Chronicles of my 2-year adventure through Namibia as a PCV.
With great excitement I accepted The Peace Corps' invitation to serve for 27 months in Namibia. Through this blog I will look to provide an updated (as much as possible) catalog of my journey. The thoughts and feelings within this blog in no way represent those of Peace Corps or The US Government.

Subscribe to the Blog

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Monday, December 7, 2015

Peace Corps Namibia - 25th Anniversary

Last week, I had the privilege of addressing the Peace Corps Namibia community at our 25th anniversary celebration. I know I haven't posted in a while, but I feel like this speech covers a lot of the way my thoughts and feelings about my service and the PC Namibia program have developed in my mind. See the speech below with some media sprinkled in.

________________________________________



Good morning ladies and gentlemen.
Last January I took a trip back to Okahandja to visit my host family. It was my host brother’s birthday and they were having a braai. It felt weird being back in Okahandja, the town that many of us trained in, without the rest of my group. Still, though the town felt so familiar. Elements of home. I’m sure many of us have felt it going back. At the Spar in town, as me and my family headed to the till, I felt a hand on my shoulder. I turned to see Doc, who owns a security company, smiling at me. I had met Doc during PST at our Small Business Workshop. After a warm and familiar greeting, he asked when the next Peace Corps small business workshop would be. He’d attended a few and was looking forward to the next. He asked me about my site and what work I was doing. He asked me if I missed Okahandja. He spoke to me with such familiarity and comfort – with an understanding of my service, my job, and my experience/purpose in Namibia. Moments like this, these small exchanges, remind me of the impact of our service. In moments like this, you really feel like a Peace Corps volunteer. When a car picks you up and the driver shares the story of his grade 9 math teacher back in 2004, followed by a, “do you know them?” and, “Tell them hello”. You know in these moments that you’re part of something special.

Today, as we look to celebrate Peace Corps’ 25th year in Namibia, we – the Peace Corps volunteers – ask ourselves: how are we meant to celebrate? How do we celebrate a 25 year history that we have only participated in a fraction of?  Across so many different sites, projects, personalities and perspectives, what experiences can we collectively commemorate? Today I want to highlight one of Peace Corp’s most defining traits, and what I believe we would all say allows our work to be effective and impactful: the unique relationships and experiences we share with the people of Namibia.

As a PCV, It would be a mistake to attribute your experiences in Namibia as strictly a product of your 2 year service. Not that you don’t deserve credit. You absolutely do. But, we do not serve in a vacuum of our own experiences. While new relationships and individual experiences are largely products of our own efforts, we do not serve alone. We serve with the support and legacy of 25 years of Peace Corps Volunteers who’ve made PC Namibia what it is today – a trusted organization that is valued for its people and projects. We carry this with us everywhere we go. Every time we introduce ourselves as PCVs, or wear our PC Polo, or every time we present our ID cards, we benefit from the strong, and well-deserved reputation of this program. The reputation established by the PCVs who came before us. Today we celebrate them. We celebrate their successes – not defined just by the effectiveness of their projects, but also by the quality of their relationships. The skills imparted, yes, but also the true and honest connection they developed with the recipient of that skill.
Left to Right: Carl Swartz (Country Director, PC Namibia), Patrict McElroy (DPT, PC Namibia), Me, Saara Kuugongongwela Amadhila (Prime Minister, The Republic of Namibia), Ambassador Daughton (US Ambassador to Namibia), Dick Day (Regional Director of the Africa Region, Peace Corps)

It is hard sometimes to see ourselves as a part of that – so it goes with history. With each passing minute, each certificate printed, each learner graduated, and each person assisted we add to that history. Milestones such as these let us see ourselves within that 25 year context.

25 years of PC Namibia. 25 years of PCVs. 25 years of touring, traveling, and seemingly endless combie rides. 25 years of looking out the window of a car and being struck by the beauty of the Zambezi or Okavango Rivers, the dunes of the Namib or Kalahari Desert, or the Atlantic as you’ve never seen it before. 25 years of volunteer confusion from trying to figure out what the man giving directions is talking about when he says his shop is “just that side of the robot” or that “he’d be here just now” – only to find yourself a few short months later using the same exact phrases. 25 years of weddings, birthdays, and holidays. 25 years of host families and relatives who support and teach us so much – though I still will probably never effectively hand-wash my shirts. 25 years of a washer, dryer, and hot showers at the Peace Corps Office. 25 years of Peace Corps office staff who have made it their full time (and often overtime) jobs to assure that volunteers can be happy, comfortable, and successful at site. 25 years of incredible supervisors, counterparts, colleagues, and learners who deserve more praise than they could ever receive. 25 years of that look on a learners face when they finally figure “it” out, when a trainee approaches you and expresses their gratitude, when the meme who you’ve been working on budgeting with can now regularly pay for her electricity. 25 years of meaningful work. 25 years of friendship.
Me & Patrick (DPT, PC Namibia)
How fortunate are we to be given the opportunity to really experience this country. To truly get to know the people of this country? We are spoiled, yes, by the aesthetic beauty of this country. These are the things anyone with eyes notice, readily apparent to the average tourist. But as volunteers, we have the unique opportunity to truly see Namibia. We have the privilege to interact with the very fabric of this country. We have the opportunity to see this country not as a 14 day road trip, or 3 months of study abroad, but with 2 years of life.

It’s why when you talk to a volunteer in Zambezi, they almost always mention life in, around, or on the river – eating fish and pap, surrounded by friends, family, and a mosaic of shitenges. It’s why a Zambezi volunteer, though at first a bit uncomfortable, eventually finds kneeling and clapping to be as familiar as a handshake. It’s why a Kavango volunteer has countless, hilarious stories of drivers backing their cars a bit too close to the water as they get stuck at Rundu beach. A Kavango volunteer best escapes the heat of the day in the shade of a large tree with a massive monkey orange in hand. It’s why volunteers in Wamboland come to appreciate the sand in their oshifima because it is a constant and crunchy reminder of the strength of their early-rising sister. PCVs in Wamboland also come to prefer Marathon Chicken, and cast judgement on those who do not completely clean the bones of its meat. It’s why an Erongo volunteer knows that they have to wait to hear the language being spoken before they attempt greeting. The diversity of the country is represented in its population, and we come to expect each sentence to feature 2-4 different languages. It’s why everyone in Omaheke and Otjazondjupa mention the pride of the Herero culture and the emphasis put on family. It’s why a volunteer in Kunene notices the diversity of their region manifested in the landscape and the people. Volunteers in Kunene define fast food as a heaping plate of donkey meat with a side of flavoured ice. It’s why a volunteer in the south can always find a braai full of strangers, who quickly become Namily. PCV’s in the deep-south will always be boastful about their frost and snow covered towns, as the rest of the country to the north sweats it out. And it’s why all volunteers know one of the common themes of this country, one thing that unites every person who identifies as Namibian, is the undying, unquenchable love of meat. I mean, I thought I liked meat before I got here, but eish! You never leave a braai unsatisfied. Never. It’s about the experience though. Anyone can eat Namibian braai meat. But not everyone gets to experience the braai. As the fire is built, and the ashes crumble and crack, we talk. We share stories, talk about cultural curiosities. In doing that we experience Namibia in a way that is both honest and extremely personal. We get to experience its true spirit – interacting with its history, languages, cultures and traditions thorough its people. And it becomes more and more apparent, as the days go by, that we will leave here having learned far more than we’ve taught. It’s an oft-repeated sentiment, but how incredibly clear it becomes.

Post-Ceremony Group Photos
Top Row: Me, Eric Feldpausch (PCV), Alex Crisel (PCV), Patrick (DPT, PC Nam), Dan Appel (PCV)
Bottom Row: Linnea Carver (PCV), Sarah Jonson (PCV), Ally Conner (PCV), Kaitlin Schluter (PCV)
Our work is always focused on the future. Whether that future is a fully-functional and sustainable project that no longer requires volunteer assistance, or perhaps a strong foundation to pass on to the next volunteer, we serve with the future in mind. We serve for future generations of volunteers, staff, counterparts, and supervisors. We serve for the future, and so will the volunteers that follow us. We serve the future as did the volunteers, staff, counterparts, and supervisors that came before us. They served for your learners, your clients, your patients, your family, and your friends. So no, you may not know Group 1. But, in some way, they knew you. And today we all celebrate each other. As my Peace Corps supervisor, Linda Shiimbi, put it during training: “Though you are but just one raindrop, you land in a rushing river of change. And though alone one raindrop does little, a river can change landscapes”. Today we celebrate all the raindrops – Namibian and American alike – that have joined together to make this river flow.

As volunteers, we work for the benefit and development of Namibia at large, but our work is effective because we focus our efforts on a small section of the population. Whether we are teaching at a small school in Owamboland, working at a clinic in Kavango, or assisting youth entrepreneurs in Karas, our work and the work of our counterparts and supervisors depends on an intimate understanding of the people and places in which we serve. Events like this 25thanniversary celebration allow us come together and put our individual, concentrated efforts into larger perspective. Collectively, we can look around this room and celebrate each other’s achievements as our own. But as we look around this room, make sure to visualize everyone who contributes towards our successful service.  See the colleagues that greet us every day and the supervisor that loves exchanging ideas.  See the entire Peace Corps staff and their passion for Namibian-American partnership and friendship.  See the government officials meeting in offices to strategically plan for the expansion of the education program and the entire Mission community discussing how to better use Peace Corps volunteers to make the national HIV/AIDS eradication agenda more effective.  See the fruit vendor that gives you an extra orange to thank you for your business, the kapana meme that knows how fatty you like your meat, and the security guards at Spar that always look out for you. It’s a truly magical thing when you realize that what we gain and leave Namibia with is not American colleagues and Namibian colleagues, American friends and Namibian friends, and American family and Namibian family, but just colleagues, friends, and family – connected through shared experience, friendship, and love. And how lucky are we for such a privilege. Thank you.