April 2023: Traveling, Realizing and Learning #468
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Traveling, Realizing and Learning
written by Aurelie
I just came back from Freetown, where I spent the most impressive week of my life. Really! While some of my colleagues continue to travel around Sierra Leone, I would like to use this newsletter to reflect on my trip and share all that I realized, learned and experienced.
My Week in Freetown
Friday
I learned what it means to be an artist in a city with no art university, no art galleries, no art museums, no art market. You get the point: it’s difficult. It amazed me all the more that they dedicate their lives to the arts no matter the hardship. This is also where Social Income comes in.
Saturday
Did you know that before bills, it was pieces of textiles that were used as currency here? I didn’t. But the day was special for another reason – I finally met our local staff and strong women Mariatu and Mabel. Yes, 100% women make Social Income possible in Sierra Leone!
Sunday
I learned how flexible you have to be as a business woman in Sierra Leone. Within a year you can easily change your job from roasting and selling peanuts to making bracelets and dying textiles.
Monday
I learned that solidarity goes a long way amongst recipients and their community. Some recipients in extreme poverty share more than half of their income with close ones who would not survive otherwise. It almost seemed that the less you have, the more you share, which made me doubt that my 1% is enough.
Tuesday
I learned that meetings can start with an uplifting performance of song. Another education: the stigma attached to epilepsy, how hard it is to live with the illness, and how easy it would be to live without seizures (if you can afford the medicine).
Wednesday
What is a fair selection process for recipients? It’s challenging to have a selection process that focuses on the neediest, but factors out tensions and favoritism. There is no one fits all solution – it needs constant adjustments and a close dialog with the local community.
Thursday
I learned that you can fit 30 people in a minibus, and motorbikes are made to transport 4 adults, 1 child and 2 water canisters, at least. Now that I am back in Switzerland I miss the hustle and bustle of the public transportation in Sierra Leone. On the next tram, I might just go up to two seated passengers and ask if I can sit in between them.
In short: social change can occur when people unite.
Our World in Data
Numbers that made us think and wonder:
Stat of the month
There are more phones than people in Sierra Leone.
Our World in News
Stories that made us think and wonder:
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