(Sorry no photos as yet, not stable enough internet at the moment!)
As I sit here in Toamasina, the coastal port on the east of Madagascar with it's clear blue skies and flat geography, England and the first world seem very very far away. I'm not sure why it feels so far away, it's not for the lack of any 'stuff', we can get the majority of 'stuff' that you can in the stores and restaurants here, even though there aren't any of the multinational food giants such as Walmart or McDonalds here on this island of 25 million people, which is a Godsend really, but it's just the fact that everything just seems to be that little bit harder.
Maybe it's the humidity that's getting to me, but it could be the traffic, or the pot holes, the slower way of life, known locally here as Mora Mora, not that that's a problem, I like living life at a slower pace or maybe the threat of the malaria carrying mosquitoes, or lack of a stable and fast internet connection, our only contact with 'the outside world'.
Don't get me wrong we aren't living in the middle of nowhere this is a 'city' of around 250,000, but with the limited infrastructure, access to electricity, water, decent schooling, etc for the majority of our neighbours then we might as well be.
its funny that even now after spending the majority of my last ten years away from England it's hard for my mind to remove itself from the first world that my body has become used to and from the 'normal' experiences that I had grown up with.
Since our last blog update we have mainly been working in Antananarivo (Tana) with the team of people whom we trained up with the Emerging Leaders 'Leadership for Life' programme when we were last in that crazy of capital cities.
The team there, mainly from a huge local church of 15,000, and known to us as 'Team Tana', have been using the programme to directly impact over 800 people in the last six months, with indirect impact on 16,000 people given the fact that most people share the leadership principles with another 20 people whom they either live or work with.
We had the opportunity to join six of our Team Tana guys as they got up early on a Saturday morning and travelled around two hours across the city on a local Taxi Be, more of those later, to share the last of the four modules to the ladies who are being cared for by the awesome charity, Iris Ministries in Tana.
We know Caroline, the founder of the Malagasy expression of the charity started by Heidi Baker in Mozambique, very well and it was great to meet up with the young lady in charge of social development, Melanie, again. Our team did a great job, sharing the principles in effective and understandable ways with the ladies, who were mainly illiterate, on what was the second two groups that they had already worked with.
The main reason for this latest visit to Madagascar is to introduce the new Emerging Leaders children's programme, called LEAD NOW, which has been piloted in both Kenya and England with amazing results. During our time here we will train up local teachers, around 130 from various schools in both Tana and here in Toamasina, who will then be delivering the LEAD NOW programme to the children they teach in government and private (don't even think of Eton or Harrow!) schools with a view to 'rolling it out' throughout this vast and needy nation.
We have had such favour during our time here in Madagascar, this is our fourth visit, after initially coming out for a short two week visit whilst we were still based in South Africa in 2014. Not only have we already met up with our European Union Diplomat friend for a couple of lovely evening meals, as well as being invited to a 'european film night' as his guest in Tana but we were also hosted for a meeting with the Minister of Education whom we also signed an agreement with allowing us to train up the teachers in the LEAD NOW programme.
This was all exciting stuff, I even had to make a speech in front of quite a crowd, including local and national reporters from both the written press and TV stations. All this bodes very well for our continued work here and by the end of this week we will have already shared the LEAD NOW training with over 50 teachers.
Next week we also have the opportunity to return to work in the local prison here in Toamasina, where we will not only be training up the prisoners but also the guards who were worked with last year in the adult programme, Leadership for Life. We are very excited to have the chance to invest in some of the 'lifers' who have been very keen to pass on the programme to those who they share their 'space' and lives with.
We have really enjoyed our time back here, meeting up with our Teams, sharing meals and other fun times with them. we have even had a bit more freedom to venture out into the streets around where we stay (in Tana). As is our desire we don't want to experience any place as 'just a tourist' and so we have been walking out to have local Malagasy coffee on the streets, buying our fruit and veg (which we have always done during our time in Toamasina but Tana it just seemed a little more challenging), taking our lives in our hands as we joined the throngs of people who travel by Taxi Be (think South African Taxi or large but very old minibuses in the UK with around 25 people sitting on one another in a vehicle that should only take 15 people, they place planks of wood between the seats as more and more people load up) and loving the fact that we have the opportunity to hail a local 'private' taxi which is an old style Renault, Citroen or Peugeot not seen on the streets of England since I was about 10, think Renault4 or Citroen2CV.
Time is once again rushing away with us, we are staying in Toamasina for another couple of weeks, once again hosted by our good friends Cho and Deborah, and then on to Tana for 10 days before flying back into the normality of England.
We do hope to be able to provide a further update with photos and stories of our next month with you before we leave and you can always be sure of a FaceBook or Instagram update in between times.
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