Friday, December 9, 2011

Making Soap in Tamale (a Tara tale/ramble : )

Due to lots of travelling and early starts the following tale reflects my state of mind a bit (although some of you may say I'm usually quite rambly and space cadet-y : )
We leave Accra at 5:30am to get on our flight to Tamale. I snooze most of the way and only really wake up when it’s time to get off the plane. There’s quite a few people in far out outfits on the flight. As we walk down the tarmac we notice that huge crowds of people have turned up. Tessa  (the consultant I'm working with) and I start looking at each other and wonder who the celebrity on our flight was. Turns out it was this guy. The best explanation we got was that he was probably an important religious leader who had just come back from a pilgrimage to Mecca. (I kinda thought he looked like one of the wise men - he had a gold hat with jewels in it and everything!)




*********

6:30 in the morning, another early start. Tamale – the northern city of Ghana feels like a different world to Accra, there is a haze covering the road with motorbikes and people all over the place. We arrive at Rabby the soap makers place. The compound has a lingering smell of shea butter and moringa coming out of it, a kitten is chasing a baby chick, a little boy wonders around without any pants on. The sun starts to rise shinning across the small courtyard, Tessa smiles at me ‘perfect light for photography’.

We’re here to document the process of soap making for a workshop that will be happening later in the day. Rabby is a master soap maker and even makes soap to export to Europe, it’s hardly surprising; northern Ghana is a haven of perfect ingredients for making beautiful soap. She takes us through all the steps, from melting the shea butter to setting the soap in the mould. She even shows us how you can make ‘omo’ style detergent using shea butter (something a lot of the women from the villages didn’t believe was possible).

You might ask why my job suddenly consists of soap making workshops. Well part of the project we’re working on is to encourage behaviour change when it comes to hand washing (with soap!) something which can reduce diarrhoeal diseases by around 44%. A lot of the communities we’re working in are remote or poor and so they don’t always have soap all year around but they usually have most of the ingredients on hand to make it themselves. If women in communities make soap from locally available ingredients they can sell it quite cheaply to neighbours and friends and even give some to the local schools, thus enabling them to increase their income and also allowing everyone to have soap to improve their hygiene and health – horay!

Once we’re finished snapping away we set out for Tolon where the soap making workshop is going to be run. Peter Paul is driving us. Along the way we spot a sign for a local drinking spot. It gets us talking about some of the funny signs we’ve seen while we’ve been here like the ‘don’t mind your wife’ eating spot. Peter explains to us that if a wife is mad usually the first thing she’ll do is refuse to cook for her husband, and then go on to deny him ‘certain other pleasures’ which kicks up an interesting conversation on how things work between men and women.

‘In Ghana a woman will ask a man out for a drink when she is interested in him, but he can only accept if he has a full pocket, a woman will never pay for her meal and if the man cannot pay he will be disgraced. So you can only take a wife if you have the means to maintain her’

 Tamale for some reason feels so much more ‘African’ than Accra. It is so much more relaxed and laid back, and is full of feasts for the eyes, the fabric on women’s clothes feels brighter and everyone seems to have an innate sense of funk. Everyone rides on motorbikes, bikes, motorbike-utes, on the top of buses... you name it. I’m not sure quite how all the craziness on the road works but it does.

We stop for at a bar by the side of the road for a desperately needed coffee. The woman ushers us over to some plastic seats that they have put out and produces a tin of Nescafe, milo, some condensed milk and a couple of mugs of boiling water. She then proceeds to whip up an omelette for Peter. I smile to myself ‘sure it’s not a latte but Ghana you sure do have it sorted’

Peter insists on paying for us all.

We arrive at the district assembly hall in Tolon. The women are all very enthusiastic when we walk in. Some of them try to talk to us but we just look back at them blankly, apologising for not being able to understand them, at which point some of them try talking even more enthusiastically and using hand gestures, which just makes us feel more guilty, we all end up laughing. Rabby shows up and gets started. The women all respond really well to her, they hang off her every word. You can tell when she says something important because they all respond in unison with a humming noise. The women are beautiful, colourful and dignified. For some reason I find their faces facinating, they seem to be the faces of women who have mastered the atitude of survival and have seen a lot in their lives despite probably rarely leaving their village.

Rabby shows the women how it's done
The day wears on, at one point the power goes off killing all the fans and the little air con there was, the room slowly gets hotter until it’s unbearable. The demonstration is finished. There is one old man sitting up the back in traditional muslim gear. When we find the translator we ask him why he is here. Turns out he is here to support his wife.
‘ he says he is very excited that this workshop is taking place, he thinks it is a wonderful idea, he says he will support his wife to buy her all the equipment and ingredients she needs’

That night there is a flurry of activity in the ‘Aussie house’ where I’m staying, everyone is preparing for Thanksgiving dinner which is being hosted by another expat down the road. As usual I feel a bit strange turning up to a strangers house uninvited with my bottle of wine but the beautiful expat hospitality is the same as in the rest of Ghana, ‘come one come all… but we might need to borrow a few plates from the house next door.’

******

I got to sleep in a bit more this morning and didn’t have to leave the house until 7:30, brilliant! The sun’s still rising though as I set off through the rubbish dump and little compounds to the main road. There’s a surprising amount of people of around and they all great me, I think it’s the only local language I’ve learnt in Tamale, ‘Despa’
‘naaa, despa’
‘naaa’
‘naaaa’
‘… naaa’
‘naaa!’
I pass a small flock of baby ducklings swaddling through a dirty pool of waste water – oh so cute.
On the main road I manage to flag down a share taxi, there’s  a man standing there with a smart African shirt, I ask him if this taxi will take me down the road to where I’m going.
‘not a problem’, he jumps in ahead of me and squeezes into the middle seat. I as I try to gracefully maneovre myself into the small remaining space with my three fat bags he smiles and takes my overnight bag and puts it on his lap.
‘oh it’s ok I can fit it on my lap here’
He smiles again ‘oh no, not a problem’
As we drive along we came up to some chaos on the road. A school girl has been knocked off her bicycle, she looks confused and has blood oozing out of a wound on her head. There is a circle of people surrounding her but no one seems to know what to do. The tension in the taxi rises and we all look around at her. Out of nowhere and in a matter of seconds a woman in a smart suit jumps off her motorbike, marches across the road, somehow produces a cloth and holds it tight against the girls wound. We all breathe a sigh of relief. When we drive past fifteen minutes later in the car that is taking us to the airport the girl is gone and there is no evidence of anything having happened there.

Now back to my house husband and his awesome spaghetti bolognaise!








Friday, October 14, 2011

Only in Ghana

If there's two things people in Ghana like to talk about it's politics and religion. But here people like to be a bit more open and out there with their faith. While this comes out in songs people sing as they walk down the street and gets incorporated into funky patterns on clothing the thing that most foreigners notice the most when they arrive are the shop names and car stickers.

Some of these I find encouraging



Some of them are quite out there






Some make me giggle a bit



and some I just honestly don't quite understand...



One of my favorite that I've seen so far is the 'love thy neighbour real estate agent', I was also intrigued the other day by 'vote for Jesus'... I didn't know he was running. Here are some more for you...






This is funny and pertinent for the roads of Ghana

In the middle of one of the city's busiest tro tro (mini bus) parks

The World Toilet Cup

The World Toilet Cup
A few people have asked me what I actually get up to over here. Well my main latest thing was a forum that we ran a couple of weeks ago... and which I think I'm only just recovering from. The Children's and Youth Forum was part of the broad Ghana Water Forum, where the 'big men' (and women) of the water industry get together to talk about important stuff. We in the mean time had lots of fun playing games (all educational ofcourse), heckling politicians and government reps and going out to Accra's water treatment plant to see just what comes out of our taps ever day.


Getting prizes ready for the kiddies with Carlos - our MC
I have to say 'Ghanaian time' and event management don't go so well together. Trying to coordinate a program where you weren't really sure if people were going to show up, waiting for politicians who show up hours late and then want to speak for the rest of the morning and trying to keep track of teenagers who were running amock in a hotel full of business men was a little bit overwhelming. It was also fun to note that only running an hour or two behind schedule was deemed a sucess.  However the scarriest part of the forum was probably when our bus load of children started driving down the wrong side of the highway during peak hour. I thought the guy we were working with from the Dept of Children was joking when he suggested getting a police escort for the bus to avoid us getting stuck in traffic (which can over delay you by around 2 hours). But no he pulled it off and we ended up with a slightly eccentric police officer on a motorbike guiding our bus through crazy scenarios and madly waving his arms for other motorists to get out the way (it reminded me somewhat of a local song that you hear everywhere about God making a way where there seems to be no way). Suffice to say the kids had a great time.



But in the end I was really inspired by these awesome kids, many of whom were from really rural areas. There was one guy (about 14) who had gotten together with some of his friends and decided to build a water filtration system for a community. They have since travelled to Stockholme as winners of the Junior Water Prize. I wasn't the only one who was impressed and now all the other kids have agreed to start up health clubs in their schools to try to promote safe toilets and having clean water available in their school environments. (in lots of schools here kids have to resort to using the bushes, and as you can image that puts girls off going to school quite a bit during certain times of the month when they hit their teenage years).




Our next challenge is how to follow all these kids up, especially since half the kids live in rural areas with no access to email, internet or phone and only slightly relyable postal services. Much of our hope now lies in our local SHEP coordinators (School Health Education Program). Who are mainly awesome funky women who ride around the countryside from school to school on motorbikes seeing how the health of the kids can be improved.


Funky SHEP coordinator encouraging kids to wash their hands
So now I'm starting to look forward to the next big events on the calander. Next stop Global Handwashing Day on the 15th of October and then World Toilet Day in November... call me a dag but I'm excited

Two brothers who naturally held hands when I asked if I could take their photo


Monday, September 12, 2011

Shopping in Ghana

One of the definate advantages of Ghana is that you can buy almost anything you need either:

1) by the side of the road

Carpentry/Woven goods shop


2) Whilst sitting in traffic

I've heard it said that with a bit of luck you can get most of your shopping done whilst being caught in a bad traffic jam and I believe it. You can buy almost anything from these sellers trolling up and down the 'car parks' of Accra from mentos to phone credit to books, skype headsets and crockery (quality not guaranteed)

 



3) off the top of someones head

Sunglass Salesman

Bread Lady












Ofcourse the down side of this is that often the particular persons head you need at the particular time you need it is not always around and you often find your self chasing women down the street and almost tackling them to buy a banana. (it's only funny when you see other people doing it). The moral of the story is - don't tick off the pinapple lady - cause she'll bluntly ignore you.

We've found a really awesome place to buy our veggies - yes these ladies can find you almost anything you need - some things they'll haggle on other things have a set price, red capsicums are the delicacy of the month. It's true, their store is set up in the corner of a petrol station but for all you Public Health nerds you can keep all those stats about the effects of petrol fumes on fresh produce to yourself.



Ofcourse the down side of all this great outdoor entrepreneurialship is that when it rains nobody really bothers to get out of bed, the city becomes strangely quiet and you're left eating baked beans on toast for dinner.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Some photos from around the place - Ghana (that is)




                                                                 




Here are some photos from Ghana for those of you who aren't on facebook - enjoy.


From Northern Ghana


Family drying shea nuts in their compound









Children check out Jason
 
The women of the village wanted me to have a photo with the children - but look at this cheek!



From Central Region (along the coast)

 


 

Meeting the village chiefs


 
From Around Accra
I was lucky enough to do a photography workshop as part of work training a couple of weeks ago so here are some of the pictures I got as part of that

 

Some local basket weavers



In Joe's Carpentry Shop