Saturday, May 16, 2009

peace ed 2009


i can harrrdly believe it! we've just finished our last course and had our last ever day of class yesterday!! it really feels like just a little while ago our class was just getting to know each other... and now we've just had our last pizza party and reminisced and laughed about the good/bad/funny times together this year!





it feels like i was still just getting to really know & bond with all of my classmates and now i've said bye already to a couple that had to hurry off home to jobs, etc... but i am thankful for this year of 17 amazing people with very different lives, ideas, passions and quirks coming together to do something so the same and SO very different... and i can indeed say that it was an awesome little family!

group hug!

(all photo credits to the awesome morea steinhauer!)

more to come again.. hopefully soon!

xo
rainbow =)

ps. my classmates are crazy :) here's Trish & Birta's musical social activism for vegetable rights - "LETTUCE BE!" and "GIVE PEAS A CHANCE!"!!


(it actually starts after the first 2 minutes of them just laughing)

oh how i will miss these girls!! :)

Sunday, May 3, 2009

life... it keeps me on my toes :)

hola friends!! i'm sorry to have disappeared for the month - i hope a nice long blog post will make up for it! :) i've enjoyed my classes and projects but it definitely keeps me energizer-bunny going! i was just reading this morning in a book (called 'The Rest of God: Restoring your soul by restoring the Sabbath' by Mark Buchanan) a little blurb that i think well describes my life here in the last little bit!

"It's not that I don't enjoy what I do - I love it most days, except Mondays, and sometimes Wednesdays, and every Thursday afternoon... but all the rest of the time I love it. Actually, that's the problem: I love it overmuch. I spend an average amount of time doing my work, fifty hours or so a week. No more, maybe a tad less, than most people at their jobs. But then I spend many more hours thinking about my work, talking about it, stewing over it, jotting memos to myself concerning it... I'll lie in bed and remember some [little thing] I want to look up or think up some new slant on a conversation I should therefore resume, and I'll spring out of bed and shuffle downstairs to scrawl something in a journal or rummage a scrap note from a hay stack of paper.

In a word, I'm obsessed."


minus that i don't have stairs to go down, and that i'm pretty sure my school work adds up to well more than 50 hours a week, i say that sums up life here, especially as i'm heading into the last 2 weeks of class (crazy!) and 2 months of thesis! i don't like "obsessed" per se :)... but i guess i am devoting my best to make the most of my time here studying about peace education this year! always too much to think about and not enough time to think about it all... but while the busy-ness is, well.. busy, i do enjoy what im doing for the most part. :) and my friends remind me to take a break every now and then to enjoy a trip out to the movies or into San Jose for nothing more than a stroll and an ice cream like i did this weekend.

here's some of what i've been working on... in no particular order! :)
**i realize that the links aren't working - i'm not sure why, but i'll try to get them up and running soon**

Projects:
- Designing a literacy (reading and writing) program for Sierra Leone that focuses on learning about the "official" post-war justice institutions - the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the Special Court - which is generally my idea for my thesis.

- Creating a program lesson plan for "Language-based Literacy and Justice" that is supposed to be a preparation for the post-war justice institutions program, using local-language words, expressions and metaphors as a basis for exploring and evaluating what "justice" means within one's own culture.

- Analyzing the language policy and language situation of Sierra Leone and what this means for literacy programs. In summary, I think that literacy learning in mother tongues is important, and adding second language learning (in Krio especially, as a commonly spoken language throughout the country) can be useful for peacebuilding.

- Designing a proposed 3-week course for the UPEACE MA in Peace Education program on "Peace Education in Violent and Post-Violent Conflicts" because this is what I came to learn about at UPEACE... and to my surprise, hasn't been a major focus throughout the year. So myself and some other students took it on as a final project for one of our courses to do some research and design a new course. I'm not sure if and when it might actually become a course for UPEACE, and I haven't had the time to try working on the logistics of it with our Department Head... but she did come see when we did a presentation and seemed impressed with the positive response from our class.

Other things:

- i started doing an internship last month with the UPEACE Human Rights Center, working with a professor on research to support the work of a UN independent expert on the question of human rights and extreme poverty. we're working on a project on the linkages between poverty, conflict and human rights, which has been really interesting. and sad. i was reading and summarizing an article last night on young people in armed conflict in Sierra Leone and it was sad to see how things that are really supposed to help, like the Disarmament programs for ex-combatants get used by commanders as part of the "deal" for recruiting fighters. i'll be working with the project til mid-June... more to keep me on my toes!

- i applied for an internship with UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization), in their Education in Post-Conflict and Post-Disaster section and had an interview last week... but i didn't get the job. but that's okay! many things to explore and do!


- quite a few weeks ago now, but i did a presentation about violence against women the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Africa) on campus with my friend Sierra as part of the v-day campaign ... the decades-long civil war has been called the deadliest war since World War II, with rape and sexual violence being used on a massive scale as a tactic of war. the link is for the powerpoint we used, adapted from the v-day support site, and i think it gives a really good overview of the war and situation if you'd like to have a peak.

and lastly, some of what i'd love to be working on one day but just don't have time at the moment to put my mind there yet...

- "techy gadgets and the Congo!" (for lack of a better name at the moment!) from some of the research for the Congo presentation, i found that almost every electronic we use (cell phones, lap tops, ipods) has tin and coltan (minerals) in it. i also found out that something like 80% of the world's coltan and much of the tin is mined in the Congo. the minerals are sold by the conflicting parties in the Congo and the profits used to fund the ongoing war. so... all these gadgets we buy in part helps fund the war in the Congo. who knew??!! soo... what can we do? my idea (which isn't mine!) is to let more people know, and work on pressuring companies like Apple or Motorola or whatever, to ensure that what goes into their products is "conflict free". like the movie Blood Diamond, that at the end, prompted people to buy certified conflict-free diamonds... but to do the same thing for conflict-free coltan and tin in electronics. i have more ideas about this... but they are temporarily on the shelf. if anyone wants to take it on, go get 'er, that would be awesome!! :) here are two websites that might help! Raise Hope for the Congo; Enough Project

- even better than just certified conflict-free diamonds/minerals, how much more awesome would it be still to have certified peace diamonds/minerals? i found out that the peace agreements signed in Sierra Leone at the end of the war spelled out that proceeds from the diamonds were supposed to be used for development (including health services, education, etc). i included in my Post-War Justice Literacy Program plan an idea about fund-matching for raising $$ through projects and having them matched by the government through diamond proceeds, with the $$ going to reparation programs for victims of the war. if there was some way to certify that the proceeds from a diamond went specifically to funding peace-building activities, how wonderful would that be? i'd want one of those on my finger one day! :)

- something we called "Transport Peace"! Myself and two of my classmates "came up" with this idea one day during class of using the Translink bus/skytrain/seabus system in BC as a space for peace education, and kind of designed what some of the elements of it might look like... and then my professor from Argentina told us that it was a nice idea, and went on to tell us about this amazing project she which printed little tid-bits of info about Human Rights on bus tickets in Buenos Ares (the capital of Argentina) to teach people about human rights, and since then, the bus tickets have been used and reserved for educating about social justice-related things! here's some pictures of the bus tickets.


pretty awesome hey? i want to do this in Vancouver before someone gets to Translink to turn the bus tickets into more corporate advertising space...

but i guess we will see... that's it for now! i know this wasn't probably the most exciting post with not a lot of pictures, but as i told my class when i did a presentation on my Language-Based Literacy and Justice project last week - i know it's been a long day, but this is my idea for my thesis, so try to get excited with me for just a little bit! :)

hehe... i've got lots of pictures though, especially from over the Easter break, when my friends came to visit. so i'll try to put some of those up soon to make up for my lack of more fun stories and pictures of this post. just for fun for now, here's a couple more pictures of creepy crawly visitors to our house, til my next post. :)

finger-long millipede of some kind...

i dont know what these beetle-ly bugs are called, but there's tons of them in our house every night if we leave doors or windows open when it gets dark. they fly around and crash into the walls, or walk off the end of the table, and fall on their backs and can't get back up again... so Julianne and i take the broom and play golf with them out the door like at a driving range :)

giant cockroach.. beside my size 6 shoe.

scorpion #3 in our house - longer than the light switch is wide! yikes!

swarms of giant wasp-sized ants i found nesting (nests and eggs and all) in the bookshelves of my room that took me 4 hours to clean out. (for being so bug-squimish i was pretty proud of myself for dealing with them - although my neighbour had no pity on me for massacre-ing another life form and refused to give me a good-job-hug!)

ok, bedtime for me now, sweet dreams! hehe, ill have nicer pictures next time, i promise. (and i'll let you know when i get those links fixed) :)

hugs and smiles,
xo
rainbow =)

Sunday, March 29, 2009

caribbean twenty-four! :)

i was super lucky last weekend to have my birthday at the beach!! i was much more than counting my blessings to have my bday on a saturday - it was my friend Francine's bday on the wednesday before so we had a little party at her house with our Peace Ed class and some bday cake... but that was after the SIX hours of class we had that day!! i think i got my wish for a fabulous birthday - julianne and i with her parents that came to visit for the weekend took a little trip out to the caribbean coast away from homework and thesis writing... here are some highlights of tropical goodness!


"the wonderful rainforest!" :)


beachykeen goodness!


monkeys at the beach!!


i've never been so close to a live monkey not in a zoo!


and then for some snorkeling!!
(but with some dancing in our snorkel gear first!)


julianne's ONWARD HO! with her giant duck feet!


underwater world!!


(i wish you could see some of the fish in the pictures!)


it's not a bday without a cake! chocolate bday cake on the road (cuz i ate so much delicious pasta on my bday night i couldn't eat my cake til the next day)! :)

mmmm and bday pina coladas too!!


24!! :D

so that's it!! a little bday break, and indeeeeed beautiful start to a new year of being twenty four! school has continued to be intense and a little stressful & exhausting sometimes, but this semester is just zipping by! my friends ashley and jess will be coming in a week for easter break and my family's coming at the end of june for vacation/ graduation! i can't wait to share costa rica with them! :D

anyways, hope you are all doing well! til next time...

MUAH! :)

xo
rainbow =)

Thursday, March 19, 2009

my house is a zoo!!

aside from the four friendly neighbourhood cats and couple of dogs that love to wander our home and property, our lovely casita (little house) is home to quite a few other creatures... mostly creepy crawly ones.



giant killer ants! ... eck! extra incentive to try to keep the kitchen spotless!


crickets to sing us to sleep...

sometimes hoppy ones - Ross (our neighbour)'s cat Sylvia and her little toad friend.


and reptiley ones... just little ones though, phew! gecko in our garden!


here he is in our living room, pre-getting swept into a dustpan and swung into the garden


guess what's behind him under the tin can with a heavy bowl on top...?


SCORPION!!!!!!!!!!! AAAAAAAAAAH!! we were warned about these!! our neighbours found this one in the house and got it in a jar. yeeeeeks! we were counting ourselves lucky til i looked down one day doing my homework and saw it and ran and grabbed the first thing i could find to cup him in... and then left him for 3 days cuz we didn't know what to do... and then last night i turned out all the lights after finishing my homework and accidentally kicked the can over on my way back to my room in the dark!! i shrieked and screamed (waking julianne up, who laughed at me in the morning!) and ran for the kitchen and groped madly for the lights and to my relief, found the scorpion still beside the can. i covered him back up and went to bed. :)

Sunday, March 15, 2009

thesis joys and woes

hello amigos! i know i've been quite MIA on my blog the last few weeks, minus the little bit about my new home (which i continue to love and be amazingly thankful for!).... but with good reason! i've been working hard on my thesis the last few weeks because our last visiting professor is the one who's advising my thesis so i've had to be doubly ambitious the last few weeks to do my course work and get as much thesis re-proposing, planning & organizing done together as possible while he was here, so it's been both frustrating and draining but incredibly awesome and exciting!

first of all, let me introduce my adviser - Dr. Thomas Mark Turay, from Sierra Leone, who just taught our course in Education for Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding...

here's our class on his birthday with a little surprise celebration! :)

his course was really good - maybe not even so much the formal content of it, but just from who he is as a very inspiring embodiment of peace! here's a very brief background of his story (well, one of a continually unfolding story of his work as a peacemaker!). you can read the full version of the amazing story from his own words here!

"[Dr. Turay] intended to complete the chapter within a couple of months while he gathered background material for a doctoral dissertation and conducted peacebuilding workshops on behalf of a Canadian NGO. His plans were changed dramatically by the January 1999 rebel invasion of Freetown. Trapped for several weeks, Turay then stayed longer until he could make contact with his three daughters—the eldest eighteen and twins aged sixteen—trapped behind rebel lines. In order to raise the money needed to bribe rebel fighters at the many checkpoints between Freetown and Makeni, he took short-term capacity building assignments with a variety of Sierra Leonean NGOs. The ironies trip over each other: aiming to write about capacity building, Turay became a practitioner. Planning to study international humanitarian agencies, he represented one himself until the invasion occurred, when he suddenly became "a local." Studying war, he became its victim. Desperate to find his daughters, and a witness to murder, his belief in peace was put to tests that nobody should endure.

Because of the way events unfolded, it was decided that he should scrap the outline he started with, and, instead, tell the story of his year in Sierra Leone in the first person. The fundamental theme of the book— building local capacities in a complex emergency—emerges in some ways much more clearly than it would have if the chapter had been written as originally intended. We believe that the convictions Turay articulates about the difficulties of capacity building amid collapsing structures and communities has special relevance and urgency."


i really feel privileged to have someone so experienced, knowledgeable and personally & humbly committed to peacebuilding be advising my thesis. he mentioned in class that when he is living in Sierra Leone (as he is now, long term), he makes a point of never sleeping in the cities in nice houses to show in practice that he isn't over and above his fellow rural folks just because he has a doctorate! i love it! and he just has a WEALTH of practical experience & knowledge of what i'm looking into too! in our first meeting together, when i was sharing with him about my research and deciding if i wanted him to be my adviser, i asked if he might know anyone in his Sierra Leone context doing literacy and peacebuilding that might be interested in my research and he just smiled and said, "well, you are looking at the director of an NGO for literacy in Sierra Leone". "oh... i see! all right then!" :)

sooo... my thesis is about peace education through literacy learning programs (programs for learning how to read and write, most basically). there is a big international push towards literacy these days, as a human right and as enabling for many other goals in development. we are actually a little over halfway into the "United Nations Literacy Decade" from 2003-2012.

my research will be focused on Sierra Leone

which is home to about 6 million people in West Africa, and that had a very brutal 11 year civil war that just ended very recently, in 2002. it is a country extraordinarily rich in natural resources, but extremely poor due to well, many things, including bad governance and the war. it ranks 177th / 177 on the United Nations Human Development Index. it's the country where the movie Blood Diamond (mined diamonds whose profits fuel war) was set in.



anyways, my research is going to be looking particularly at the work of an organization called the Sierra Leone Adult Education Association, which is already doing some work in Sierra Leone around peacebuilding in its literacy programs - seeing out what they are doing, what literacy means for them, and how they can frame their programs even more towards effective peacebuilding. here's my proposal for the full wordy version of the description. :) basically, i'll be looking at a lot of what's written about literacy and peacebuilding already, and also doing some phone interviews with the director of SLADEA and program facilitators and participants - lucky for me, Dr. Turay is very connected with the peacebuilding community in Sierra Leone - the director of SLADEA was once a student of his, the umbrella organization that gave me consent for my research is a good friend, and some other names I've run into in the field and emailed turned out to also be good friends! :)

anyways, it will be a very exciting (and intense!) research project in the next few months! so much so, in fact that the next few classes i have left seem to pale in comparison in terms of interesting-ness... and i'd rather just be working on my thesis...
[i've just mapped out thesis life in the next 4 months in calendar form :)... lots to do and not so much time when it's right there in front of me! yeeks!]

but anyways, it'll be good, hopefully! we have a new professor from Argentina coming in tomorrow... so deep breath....phooooooooo... and dive into another course! here we go! :)

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

home sweet home! :)

chronicles of our move from our old apartment to a new home for the next couple months!here's some pictures :)

now, all our bags are packed & ready to go!! (how do we have SO much stuff??!)

bare and scrubbed clean... good bye old apartment!

bye to our next door neighbours! he was so cute, he ran inside the house and brought us a cookie and gave us another hug.

bye to Ana from the pulperia (little shop) a few houses down from us that we visited often when we were cooking and realized we were out of eggs or milk or something!

called a taxi, and we're off!

i can't believe we fit everything into one taxi!

opening the door to our new house!!

moving on in!

my new room... with enough room for guests coming to visit! :)

julianne's new room

more awesome extra's... a hammock to catch a nap in! :)

and a yard to play frisbee in...!

our living-room-turned-saturday-night-theatre with a projector borrowed from school! :)

and, most happy for me, just a very relaxing and quiet spot to write my thesis in for the next couple months! :)

i have to tell you, the last semester i got pretty depressed sometimes in our very new and nice but noisy and stuck-in-the-city home. i used to stay at school from 7am - 7pm so i could get some work done where it's quiet enough for me to think, and before i started walking to school and getting to enjoy a bit of outside that way, i'd go walk to a spot about 20 minutes away and peer through the fence of two houses to get a glimpse of the open valley and river below, and i just wanted so much to be in nature! on sundays especially, i'd try to have a bit more quiet time and read and journal, and i'd get SO frustrated with the car alarms and ATVs and screaming kids in the street, cute as they are in person. i guess i'm not quite a city girl at heart! probably near the end of october, i had found a place i hoped to move into close to here, and when everything was set and ready to go, the owner said he actually wasn't renting it out after all, and i was so disappointed. anyways, this house is even more beautiful and i am SO very thankful now for this home!

so here it is, our new home! great is thy faithfulness! :)