Sunday 8 June 2014

Camp America

So my next ‘little’ adventure is here…

In less than 12 hours’ time I will be checking in at Heathrow for my flight to America. I am flying to New York JFK airport and then after a 5 hour wait, I will be flying to Minneapolis airport in Minnesota. Hopefully I will arrive at camp before the day has ended.

I applied for Camp America way back in September and October, before having my interview with a regional interviewer up in Durham. After sorting out all of my paperwork and finalising my application, I was ready to be placed. I also took part in Camp America’s International Youth Leadership Award (IYLA) which is for girls aged 18 and 19 who are interested in working at a Girl Scout camp. We had our own recruitment fair in January in which camp directors are flown over from America and can hire staff on the spot. This is where I got hired by a Girl Scout camp in Wisconsin.


So I will arrive at camp tomorrow for training, which lasts for about one and a half weeks. Then we will get our first group of girls. The programs tend to be a week long, with a few being 2 weeks. Camp lasts until the 17th of August and then I’ll be off travelling somewhere until about the 10th September.

I am a General Counsellor which means that I will look after the campers on a day to day basis, taking them to their activities and making sure they have a good time.

I am very excited and cannot wait to get started!


Friday 6 June 2014

World Toilet Day – 2.5 billion do not have a clean toilet



This will be my last post on Tanzania (at least for a while). I hope you've enjoyed following it! 
I wrote this article last November for World Toilet Day as part of my Action at Home, and it is on the online Durham student paper: http://www.palatinate.org.uk/?p=43401 

I think it really sums up my experience and what I learnt in Tanzania:
















‘This year the United Nations General Assembly designated 19 November as World Toilet Day, urging changes in both behaviour and policy on issues ranging from enhancing water management to ending open-air defecation.’




Toilets are something we take for granted in the Western world and we use them without thinking, but not everyone has access to this basic need and right. The United Nations released a statement earlier this year to acknowledge that more people in the world have access to a mobile phone than they do a toilet. This is a worrying statistic and something that should be taken seriously as water, sanitation and hygiene are critical to poverty and disease reduction.

You may think that it’s as easy as providing water and sanitation infrastructure to resolve the problem but it’s not that simple. Education on the importance of using it needs to go alongside the construction in order for the community to undergo a behavioural change. This means that there is a greater chance of a long-lasting positive impact being left in the community.

Sanitation is a human right but one in three people do not have a safe, clean and private toilet. Bad sanitation leads to illness and in developing countries, diarrhoeal diseases are the second most common cause of death of young children. It doesn’t receive as high a profile as other diseases but it kills more than HIV/AIDS, malaria and measles combined.
In this video, http://www.ted.com/talks/rose_george_let_s_talk_crap_seriously.html Rose George talks about how toilets shouldn’t be seen as unglamorous when they essentially save lives. It’s really worth a watch!

There are many organisations working towards tacking this problem, including sustainable development charity, Raleigh International. During the summer, I spent 10 weeks in Tanzania, working alongside 5 UK volunteers and 6 Tanzanian volunteers, on a water and sanitation project which involved constructing latrines for a school in a rural community. 

Digging down for the school latrines

However, as mentioned previously, building toilets isn’t nearly enough. Together we planned and delivered several awareness raising sessions in the primary and secondary schools. By playing games and making up songs, amongst other things, which enabled us to get our message across: the importance of washing their hands.

We played games with glitter to symbolise the spread 
of disease when you don’t wash your hands


We camped in the community which enabled us to become fully immersed in the culture. It was surprising how quickly you adapted to using long drops. The education behind using clean and safe toilets is definitely important as you have to change a certain aspect of someone’s life.

We also built hand washing facilities, in the schools and around the community, called Tippy Tappy’s which are made out of sticks, an oil container filled with water, soap on a rope and stones to aid drainage. Through our work in the school and the community, we encouraged people to build and maintain their own Tippy Tappy’s which will hopefully have a long-lasting impact on the health of that community.

A Tippy Tappy is really easy to build and 
it has the capabilities to prevent diseases



The project was part of the International Citizen Service (ICS) which is a government funded scheme run by six respected international development charities, including Raleigh International. ICS consists of three parts: fundraising a minimum of £800, an overseas project with volunteers from both the UK and the host country, and an Action at Home project which aims to raise awareness about development issues and inspire others to take positive social action.
   

You can find out more and get involved by visiting www.volunteerics.org. Click apply and you could be spending ten weeks in a rural community, in one of twenty-four countries, and making a real sustainable difference.