Tuesday, November 29, 2005

City of Child Picnic

Hello and welcome to another blog by that stressed, hair-losing, sleep-lacking human climbing frame you may recognise as Roy Walker. I know that sounds fairly negative but I have been having loads of fun recently with the children and the different work on offer.

One such event is the City of Child Picnic that Lotte arranged recently for her Tadiwala Road classes.

I was relaxing in my room at CoC, packing for my trip back to Pune when I heard the sound of the Deep Griha bus arriving at the front office. Within a few moments children piled out of the bus, I was greeted with the usual ‘Namaste’ and I honestly felt like the Queen of Britain with all the handshakes. This was when the initial chaos began!

With a delirium of excitement from the trip and typical human nature, within ten minutes the children had already lost most of the sporting equipment, had come close to snapping a large swing, and a large boy (who will remain nameless) broke the outdoor shower system that took the supervisors an entire day to repair and upgrade! None of us minded though because the children were having the time of their lives and that was the main thing.

After playing in the amazing CoC playground (donated by Gordonstown students from Scotland) and eating most of the unready almond pods from a tree we brought the children round the front to get ready for lunch. There were also traditional games such as frisbee and the ‘hokey cokey’. Meanwhile a few of the CoC children were returning from school and I had the distinct impression they were completely overwhelmed!

After lunch we decided to bring them on a short walk to the village to see the temple and a small reservoir nearby. The children seemed to enjoy this very much, judging from their funny antics. Again they were having the time of their lives until unfortunately it started to rain. They looked quite dejected when we headed back to the buses, but were clearly satisfied from their long day at CoC.

The outing was a great success which we all enjoyed very much. It would be a good idea for Deep Griha to arrange more such events in the future so the children can benefit from the rural atmosphere and most importantly, have a load of fun.

- Roy Walker

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Picnic, Play and Changing the World





















By Lotte Webb

Since arriving in Pune as an independent volunteer for Deep Griha Society at the beginning of September, my timetable has included two school drop-out classes at Tadiwala Road. The first class are aged 10-13 years and the other aged from 3-12 years. Many of these children have adult responsibilities, and the school drop-out classes seek to provide informal education and an opportunity for them to be children again. This is a wonderful vision.

On a day to day basis our lessons include a range of activities. I generally begin by singing some action songs in English, and particular favourites include ‘Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes’ and ‘Hokey Cokey’. Following this, I ask the students to sit in a circle, and we spend some time practising spoken English. I also use this time to focus on building relationships between students in the class, as they can be quite rough with each-other. We do activities and games like passing around a toy, saying, “my name is Lotte, your name is Sadam." I have a puppet called Tommy who has proved to be a particular favourite for this activity. We also roll a ball across the circle, practising names, and use clapping and rhythm-based games. It is gratifying to see them beginning to trust each-other, to respond to the games, to ensure that all are included, and to bond as a group. These activities are also accessible to children of all abilities, which is necessary in such diverse groups. The main part of the lesson usually involves some kind of written or arts and crafts-based activity, which ranges from making puppets and mobiles, to drawing, colouring, writing and sticking.

I have a sense of deepening relationships with all of my students. The classrooms and areas where I teach are becoming more and more full of displays of the students’ work, which is a delight for me. There are flying birds, bright parrots and peacocks, English writing, drawings, portraits, Diwali glitter pictures, favourite foods and animals and colours dancing across the walls. I find it creative and rewarding to prepare new activities for the children each lesson, and to see their delight in their work on display on the walls. They come into the room, and smile and point at their work on the wall. In addition to creative work, their spoken English continues to improve.

Before I came to India, I was involved in fundraising for the Deep Griha Society; I wanted to be able to offer financial help in addition to my own time and energy. During this time I was a trainee teacher on placement in St Augustine’s High School, Westminster: a multicultural, multi-faith inner London school. As part of my work experience, I was given the opportunity to lead several assemblies. I took this opportunity to educate the students of St Augustine’s about the work of Deep Griha, and to include them in the fundraising efforts. Various students helped me to gain sponsorship for a sponsored walk from London to Canterbury, in addition to collecting stationery and other kinds of donations to be a gift to the children at Deep Griha. I also prepared a PowerPoint lesson for the Year 7 Personal, Social and Moral Education, about the work of Deep Griha, including showing the video via hyperlink from the DGS website.

While I was preparing the assembly, I began to reflect about the message I wanted to communicate to my students. I feel that one of the greatest myths of our society is that one person cannot make any difference. I wanted to tell the students that each one of them can and does make a difference. In order to express this, I worked with some students on a dance mime, telling the story of Deep Griha. I spoke about Dr Neela Onawale, and her vision and willingness to reach out to others in the ways that she could, which has led to the flourishing of Deep Griha as we know it. We chose the song, ‘Where is the Love?’ (Black Eyed Peas). One student represented Neela Onawale, and she began to walk as the music played. As she passed by others who were in need or suffering, she took their hand. Each person then reached out towards another person, and the chain began to grow. The chain wove its way off the stage and around the students in the school hall, taking other hands as they went, until the chain was a long, dancing line of human beings linked by love.

Following this, I spoke about the vision of the City of Child. While I had been reading through the website for inspiration, I was struck by the vision of City of Child, and by the beauty of the gift of a playground from a school in Scotland to the children at City of Child. What is it to give a child a playground? Laughter; childhood; play; exercise; fun—things which are so fundamental for children, and yet there are no playgrounds here in the slums. Certainly there is play, but the environments are often hazardous. To make the gift of a playground is to give a place where the children at City of Child, and local children from the rural villages, as well as children from the slums, could play. I recall being particularly struck by this vision of City of Child as a haven, or place of retreat, where children from the slums could go and experience play, the beauty of the countryside and fresh air. Even one day out of the ordinary can change a person’s life.

So, as I began to teach my own school drop-out classes here in Tadiwala Road, a dream began to form in my mind and heart. I wanted to take these children on a picnic to City of Child. I wasn’t sure how to organise it, but after negotiations with various staff at Deep Griha, we agreed upon Friday 14th October. When I told the children, they literally jumped up and down with excitement, and I could have cried. It was incredibly moving to see them express such excitement and pleasure in the idea. Their teacher too was nodding and smiling, saying, “very happy” and laughing with the children.

On the morning of the picnic, instead of riding to work in the usual Deep Griha jeep, we drove in the ambulances over to Tadiwala Road. When we arrived the children and teachers were all waiting, and as we got out of the van they excitedly screamed ‘didi, didi’ and came rushing around us! We somehow managed to squash about 50 children and 6 adults into two 12 seater minibuses! I was personally in a double seat with 3 children and a large sack of garlic, so there wasn’t exactly much leg-room! We drove in convoy for the hour-long journey over to City of Child. The children went through their repertoire of English songs a number of times during the drive, and particular favourites include the Rainbow song; Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes, and Hokey Cokey (the latter two of which are not easy to lead when feet and toes are entirely obscured by sacks of garlic and small people!)

When we arrived at City of Child I immediately took the children over to the playground, where we spent a happy morning. There is a climbing frame, slides, swings of varying types, and a very fast roundabout. I and the other volunteers were enjoying pushing the children on the swings and roundabout. When they decided they wanted me to go on the roundabout, I was very glad I knew the word ‘Bas!’ (enough!) as I was spun around at an alarming rate by enthusiastic 13 year old boys! While I was playing with the younger children, I heard someone shouting, ‘Didi, saab! Saab!’ Now, I know very few words in Marathi, but having taught animals in English, I recognized the word for snake. I went rushing over to the children (I’m not sure what I thought I was going to do, but it was instinctive) to find that Sadam had a viper on the end of a stick. In clear sign language and English I instructed him to throw it into a nearby field and come away!

After two happy hours in the playground, we went over to the eating hall for our picnic. Some children had brought food, and shared it, and others were given food along with the some children from City of Child. We all sat in a big square and ate together, which was wonderful. At City of Child there is always a blessing prayed before eating, which was led by one of the City of Child children, and repeated by all the other children. I believe that eating together builds community, and this is especially true in India where people are always so generous and wanting to share whatever they have with you. People had brought treats for the children, including a banana each, and some biscuits for afternoon tea, so it was a real feast for us all.

After lunch we went for a walk in the hills to a nearby lake, as City of Child is set amidst hills, and rural villages with thatched huts. The children enjoyed throwing stones into the water, and playing on the banks, though swimming was definitely not an option. On the way back they were picking custard apples and flowers to take home to the slums. We also went into a mandir where there was dharshan, before returning to City of Child. For me if was so special to see the children taking delight in the beauty of the scenery, a passing green parakeet or beautiful butterfly. We were all holding hands and singing as we walked. For some it may have been their first trip out of the slums and the city, and it is very moving to be part of such a journey. In some small way, it is changing people’s lives and expanding all of our inner worlds.

On the Monday following the picnic, I wanted to include in our lesson some reflection on our experience together of the picnic, to help the children to make meaning from all they had encountered. However, as ever the language barrier always makes things more challenging. How could I express the inner meaning, and encourage them to do the same, without being able to speak their language? In the end, I decided that the best thing I could do was to draw a picture of the day, and what it had meant to me. In the picture I included particular people, Sadam’s snake, the playground, Temple and lake, and the details which held meaning for me. As we sat in a circle that morning, I took out the picture and showed them all. They were smiling as I pointed to the different features, “yes, didi” they said, understanding. I then stuck my picture at the front for them to see, and gave them each some paper to draw their own pictures, writing “On Friday we went for a picnic to City of Child” on the board. It was wonderful to see the quality of the work they produced that morning, which is now proudly on display on the walls of the classroom under the title, ‘Our Picnic’.

A month later, the experience clearly remains fresh and strong in their memories. This afternoon, as I was sitting working at the computer, two of my students came to find me. “Didi, didi” they called, and took me by the hand, making it clear that they wanted to show me something upstairs, in the area where we have our lessons. I allowed myself to be led up the stairs and they proudly pointed to the chalk board, which had been divided into two sections, each filled with a lively picture of children playing, mountains, temple, playground with swings and slides and flowers and trees. “Picnic, Picnic” said Puja, pointing proudly at her board mural of our day at City of Child as she and Menakshi smiled broadly. “Picnic, didi…”

Friday, November 25, 2005

You never stop learning

Every Friday – now we’ve started up again that is – I have the unenviable task of following ‘The Chaos Within’ which has surely built up a cult following by now.

On the one hand I occasionally like to brighten the mood with a light-hearted piece about picnics or prize-givings. This puts me in mind of a stand-up comic stepping up to the stage immediately after the compere has announced that the bar is closed and all the vehicles in the car-park have been vandalised. On the other hand, now and again the time is right for some musings about serious subjects.

Today I’m going to attempt a different angle.

Natasha is always attempting to round up contributors to post on the blog. It’s interesting to hear what the volunteers – both local and international – are getting up to. I can’t wait for some of the song-and-dance routines we’ve been promised for the Celebration of Life… Hopefully we can get some permanent staff members to chip in with some entries too.

I have a fairly undefined role at DGS, being somewhat of a ‘jack-of-all-trades’. One of the things I’ve been working on is the continued development of a professional approach to project management, fundraising, progress monitoring and reporting. All that kind of thing. DGS have been able to find a couple of very experienced experts to visit and consult about best practice. Now I’m not one of these experts – no surprises there – but it’s been great to work alongside and learn from them.

Let’s take one example. These days, securing institutional funding – from corporate businesses perhaps, or international donor agencies – can involve a tremendous amount of effort. When in the past, a simple letter might have sufficed, nowadays potential donors want to know a project’s specific aims and objectives. They want to know the overall vision. They require financial breakdowns and timescales. Filling in the appropriate documentation takes considerable time and effort.

This isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It drives transparency in the not-for-profit sector, should help improve the quality of service to beneficiaries and helps projects focus at all stages of their operation. This doesn’t mean that compiling and providing this information is much fun, or even easy to do. For long-running successful organisations which have operated effectively in the past without cartloads of formal procedures or documentation, it can be quite a shock to have to meet these requirements.

As I wade through project plans, ISO9001 quality documentation and Human Resources policies, I know it’s important to keep in mind what all this is for. Who all this is for, in fact.

DGS is undergoing a period of change. It’s hard work. There are plenty of challenges ahead. It may not be much fun – hey everyone, lets play ISO9001! – but it is necessary. Securing funding is just one part of the equation; ensuring that DGS beneficiaries receive the best possible service is the ultimate aim for all of us.

Thursday, November 24, 2005

The Chaos Within - A week to go...

First off, thank you to anonymous for the comment. Appreciated it. And we welcome your engagement with the issue.

Today's the 24th of November, in a week it will be World AIDS Day... not too clear why the 1st of December has been plucked out of the other 365(should probably google this query), but no doubt every other day is somehow dedicated to men and gods and the odd apple tree.

World AIDS Day meant little to us a year ago. I missed it completely and I was watching out for it too. Life's blinkers somehow got in the way - and I can't even remember what the blinkers were! Such is the power of the inconsequential.

The DISHA team comprises predominantly of ex-housewives from the community. There were a few working mums of course, and the odd struggling student like Santosh, but overall the DISHA team was immersed in the puddles and pools of life a year ago. Tadiwala Road didn't have blinkers on, they just all blinked, collectively, millions and millions of eye lashes fell like guillotines, and World AIDS Day 2004 passed them by.

This year there is a disruption or disturbance in the force that is already felt within Tadiwala Road. World AIDS Day is on the lips of the youth that are playing for the DISHA Cricket trophy and the novelty of a day set aside for such a stigmatised disease has intrigued this community that has only just begun to understand what HIV/AIDS is about.



We are calling our World AIDS Day event a Celebration of Life. A community dance troupe has formed to dance HIV/AIDS into the Tadiwala Road psyche; a Polish jazz singer from the Le Meridian hotel has come forward to sing, and although her words may not be understood by all the essence will be felt; the local school that won the street play competition will perform on this evening; the Mayor of Pune and the former cricket captain of India will all add to rhythm and colour of our celebration; SAHARA Care home has promised to dance for us too... I can't wait to see what Errol's costume will be! You can't have colour without Errol and his team. They are blue and green, vivid red and peaceful white. You smell their colours. It intoxicates; Jyoti has courageously come forward to stand up on stage at the open air venue in the heart of the community and proclaim her HIV+ status.

It all happening, and hopefully the Pune that has never experienced slum life will be amongst us. The comfortable that don't so much have guillotine eye lashes but crusty Pauline scales that must fall and become dust.

Celebration of Life! Come join us on the 1st of December at 6pm. If you want directions either call Smiler on 9823043350 or Hans on 9823599274.

Friday, November 18, 2005

Experiences-Good and Bad!

Hello and welcome to another blog by that uneven-tanned, blister-footed, blue-eyed volunteer you may know as Roy Walker. It’s been about two and a half months since I first immersed myself in the amazing Indian way of life and again a lot has happened since my last update.

I have finally sorted my placement at Deep Griha. For two weeks of the month I’m out at City of Child, helping around, playing with the children, giving Santosh computer lessons getting up at 6am for exercise. For the rest of the time I’m at Ramtekadi, giving fairly intensive English lessons for school drop-outs. None the less I am having a lot of fun so far from the many once-in-a-lifetime experiences I’m having.

After the cleaner found a large scorpion in my bathroom at CoC I thought (hoped!) that would be the last of my bad experiences. I was mistaken. On the 20the September I was calmly getting ready for bed when I saw a shadow in the corner. I yelped, jumped out of bed and saw that it was a scorpion. I think I must have looked a wee bit like a caveman – jumping around in my boxers, long hair blocking my view, trying to bash the thing with a stick and making a monkey-like screech when I missed and it ran after me! I think it was more scared of me.

Only a few days ago I was sitting outside the dining hall when Nadim came up and said to me, “Small snake, come!” I got up with interest and sidled to the front, when I saw a snake that was anything but small. I saw a six foot (six foot!) snake writhing around on the ground from getting its head smashed in by Santosh. I could see that it was highly poisonous and while everyone initially said it was a cobra, it turned out to be another type of poisonous snake. That was one experience I won’t forget!

After overcoming a nasty bout of the illness and getting over the mouse that jumped out of my towel when I was showering, I went back to Pune to see the world-famous Ganesh Festival. It was good fun. Later on in the month we went to a show at St Mary’s school, which we watched under the flight-path of massive bats that looked like small eagles. I thought it was very good to se the professional creativity of the children there.

A few days later, back at CoC, I could hardly conceal my shock when Julie – pet dog – had locked itself in my room for two days, shredding my mosquito net. We released her by smashing a window and opening the door from the inside with a large cane. Poor thing.

I am really looking forward to the next few months filled with different experiences, both good and bad. I just hope they happen slow enough for me to absorb and fully appreciate them.

-Roy Walker

Thursday, November 17, 2005

The Boy and the Starfish

After reading Hans' latest post, my mother sent me the following story. I've heard variants of the tale before - at DGS and elsewhere - and it really underlines what grassroots development is all about.

The Boy and the Starfish

A stressed out city bloke takes a two week break on a remote Greek Island. He rises each morning to look out across the bay and enjoys a healthy breakfast. After several days he comes to recognise a local boy whose morning ritual, of walking along the beach and every few feet reaching down for something to fling into the sea, intrigues him.

One morning he wakes extra early and pulling on his Armani tracksuit he heads out to give the boy's antics a closer look. On reaching the beach he finds the boy, no older than 13 years, meandering along the water's edge in his usual fashion. Every few feet he comes across a starfish that has been washed up on the shore he pickes it up and flings it back into the ocean.

The man follows for a while, and after admiring this exercise in its futility, decides to share his superior knowledge with the young boy. "Hey Kid" he says. "Do you know how many miles of beach this bay has? Do you know how many thousands of starfish are washed up every day, and that it will all happen again tomorrow? Can't you see how pointless what you are doing is? It won't make a bit of difference!"

Looking at the starfish in his hand, the boy flings it out across the glistening bay. He pauses and humbly he mumbles ... "It made a difference to that one."

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

The Chaos Within - The Return

I'm back. Just about.

A lot has happened while I've been away at Deep Griha, and within DISHA in particular. To begin with DISHA lost two HIV+ clients while I was away. Sushila died on the 12th of September, and Renuka died later that month on the 25th at Sahara. Errol and I discussed her case before I left and it didn't look good. When I last saw Renuka at Sahara she didn't recognise me. I was another faceless being stroking her head as she simultaneously vomited and defecated on the bathroom floor. Her pain was manifest and unapolegetic. Hers was the release that is often spoken of in death.

Sushila was a client that came to us in the last stages of HIV/AIDS. Her son had heard about DISHA in the and brought his mother to see us in a rickshaw. She couldn't walk and we went down to see her and assess her condition. Maya, one my dancing stars, then accompanied her home. We admitted Sushila into Inlaks Budhrani hospital she died a week later. DISHA and death are uneasy bedfellows, and will forever be! We were told to expect it. We have been counselled on how to counsel. The darkness in the gaze of clients in the last stage grows more perceptible every day. But the force that drives us continues to be life. This life-force ebbs with loss. It breaks down and cries when a warm fluid bucket of it grows cold and dead inside a person who lived with HIV/AIDS.

Life finds a way to survive. The human body, the mind, has a force so powerful that almost all of us have no control of, or even inclination of what this force is capable of. The charismatic godmen and women of this world tell us this. Is it true?

Recently there has been a lot of press coverage over Andrew Stimpson's claim to be cured of HIV. First he tested positive in 2002 then in October 2003 the test came back negative. His body may potentially hold the cure for HIV/AIDS according to those two premier newspapers in Britain the Mail on Sunday and News of the World. Sensationalism aside, and unlikely though it is, it is possible that Stimpson's body has a unique HIV fighting life force. But it is even more possible that the first test was a mistake. Or the second. It happens. Three days ago little Karan Patel, a child in our Aadhar Kendra child sponsorship programme died at City of Child. He had tested positive, and then negative, and now months later died of acute diarrhea. A common cause of death for a children with HIV/AIDS.

Uplifting as ever these Chaos Within blogs aren't they?

After spending a considerable period of time on my butt recuperating from surgery the forces that make up life dance but sluggishly about me. To return to DISHA is to feel the surge within. To meet with the team and the clients again was wonderful. To see their smiles again is brilliant. There are new smiles too. And it means DISHA is working. People living with HIV/AIDS have realised that we provide a space of comfort and encouragement. The cricket tournament quarter finals are on, the local schools are enthusiastically acting out their original scripts for the street play competition. The focus on HIV/AIDS has never been stronger in the Tadiwala Road community.

Too upbeat for me eh? So here goes...

Just after I got back I had a conversation with this absolutely ghastly bastard who suggested that we should allow HIV/AIDS to go on the rampage because then it would shock the nation back into morality. He argued that what we were doing at Tadiwala was futile. We are apparently underfunded and smalltime! Better to let them die. He knew he was being provocative. My inane smile told him that I knew he knew. His comments about DISHA being limited is true. We are aware of the millions but focus on the 39 we know about, and have the resources to help. Tadiwala road's response to DISHA proves that grassroots NGOs are ideally placed to fight the pandemic. We are trusted. We are part of the community. We don't need to dissemble.

What was also sadly true about that ghastly bastard's tirade was his misbegotten belief that HIV/AIDS results uniquely from the lack of what he calls morality. It is attitudes like his - what Indians would clamour to call well educated - that are body blows to the fight against HIV/AIDS. The virus runs rampant, it is amoral, it gives a fuck whether you contract it by visiting a commercially exploited sex worker without a rubber, or whether you receive an infected batch of blood during an op!

Well... needless to say that it worked. The provocation I mean. My smile couldn't hold. Invective didn't quite flow, but I am cursed with a sarcastic edge and eyes that help those who miss the sarcasm find it.

Its good to be back.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Be the change you wish to see in the world

Every week I have the privilege to join the DISHA Team as they work to improve the lives of People Living With HIV/AIDS (PLWHAS) in the Tadiwala Road area. I have been volunteering with the team since March and truly do find it a privilege to have the opportunity to work with such a dedicated, friendly, and caring group of people. Although I try to help out in whatever way I can to assist the project, I have no doubts that the project is teaching me more than I could ever hope to offer. I have spent time in the communities visiting clients and families, have shared in training sessions and discussion groups, been to hospitals to see how the medical system works in India (and make clients smile if I can J), seen a hospice caring for patients, contributed to programmes and activities and most importantly been empowered and inspired.

The DISHA team are tackling an issue in India that no one wants to talk about or deal with. In a culture that barely allows public affection in its streets, discussing the realities of a disease such as HIV is an immense challenge. Step by step, DISHA is doing just that by reaching out to families, men, women and children in an unassuming and effective way. It is even more inspiring to see people who have the disease themselves reach out to work with, educate and help others in their communities – sharing their own experiences and offering strength and hope.

I always look forward to new adventures and the opportunity to learn when I visit DISHA. Because I work full time in Pune in a mostly westernized environment, it is very easy in this cosmopolitan city with its shops, gyms, restaurants and night clubs to forget the realities of the situations that the majority of the Indian population live with. I love my dose of “real India” as I am guided around the maze of Tadiwala’s roads and pathways by the staff who often have to be as my bodyguards when groups of children follow me or translate my rough local language skills so that I can chat with people too.

It is exciting to see the impact that DISHA is having. From the turnout at exhibitions where DISHA shares information on HIV/AIDS its obvious that people want to learn – it’s just a matter of finding the way for them to be able to do so without embarrassment or fear. I am thrilled to have had a chance to play a small part in the success of this grassroots project and have great hopes for the many lives it is impacting.

As Ghandi said - “Be the change you wish to see in the world “ – Thanks to DISHA who are doing just that every day.

Rachel