#3 – Dar es Salaam: Progress in the ‘City of Peace’

8 07 2008

Last week Jordan, Holly and I boarded a bus and took the long and adventurous trip to Dar es Salaam where we had a number of meetings with stakeholders, like-minded groups and potential partners. Although we had all been in Dar before, there was certainly a feeling of city-shock upon arriving in Tanzania’s largest metropolis but it quickly subsided as we got immersed in our work and the good vibe of the big city.

One of our meetings was with Tech Bridge World (a Carnegie Melon NGO) that innovates and implements technology solutions to meet sustainable development needs around the world (www.techbridgeworld.org). It was a pretty enlightening meeting as we exchanged stories and ideas about our respective projects ultimately to find areas and ideas where we could work together. I think it would be an understatement to say that we were humbled with the enthusiasm of the TBW staff for our project and look forward to the opportunity of implementing their technology solutions in the future or even have some of their volunteers join us.

One of the other exciting things that happened in Dar was that Jordan and I got to hang out with at the “Books for Bricks” charity event – a used book sale raising money for the building of an orphanage. Although we were there to support the event, we quickly found ourselves benefitting from the conversation we were having with the plethora of other volunteers there from an eclectic mix of NGOs. It was pretty cool to be in a conversation with everyone representing different organizations but ultimately all sharing the same goal. We made some great contacts and were happy to be part of this sub-community here in Tanzania. But perhaps most important, Jordan and I were really treated by the show put on by the children from whom the orphanage was for.

Following Dar, we took a car to Morogoro which is where Alliance One’s Tanzania Headquarters is situated. In addition to being treated exceptionally well by our friends at AO, we were allowed time to meet with different members of the AO team to aid our “Gathering Inputs” stage in the project and give us a better understanding of the industry. The headquarters is both the corporate facility for AO and the plant where the tobacco gets processed before being shipped to the company’s customers. All in all, it was a pretty informative trip but we were happy to get back to Tabora, especially after a 25 hour bus ride home!

As we say: TIA (This is Africa),

Adil.





#2 – Getting down with the “Go-Down”

26 06 2008

It hasn’t been long since Jordan’s first entry but we’ve had such a flurry of activity that there was good reason to keep regular with our reporting. In a Taboran-nutshell, our project has really taken off in the two weeks since we arrived and there seems to be no shortage of areas and places where we can help here.

On the weekend we visited a “go-down” which is essentially a large warehouse where the tobacco arrives from the farmers and is weighed, re-packaged and placed on a large transport on its way to the eventual buyers. Quite recently, they have initiated electronic tracking of the tobacco bales which provides an excellent example that IT is both welcomed and already improving the efficiency of the business dramatically here. Jordan and I also provided the entertainment when we volunteered to join the workers and carry the bales (which can vary in weight from 35 – 60 kg). Apparently, the workers had never seen Mzungus (foreigners) joining them carry the bales and found our attempts hilarious.

Following the go-down, we visited a few local communities to meet with primary societies and specifically, the farmers. It was an enlightening first experience to learn what’s on the mind of these farmers. This certainly planted some seeds of thought of how integrating IT into their work can improve the overall standard of living. Speaking of standard of living, we saw a couple of communities which had previously been considered to be ‘dying out’ but have since been revived from the influx of income via specifically the tobacco trade. Only a few years ago, food was hard to come by but today when you see their markets filled with consumer goods – clothes, games, etc. – it’s clear that the lives in these communities are improving (relatively speaking).

We also had a chance to today to check out the home base for Alliance One’s “Oxen Project”. The project is an arm of the company’s SCR campaign and is focused on obtaining, training and then selling oxen to farmers. The project leader, Claudio, gave us a tour of the facilities and explained how once the oxen have been trained, they are provided to farmers who pay for this form of ‘advanced technology’ through a system of microcredit. It was quite clear to us quickly that the socially focused project was capable of achieving immense improvements on the farmers’ lives. For example, with an oxen and plough it takes 1 farmer 1 day to plough 1 acre. Without the oxen it would take 12 people, 2.5 days to plough the same amount! The improved efficiency allows them the time to grow other crops such as maze to ultimately push them closer towards being self-sustainable and comfortable. Moreover, Alliance One is also finding that the project allows for the farmers to begin affording luxuries which we often taken for granted such as being able to rest and afford education for their children. Also, those in the communities with oxen become major enables for others as they often use their extra time to help others move things around such as clean water.

We started our computer education classes last week. After setting up a couple of computers with some generously donated educational software (thanks to the Dalton family!), we were able to take the children through an interactive book which they absolutely loved. As Jordan pointed out, the ubiquity of computers in our lives back home makes us forget how life-changing even the simplest applications and usage can be. It also makes explaining what comes very natural to us such as using a mouse or hitting the enter button, very hard to explain. Although early in our project, we are thrilled to see the children’s desire to learn and we are eager to get more computers so we can involve more kids and eventually the greater community.

We’re heading back to Dar this weekend for a series of meetings with various organizations who will help us gather information for the eventual application of our plans so expect another update soon.

Finally, I want to give some shout outs to two wonderful individuals – Amy and Ben – who were volunteering with other organizations and left Tabora recently to go back to their respective homes. For those of you thinking of volunteering with us, the people you’ll meet here are phenomenal and it’s simply sublime how close you become with one another. It certainly makes missing home hard when you’ve got such a great family here.

Kwaheri, Adil.





#1 – Getting Started

19 06 2008

Holly’s been hard at work for the last several weeks networking and getting our facilities in shape, including fixing up the gorgeous volunteer house. Adil and I (Jordan) spent the last week in Dar, taking basic Swahili classes at KIU and getting some cultural immersion in the city (including being practically buried in Kiswahili while riding the local public transport system, the Daladala — quite a crowded, if cheap, mode of transport!).

Lots of practice with greetings (incredibly important to get anything done here), do’s and don’ts, and work with essential verbs and phrases. Our instructor, Nicholas, was an amazing help, devoting the better part of every day that week to teaching us and taking us out into the city.

Saturday morning brought our departure from Dar and flight to Tabora — quite a dramatic change. We left the hustle and bustle of the crowded port city and landed in quite the pastoral land of green. Holly met us at the airport, and we caught a ride with one of the Alliance One drivers to the house to drop off our bags before heading into town. (Still working on getting the keys copied…)

Things definitely move at a different pace here in Tabora. Mornings are very busy, with meetings with all of the various forces we’re trying to somehow tie together, including the mobile phone companies here, Alliance One, and the kind volunteers and staff at HAPO, a school for orphans of HIV/AIDS at which we’re spending some time teaching computer classes. Then, lunch and the heat-of-the-day afternoon siesta, when things slow down significantly. Evenings tend to be very laid back, with dinner and then social time with the volunteers and the locals.

Our research, all couple days of it, has been going remarkably well. Meeting with mobile phone companies will hopefully yield data on distribution, usage, and options for making mass communication more affordable. What we theorized is showing itself to be pretty much true — while computers are still more or less prohibitively expensive, mobile phones have become incredibly popular over the last couple of years here, with a remarkably high rate of usage. If we can get our hands on some more concrete data, we can match that up with data from Alliance One regarding their farmers, and really get things going.

Communication with farmers now is difficult at best. Most communication between the company and the farmers is done via cooperatives called primary societies, which handle the distribution of inputs (fertilizers, seeds, etc.), education, and the sale of the harvested and cured tobacco. To get information from the company, farmers must travel as much as 8 or 10 hours by bicycle or, if they’re lucky, vehicle, not even knowing if what they need will be there when they arrive. They spend the night there, then must spend another day traveling back, sometimes emptyhanded. To get payment for their crop, farmers or their representatives from primary societies must make what can sometimes be a several-day trip to the banks in Tabora to get the cash in a lump sum. Carrying this much money is extremely dangerous, even in a place as peaceful as Tabora, and so they either hide the money all over their bodies and make a mad dash back home, or, as occurs more often, spend it all on sundry things here in town and then return home, as broke as when they arrived.

Obviously, these problems are pretty big ones, and so we are just beginning to explore possible solutions. The expanded use of mobile phones, combined with mass messaging services to distribute information on pricing, payment, planting, or other essentials, is one promising option. Another idea from Alliance One, to solve the issues of payment, is encouraging investment in things like cattle or other livestock, so that the farmer, rather than spending his money on unnecessary things, can make a long-term investment that can serve as a safety net in the event of a bad year for tobacco. Alliance One is already undertaking a project like this called the Oxen Project, wherein investments are made into oxen and carts to allow for increased efficiency with work in the fields and easier transportation of inputs from and tobacco to the primary societies. More info about this project will be forthcoming, as we’ll be going to check out the demonstration areas in the next few days.

However, these options rely heavily on motivating the farmers and educating them, so we still have a lot of footwork to do, speaking directly with them and finding out their needs firsthand. In the next few weeks, we’ll be visiting farmers at the tobacco markets throughout the Tabora region, interviewing them and finding out what kinds of information and services they need and what would be absolutely useless to them. Throwing useless technology at a problem rarely does anything but create rust heaps, but careful research and the concentrated use of certain technologies could dramatically improve the lives of these farmers in this beautiful part of Tanzania.

–Jordan