CORPSAFRICA
  • Home
  • About
    • About us >
      • The Model
      • Human-Centered Design
      • Impact
      • Development Partners
      • Junior CorpsAfrica
    • Team >
      • Staff
      • Board of Directors
      • Advisory Council
    • Work With Us
    • Press
    • Videos
    • Testimonials
    • Contact us
  • Countries
    • Morocco
    • Senegal
    • Malawi
    • Rwanda
    • Ghana
    • Kenya
  • Volunteers
    • Meet the Volunteers >
      • Morocco Volunteers >
        • Group 1 Morocco
        • Group 2 Morocco
        • Group 3 Morocco
        • Group 4 Morocco
        • Group 5 Morocco
        • Group 6 Morocco
      • Malawi Volunteers >
        • Group 1 Malawi
        • Group 2 Malawi
        • Group 3 Malawi
        • Group 4 Malawi
        • Group 5 Malawi
        • Group 6 Malawi
      • Senegal Volunteers >
        • Group 1 Senegal
        • Group 2 Senegal
        • Group 3 Senegal
        • Group 4 Senegal
        • Group 5 Senegal
        • Group 6 Senegal
      • Rwanda Volunteers >
        • Group 1 Rwanda
        • Group 2 Rwanda
        • Group 3 Rwanda
    • Podcast - "My CorpsAfrica Story"
    • Featured Projects >
      • Dzaleka Basketball Court
      • Kitchen Gardens
      • Coronavirus Response
    • Featured Volunteers
    • Alumni Association
    • Apply
  • Events
    • Events >
      • PROJECTing Resilience
    • All Country Conference
  • Blog
  • Donate
    • Donate to CorpsAfrica
    • Pay It Forward Campaign
    • Holbrooke Campaign
    • Corporate Council for CorpsAfrica
    • Planned Giving
    • Amazon Smile

Take It One Step at a Time

11/30/2022

0 Comments

 
Written by CorpsAfrica/Malawi Volunteer Ms. Joana Msukwa

“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.”- Theodore Roosevelt

I must say the idea of moving to the outskirts of the city was not as easy to digest but after going through six weeks of PST, I convinced myself that living in a totally different place far from home was not going to be so bad after all but rather a wholesome life adventure worth a shot.

After arriving at my site in Ntcheu district, I had quite zero expectations from the community after having been told to lower our expectations throughout service but what fascinated me was the warm welcome I got from some community members. I was intrigued as to how someone would welcome a total stranger they have never met before. This alone does prove the famous quote about Malawi being the warm heart of Africa. Having been dropped off, I was then told by my program coordinator that there was a bridge project at a nearby village pending implementation. I then thought to myself how is a girl like me with little knowledge in construction going to handle a whole bridge construction project? However, after some thought process, I told myself to just do it as Nike says.

During the first encounter with the village where the bridge was to be constructed, I was quite touched to see the commitment the community members have had throughout the years in trying to ease movements to the village. The community has used most of its community assets like quarry stones to put underneath the water across the river but this didn’t really help. Vehicles hardly reach the community. They have to be packed and people cross the river on foot. With the CorpsAfrica Volunteer coming into the picture, the community is more than overwhelmed seeing their story about to change. I am quite excited to be a part of this social change and help make a significant impact throughout my integration process. With a  step at a time, we are closer to finishing the project and a great story is about to be told.
0 Comments

My Integration in the Province of Tata

11/28/2022

5 Comments

 
​Written by CorpsAfrica/Maroc Volunteer Ms. Cecile Niyimenya (a Rwandan Exchange Volunteer serving in Morocco)

It all started when I knew that I was deployed to Tata.  I was so excited because it is a province that is different from all the places I have visited in Morocco so far. Everything started changing when I left Marrakech to begin the 10-hour journey to Tata. Beginning this journey was when I really felt “Oh my God” and I realized that this is another time leaving my comfort zone, like when I left my country, Rwanda. I felt in my heart that the journey was already starting to challenge me and teach me new things. Honestly, I was afraid, and I couldn’t sleep on the bus because I was so excited to see exactly where we were heading.

Before heading to my site, I spent some time with my colleagues in the small city of Tata. I was impressed by the city, which is clean but hot. I visited one of the cooperatives that grows dates and produces a lot of other products. I was impressed by how the people working in the cooperative used their own resources to produce so many things. They gave me a gift of some of their products (my second time tasting dates!) and from that moment I started feeling like people from Tata are welcoming people.

Finally the time came for me to travel to my site, Asmlil Village, where I met beautiful and caring people. Even though I couldn’t speak their local language, I still felt their warm welcome. As the days went by I learned more about the local language, but for the first few days it was difficult. Sometimes I felt so frustrated because I couldn’t communicate with them in Tashelheit, which made me so sad and caused me to begin doubting that I could do it.

One day I didn’t have a good enough network connection to use Google translate and I cried in my room. I began thinking about what to do, so I called some of my colleagues, who gave me a lot of ideas on how to face my language challenge. I started using many different strategies to communicate, and even though it is still not perfect, Alhamdulillah, it has improved. The one thing I promised myself is that I won’t give up!
​
In Asmlil the community produces a lot of dates, so now I taste dates every day! They also use the leaves from the date trees to produce handicrafts. Overall I really enjoy living in this village. 
Picture
5 Comments

Hello Change, I Welcome You.

11/28/2022

1 Comment

 
Written by CorpsAfrica/Malawi Volunteer Ms. Khumbolawo Mkochi

Describe your CorpsAfrica experience in one word? I briefly stared at the survey question before I decided to respond with 'hectic'. But when I looked at the environment around me, I realized that the question was a little unfair. My time here cannot be summed up in one word. The survey question did all my experiences a disservice. I have panicked, I have been anxious, I have laughed, I have grieved with people, I have been shown intense kindness, I have seen a world different from mine, and experienced a whirlwind of emotions that cannot be summarized by a single adjective.
​

Picture
Chitowe nursery school
Our Country Director once said that this experience will allow us to have an authentic Malawian experience. Truthfully, I felt a little offended and confused by that statement. I thought it disqualified my own experiences as a Malawian. Now that I started my solo journey in my site, I have realized that it is all a matter of perspective. An authentic Malawian experience for me has meant eating traditional food I would normally tell my mother no, it has meant having nsima breakfast, and walking for unbelievable hours in the excruciating sun. It has also meant walking for twenty to thirty minutes to climb a hill so that I can find a power source to charge my phone. My experiences haven't been all pretty but I welcome the new perspective.
​

Picture
Spontaneously climbing up a hill after a youth meeting
The first time I climbed a hill I was convinced I was going to die or faint. The other times after that I believed I could make these trips twice a week and not feel exhausted. This journey has taught me that the limits we set for ourselves aren't limits at all. Sometimes we are unaware of our own capabilities and how moving out of our comfort zone slowly forces us to grow and change, even in the tiny details of our life. 
​
​
Picture
-Khumbolawo Mkochi.x
1 Comment
    Support
    Welcome
    ​to the CorpsAfrica Volunteer Blog! 
    Get an inside look at the experiences of CorpsAfrica Volunteers in the field.

    Archives

    December 2022
    November 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    December 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    August 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016

    RSS Feed

Picture