Dear All,
We have been back in Malakal for about two weeks now, we came back to find the classroom building at Malakal Basic school had begun which was great to see. However the diocese have had a few problems getting started on the building of the other two school which are out in two rural communities. All the materials have to come to Malakal by barge from a town called Kosti, they then have to be taken by boat and road to the building sites. There’s been a bit of a delay in them arriving here so the labourers in the communities have not been able to begin. The Diocese have just purchased a donkey and cart for the community in Riang as they are far from the Nile, this will help to bring water to mix with mud for the school walls and will then be used to bring river water for the school children.
There are lots of issues the diocese needs to be dealing with in order to build and run these schools and we are assisting them in managing these things which range from helping them to account for everything spent on labour and materials for the building work to making applications to the World Food programme for Food For Work (food to pay unskilled labourers to help with building) and applications for food distributions for the school children. We are in contact with UNICEF regarding school equipment distributions, Simon is putting together an accounts system for the diocese, we are also looking into starting up a boat project to enable the diocese to provide transport to some of the more remote communities in the diocese and would create some much needed income.
Malakal is in some ways almost medieval in feel – I think it’s the way the living quarters are split up. The whole family and sometimes extended family will often live in one or two rooms and then they will have a separate mud hut which is the kitchen where the women will cook often over coal, then there will be a little rukuba – grass/bamboo walled area which you can go behind with a bucket of river water to wash in. Maybe there will be a pit latrine and then one outside tap pumping river water to the compound. Babies, cows, chickens, goats, cats and rats roam freely between house and garden. The bishop has recently acquired a generator which is on after dark but many people don’t have this luxury. Power in the town is sporadic, sometimes a few hours every day sometimes days go by without any. We stayed at the bishops home for a while but decided to move out after the temperature was regularly hitting 50 degrees C and with hardly any electric and occasional water I was getting very ill with heat exhaustion. Some days here it has felt like we’re just surviving rather than getting any work done, luckily we found a room at the Oxfam guest house which we think we will stay in until our house renovations are finished.
Everyone seems to be getting ill at the moment, Cholora has hit town and 16 people have already died. People drink water from the Nile without boiling it so we’re not sure if it will turn into an endemic. Two of the bishop’s children have been ill and in hospital, poor baby David has just been diagnosed with malaria – we pray that he will be ok.
I attach some pics of Malakal and will be putting them and others onto our myspace sight when I am next in Khartoum. There is an update on the site about Renk which I did not send out as I don’t want to bombard you all. You can get onto the site through www.myspace.com/reconcileconsulting
Will be in touch again soon
Keren x
Wednesday, 21 March 2007
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