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School Days and Radio Liberia

Posted by Emily Holland on May 20th, 2008

Karnplay School
Photo: Emily Holland/The IRC
International Rescue Committee communications officer Emily Holland is blogging her second trip to Liberia. This is Part 4. Read all her posts from her journey here.

Karnplay, Liberia  I said that I would be making a special effort to reach out to Liberian youth on this trip.  Most have grown up in a war or fleeing from it.  They know little besides conflict and the processes involved with recovery.  Inheriting a new place than that which their parents lived in presents them with new opportunities, yes, but also new challenges. 

Put simply, they have a lot to do—and a lot to teach us.

Karn School IRC

Today I visited one of the six schools in Karnplay that the IRC supports:  Karnplay High School.  It sits at the end of a lovely, tree-lined lane and is surrounded by thatched huts and simple mud brick houses. 

Some of the houses are etched with the cell phone numbers of the inhabitants who live there. (Blog moderator’s note: We blurred out some of the numerals in the photo for privacy’s sake.)

Number 

I arrived at Karnplay High School—or Karn High—around lunchtime.  Three Liberian women were ladling out bowls of rice and cassava stew.  Between shifts of students, they chatted and knit beautiful table cloths. 

School Lunch Liberia The IRC

Waiting for afternoon classes to begin, I visited Karn High’s enormous auditorium.  Students gather here for assemblies and to perform cultural dances.  Later, I’d later get roped into one…  Next, I toured Karn High’s new library.  It was stocked with world maps, a set of encyclopedias, and African and Western classics including Things Fall Apart, Twelfth Night, and The Pony Express.  Students come here to read and write their research papers.  Soon, a card catalog system will be implemented so they can take the books home. 

School Books Liberia The IRC

Finally, it was time for classes to begin.  The seniors, who were preparing for national exams, weren’t around, so I visited several classes of younger students.  Some were learning to write their capital letters and compute fractions; others, Biology and English.  In one classroom, “Remember 9/11” posters were tacked to the walls.  That was strange to see 4,500 miles away from New York City, where I live.  It also reminded me conflict isn’t confined to countries like Liberia. 

Donated by The IRC

That afternoon, right up the hill from Karn High, I visited the Karnplay community radio station.  I met 25 children who attend IRC-supported schools and, as an extracurricular activity, volunteer as student radio announcers.  One, named Chris, 15, is on the air many mornings and afternoons and is responsible for reading the list of guests who will appear that day, broadcasting news announcements, and managing the children’s phone-in program. 

What’s that you ask? 

“A show where local children call in to sing songs, say their ABC’s, and quote Bible verses,” he told me.  “Are all of them good singers, Chris?” I asked.  “No,” he laughed.  When I asked him about the development going on in Karnplay, Chris reported:  “You can see that the IRC people are building a clinic and the IRC women’s group is doing some projects.  And we are building a cinema.” 

Radio Liberia The IRC

Blessing, 15, another youth radio announcer, reads health messages on the air after school.  Most are supplied by staff who work at the IRC-supported clinic.  Blessing describes them as, “messages about the importance of being clean and taking care of the environment and our surroundings.”  This segues perfectly with Blessing’s professional goal:  studying science and one day becoming a nurse.

Finally, I said I’d be asking the kids about Liberian food.  The 25 I met reported their favorite things to eat were rice and “g.b.” (which is made from cassava), plantains, potatoes, pineapple, mangoes, coconut, oranges, and bananas.  Local dishes they enjoy include eddoes (something like cassava), bitter balls (fruit), and palava sauce (a spicy sauce which, translated directly, means “confusion”).  Other favorites?  Caterpillars and grasshoppers, which the kids called “special caterpillars and grasshoppers.”  While it’s unclear whether they’re in season, Blessing tells me she’s confident I’ll like them.  Think I’m up for the challenge?

Posted in Africa, children, education, photos | 2 Comments »

Liberia: “Don’t sleep in the same room as the chickens”

Posted by Emily Holland on May 19th, 2008

Clinic in Liberia The IRC
These women were helping to build an annex for the clinic by porting water in
buckets to mix cement from a nearby stream. All photos: Emily Holland/The IRC
IRC communications officer Emily Holland is blogging her second trip to Liberia. This is Part 3. Read all her posts from her journey here.

Karnplay, Liberia A midwife greeted me at the door of the Karnplay clinic.  She had been busy sweeping the steps and put down her broom to perform a welcoming dance.

A clinic is the simple, first-line of basic healthcare the IRC supports in Liberia.  Villagers come to the clinic for prophylactics, medicines for diseases like malaria, and to identify the signs of diseases like TB.  Family planning is done here.  Women who have been raped often come to the clinic first.  An ambulance helps transport at-risk and emergency patients to a more sophisticated health center or hospital.  Otherwise, Liberians would (and will) walk for miles.  The longest distance traveled from an outlying village to this clinic?  A staggering 3-and-a-half hours.

Palm ClimbThe day I visited, there were several patients being treated:  one man had malaria and another had suffered an accident.  Moaning in a nearby room was a girl being treated for cerebral malaria.  Her cries were harrowing to hear.  The clinic manger assured me that she would recover.The clinic keeps drugs cold in a room with a tiny window that can be opened to let the breeze in or shut to prevent the sun’s sharp rays.  As the clinic does not have the ability to feed patients, family members must travel with and cook for them, too.

There’s a huge outreach component to the Karnplay clinic and other IRC-supported health facilities.  Clinic staff venture into the town and outlying villages to spread messages about the importance of hand-washing, boiling water, and using condoms, and why sexual violence is wrong. 

Painted signs in villages and along the roadside help reinforce these important messages.  Some are serious:  “Real strength is in the mind, not the fist.”  Or, “You cannot get HIV/AIDS from mosquito bites or bathing together.”   Others contain a bit of humor:  “Don’t sleep in the same room as the chickens.”

That afternoon, we changed gears to visit some of the small farms that the IRC is supporting.  Remember how difficult it was to shimmy up the rope in high-school gym class?  Well, you’d never make it on a Liberian palm farm!  I saw men scale palm trees that were easily three stories high in a matter of minutes.  They hacked off huge palm fronds that fell gracefully to the earth. 

How did they do this?  The men used a circular belt to hoist themselves up the trunk, but it was sheer muscle that was powering them.  I asked one young man if I could try on the belt.  He laughed and said yes.  Next, I showed him my bicep and asked if I could cut it as a palm farmer?  He was polite but blunt!

kidspickingoutpalmseeds

Nearby, the multi-step process of de-seeding, boiling, crushing, sifting, re-boiling and finally extracting palm oil from the palm heads was in full-swing.  Children who go to school during the week were spending their weekends picking palm seeds out with their bare hands.  That’s difficult to see.  These same children spend the majority of the time they’re not in school working hard to help their parents.  I think of the great emphasis we put on childhood—and recreation—in America.  It’s very different in a place like Karnplay, where daily life is about survival.

Liberia Market 

We wrapped up the day at a local market.  There, I saw the fruits of the palm farmers’ labor on display.  Red oil, extracted from the palm tree and aptly name for its brilliant color, was on sale in reused water bottles and jerry cans.  It’s used to cook just about everything in Liberia.  As to what constitutes Liberian cooking?  I have a rambunctious group of school children who are going to tell me all about that tomorrow…

See more photos in Emily’s Flickr set.