I focused my paper on was the Cambodia Killing Fields. Since then, I have always had an interest and questioning of how genocides start, what impacts them, what makes people have so much hate to murder, herd mentality, mass medias impact in genocides, also looking at how countries deal with the aftermath and overcome something as devastating as mass murder. I think for me there is also a great interest in Human Rights, which genocides are a human right violation on many fronts.

I traveled down to run in the International Peace Marathon at the end of May but it was not running that impacted me the most. I have been to a few memorials and genocides museums in the United States but this trip by far has meant the most to me and also being older, I can understand better how this genocide impacted the country. I have spent years reading about genocides around the world and I have always wanted to visit Rwanda and Burundi to learn more firsthand the impact it had on the countries. I was fortunate enough to be in Rwanda and I thought I was prepared for what I was going to see but I was wrong, The Rwandan Genocide Memorial started you in the mass graves surrounding the memorial, over 250,000 people are buried in the 13 graves overlooking Kigali. It was very emotional to be standing there; I was the only one there at the time in the gardens and the stillness was extremely powerful and moving. Flowers lay on certain parts of the graves with family names written on them. A wall lines the graves for the names of those killed but it is almost empty, as no one really knows who was killed. Overnight, whole families disappeared or were murdered – no one kept records – another devastating aspect of genocide. The memorial is by far the best memorial I have ever been too. It was so respectful but also sends a powerful message of the importance of not letting something like this happen again. It showed you how the genocide and hate for the Tutsi grew out of how the West (Germany and Belgium) had come and created these groups of people labeled them back in the early 1900s because they looked a certain way or acted differently, also how many cattle you owned determined which group you were in… and we say Africa has issues… well most of those issues and conflicts, I am finding out were because of the West not because of the people who live in Africa. Then the memorial showed us how newspapers and radio played a large part in gaining support and spreading hate for the Tutsi, then brought us right into the day the killing started. They have a room filled with photos of those who have lost loved ones, photos after photos line the walls, clothes from those murdered in Kigali hang in glass cases along with bones and skulls from people. Just as powerful was the five different rooms dedicated to the world genocides and they all had the same message Hate of a certain group of people who were different or didn’t do something ‘we’ wanted them to do. Why do we keep letting things like this happen around the world – we turn and act like it is not there? The final room was called the Children’s Room and it was dedicated to the children of the genocide and I was only able to make it through about half of it before I had to leave. Photos of children lined the walls but also listed were their hobbies, activities, how they acted as children and how they were killed. They really got you with that room and I had to call it quits.

While I was walking through the genocide memorial there was a fire in my stomach that was anger at a simple thing ‘hate’ and how it could destroy so many. As I have had the chance over the last year to disconnect to the outside word I am finding I am more aware of that simple thing ‘hate’ in the media. Much like that women who set up the Mohammad cartoons contest in Texas – that is ‘hate’ I do not care if you are democrat or republican that is ‘hate’ of a group of people and they should be ashamed of themselves for spreading that. All because a group of people worship a religion different from our own, a woman on the BBC the next morning was talking about the ‘Love thy neighbor as thy self’ and how we seem to have forgotten that – especially in America and we should focus on it more and our world would be a better place and she is so right. ‘Hate’ can destroy a whole generation and we as a world choose to ignore it just like ignore our neighbors and then something happens.

After visiting the memorial, I was not going to visit the churches from the genocide because walking through the memorial was hard enough but since a fellow PCV was going to the churches one day, I decided to go with and after visiting them, I am very grateful I did. Cody and I traveled out of Kigali about 30 minutes to the villages of Ntarama and Nyamata home to two of the many sites around Rwanda were mass murder took place.

Ntarama is a small one-room church, with a storeroom; kitchen and Sunday school all separate from the main building set on a low hill overlooking the green rolling hills. It is fenced off and white and grey streamers and flags line the fence and walkways. Large metal roofs cover all the buildings to protect them from the elements of the weather. An older woman, Mary Ann met Cody and I at the entrance. She tells us of the history of the building, were people would gather for celebrations and worship in brighter days. The outside of the main building is missing chunks and half of the wall if not covered with metal sheets would be open. We enter the church and my heart stops, the rafters and walls are all covered in clothes from the over 5,000 victims murdered here. Coffins full of bones from victims sit on the pews and Cody gasps and I turn and next to the wall covered with metal sheets that once was a large class window are shelves filled with bones and skulls of all different sizes. Showing signs of how they were murdered – either by a spare, machete, gun, or club. On the far end of the church are more shelves with shoes, pots, bibles, items from the people. After the killing started in April, Tutsi gathered at the Ntarama church and barricaded themselves in fighting off the killers outside, who retreated but after a couple days they returned this time with grenades, guns, more men and one goal of killing. They threw grenades into the church, fired guns through any opening they could find. They burned people alive inside the kitchen. The moment I will never forget is in the Sunday School they showed us a wall where people smashed young children against the wall – the wall is stained a dark red with chunks of brain matter still there. People were murdered in the yard outside the church. Some of the survivors, mainly men and young boys ran and hid in the swamp until the end of the genocide and come out and started burying the dead at Ntarama.

The second church is about 10 kilometers down the road from Ntarma in Nyamata village. Nyamta Church sits on a slop overlooking the main road and is surrounded by a large graveyard that stretches all the way to the main road, the graves of those long gone are barely visible because of the overgrown grass that has grown since 1994. Across the street sits two schools, one of them built by a woman for the Tutsi children when they were banned from their schools before the genocide happened. Sitting at the churches two o’clock a new looking large church sits. As Cody and I arrived, music from the church drifted over to us and members of the church were making their way over to pay their respects to the victims at Nyamata Church. During a tour we heard them singing outside near the mass graves and they made their way through the church silently morning those lose, many wearing anti-genocide t-shirts and white and grey ribbons (a sign of mourning and rebirth). We were greeted by an older gentleman who gave us a beautiful tour of the church which has had not changed since the day. Just like the church in Ntarama, people came to the church seeking a safe place thinking the church would protect them when really all the churches cared about were their own property and did not care about their members. 10,000 people were murdered in one day at Nyamata; they were murdered in the churchyard and in the church itself. The only difference from this church and Ntarama is that they went around and made sure everyone was dead, they left no one alive. They double-checked everyone. Clothes from all the people lay on the rows of pews in the sanctuary, a few items sit on the alter: some rosaries and a bible or two, a photo identification card. Nothing hangs on the walls but a statue of Mary that has a bullet in her cheek. One of the Hutus shot her because she ‘looked like a Tutsi.’ The mass graves sit in the back and they are open for people to go down and see the rows of coffins and skulls, bones that are on shelves that go six or seven high. One of the mass graves was just recently added and closed due to respect for the died.
Rwanda will never know the exact number of people killed during the genocide, the country are still finding bodies, 21 years on. They had just pulled hundreds of bodies out of a pit latrine, it was said they were buried alive and something like five or six people deep. There are mass graves throughout the country that have still yet to be found. Family members still do not know what happened to those lost and may never know. It is just heartbreaking. What a horrible thing to do to our fellow man all because of a label.

I had a lot of time to think and talk with many local and ex-pats living in Kigali. Many of the ex-pats expressed concerns of how closed off people are and I think a lot of people have just pushed this issue deep inside and never faced it – I do not blame them. During dinner with a couple Rwandans, we got talking about Western Aid and one of the men started crying when talking about how the West left during the genocide and I realized there must be a deep mistrust, dislike, and hurt of Westerners due to the fact we left the country to fend for themselves during the genocide. We always say we will never let this happen again and we still do. Look at Syria, look at treatment of the Rohingya in Myanmar, when will we ever stop, the wheel just keeps turning? I hope one day we do end up saying stop.

I am not sure how to conclude this article so I will simply say, I will never forget the beauty of Rwanda and her people. It was such an amazing experience and I hope that one day on the eve of a future genocide that the world shouts 'no' and we do not let something like this ever happen again. This World is too beautiful to let something like that stain it.

Friday, June 5, 2015

An Anniversary!

Today is a big anniversary! One year ago today, I arrived here in Uganda to begin this amazing journey and I cannot tell you how happy I am that I stepped on that plane with 39 other volunteers and traveled across an ocean to arrive in Africa. Those volunteers who traveled with me have become close friends and a support over this past year and I am so grateful I have them all. I have learned so much about Uganda, Ugandans, working with non-government organizations, and also about myself this past year that it is amazing to look back at where I was just a 365 days ago. The year has been full of emotions and growth, it has been frustrating, tiring, joyful, and for the most part a wonderful experience.

I want to send out a big thank you to all of you who have read my blog and supported me this past year! I could not have done it without your support and kind words. I am very much looking forward to this final year or 14 months of service here in Uganda. I have lots of ideas and goals I want to accomplish and some more seeds I would love to plant before I leave. I looking forward to meeting the new PC volunteers that will come to Uganda to serve, say goodbye to those that will be leaving and also meeting the new volunteers that will be coming and going here at KFSP and in Fort Portal over the next months.

With that being said, on Wednesday, I will be flying home for a short and much needed vacation in America to see family and friends. I realized this week that I am really burnt out mentally and physically dealing with my org and also living here in Uganda and I need a break from it all so this trip comes at a perfect time. I will spend a most of my time in Minnesota before traveling to Colorado and spending time with friends and family. I am looking forward to recharging a little and not dealing with my org for a couple weeks. (I have a dream, I will not be answering emails for those three weeks but who am I kidding?!). Then I will return to Uganda to finish up my time here with style and hopefully work for the better.  

Again, thank you very much for all your support and love, I cannot tell you how much it means and it would have been hard to do it without it. I cannot wait to see what this next year brings.

Hugs and love from
Katelyn

Saturday, May 30, 2015

Running in Uganda!

Sunrise during dry season on one of my morning runs
I have never done much running in my life before I came here in Uganda. I really have never been a fan of running in general but since I have been working on trying new things that I decided back around November to run in the Rwanda International Peace Marathon. I started out training for the ½ Marathon, as I knew I would not have time to train for a full plus the thought of running a full makes me want to chop off my feet. So training for the ½ Marathon started and I would get up at 5:15AM and would be out running by 6/6:15AM. The roads get too busy and hot after 7:30AM and I like my privacy as I am huffing and puffing along. It started off really great and I was having fun and making great distances.
                                                                                                    
Uganda is very different when it comes to running, there is something about it that just makes you want to run, run, and keep running. I would run every other day just to help my joints that do not like running and help me not get to the point of ‘oh why do I have to get up and do this!?” It helped a lot with keeping it fun.
Another Sunrise
After I came back from Italy in December (I didn't run at all during that time due to the cold), I had no drive and I really was not in the groove to run anymore. I would run here and there but nothing was ever consistent. Finally, April rolled around and I went okay this is dumb you need to run at the end of May, so I started training again and developed an issue in both hamstrings that made me very uncomfortable and nervous about them snapping and ending my short lived running career, I cut back on the amount of running and the ½ was out of the question so I focused on doing a simple 5K.
Finish line of The International Peace Marathon
After a couple weeks, I finished up my final training and then headed south on a bus to Kigali, Rwanda. I had time for two training runs after arriving in Kigali and after six months of running on dirt and trails, running on pavement for the first time was very interesting. I can tell you, I enjoy running trails and dirt way better then street running.
T-Shirts!
This past Sunday, I did run the 5K in the Rwanda International Peace Marathon. At site I was running around 25-28 minute 5K and my goal was to get in around 26 minutes. There was a lot of stress and frustration that morning and the sun at 7AM was already blazing after a week of cool almost chilly weather. Kigali is land of 100,000 hills and the whole 5k was nothing but going up a hill or down a hill. I ended up coming in just under 30 minutes and I am not going to lie there was a lot of frustration and disappointment at that time but looking back on it, I PR’d and ran my first 5K overseas and should be very happy and I am.  
It Was Hot!

Start of the race out into the street

Everyone who came down from PC Uganda finished the ½ marathon or the full marathon all had the same thing to say ‘wow that was tough’ but there was a lot of joy as it was a lot of firsts for people. It was a wonderful experience to run my first 5K overseas and I learned a lot of that. Looking toward the future but I think I will focus on trail running and would like to run longer distances in the future!
At the finish line after my run

Monday, May 18, 2015

Let Girls Lead In Uganda!

This past weekend (May 1 – 4) was one of the best I have every experienced here in Uganda. I had the wonderful opportunity to attend the first ever Let Girls Lead and Girls’ Voices Initiative workshop that took place in Kampala.  I cannot tell you enough how amazing it was to be a part of and I feel so lucky to have had our organization attend. I learned so much and also met some amazing people who are working to make Uganda a better place for women and girls. It was so inspirational.

Priscillar, myself, and Gift
Winnie Gift and Nsemerirwe Priscillar both 14-years-old from Kyebambe Girls Secondary School in Fort Portal and both scholars of The Kasiisi Project attending the four day training with me. For both Priscillar and Gift this was a new and exciting experience. Gift had never been to Kampala before and Priscillar had only been to the Kampala bus park. When we arrived at the Silver Springs Hotel one of the nicer, Indian run hotels in Kampala – they were in awwwww. (The hotel was lovely and I would recommend it to anyone who wants to put out the shillings to stay there). The girls had some culture shock when they got to the hotel and I had to show them how to use a shower and they needed a little reminder on how to use a toilet. The room also had air conditioning that took them some time to get used to it. They also got to try a lot of different foods which ranged from American, Indian, to Ugandan. It was for sure the best food I have had here in Uganda. They had a mochachinno machine and chicken that was not boiled to death. Priscillar also got up the nerve to swim in a swimming pool for the first time, something she was terrified of but ended up enjoying it greatly.

Goofing around on Photo Booth

The girls the first night at the hotel
Let Girls Lead and Girls’ Voices Initiative works on grassroots campaigns, leadership, and promoting girls rights with governments and United Nations Leaders. It is also focused on Girl-Centered Advocacy for the Post-2015 Development Agenda.

Gift with a former Uganda MP

Discussing Early Marriage
38 girls from across Uganda ranging from 10 to 19-years-old attended along with 20 women leaders all looking for the goal of making sure young girls are included in both the Post-2015 Development Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals which will be put into place in September at the United Nations general assembly.  
Working hard on their projects
Gift and Priscillar will bring their skills and knowledge back to their communities and educate 20 other girls about leadership, advocacy, and the Girl Declaration. Priscillar has already done an activity talking with girls at her church about education and leadership. Gift is brought the importance of education to her community last week. 
Talking about the UN
At the end of the workshop, the girls presented different solutions for four issues that the girls agreed upon that are currently affecting Ugandan girls: Education, Sexual Harassment, Early Pregnancy, and Early Marriage to officials from UN Woman, UN AIDS and officials from the Ugandan government, and various women organizations in Uganda that advocate for women and young girls. 
Gift and the women organizers

Priscillar and the women organizers at the closing BBQ
The girls had so many different stories about their lives here in Uganda and also the women leaders who many have started their own NGOs or work with organizations that help women and also girls. During the trainings of the chaperons I was in ah of how strong and passionate these women are about helping change things in Uganda and I learned so much from them in the short time we had together. I also made some friends that I cannot wait to get to know over my time here. 

The Girl Declaration created by girls around the world
It was such an amazing experience with so many stories from Gift and Priscillar, showing me their communities’ problem trees they created and also their life timelines that gave you a real insight into the every day life they live here. Seeing those two girls stand up and tell the whole group of 50 plus people press included who they are with confidence was so inspiring, I may have cried a little. Most importantly they got to learn about how they can make chance in their communities and even at the national level.  

Check out www.LetGirlsLead.org for more information on girl-centered advocacy. 

Here are two different links about Let Girls Lead and the work that has been doing on around the world to change how girls are seen in the world.