I left
Saturday (July 12), I did venture out of the hostel compound to find an atm (no easy feat if you have a mastercard) and a cell phone store. It was a successful, but surprisingly tiring adventure. That night, I had dinner with a couple, Dave and Rene, who were passing through
Sunday (July 13), I had the Red Chili call me a taxi (called a special hire, the vans that run like buses are called taxis) and my driver and I headed out to attempt to find
Well, my driver claimed that he didn’t know where the church was because there are so many Baptist churches in the city. But he picked one and it was exactly the one I wanted. I walked into the sanctuary about 15 minutes before the early service ended. Unfortunately, it was held in Luganda, so I couldn’t understand a single work. But fortunately, very few white people attend that service, so I stuck out easily as someone who needed friends. (The later service in English was relatively diverse). At the end of the service, a woman (named Jenny) approached me and introduced herself. Long story slightly shorter, she and her husband are long-term missionaries in
Susan, another missionary who has lived in Africa for decades, offered to pick me up, help me check out of Red Chili, let me sleep in her guest room, and drive me to and from UNAD on my first day (I am working with the Uganda National Association of the Deaf, both volunteering and researching for my BA thesis). Needless to say, this was both incredibly generous and incredibly helpful. Then yesterday (Tuesday, the 15th), I moved into another home of missionaries relatively new to
So Monday was the first day that I went to UNAD. I arrived mid-morning to the most pleasant surprise: a number of people who work for UNAD know American Sign Language, which makes communication much easier. I signed with a weird mixture of ASL and Ugandan Sign Language, and they continually taught me knew words in USL. This actually developed into a type of game where we tried to think of and use as many words as we could that were the same in ASL and USL. Two of the men took me out to lunch at a Ugandan restaurant. Honestly, I have no idea what I ate because they labeled all of the food on my plate in USL, so I don’t know the English words yet. One thing about Ugandans, they stare. And the sight of a muzungo (the word meaning white person that is constantly yelled at me by people on the street) and two deaf Africans must have been quite the sight. Because everyone wanted to watch. While in the office before and after lunch, I chatted with two of the employees and read through a different USL dictionary than the one I had been sent that was much more complete. I am going back tomorrow (Thursday) to meet with the woman who does the HIV/AIDS education for UNAD.
Today (Wednesday, July 16), I went with the first missionary family I met at church into town, the heart of
So that’s pretty much everything. I promise that none of my future posts will be this long. Please keep in touch. I do feel pretty disconnected from everyone and nights are a bit lonely, especially when the power goes out and I read all night by flashlight (stupid jetlag). But please don’t send e-mail with any large attachments because Ugandan internet just can’t handle it. I have a gmail account, sarahmarguerite@gmail.com, that I use to instant message. Once I have my schedule more set, I will post when I plan on being online and ready to chat.
Omukwaano (love), Sarah
6 comments:
Leave it to facebook status updates for me to seem totally creepy...
Looking forward to reading about your adventures!
Sarah! You are so lucky. I can't wait to hear more about your research. I'm doing ASL stuff this summer, too, but it's not nearly as interesting as Ugandan sign. Good luck, girl!
-Jessi
Hi Sarah,
I didn't know that being from Wheaton would ever be a good thing or have a positive impact on a situation, but I'm glad that I was wrong. It sounds like you have met some genuinely kind and generous people there, which must be a huge relief for you and of course, for all of us back home. It sounds like you are making definite progress on the learning Ugandan sign language/learning how to live in Uganda front, which is awesome. I look forward to more posts.
I have some interesting news of my own to share, but I think I will do that in an e-mail instead of announcing it to the world. Or everyone who reads Sarah's blog. Same thing.
Love,
Christina
So happy to hear from you and learn that you are settling in a bit. I hope we have the chance to chat on gmail. Let me know if that coda contact info I sent was helpful. Sounds like you are getting on very well with the deaf people at the association already, though!
Marie
I'm so jealous! It sounds amazing! I'm sorry that we didn't get to touch base before you left. You will just need to tell me everything when you get back (plus I will keep reading your blog)!
Sarah,
This all sounds so incredible. I had no idea this was something you were studying. Good luck, and have good adventures. I know you will.
Emily Denay
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