Thursday, December 15, 2016

Ethiopia

In November I spent a week in Ethiopia - another first for me - as was finally flying on a 787, direct from Dulles to Addis. I don't have too many photos to post (although I did bring back two bags of great coffee). My colleague and I spent the week with an amazing team of people who persevere under the enormous restrictions they find themselves. We stayed at a very nice hotel (the King of Morocco was there on our last night with his entire entourage which was quite the spectacle), although we didn't get to enjoy it as much as we wanted as the days were long. But I appreciated what I could especially the grounds of the hotel and the literal banks and banks of roses. Ethiopia has such a rich heritage. I would love to come back and explore the country more fully one day. (For trip advisor report on the hotel, go here.)


Beautiful Roses
Views over Addis





Duncan

Friday, December 2, 2016

Somalia

Mogadishu was not somewhere I anticipated going any time soon and certainly not just six days after returning from Kenya, but the request was made and I was willing to go - not without a little thought and conversation with those around me. But, I was so glad I went as the team I worked with was so inspiring and courageous. My role was to provide education on stress and trauma and provide counseling as needed, but as is usually the case, they taught me a great deal also. Every country is complex and faces challenges and Somalia is no exception, but from the little I heard, in spite of the continuing al-Shabaab threat, Somalia is moving in the right direction. As in Nairobi during the previous month, I was so grateful and privileged to meet with individuals committed to peace and stability and life - even as they risk their own lives in the process.


What helps when dealing with trauma and stress
As you might imagine security is tight in Somalia because of the threat from al-Shabaab. I was picked up from the airport in an armored car which quickly had me inside a very fortified compound of the hotel I was staying - which incidentally was outside the green/safe zone. I didn't leave the compound except for the few times we went out a back gate for a very short walk to the team's office - always surrounded by armed guards. Needless to say, this was a new experience and the most intense security situation I have been in.
Barriers surrounding the airport
View from my room
Looking out to the ocean/airport/green zone from the hotel

Camel...first time




On the way back, after I had gone through the NINE security/ID checkpoints just to get on the plane in Mogadishu, we took off and as all planes flying to Nairobi from Mogadishu do, landed in Wajir, in the middle of the Kenyan desert, to do another complete screening of passengers and luggage before reboarding and continuing on to Nairobi. If there is going to be a security breach coming from Somalia, Kenya wants it contained out in the desert!
Flying into Wajir
Lining up under the only trees for one final security screening
Reboarding in Wajir
Duncan

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Kenya

Part of the the work I do involves responding to critical incidents in order to sit with survivors to help them process their experience and feelings and give them information that will help. These requests can range from meeting with a team after an unexpected death of a colleague or after they witnessed something traumatic. These requests can sometimes require an immediate response. On an otherwise normal Tuesday this past July, I got a call to see if I would be interested in flying to Nairobi to meet with a team that was needing assistance. That evening, Andrea and I had already made plans to have dinner with a former Chefoo student who was over from London for a few days. We had a delightful dinner with Jill and knew she was returning to London the next afternoon. When we arrived home, the go ahead for Nairobi had been given and tickets already purchased for me to leave the next day and I would be on the same flight as Jill! As it turned out, the British Airways flight we were supposed to leave on was eventually cancelled long after it was due to depart. Jill was put on the other daily BA flight from Washington while my colleague and I scrambled to find a hotel room for a few hours sleep before heading back to the airport the next morning and eventually getting on a KLM flight instead. Sometimes travel plans don't work as well as they should.  But eventually, we arrived in Nairobi where we began to meet with the team that had requested our services.

Jill and I waiting at the airport before the flight was cancelled.
I won't share any further details about the teams I worked with other than to say what a privilege it was to witness their resilience and heart for each other and for the countries they work in. I wrote the following words on facebook while I was there.


Early morning thoughts from Nairobi where for the past two days I have heard stories from S. Sudan of people losing everything - if not their lives - fleeing without shoes, of family members and friends executed because they are from the wrong tribe.Meanwhile back in the US the killing continues also. We continue to reap the whirlwind of our choices and policies when it comes to how we treat each other - years of racial discrimination, neglect and abuse - silence or a blind eye turned away in the face of oppression, asking police officers to solve all our issues while not funding teachers and mental health but protecting so many loopholes and laws that allow easy access to guns. 
Yesterday as I sat in a hotel lobby, Andra Day's Rise up came on and I was so grateful as I thought of the many, who in the face of so much hardship continue to work to make the world a better place and who do what they can to protect the vulnerable. Most go unnoticed and unpraised. Others rise to the challenge when given the spotlight even under immense odds. 
So for all those who serve in whatever capacity, who are kind, who don't give into fear and who show that another way is possible - whether that is with your children, your elderly parent or neighbor, the punk down the street, the child bride or child soldier around the world - for all those who in the face of exhaustion and unbearable pressure continue to rise up and choose to make a difference, I am grateful.

I had several non-work highlights during my two weeks in Nairobi. The first was the unexpected surprise of meeting up with one of my high school classmates who has spent years in S Sudan/Sudan and who I hadn't seen since graduation! I discovered this 24 hours before I met him. Chris discovered this when I walked into the room. Talk about a surprise! It was so great to catch up over several meals together and meet his wife Nelly too. AND to try to recreate our senior pictures from 26 years ago!