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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Life in Butajira ... so far



Gorge in Butajira next to my family's home
I’ve had a few people ask me what kind of environment I’m living in so I thought it might be good to write about my living conditions. I’m currently in training and as we have been reminded several times, we are not yet volunteers. We are still just trainees and will not become true volunteers until the swearing in ceremony at the embassy in mid-September so I can’t wait for that day. Training for our group is in Butajira which is about two and a half from the capital Addis Ababa. Unlike many of my friends and family assumed the weather here is not hot. It is currently the rainy season in Ethiopia (July – September). Average temperatures during the day have been in the 60s and it gets much colder at night. The altitude here is much higher than what I’m used to in Knoxville, so even if Ethiopia is close to the equator, we are pretty high up making it colder than what the majority of us expected. With all this rain, Butajira is very green with plenty of trees, grass, and huge hills that I have to walk up every day.
Gorge in Butajira next to my host family's home
                I am living with a host family in Kebele 1 (Kebele stands for community). There are 5 Kebeles in Butajira and our group has been dispersed all over these 5 communities. With it being the rainy season, the power will sometimes go out, but it doesn’t happen frequently and has not proven to be a huge problem… yet. My host family has running water however there is no indoor plumbing, so I’m sure you can guess what that means… I have to go outside to use the bathroom. Here the latrine is called the "shint bet". I’m slowly getting used to it. It was hard at first, but I have no choice. Each time I get done using it I’m so proud of myself, it feels like some sort of huge accomplishment. “Yeah, I used the shint bet with no problem today.” There is a shower room that is also outside. There is no hot water, but my host family has been kind enough to boil my water so I don’t use the shower head but instead take bucket baths. Even with the boiled water, taking a bucket bath outside in 60 degree weather is still cold. It is quite the process but I get better at it every time I take a shower. Practice makes perfect!
Gorge
                There is no internet at my host family’s house so I’ve been going to the hotels to get wifi and bunna (coffee). The main road of Butajira is paved and there are a couple cobblestone roads. The rest of Butajira is dirt and with the rain it’s mud. I’m very thankful for the hiking/waterproof shoes I bought right before getting here. When I walk out of my house I’m confronted with cows, goats, horses, roosters, and chicken so you constantly have to watch where you are going so you don’t run into a herd of cattle. I have a rooster right outside my window as well that doesn’t yell at the same time every day (my naïve, western self assumed that roosters woke up at the same time every day, some internal clock thing, but no, roosters are constantly cock-a-doodling at no specific time). There are also monkeys and it is totally normal to walk to my technical training session with a monkey on my left and a baby goat to my right.  

                The pictures I have posted are of the magnificent gorge right next to my house. The view is absolutely stunning and pictures do not do it justice. I’d love to try and get some quiet and relaxing reading time there however the children in the neighborhood are constantly surrounding us foreigners so getting any privacy outside the confines of your bedroom is practically impossible. Even so, Butajira is absolutely beautiful. I hope this blog post gives everyone a better idea of how I will be living for the next 8 weeks. We tend to forget how much we have living in a developed country and take a lot for granted so everyone realize how well you have it when you take your long hot shower tonight and you get to sit on a toilet!!

2 comments:

  1. Love this! Shint bet literally means pee house, right?.... One of the delights of local language!

    ReplyDelete
  2. It sure does mean pee house!! I'm glad you like it!

    ReplyDelete