Showing posts with label Uganda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uganda. Show all posts

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Quick Post: Uganda

A young girl at the Kukanga School

I'm in Kampala using very slow internet, so I'm going to try to post up a few pictures and will post more extensively sometime when I get a faster connection--maybe from Namibia.  I've been visiting schools for One School at a Time.  You can google their blog to see more info!  Cheers from the equator.

Students at the Bbinikila School.

Girl with headscarf, Kassanda Boarding Primary School.

Girls, Kukanga School.



Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Heading Out: Uganda and Namibia

Street scene:  Kampala Uganda.  2009

On Friday I head to Africa for a month!  

After hopping from Denver to Chicago to Brussels, I arrive in Kampala, Uganda on Saturday.  As I watch the last of Laramie's most recent (May) snowstorm melt away, equatorial Africa sounds increasingly appealing.  

The first two weeks will be spent with Hussein Tadesse, working for One School at a Time.  Hussein is One School's in-country program manager, and I'll stay at his house along with his wife and five (!!) kids.  I'm on One School's board.  

I was last in Uganda in 2009 mostly to take photos for One School, and much of my time was spent at rural schools photographing and visiting with the kids.  It will be fun to see them again.  This time I'll split my time between Kampala and rural schools, and I'll be shooting photos, helping with  administrative work, and, for the first time, trying to capture reasonable video.  That last task is a tall order, since I haven't shot video before except for jiggly footage of Bei's choir and skating events, and it will be fun to see what I can come up with.  My mantra for video is "don't move the camera," and I intend to leave it firmly planted on a tripod while in video mode.  I'm not quite sure how to balance collection of video and stills with meetings in which I'm a participant, but at least I won't be bored.  

After two weeks in Uganda, I fly to Windhoek, Namibia to hike to the top of the Konigstein in the Brandberg Massif, and then to spend the remaining few days of my trip driving down the Skeleton Coast and on to wherever the wind blows me.  The Brandberg is famous for its San pictographs, and I'll hike for 4-5 days to see rock art sites amongst the granite boulders and dry peaks.  

I hope to post blog entries while on the road, but internet in Kampala is sketchy and time will be short.  I'll see what I can do.  At the very least, I'll have some good stories to tell when I return.  

Hopefully by then (mid-June), it will be summer in Laramie.  Stay warm.

Hussein Tadesse, my host while I'm in Uganda.  

Joel, whose house I stayed in in 2009 near the rural schools I worked with.  Joel owns a private school funded in part by his pineapple farm.

Mikey, at Joel's house in 2009, enjoying one of my cameras.


Soccer with a homemade ball.  I'm carrying an indestructible soccer ball with me to Uganda to give away.

A school for orphans near the source of the Nile that I visited in 2009.  One task will be meeting with potential new partner schools.  

Downtown Kampala.  2009.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Show at the Dairy Center for the Arts, Boulder, CO

(click to enlarge)

I'm off to Boulder this afternoon to hang a show of my Uganda photos at the Dairy Center for the Arts.  The show opens this Friday, October 26, with artist talks from 4-5 and a reception from 5-7.  If you're in area, stop by and say hi.  Of course our first significant winter weather of the season is also scheduled for Friday, so If I get snowed into Laramie, I'll let you know--but even if I do, stop by and have a look.  Bay Roberts will be there representing One School at a Time, the NGO whose projects are the subject of my images.

Study session, Kyamulinga, Uganda

Girl with Pencil Box, Kukanga School, Uganda

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Portraits in Uganda

Recess at the Kyamulinga School in rural Uganda, 2009
(click images to view larger versions)

In 2009 I had the opportunity to travel to Uganda to photograph schools and students for Boulder-based non-profit One School at a Time.  It was a fantastic trip and I look forward to being able to afford to return sometime to work with them some more.  One School partners with rural Ugandan schools (one at a time) and does a great job of bringing the school community into the partnership so that the projects are shared and sustained.  The kids at these schools are remarkable.  They are poor, living in a subsistence economy with very few resources, but they are driven to succeed at school.  I wish our kids could somehow see how good they have it here and not take our schools quite so much for granted.  

Since returning from Uganda, I've joined the One School board of directors, given a number of slide shows on their programs, and generally tried to help out.  Ellen sells delicious Bristol Bay salmon (thanks to a friend at Misty Fjord) here in Laramie twice a year and the profits go to One School.  Many of you know about this.  

I'll be doing a show at the Dairy Center for the Arts in Boulder this fall and will show some of these photos, and others, there.  I also maintain a blog for One School--I just posted some of these portraits there along with others, so have a look if you are interested and spread the word.  One School does a lot of good things with a very small budget, and unlike many non-profits, almost all of their funds actually make it to the ground in Africa, thanks to a huge amount of volunteer work and personal sacrifice by the directors.










Sunday, November 6, 2011

One School at a Time Sponsorships

                                           Brenda at Coal Bin, Kampala, Uganda 2009

I returned to Laramie from Boulder, Colorado last night, where I attended a Board of Director's meeting for One School at a Time, the non-profit that I photographed for in Uganda in 2009.  One School partners with individual schools (one at a time) to improve educational opportunities for rural Ugandan kids.  They're small and they do a fantastic job of working with the school community to make sure that any improvements made to the schools will continue to function long after One School has left.  Lots of NGO's drop money into projects in Africa without ever really engaging with the people they are trying to help.  The result is a surprising legacy of decaying infrastructure, unusable or in disrepair.  When I was in Uganda I saw  textbooks on the history of Robert E. Lee in the South in donated "libraries" at rural schools, and an articulating hospital bed in an empty concrete room at an unstaffed "clinic" among banana trees.  One School is remarkable in that 96% of their funds go directly to their projects (tiny overhead for an NGO) and the projects continue to function on their own, thanks to carefully crafted community buy-in.

Early in the history of One School several of the directors traveled to Uganda where they met individual children, like Brenda, in need of support.  Later, they decided that individual sponsorship, though badly needed, was not the most efficient way to use their limited resources, so they evolved towards the current school partnership model.  Nevertheless, several of the directors personally took on sponsorships of a handful of children, including Brenda (above) and her sister Agnes, whose mother worked in a coal bin in Kampala selling coal for the owner for less than a dollar a day.  The girls were living in a nearby shack with their mother and suffered from crushing poverty and frequent illness.  Thanks to the sponsorships, these girls are now thriving and eager to attend secondary school, which costs more money than their original sponsors can afford alone.

One School is looking for a few people willing to commit to a long-term sponsorship (5 years) of one or more of these 5 or so children to get them through secondary school.  A commitment of $500/year for 5 years for each child would be ideal to cover all of their costs, although $100/year for 5 years would make a difference.  For these particular sponsorships, the directors are not looking for small donations, though you are certainly encouraged to donate whatever you can to One School at a Time to contribute to their school partnerships.  If you'd like to take on a long-term sponsorship, contact Bay Roberts, the One School director.  If you are interested in making any kind of donation to One School, you can do so at this page.

I'm hoping to put together a proposal to return to Uganda in 2012 to do a story on the issues and challenges associated with educating girls there.  Stay tuned for more information on this as I begin to plan for this project.