Friday, August 15, 2014

Maude's Story


Maude showed up at our door that Sunday to take us to her home, her brother beside her on a bicycle, bearing a bunch of green bananas and a bright blue basin full of jackfruit and avocados. She was there to bring us to her home and show us her new business, an apiary she started two years ago.

We walked along the road towards her village, Kris carrying the empty basin she had brought us food in. We passed by two women digging in the fields, just back from church in their best kitenge. Maude went to greet them and came back with the basin, now full of Ugandan sweet potatoes, balanced on her head. Laughing at Kris’s offer to keep carrying the basin, his ability to carry it while full of potatoes clearly hilarious, Maude led us onward, branching at a dirt path leading deeper into the hills. While we walked, Maude asked us what Americans know about Uganda, and I struggled to find a way to tell her that the only things most Americans associate with Uganda are Idi Amin, AIDS, and the nickname of the Pearl of Africa…if that.

As we paused on top of one of the lush green hills, a small girl approached us. Maude explained that Shivan was actually her niece, but Maude has been taking care of her since her mother died. She handed over the apparently too-heavy-for-Kris basin full of potatoes to the eight-year-old with instructions to run ahead and begin the preparation for lunch. As Shivan balanced the basin on her head and nimbly moved ahead, Kris and I took a moment to exchange a glance and a laugh at Ugandans’ constant low estimation of our physical abilities.

We stopped one more time as Maude pointed out her village. It is small, with perhaps a couple dozen homes scattered across the rolling land and a one-building trading center where the villagers can buy soap and other necessities. As we climbed the last hill to Maude’s house, we paused at the top and she pointed out the lines of the property her family has held for generations, spreading out over banana plantations and sprawling fields.

We entered Maude’s compound, a cleanly swept dirt area consisting of three different buildings. The first contains a sitting room and several bedrooms, while the second contains a storage room and more bedrooms for the variety of children that live there, beds piled high with foam mattresses and the ubiquitous Ugandan blankets. The last is a kitchen separated into a cooking area and an eating area with a dirt floor covered in grass. Maude pointed out the nesting chickens in the corners of the kitchen; this is where they lay their eggs when they are ready. She then brought us around the corner and showed us the neighboring mud and wood constructions housing hundreds of goats and chickens.

After the tour, Maude introduced us to her aging mother, various nieces and nephews, and her grandnephew. Kris and I settled into two wooden chairs brought outside for us, playing peek-a-boo with the grandnephew. We were presented with about a dozen bananas and told that we were expected to finish them while Maude bustled around, preparing for lunch, slaughtering a chicken, shooing the dog out of the kitchen, and instructing her nieces. Once she was satisfied that the meal she had begun over the open wood fires in her kitchen could be continued by her family without her direct supervision, she took us to see her apiary.

Maude began her apiary as an income-generating activity two years ago with only the help of a local boy whom she is able to pay, as she says, “not nearly enough.” With almost no knowledge of beekeeping, she managed to produce almost 100 liters of honey in her first year using traditional methods such as hand-held smokers and hive baskets she wove herself. She admitted to us that she is still learning as she goes; her first year, she threw away all of the empty comb, having no idea she could sell it at a profit to candle makers. This year, she is expanding her twenty hives to fifty and building more modern, “but still not very modern”, frame hives made of timber, nails, and screening.

As we inspected the woven hives plastered in clay and covered with aluminum sheeting, it began to rain. Maude brought us back to the kitchen to check on lunch and we were promptly ousted by her mother, who was outraged at the idea of making visitors eat in the kitchen. Maude showed us to the sitting room and Shivan brought the three of us our lunch of matooke, boiled sweet potatoes, and the freshly-slaughtered chicken with a Ugandan sauce. When we finished, we relaxed with some homemade lemongrass tea and, of course, honey, listening to the sound of the rain beating down on the tin roof.

Maude excused herself for a moment and returned with a pile of yellowed photographs wrapped in a fading campaign poster. She carefully spread them out on her lap and began to tell us about her life.

Maude was born the youngest of ten children. Her parents were farmers, as their parents before them and their parents before them. As the youngest, however, Maude had more opportunity as her older siblings grew up and also began to earn money. She graduated secondary school and went to business school in Kampala, the capital city. Her life early on, as she put it while showing us a picture of her in a Banyankore-style gown, was easy. “I could have chicken and fish whenever I wanted!” she remarked, laughing and patting her now much-smaller stomach.

She stayed in Kampala for 19 years, working various office jobs. However, during her time there, tragedy began to strike her family. Maude explained that her father had been a polygamist who died during her time in Kampala, leaving behind three different families in as many villages. She then pulled out a photograph of a solemn-looking man, her brother, explaining that he had been killed during a robbery. Two more of her siblings, a carpenter relaxing casually on a newly-made cabinet, his leg thrown over the side, and a beautiful woman laughing happily atop a truck, passed away in the following years. At that time in her life, Maude began to receive phone calls from her surviving brothers and sisters, exhorting her to return to the farm to take care of the plantation and their mother, only in her fifties but crippled by diabetes. Maude told us that she resisted at first – give up her office life in the capital she had worked so long for to move back to the village?

Maude then pulled out a picture of her and one of her sisters sitting on a hospital bed. Between them was a woman, leaning forward towards the camera, clearly suffering but surrounded by love. Maude told us that was her first sister to die of AIDS. Years later, AIDS took another, leaving her family of ten children with only five. The sisters left behind children of their own which their mother took in. However, their mother was having trouble supporting the orphans, and Maude finally decided to give up her life in Kampala and return home to the village.

Maude took charge of the farm, raising the hundreds of chickens and goats and several dairy cattle along with taking care of the banana plantation. Still unwed, which is unheard of here in Uganda, she is looking after the children her siblings left behind as if they were her own, paying for their school fees and proudly boasting to us about the ones first in their classes. Her mother is relieved to have her home, but, now in her sixties, is losing her battle with diabetes and has sunk into a depression after the decimation of half the family. Maude is ever-optimistic, however, and plans on continuing to expand the apiary and using the income to relieve some of the hardships poverty has forced upon her family. She is confident that her lack of beekeeping experience will not hold her back; she will leverage the business education she gained in Kampala along with the knowledge and traditions that she has learned in the village to make it work.

“I have suffered,” Maude told us, “but I am bold.”

A sample batch Maude brought out for us.

She wraps the netting around a pot to allow the honey to drain out of the combs.You can also see the smoker she uses on the bees.


Giving us a taste of honeycomb! Apparently you are not supposed to swallow the comb itself...whoops.

Maude's hopeful expression was rewarded after Kris declared it the best honey he's ever tasted!

One of the traditional hives that Maude made herself, woven from papyrus reeds and covered in mud. The aluminum siding is used the cover the hive during rain and keep it warm.

This hive has been plastered with mud to close it in preparation for the bee's honey production.

The more traditional frame hives Maude has started to build.



Bees starting their hive!

She drills holes in the back to allow the bees to fly in and out.

Matching hats!

All of the food that Maude left us with, including a long piece of sugarcane. Which you are also not supposed to swallow.

As we were leaving, Maude was pouring her last gift for us; a jar of her very own honey. As she presented it to us, letting the light filter through the now-golden jar, she proudly said, “One day, you will see this on a supermarket shelf in Kampala.” Then she slipped back into her mismatched, mud-covered sandals, ducked under the dripping clothes hanging out to dry, and took the bag of sweet potatoes from my hands to guide us home, her mother’s chiding voice floating in the air behind her, reminding her to always carry a guest’s things.

When we focus on ourselves, our world contracts as our problems and preoccupations loom large. But when we focus on others, our world expands. Our own problems drift to the periphery of the mind and so seem smaller, and we increase our capacity for connection – or compassionate action.
-Daniel Goleman




Thursday, August 7, 2014

Mailtime!

Almost every Saturday, Kris and I wake up, fry up some eggs and toast, and then make the 45-minute trek to the nearest post office. It’s actually a really nice walk with beautiful views, and it passes by a place I suspect is a vineyard. Unfortunately, I haven’t yet gotten up the courage to follow through on my plan of climbing the mountain it’s on, knocking on the door, asking if they are actually a vineyard, and then gracefully accepting a few free bottles of wine.

After my weekly longing glance at Wine Mountain, we reach the post office and are enthusiastically greeted by the post master who we forever ingratiated ourselves with by speaking to him in hesitant, stumbling Runyankore when we first met him. He ducks into the back of the two-room building and, on the best days, comes out looking like a Ugandan Santa Claus, his arms full of letters and packages and his face beaming. We stuff our loot into Kris’s backpack, pay the delivery fees, and race back home where we allow ourselves to open one letter or package upon arrival. We then try to space out the opening of any other mail we’ve received for the rest of the day. Sometimes we even save a letter for the upcoming week when we know that one or both of us has a potentially rough or stressful day coming up. Mail from home is, without a doubt, one of the best outlets we have here.

Life is a new kind of stressful as Peace Corps Volunteers, and we have to find new ways to deal with it. A lot of outlets come from within – exercise, meditation, yoga, creative cooking, crafting, journaling, decorating. This inner dependence is not initially by choice; with unreliable electricity (I’ve discovered that I have the magical ability to make the house go dark by shaving my legs), limited grocery options, and expensive airtime, a lot of these are our only options for free-time activities. But those limited choices are actually one of the amazing things about being a PCV. You are pushed to reflect, rely upon yourself, and grow in a way that you have never been able to before.

However, there is only so much meditation and friendship-bracelet making you can do before you go insane. Luckily, we have incredible friends and family who have helped us to keep going, day after day, with our new-found appreciation of the lost art of mail. There is just nothing like a long, handwritten letter, the crack of the tape on a package as you tear into it, or the feeling of pulling one over on the postal system by stuffing as many things as possible into an envelope without having to add any more stamps.

This blog is a thank you for that appreciation, that outlet, that sanity. A thank you to not just those mentioned in this blog but to everyone out there who has brightened our day, helped us continue our work, and made us feel like we are still a part of their lives with a letter, a package, a card, a donation, an email, a Facebook message, a comment, or even a 12-year-old scotch. Webare munonga, banwanyi baitu.














Care packages galore! Ben, Laurel, Mom, Amanda, Grandma, Aunt Susie, Becky - you guys know how to pack a box! 

 Letters, cards, and assorted goodies from home - including several from Nita, our most avid pen pal.

 Pen, paper, and a wine cork, and Andrea made one of the most inspiring and treasured possessions we have.

A letter from Steve and Amanda doubling as both wall decoration and crazy awesome emotional support.

Unk Ritchie - making us laugh, think, and appreciate, all at the same time.

Every time I look at this, it makes me smile.

One of the best presents I've ever gotten, Shawn - really.

My pupils are reaping the benefits of our care packages too!

Although it is leading to the perpetuation of some American stereotypes...

Marilyn, Amanda, and Mom - they absolutely love the books you sent! My library is more flooded with excited readers than ever.






"Happiness is only real when shared." - Christopher McCandless