|
|
On Monday, the day after our awesome rafting
experience that
also left me frustrated with the intervention policies of massive
capitalist
bodies like the World Bank, we met with the Kampala Chapter of the
UNFPA. The
United Nations Population Fund is a branch that never ceased to excite
my hope
in aid. Because it is not work we do for you, but work we do with you.
Chapters are established where population demographics and trends
demonstrate a need for certain improvements.
In Uganda, the population is growing at such a clip, that available resources and the pursuit of subsistence do not match up. In other words, poverty, overpopulation , and underemployment are all problems. The UNFPA operates on a holistic basis, always ready to include another facet and root cause or correlation. As sources of overpopulation and poverty continue to present roots in socialization, cultural mores, parental roles, the active underdevelopment of puppet governments and the residual stain of colonization (Uganda, remember, has only been independent for less than half a century), the UNFPA will attempt outreach in an appropriate form.
In Uganda,
the UNFPA introduced us to grass-roots and individual-level organizations and
programs designed to empower youths and offset trends that disadvantage
citizens. I’m being vague because there is such a list of opportunities for
this type of service: the education of children on the reality of sex and HIV,
in a culture where it was taboo to discuss such topics; the tweaking of socialization
practices so that a woman is revered as equal, rather than merely a future
mother; the distribution and maintained accessibility of medical services; and
so forth.
After our meeting, we drove to the Naguru Teen Health
Clinic. There, in Kampala, with the
help of aid and donations, is a clinic focused only on Ugandans ages ten to
twenty-four. They offer testing, from malaria to HIV, and treatment,
counseling, counseling, and more counseling, and care for new mothers- anything
the citizen in that age range might need. And they operate without the help of
American aid money, because they do not adhere to an abstinence-only rhetoric.
There are condoms all over. Team-building and educational seminars are
orchestrated in the guise of fun weekend activities, so students can get facts
straight, learn to respect each other and their education, and feel empowered.
This place is an inspiration. We volunteered there mornings while in Kampala.
While we organized their library, helped with administrative tasks like
checking patients in, and counted countless pills into baggies for easy
distribution, we got to know the employees and interns. We got to sit in on
counseling sessions, and HIV testing visits. The air is heavy with anticipation
inside the clinic. The mood shifts from friendly chatter in the front pews
where teenagers wait, to the back benches where they keep courage up to get
tested, or hear their results.
Counseling focuses on first that the teenager
has come of his or her own volition, and that the test will be the
first of
many. Then the sessions empower those with negative results to continue
a
lifestyle of caution safety, and those with positive results to
continue life
without throwing everything away. For all the other pressing medical
and social questions teenagers show up or call the hotline to ask, a
counselor is willing to answer.
I worked first organizing the library, and then marking newspaper archives for relevant articles. You can imagine the last one was an inspiring journalist’s dream: reading the local newspaper from the last six years. Our cultures are displayed by our publications. The next day I helped in the pharmacy, joking around and refining my simple math and efficiency skills. The next day I worked at administration with a sweet intern named Patra, filling out the cards with the teenagers’ information as they walk in. Patients come from all over the region, not just the city center. The clinic is a gem in this region. Did I mention everything is free? For confidentiality, inpatient cards are marked only with the mother’s name, and never removed from the clinic. Teenagers were asked also for school status, religious affiliation, and region of residence as well. Sometimes they did not know their mother’s names. “She died before she could tell me” was the common response, Patra told me.
We were continually moved by the clinic, because our
experiences there were at one moment jovial, and the next, heartbreaking. We
learned to hide or still a buoyant spirit as we walked into the back- because
the key for the bathroom was hanging inside the testing room. I began my time
there smiling pleasantly at everyone. When I saw how selfish this move was, I
desisted.
This place is making a difference for the next generation. You can feel it.




previous travel blog entry
Would you like to comment or ask a question?
Sign up for a free account, or sign in (if you're already a member).