Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Swaziland Tidbits

It has come to my attention that there are some schools using my blog as a way of teaching classes about different places in the world (specifically Swaziland, however, I am sure they could browse through posting from years gone by and find plenty of cultural information from other places I have lived like Australia and Japan and other places I have traveled like Europe, Colombia, maybe New Zealand is in there or something... I don't know). So, I decided I should do a little more to give information about Swaziland and what life is like for people who live here. So here is a little stream of pictures and small tidbits about The Kingdom of Swaziland and its culture.

Once a woman is married, she is not to be seen in public with her hair exposed (this is the way they show they are married - instead of a ring). Most of the time women wear some sort of scarf or wrap like this, but for church they often wear hats - most religions have uniforms that people wear, so the women wear the hats assigned to their uniforms. Also women are not supposed to wear pants. In many communities this is becoming less of a rule, but there are times during the year (October-December) when people travel the country and fine women everywhere for wearing pants, exposing their knees, wearing jewelry, or fingernail polish. While some communities are becoming more liberal with the dress wearing for ladies, a married woman must never pants. So once a Swazi woman is married, she pretty much wears this (pictured - Swazi dress)  forever.

Collecting and chopping firewood for cooking is the job of women and girls.
Swazis like to dress nicely whenever they are in public, so even when doing manual labor,
they sometimes wear their nicest clothes.

Basically every family in Swaziland has cows. Cows are a sign of wealth (much more so than fancy cars or jewelry or a nice house). Cows are used for paying for wives and for... well, not really for anything besides that. They are eaten only at very very special occasions. But every morning every family must heard their cattle up the mountain to a place where they can graze all day and not wander into somebody's maize field. Then at night the cattle must be herded back to the homestead and into the cattle kraal where they sleep. Motor vehicles or horses are far too expensive to keep, so the herding is done by the men on the homestead when the children are in school, but the job is the job of the boys in the family. They heard the cattle by series of whistles, throwing rocks, and whipping them with sticks. It is incredible how the cows actually know what the whistles mean - I can't even figure out the different meanings of them!

Children are usually sent to the village center to get maize ground at the maize mill. I am impressed by how young these kids acquire the skill of carrying such heavy loads on their heads!
The only way Swazis carry water from the river is on her head - I am talking women carrying 20 liters on their heads for miles and never spilling a drop! It's incredible!

In some communities it is becoming more common to have electricity, but in rural Swaziland, it is still not the norm. People that get electricity after their homes are built often have a set up similar to this. It MIGHT not meet the building standards we have for American homes, but, it works! (Yes, that is the light switch hanging on the right.)

This is a very common scene in Swaziland. Just a typical dog in a typical yard out front of a typical house with a bucket of knob-sticks.
ALL (and that is no generalization) Swazi villages have a soccer field exactly like this one (three gum tree poles wired together on either end of the field). Soccer (called football here) is a HUGE sport that pretty much all boys play. Girls do not. Girls can play netball if their school has the hoops, but, unfortunately at this point the two do not mix. Soon, slowly, they will. We are working on that.
This is just a stinking cute picture of some of the grade 1 boys on the orphanage. You can tell it is Sunday because everyone is dressed in their nicest clothes for church... except David who is wearing a pine-needle wig fashioned by some of the little girls. I love these kids!

This kid blew me away! You'll never guess how old he is. When I first saw him, I was sure he was too young to have a grasp on English yet, so I bent down and talked to him like a baby and he put his hand on his hip and goes, "What's your name?" I just about died! This little dude is 4 years old and quite a whipper snapper!











This is what a typical Swazi school looks like.

Two-Toned, one color.

Long rows of classrooms with an outdoor hallway. It is not very common for schools to have electricity in the classrooms, just in the office. They have large windows on both sides that provide plenty of light.

Swazi students wear uniforms that typically match the color scheme of the school (The school above - green. Also the school is in the background behind the girls). Primary school uniforms are the same style across the country (there are 4-5 different color schemes) and high school uniforms are the same across the country. Most kids have one uniform that they wash 2 times a week. (Wash by hand, remember. You can either wash them in the river or carry water home and wash in a bucket at home.)

I hope this (and future educational posts I will try to put up) gives you a better picture of the Kingdom!
Thanks for keeping up with me!!

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Latest Happenings

So, while I was in limbo, I had a chance to hang out and do some fun things with my awesome friends who were so sweet to cheer me up. We did a big caving adventure where we hiked for an hour or so down to this cave. We had some hard-core spilunking for a good three hours before we hiked back late late in the night and ended up at this nice little hot spring where the tour company had ice-cold beers and the best pizza ever in the world waiting for us! We each got our own delicious pizza and let our bodies relax in the hot spring... the whole adventure was the most perfect thing for my mind and body.
Crawling through

I believe this was called a chimney move...?

TIGHT squeeze!

A long climb up!
I wonder how much diferent this would be in America. I mean, they would have to have so much safety equipment, the whole 'leaving the cave completely natural' thing really wouldn't work. Hooray for Swaziland and REAL caving! 

The gang (Some British guy, Peirs, me, Janna, Ruby, Ryan, and Lewis)
In other news, my new site continues to be absolutely BEAUTIFUL! I can't stop taking pictures of the sunset! I like to wake up at 5(ish) every morning and hike out to this ridge to watch the sunrise. Talk about a 180 from life where I was! The kids are adorable, social, loving, and curious, so my job is WAY easy.
This week I went and helped put on Peace Corps' GLOW (Girls Leading Our World) camp in Siteki. This year I was just helping out, but next year I am on the organizing committee. It was a huge success! So wonderful to see all of these young girls learning, taking chances, expressing themselves, and just having fun! I am excited to start a GLOW club in my new community and take girls to the camp next year! I also attended a Caregivers Seminar in Mbabane this week. It was so good to learn about brain development in youth and the effects of different kinds of trauma and ways to work on those things. I really want to start counceling kids and get them recognizing feelings and learning how to work through the hard ones - learning how to control themselves when tough things happen.
I hope everyone is doing well! I know I am. Thank you for keeping up with me and for thinking of me! I sure think a lot about you guys!


Yes. This is where I live, and this is why I have sunset addiction.

Oh, also, my address is still the same despite the site change:
Katie Walters PCV
PO Box 2797
Mbabane H100
Swaziland
AFRICA