A Telling Collective Blog
In this blog Katelin and Nicole will share their experiences using body mapping in Southern and East Africa.
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Entry for September 27, 2007
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Hello Everyone


 


We’re now settled in Zanzibar with a small flat in the middle of Stone Town . Here are a few quick updates on some of the amazing things we’ve been up to!


 


Yesterday we held the first meeting of the youth support group for HIV+ children and/or children affected by HIV/AIDS. The group began with a big bodymapping session led by the support group facilitators we’ve trained and will continue to work with. Children told stories about losing their parents to HIV and about the stigma they face while the facilitators talked about the hope and possibilities of supporting each other.


 


One young man spent most of the session staring at his bodymap in distress. We suggested a facilitator help him. High Tide, our translator and an incredible youth activist, sat down with the boy. The boy told High Tide that he felt so much sadness he was too overwhelmed to put it down on paper. High Tide painted for him and told him he is now in a space where everyone else is dealing with similar problems, he can feel supported and not alone anymore. The boy spoke loud and clear to the whole group upon presenting his bodymap, having gained a new confidence in hearing similar struggles from other youth before him. He also has gained mentorship and community support.


 


We will be starting an adult support group soon and will work with other organizations that have asked us for support. We’ve had such an incredible reception here, with so many possibilities! The three bodymapping sessions we’ve already had have been incredible successes.


 


We’ve also started to study Swahili, taught an English class for two weeks, and have gone to many unbelievable cultural events. Drinking coconuts, going to the fish market to buy our dinner, watching the sun go down over one of the islands, and making unbelievable Zanzibari friends while doing the work we love most…


 


We hope you are all well. Keep in touch! More stories soon…


 


Nicole & Katelin


 


 
2007-09-27 14:44:30 GMTComments: 0 |Permanent Link
Entry for July 4, 2007
To Everyone!
 
***For all newcomers to this email/blog list, please visit www.kukummi.org for more information. We’re excited to share this update on our progress with a six month trip to enable the use of bodymapping, an artistic tool for storytelling and empowerment***
 
We had the pleasure and excitement today of going around to different townships today delivering bodymapping supplies. Siya, in Phillipe, was coaching basketball with twenty-five youth. We were so impressed by his leadership skills, the respect he commanded from the young people. When we explained we had brought the supplies he was excited to tell us he would start bodymapping immediately.
 
We spent the entire weekend making up five bodymapping ‘kits’. We went from restaurant to restaurant asking for containers for a “community art project for youth”, entering into the backs of kitchens to retrieve boxes of containers, lids, anything that you could put paint in or on. Each of the five kits have 60 paintbrushes (30 small, 30 large), 7 jars with different colors of paint, a packet of ‘pallets’ of lids or other materials, containers for water, pencils, markers, newspaper (also laboriously collected from newspaper stands and quickly grabbed from free magazine containers), forms and instructions, and a card of contact info to local organizations/helplines. We got carried away decorating them with hand-prints and other bodymap inspired ‘art’ (proving to the all stars who all think we are artists that, in fact, we are not).
 
Next we visited Thabo at his house in Nyanga to bring him his kit. He was blasting music from his house and dancing with some kids. He is starting bodymapping tomorrow. Thabo has been a really interesting part of this project. At first we thought he would be hard to reach. His first body map, last Friday with all the all star leaders, was very dark. When explaining it to the group, he said “You give me black, I give you black”. Last week Thabo facilitated a workshop with his MVPs (MVPs are the leaders under the guidance of their respective all stars in each community, in this case, Thabo). We were so impressed that getting girls involved and giving them leadership is a priority of the organization as well as working with young men to respect women and it is really being practiced. We were at the workshop as a support. Thabo had a drill sergeant, or basketball  coach, style yelling “People of the South, these are your lives!”. They responded with incredible creativity and articulation of their own struggles and hope. Half way through facilitating Thabo ceased his pacing and loud instructions to begin to sketch on an empty brown paper. By the end he had drawn a tree with fruits and leaves off of the sides. The tree represented the way he wants to now look at his life, since thinking about his last bodymap. He now sees possibility and strength to grow. He is enthusiastic about having people continue to reevaluate their body maps as they change their lives. We are the active facilitators of change, he believes and practices. At the end of the workshop he facilitated with the MVPs, Thabo said,
“These are our lives…what the people are sharing here with you they are trying to make you understand as to what is going on with them so that you can treat them differently. So that you can walk and walk and walk with them because you understand. You cannot walk with someone you do not know. You cannot even walk by yourself because you do not know who you are, where your from, where the hell are you moving until you know about the map of your body. That’s how your life becomes something else so that you can make it something else. No one has chains here. I can see you all are free. But there is one thing in common. Everyone has the same heart. I haven’t seen a dark heart. I have also not seen a white heart. They are all red. We all have love… After this work, you take this, go home, paste it (bodymap) on your wall .. let it remind you as to what you want to do. Look at the phases in your life. Look at it every day. Change your life. Not me. I will support you. We will all support one another. That is why we are here.”
 
We are looking forward to seeing Thabo continue to facilitate bodymapping with hundreds of kids in his community this week. Tomorrow we go to two more communities to help them get started. This week thousands of kids will bodymap! The equipment/kits we made up for them will last them a long time so that they can continue to do bodymapping in their more regular programs. We are going to work with them, post writing a detailed evaluation of this holiday program, to find ways of their continuing this work as a way, as they put it, to “check in with their kids” (Hal, management) and to “break the silence” (Devina, all star).
 
Bodymapping fits their needs so perfectly. The organization has been around for four decades because it uses fun as the basis for it’s programming (highlight the ‘fun’ in fundamental). Alongside playing sports and having fun, they are teaching very important life skills that directly impact kids lives. But they have never had a way of connecting with their kids. Bodymapping has given them this opportunity.
 
We’re so excited that it has taken off and that we are now in a support role, helping it happen, while they have become the facilitators. The logistics of getting supplies to thousands of kids are overwhelming but we’ve been able to pull it off (thanks to lots of recycling, huge tubs of paint, and really friendly and helpful South Africans).
 
Please forward this email widely. We want people to know about this work, about these youth. Even though we don’t have the video footage to you yet, we hope you get a small sense of what incredibly important things happen when kids who have historically been ignored are given a paintbrush and the freedom to express themselves.
 
For us to continue to be able to support them in implementing both immediately and for the long term, we need your support. As Thabo says with paint, “a little goes a long way”. Anything you can send – from old paintbrushes to $25 bucks (that will support one workshop where thirty kids’ lives will be impacted). You can send donations to:
26 Maple Terrace
Auburndale , MA 02466
USA
Make all checks payable to Nicole le Roux.
 
For tax deductable donations contact us for instructions.
 
…And we continue to bodymap with other groups as well and have begun planning exciting things for the future stops on this bodymapping trip!
 
As always we are very happy to receive all of your wonderful responses and look forward to hearing from you!
 
All the best from Cape Town and the team of all stars at Hoops 4 Hope,
 
Katelin & Nicole
 
 ps. We will put lots of pictures on the web site as soon as we have a minute between body mapping!
2007-07-09 12:06:44 GMTComments: 0 |Permanent Link
Entry for June 20, 2007
Hello from Cape Town !
 
This is our first update from A Telling Collective (we now write ATC). Forgive the lack of editing, we’re working quickly out of an internet café. We’ve been here now a little over a week. It took us a while to learn the ropes of this city.
 
We’ll start with driving… We have little old school red VW bug that we call “Buggy”. And we do actually call it this because we often need to talk to it out loud to try to get it to work… the reverse needs to be held, the locks won’t turn, it can’t go above 80 km, etc. etc. It’s an experience. We haven’t gotten stuck anywhere and Deon, from whom we’re renting, has a truck full of VW spare parts which he drives to the scene within the first few minutes (so we hear from our friend whose experiences filled us in). Navigating crazy city driving with people running across the street, horse buggies with old box spring trailers behind, ostriches and rock climbing baboons, etc. etc. (and we must add, four different confusing maps that Katelin somehow has worked with and is teaching Nicole the old family philosophy that getting lost is not possible but is in fact called bumbling and means that you learn more about the place than you ever wanted to know and get there eventually).
 
Anyway, more important things. This morning was our second set of many meetings at the Hoops4Hope offices. You can find them online if you’re curious. They service five townships in the area, thousands and thousands of kids, with a principle called FUNdamentals (fun to teach the fundamentals) that has kept their organization alive and flourishing for nearly twenty years whereas many other means of HIV and life skills education has suffered. They use basketball, soccer, chess, and other means to keep learning about HIV fun – but it is so so much more than that! We are now fitting body mapping into their curriculum (quite a challenge they have posed to us immediately). Body mapping fills a gap of knowing “how their youth are doing”, working with youth who don’t like sports but want to participate because of the programs incredible popularity, and using expression as a form of ‘fun’ learning. They have had resources persons in the past working with creative means but we’re excited that they can take charge of the body mapping after we leave so that it doesn’t need to be that temporary which is exactly what we wanted. They shape the project and we support. In other words, we start body mapping with the “all star” team of 15 community leaders who each work with 15-20 MVP’s, leaders within each community. The MVPs we will map with in the coming days also before jumping into mapping with basically thousands of kids- trying to find ways of scraping from the budget enough money to buy gallons of paint and huge rolls of brown paper since we never foresaw SO much interest and such a massive quantity of children! And we’ve discovered there’s no time for such a thing called processing. Wow!
 
We’re also probably going to map with… rural women in Stellenbosch, children’s home for HIV positive youth, the office staff at a partner organization to H4H, and a community program that serves women. We’re reaching out to other like minded people and projects such as the suitcase stories (check it out online or look for the book… suitcases done just like body mapping with refugee children and their journey’s), photographer of TB patients who exhibits their stories alongside portrait pictures, play wrights and storytellers who are doing cultural activism, etc.
 
We spent hours and hours in the book store last week and left with no less than six books each. We’ve already worked our way through several… the reading feeds our need to know more about the area, intellectual life here, and projects similar to ours. We went to a book fair where we met some of the authors we’ve been reading and were able to ask them questions which was incredibly stimulating albeit overwhelming. We both are designing separate projects but we may have to write most of them once we arrive in Pretoria since Cape Town is exploding!
 
All the best,
 
Katelin & Nicole
 
AND....
 
We’ll both add personal messages from time to time to these emails.
 
Here’s Nicole’s:
 
I can hardly believe that we have only been here a week. It seems like years ago that I was home, finding new ways of pushing things into my bag so that I could fit the paintbrushes I had forgotten to pack! There has been many times when I have longed for home, and the many people at home I love so much…
 
At the same time I find myself walking along the top-side of the mountain behind our house, facing the ocean with the setting sun behind me, digging my feet into the earth as I step carefully to avoid breaking too many spiders webs or disturbing the many little creatures among the bushes. Something about being here, smelling the lavender that grows here as a weed (and is in every one of Katelin’s pockets, hung all around our room, in our tea, even on my latest body map), gives me an inexplicable feeling that I am home.
 
I am in the place that draws out in me a deep sadness, for so many oppressed and so many hurt by the pain of being the oppressor. A place where I see capitalism gone very very wrong (does it ever go right?) with huge townships and massive homes, so so many starving people and people drinking fine wine or tea with scones and quiche… After I met one of my most beloved authors,  Antjie Krog, a woman who wrote an incredible reflexive book about the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that literally changed my life, I had to leave the book fare in tears… there is an incredible emotion, an exhaustion of struggle here.
 
At the same time I am sitting at the edge of my seat, riveted by the hawks, the spiders, the smell of the ocean, and the people I cannot give justice describing. The work that is happening here to rebuild the ruins of the old South Africa positively is more incredible than I could have dreamed! I am among mentors now in a place in which I am reminded, every second, of why my heart is beating. The passion I feel here makes me jump up early in the morning to get outside and roll my sleeves up, so to speak.
 
There is a lot of work we will be writing about. Many many experiences I won’t be able to even try to put into emails or letters, but we’ll definitely document as much as we can in multi media forms!
I look forward to hearing from all of you!
 
 
From Katelin:
More from me next email (Nicole prepared hers last night but I couldn’t put my book down to write). I am so excited about how many people are using “oral history” of all forms here, and am trying to set up interviews and create some kind of multimedia project as a final product (writing, video, photo etc.), and all along we will be having these amazing experiences sharing bodymapping with people and learning about memory and oral history through our own method of bodymapping. Continued next time…
2007-07-09 12:00:16 GMTComments: 0 |Permanent Link
Entry for May 28, 2007
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A Telling Collective Blog Information

We will be updating this blog on a regular basis as we embark on our Telling Collective initiative. You can reach us via email at atellingcollective@kukummi.org. If you would like to join our email list for regular updates on our whereabouts and experiences (that may or may not differ from this blog) send us an email and ask in the subject line to be added to our email list. We will update our address on the email list, NOT the blog, so if you would like to have our updated address you will need to ask to join our email list.

Our flight itinerary (for the final four months of the trip not necessarily meaning we will be in one specific country in East Africa) is as follows:
** Depart 10pm June 8th from Boston --- Arrive in Cape Town, South Africa at 5am on June 10th
** Depart 7:00am July 23rd from Cape Town, South Africa --- Arrive in Johannesburg, South Africa at 9:00am on July 23rd
** Depart 10:05am August 12 from Johannesburg, South Africa --- Arrive in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania at 2:35pm
** Depart 9:00am December 16 from Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania --- Arrive in Boston, USA 9:35pm December 16

Although we may respond slowly at times, any emails, letters, thoughts you want to send our way would always be *much* appreciated!!!
2007-05-28 19:04:21 GMTComments: 3 |Permanent Link
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