10/18/2009

Newspaper vendor

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Newspaper vendor

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Topic
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation

Newspapers are usually sold like this, close to the houses where people live or work :

CLICK for enlargement !

with at least the three daily papers lying side by side first thing in the morning (I took this picture a bit later, when one of them had already been sold out), sometimes also some of the weeklies or some magazines too.

When it rains, the newspaper vendor whips out a clear plastic sheet to cover them -- the papers are protected, and the customers can still see what is there.

Photo and Text: Isabelle Prondzynski


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Worldwide use

Newspaper seller, newspaper boy

Zeitungsverkäufer

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Things found on the way



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HAIKU



intermittent rain--
the newspaper vendor covers
and uncovers


Caleb David Mutua, Kenya


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the newspaper boy
walks with his head bowed
in the frosty dawn


source : Martin Lucas, September 2002


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MORE : newspaper boy haiku


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Related words

***** WKD : Reference


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7/25/2009

Khamsin wind

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Khamsin wind

***** Location: Egypt
***** Season: Topic
***** Category: Heaven


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Explanation

The Khamsin will be familiar to anyone who has spent time in Egypt or the neighbouring countries. The name means 'fifty' for the number of days it supposedly blows, and is actually an abbreviation for 'rih al-khamsin' (the wind of fifty (days)).

for fifty days
all nature lying low—
the khamsin wind


The Khamsin is signalled by a dramatic rise in temperature and is anecdotally associated with a general shortening of tempers. Indeed, under Ottoman law, the presence of the khamsin was considered a mitigating factor in murder trials.

awaiting the khamsin
to do her in:
the nagging wife


Norman Darlington
Kigo Hotline, July 2009



CLICK for more photos


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quote
Khamsin, khamseen, chamsin or hamsin (Egyptian Arabic: khamsīn, "fifty"), also known as khamaseen (Egyptian Arabic: khamāsīn, "fifties") refers to a dry, hot and dusty local wind blowing in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. Similar winds in the area are sirocco and simoom.

Khamsin can be triggered by depressions that move eastwards along the southern parts of the Mediterranean or along the North African coast from February to June.

In Egypt, khamsin usually arrives in April but occasionally occur in March and May, carrying great quantities of sand and dust from the deserts, with a speed up to 140 kilometers per hour, and a rise of temperatures as much as 20°C in two hours.It is believed to blow "at intervals for about 50 days",although it rarely occurs "more than once a week and last for just a few hours at a time."

An 19th-century account of khamsin in Egypt goes:
These winds, though they seldom cause the thermometer of Fahrenheit to rise above 95° in Lower Egypt, or in Upper Egypt 105°, are dreadfully oppressive, even to the natives. When the plague visits Egypt, it is generally in the spring; and the disease is most severe in the period of the khamáseen.

The same account relates that Muslims in Egypt "calculate the period of khamáseen ... to commence on the day immediately following the Coptic festival of Easter Sunday, and to terminate on the Day of Pentecost (or Whitsunday); and interval of forty-nine days."

During Napoleon's Egyptian Campaign, the French soldiers had a hard time with khamsin: when the storm appeared "as a blood-stint in the distant sky", the natives went to take cover, while the French "did not react until it was too late, then choked and fainted in the blinding, suffocating walls of dust." During the North African Campaign of the World War II, "allied and German troops were several times forced to halt in mid-battle because of sandstorms caused by khamsin ... Grains of sand whirled by the wind blinded the soldiers and created electrical disturbances that rendered compasses useless."
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



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Worldwide use



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Things found on the way



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HAIKU



khamseen -
echo of
deserted Ra


Camilla Sayf, khamseen winds

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Related words

***** WIND in various kigo


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7/16/2009

Sesbania Tree

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Sesbania Tree

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Topic
***** Category: Plant


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Explanation

Sesbania Tree
Sesbania sesban (L.) Merr.

CLICK For more photos

Common names
Egyptian pea; jayanti, janti, puri (Indonesia); katuray, katodai (Philippines); yay-tha-kyee, yethugyi (Myanmar); snao kook (Cambodia); sapao lom (Laos); sami, saphaolom (Thailand); dien-dien (Vietnam).

Shrub or short-lived tree up to 8 m tall. Stem up to 12 cm in diameter, usually pubescent, sometimes becoming glabrous. Leaves, including a short petiole, 2-18 cm long, pinnately compound; leaflets in 6-27 pairs, linear, oblong, up to 26 mm x 5 mm, glabrous or almost so above, sometimes pubescent beneath, often pilose at the margins; stipules narrowly triangular, up to 7 mm long, pubescent.

Uses/applications
S. sesban has a long history of use in India, primarily as a green manure and a source of cut and carry forage. Planted, or assisted to establish as a volunteer, as an improved fallow in maize fields in southern and east Africa because it improves crop yields and provides fuelwood. Can be intercropped with corn, beans, cotton and many other field crops. Harvested leaves make a rich compost. Its leaves are a good source of protein for cattle and sheep. Used as a grazed forage in sub-tropical Australia and Kenya. Has been used as a reclamation species of saline spoils in southern China.
It produces a light fuelwood suitable for cooking and charcoal production.
It has been used as a live support for black pepper, grapes, cucurbits and betel vine and as a shade tree for coffee and turmeric.

In Western Kenya, farmers allow it to grow in their maize fields because it improves crop yields and provides fuelwood.

It is used in the cuisine of Vietnam.

source : www.tropicalforages.info

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sesbania pods

sesbania pods
slowly turning brown--
cloudy sky


Partrick Wafula


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Worldwide use



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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


cold breezy morning ...
sesbanias gently swing
from side to side

dew gleaming
on sesbania leaves--
a dove coos


Patrick Wafula, Kenya


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from the Bamboochas, March 2010


evening breeze --
a butterfly flying around
a sesbania tree


Stephen Macharia



breezy evening --
a bird rests on a swinging
sesbania tree


Eric Mwange



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Related words

***** WKD : Trees and Haiku


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7/11/2009

Weaver bird

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Weaver bird, weaverbird

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Topic
***** Category: Animal


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Explanation

The Ploceidae, or Weavers, are small passerine birds related to the finches.

These are seed-eating birds with rounded conical bills, most of which breed in sub-Saharan Africa, with fewer species in tropical Asia and also in Australia. The weaver group is divided into the buffalo, sparrow, typical, and widow weavers. The males of many species are brightly coloured, usually in red or yellow and black, some species show variation in colour only in the breeding season.

CLICK for more photos Weaver birds, also known as weaver finches, get their name because of their elaborately woven nests (the most elaborate of any birds'), though some are notable for their selective parasitic nesting habits. The nests vary in size, shape, material used, and construction techniques from species to species. Materials used for building nests include fine leaf-fibers, grass, and twigs. Many species weave very fine nests using thin strands of leaf fiber, though some, like the buffalo-weavers, form massive untidy stick nests in their colonies, which may have spherical woven nests within.
The sparrow weavers of Africa build apartment-house nests, in which 100 to 300 pairs have separate flask-shaped chambers entered by tubes at the bottom. Most species weave nests that have narrow entrances, facing downward.

The weavers are gregarious birds which often breed colonially. The birds build their nests together for protection, often several to a branch. Usually the male birds weave the nests and use them as a form of display to lure prospective females. The weaver bird colonies may be found close to water bodies.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

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ngosos (a species of weaverbirds found in Eastern)

Reference : Weaver bird, Kenya
Weaaverbird, weaver birds


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Photo © Isabelle Prondzynski

. Thorn Tree .

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Worldwide use



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Things found on the way



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HAIKU



July wind --
weaver birds swing back and forth
on a millet stalk


Raymond Otieno



the weaverbird
returns to its nest --
nightfall


Christopher Kavita



morning sunshine --
a weaver-bird sings
in a virgin land


Barrack Elungata



drrizzly afternoon --
a weaver bird seeks shelter
in the hedge


Jacintah Wanza



chilly evening --
weaver birds singing
melodious songs


Kyalo Onesmus



into its nest
a weaver bird slips to hide --
short rainfall


Kelvin Mukoselo



noisy weaverbirds
build their nests on acacia trees --
men bend on farm


Prerna Dharap



weaver bird`s song--
a dog sheltering under
a bamboo tree


Dorothy Minayo



whispering leaves--
two weaver birds mating
on the acacia tree

green grass--
weaver birds struggling
to build a nest


Peter Kilunda


hot afternoon--
a weaver bird struggling
to catch its prey


Stephen Macharia



weaver bird --
how it pecks at this cabbage leaf
stuck in the mud!


Alex Mwanabisi


Kenya Saijiki Forum


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weavernest patrick

april rain...
the weaver builds a new nest
in the acacia tree


Photo and Haiku: Patrick Wafula



the weavers
repairing their old nests...
long rains


~Tevez

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dawn chorus--
the rhythmic whistles
of a weaver bird


Kevin Asava
Shiki Monthly Kukai December 2010


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sunset -- .
a baby weaver bird peeps
in an incomplete nest


Steven Macharia
April 2011


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silent chapel --
chirping weaver birds
break the silence


Milkah Wanjiku (Bamboocha, F3)

First prize at
. Carlile Kukai, 11 June 2011 .


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***** Bird Saijiki


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7/02/2009

Casuarina Tree

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Casuarina Tree

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Topic
***** Category: Plant


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Explanation

The casuarina tree is a lovely coniferous tree most at home on the Indian Ocean coast of Kenya. It is plentiful on the island of Lamu.
In Nairobi, it exists and grows, but is not plentiful.

Isabelle Prondzynski


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CLICK for more photos

Casuarina is a genus of 17 species in the family Casuarinaceae, native to Australasia, southeastern Asia, and islands of the western Pacific Ocean. It was once treated as the sole genus in the family, but has been split into three genera.

Commonly known as the she-oak, sheoak, ironwood, or beefwood, casuarinas are commonly grown in tropical and subtropical areas throughout the world.

C. cunninghamiana and C. equisetifolia grow in Kenya.

© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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Worldwide use

India

Casuarina trees are found in India too. Some years ago, while going by road to the Sun Temple of Konark, on the coast of Orissa in Eastern India, I found them growing in plenty by the coast. They presented a pleasant sight waving at the passers-by.

sunil uniyal, India

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Casuarina trees are seen along coasts of Goa and on the east coast besides Orissa as Sunil mentions in Bengal's Digha beach as well. These trees grow on the coastal regions and create a wonderful sound throughout.
I have seen these trees on the coasts of Mananjeri in Madagaskar and Mauritus, too. These are very beautiful.

Kumarendra Mallick, Hyderabad, India


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Things found on the way



The Casuarina Tree
a collection of short stories set in 1920s Malaya
by W. Somerset Maugham
that came out of travels he paid for by working for the British Secret Service as a spy.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



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HAIKU


cold breezy evening ...
the casuarina trees whistling
in the wind


Patrick Wafula, Kenya


The leaves of this tree are called needles and they whistle when it is windy or heavily breezy.


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quote
Visit Malaysia Year Haiku - Tanjung Rhu, Langkawi
(State of Kedah)

longing for another luminuous day
this evening tanjung rhu
the casuarina sighing throughout

the casuarina's tremulous sigh
tanjung rhu
every leaf sings the wistfulness in me


john tiong chunghoo
source : www.poemhunter.com


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Related words

***** Trees as haiku topics ... ... and kigo with trees


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Kanga wrapping cloth

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Kanga, kangas wrapping cloth, leso, lesso

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Topic
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation

The colour orange is very popular in Kenyan textiles, particularly among the Kikuyus and Maasais. Traditional wraparound cloths, called kanga, often use yellow and orange patters in the ever changing designs.



There is a famous book called "100 uses for a kanga" -- and there are at least that many, probably many more!

Text and photo : Isabelle Prondzynski


. More photos of kanga .



Similar cloths are the kikoi and the kitenge.

. . . . .

The words lesso and kanga or khanga have now been officially accepted as English words, and now they can be found in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary 8th Edition page 819.
Patrick Wafula

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History of Kanga

Kangas originated on the coast of East Africa in the mid 19th century. As the story goes, some stylish ladies in Zanzibar got the idea of buying printed kerchiefs in lengths of six, from the bolt of cotton cloth from which kerchiefs were usually cut off and sold singly. They then cut the six into two lengths of three, and sewed these together along one side to make 3-by-2 sheet; or bought different kinds of kerchiefs and sewed them back together to form very individualistic designs.

The new design was called "leso" after the kerchief squares that had originally been brought to Africa by Portuguese traders. The leso quickly became popular than the other kind of patterned cloth available. Before long, enterprising coastal shopkeepers sent away for special designs, printed like the six-together leso pieces, but as a single unit of cloth.

These early designs probably had a border and a pattern of white spots on a dark background. The buyers (or more likely, their menfolk !) quickly came to call these cloths "KANGA" after the noisy, sociable guinea-fowl with its elegant spotty plumage.

Early this century, Swahili sayings were added to kangas. Supposedly this fashion was started by a locally famous trader in Mombasa, Kaderdina Hajee Essak, also known as "Abdulla". His many kanga designs, formerly distinguished by the mark "K.H.E. - Mali ya Abdulla", often included a proverb. At first, the sayings, aphorisms or slogans were printed in Arabic script, later in Roman letters. Many of them have the added charm (or frustration!) of being obscure or ambiguous in their meaning. If you find a motto that you can't figure out, ask several different Swahili speakers. You will get an equal number of different explanations! Some typical kanga sayings are listed on the following page, for your edification and enjoyment.

source : www.glcom.com/hassan / Swahili language and culture



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Worldwide use



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HAIKU



cold July evening --
market women wrap kangas
round their necks

Patrick Wafula, Kenya, 2009


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quick nap-
she burns her kanga
on a jiko


joseph nzilili
September 2010


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Sunday afternoon-
she carries her child
in a leso


Sibiko Yamame


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cold breeze-
mother covers her child
with a khanga


Mercy Amunze
June 2012


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6/30/2009

Wood

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Wood

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Topic
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation

This includes many kinds of wood, also firewood.
also lumber, timber etc.


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CLICK for more photos

Kenyan wood articles

Kamba woodcarvers are famous for their intricate designs.
In Kenya, wood carving provides livelihoods for 60000 people.


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Worldwide use

Japan

mokuzai, kizai もくざい【木材】 wood
(as material for construction etc.)


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


The following haiku were written for the
Shiki Monthly Kukai, June 2009


late night --
a house girl wipes the stained
wooden table


~ Andrew Otinga


May rain --
swollen wood floats down
the flooded river

~ Hussein Haji


the walking stick
her only old-age companion...
my blind grandmother


~Patrick Wafula


wooden frame --
a beetle struggles
to find a dwelling place


~ Maurice Peacock


old father
on a wooden chair --
basking on the sun


~ Kisilu Peacock


two lovers chatting
on a wooden garden bench --
breezy sunset


~ Anne Wairimu


rainy afternoon --
village girls fetch wood
to light a fire


~ Dennis Ongaki


fire blaze --
wood engulfed in sparks
and protest


~ Aineah Peacock


cold night --
a watchman guarding the house
with a wooden club


~ Khadijah Rajab


whispering wind --
she burns wood on hearth stones
to keep warm


~ Beryl Achieng


mercilessly beating
a thief with bamboo sticks --
mob justice


~ Kelvin Wekesa

a dog barks
angrily and jumps
a wooden fence


~ Barrack Elung'ata


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smell of wood ...
the new chopping board
still dreaming


Gabi Greve, 2008



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Related words

***** Trees as haiku topics ... ... and kigo with trees


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12/29/2006

Waitinglist

Waitinglist for the Kenya Saijiki

Please add your entries as a comment!
I will pick them up from there.

Gabi Greve

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Words to be taken up



Groundnuts

heavy downpour --
grandma holds a stick as
she plants groundnuts

~ Duncan Omoto






Planting, March 2010


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12/27/2006

Japanese Culture Week 2008

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Japanese Culture Week 2008


The workshop was organised in order to promote Japanese culture among Kenyan children. The Japanese Culture and Information Department invited various Nairobi schools as follows :

St. Elizabeth Academy
Juja Preparatory School
Moi Educational Centre
Bellevue School
Serare School
Mountain View Academy
Riara Road Primary School
Makini School
NPC Academy
Juhudi Children Club


Altogether, ten primary schools (normal age range : 6 to 14 years old) attended the function.

The Bamboochas for their part attended as facilitators to their junior brother and sisters specifically as regards Introduction to Japanese Poetry -- Haiku. The following haijin (all Bamboochas) represented the Haiku Clubs of Nairobi :

Jedidah Nduku, James Njoka and Judith Muthengi (Form One)
Caren Cheptoo and Anne Wairimu (Form Two)
Martin Kamau (Form Three)
Raymond Otieno (Form Four)






They performed superbly well in all their presentations. They managed to inspire other children to write haiku and even invite them to their schools to teach them haiku! The haiku written by the ten schools have been sent to Wairua Sensei of the Japanese Cultural Centre for publishing on the website of the Embassy of Japan and in the Embassy Bulletin Magazine.


The following are the lecturers / facilitators who presented during the workshop :

Mr Kikuchi : Welcome
Mr Kimani: Juhudi Childrens Centre : Ice Breakers
Dr Jiro Nozaka : Origami
Mr Wairua : Video on Japanese Culture
Tamura Sensei : Karate
Mr Patrick Wafula : Japanese Poetry : Haiku
Mr Nakagome : Introduction to Japanese Language
Ms Onaka : Chinese Dance and Show
Dr Florence Munyiri : Kenyan Experience of Japanese Culture
Mr Gachie Kiruri : Kenyan Experience of Japan
Ms Irene : Children Folk Games



Programme for the week

The first day was one of the most exciting and memorable days in the lives of the members of the two-year-old Bahati Haiku Poetry Club (the “Bamboochas”). Following the invitation from the Japanese Embassy to attend their cultural week, the members were able to seize the opportunity with unsurpassed enthusiasm and attended the great culture exchange event which took place during the week of 25 February 2008.

Initially, I was the one who was invited to facilitate a haiku lesson, but after further discussion with the Embassy, I was allowed to bring along six haijin. So we deicided that each indivual should present a specific aspect of haiku poems. We had only 25 minutes at our disposal.

Raymond Otieno : Senryu (3min)
Jedidah Nduku : Kireji (3min)
James Njoka : The Structure of Haiku (3min)
Martin Kamau : Saijiki (3min)
Judith Muthengi : Saijiki (3min)
Caren Cheptoo : Haijin (3min)
Anne Wairimu : Kigo (3min)



After the haijin had presented, I took the opportunity -- about 10 minutes -- to lead the class through a haiku writing session. By the end of the haiku session, the children had written over 50 haiku poems, which we handed over to Kikuji san, the Director for the Information and Cultural Services. He said the best haiku will be published on the Embassy Website. The audience was a sizeable one comprising different ages and classes.

In each of the three haiku teaching sessions: (Monday, Wednesday and Friday), there was a different audience participating.





Text and photos © Patrick Wafula


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HAIKU



Haiku from the Bamboochas participating


February morning --
in Japanese Embassy
watching music video

February morning --
learning Matsuo Basho’s
haiku


February morning --
Patrick sensei teaching
haiku

February morning --
walking towards Upper Hiill
to the Japanese Embassy


how good it is here --
a girl dancing Japanese
song

juice on the table
ready to drink --
break

February morning --
Jedidah haijin reading
haiku


~ Jedidah Nduku


a frog jumping
into the stillness
of an ancient pond

deep in the stream
the big fish lies motionless
facing the current

the garter snake
goes in and out of the grass
at the same time


ice scattered
everywhere --
winter Shikansen

brown leaves
fallen on the bare ground --
autumn season


Monday morning
walking past the blooming flowers --
Japanese Embassy

a beautiful lady
performing the Japanese acrobat
Japanese Embassy

February sun --
sweat drips down
my forehead


~ James Njoka


February dry wind --
trees swing east and west
leaves scatter

February morning --
pupils in Japanese Embassy
writing haiku

~ Anne Wairimu



Bamboochas admiring the exhibition at the Japanese Cultural Centre


Haiku from the children attending the
Introduction to Haiku lessons


February femine --
lions hunting
for antelopes


~ Khadija Kivuvani (Makini School)


February morning --
fresh air from my window
birds whistle in the trees


~ Michelle Wangechi (Makini School)


January evening --
wiping sweat
how tiring


~ Jane Wambui (Makini Middle School)


February morning --
going into Japanese Embassy
walking towards the video room

~ Brenda Muthoni (Makini School 5Blue)


February morning --
in the Japanese Embassy
so much to learn


January morning --
a lot of dust in the air
I breathe in

August evening --
shivering in cold
no food to eat

January morning
the sun
glittering

~ Suzane Akinyi (Makini School)


November morning --
rainy day
dripping wet

January morning --
celebrating
New Year's Eve


~ Sveta Victoria (Makini School)


February sun --
I sweat and
loosen my tie


~ Joan Wateto


February heat --
in Mombasa
relaxing on the beach


~ Nicole Nduku (NPC Academy)


February morning --
birds whistle
from a tree


~ Stephani Joy (NPC Academy)


February morning --
I brush my shoes
but the dust keeps coming

~ Jude Sam Olang (NPC Academy)


February evening --
feeling the breeze
dry sweat on my forehead

~ Elizabeth Ndinda (NPC Academy)


February evening --
celebrating my birthday
the cool breeze

~ Said Salim (Makini School)


February evening --
celebrating my birthday
in a light dress


~ Diana Adhiambo (Makini School)


February morning --
watching a vulture eating
a dead animal

~ Tony Ochar (Makini School)


February evening --
waiting silently for
the dusty sunset


~ Valerie Wasilwa (Makini School)


February sun --
water flowing in the river
flowers blossom

~ Ashley Chebet (NPC Academy Nairobi)


February morning
at Japan Embassy --
learning my first haiku


~ author unknown


February famine --
dry leaves
no food


~ Sheila Mwende (NPC Academy)


February heat --
I loosen my tie
and rest under the tree


~ Sharleen Muoki (Makini School)


February morning --
leaves shedding
from a tree

~ Joshua Mwanga (Makini School)


February heat --
blazing sun
above my head


~ Marvel (Makini School)


February dust --
polluting the air
I breathe in


~ Joel Mutiso (Makini School)


February heat --
wiping sweat
from my face


~ Sandra Wekesa (Makini School)


February morning --
learning to count
in Japanese


~ Isah Ochieng (NPCA)


February morning --
learning numbers
in Japanese Embassy

~ Daniel Chege (NPCA)


February dust
landing in my
meat stew

~ David Ndambuki (NPCA)


February morning --
learning Japanese
language and culture

~ Allan Riunga (NPCA)


February dust --
moving in the air
as the bus drives away

~ Andrew Wanyoike (NPCA)


February morning --
clearing rubble from
post election fights

~ Daniel Ng'ang'a (NPCA)


February morning --
dusty shoes
being brushed


~ Japheth Mutie (NPCA)



Enjoying Bonsai trees




Enjoying temari balls and dolls


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. Japan Culture Week 2012 .


Bamboocha's Visit to the Japanese Embassy 2011

. Visit to the Embassy


source : Photos from Caleb



*****************************
Related words

***** The Haiku Clubs of Kenya since 2006

***** BAHATI Haiku Club, Nairobi


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12/12/2006

Arboretum Kukai

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Arboretum Kukai, 29 March 2008

Introduction

The fifth kukai of Kenya Saijiki was set for a mystery destination, unknown even by the organisers themselves until a few days before the event.

The day started with a lot of excitement, as the members of Kenya Saijiki gathered at Kayole Police Post, and the driver of the Jimcy School Bus worked his way through the traffic chaos of Nairobi. Haijin and bus met together a bit later than expected, the traffic chaos having won out. Bamboochas and Peacocks boarded in an orderly manner, one by one from each club, with friendly teasing and a feeling of joy at sharing this new adventure together. We were joined by some smiling members of the Cocks, out of their school uniforms now, and still strong haijin together. We all squeezed in as best we could for a while, until a willing matatu was hired to drive the overflow to the Arboretum.

.. Nairobi Arboretum ..
is a wonderful, historical place, where the trees of Kenya and East Africa have been planted in a beautiful park for our pleasure and education. Each tree is clearly labelled, with the Latin and English names of the tree, as well as the family of plants to which it belongs. The park is famous for its serenity, its peaceful and natural ambiance.

The Arboretum is sponsored by the charity FONA (Friends of Nairobi Arboretum), is kept beautifully clean and safe for groups, and is very popular with schools for outings and with the population of Nairobi for picnics and games.

When we arrived, the ground was still wet from the previous night’s heavy rains, and it took us a while to find a suitable location for our Kukai.

We organised ourselves around the trunk of a fallen tree, and set up our blackboard, which we had brought from Kayole.

Computer graduates

After the introduction by Patrick Wafula sensei, we turned to the awarding of computer certificates and prizes for the students who had persevered for the year and had passed the recent computing examinations.

It was a great joy to congratulate the following successful students on their well deserved certificates :

Hussein Haji (Peacock)
Margaret Ndunge (Peacock)
Malcolm Arnold (Peacock)
Winslause Yamame (Peacock)
Beatrice Awuor (Peacock)
Amarpreet Munayan (Peacock)
Peninah Mutheu (Peacock)



The computer graduates


The graduates were encouraged to practise their computing skills and start sending in their own haiku to Kenya Saijiki.

We agreed that the computer courses would be resumed, so that the new Form One members of both schools could learn the same skills, with an invitation extended also to those who may wish to repeat and gain their certificates.


Haiku on Ageing

The members of Kenya Saijiki had submitted a number of entries on the topic of AGEING to the Shiki Kukia, March 2008. Several of these had been awarded points by the voters, and we celebrated the haijin who had contributed their poems.


Njoroge and Beth, discussing haiku on ageing
Photo © David Kimani Mwangi


It was enjoyable to discuss the haiku first, without announcing the names of the authors. The following six haiku were taken up in an open discussion, and many haijin explained why they enjoyed the poems, and what in particular appealed to them. Here are the haiku, with the authors’ names included :

my grandfather --
using less and less
of his cane

~ Abraham Muuo

The discussion of this haiku made us see the grandfather either with a walking stick, or with a cane to punish the children... We had very good explanations as to why he was using each of these less and less... It just shows that a good haiku can give rise to various different pictures in the readers' minds!

my grandmother
looking at me closely --
the frown on her face


~ Anne Wairimu

sunny evening --
my grandmother talking
to herself


~ Solomon Kilelu

breezy evening --
my grandmother
trembles


~ Wandera David

my grandmother
brushing a toothless mouth--
ageing


~ Joseph Kilunda

my grandfather
holding onto my hand --
a slow walk

~ Onesmus

my grandfather
chewing soft vegetables --
his toothless mouth


~ John Mwangi

We also discussed several of the top prizewinners of the kukai, and appreciated the many different views of ageing that have been brought by writers from different countries. The poem that the haijin found most attractive, was :

face in the mirror
a map
of my life

~ Frances McCarthy

More on Ageing in Kenya

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Ginkoo

After a lunch of bread and milk, during which we relaxed in the pleasant atmosphere of the park and watched the children and the monkeys playing around us, we started into the ginkoo, the event that everyone had been looking forward to.

The idea was this :

We walk around and compose our haiku, writing the first two lines about what we have observed. The third line will, in each case, read :

"this makes me feel happy"
or
"this makes me feel sad"
or
"this makes me feel lonely".

We would then come back together and carry out an exercise on the first five prize-winning haiku, replacing the third line with an appropriate kigo.

The idea I wanted to teach, was that a good haiku expresses an emotion -- not by saying "it makes me feel happy / sad / lonely" etc, but by using an appropriate kigo.

But first, we set out to observe, to see and listen, and to compose haiku.


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Patrick Wafula wrote about the ginkoo as follows :

Shortly after Isabelle san had issued guidelines and instructions for the Ginkoo, a grasshopper daringly walked across the flipchart on which she had written the guidelines:

a grasshopper
walking across the flipchart --
Arboretum ginkoo





During the ginkoo among the green trees -- it is the start of the long rains here -- I was saddened by one tree near the ginkoo site which was dry and leafless. I walked to the huge trunk and found that termites were busy eating up its roots and building their nest at the base :

termites
eating into its roots --
the dead bunchananii


And then there was the walk and writing haiku among the trees :

the golden blooms
of the cassia tree --
first rains

rejuvenating
leaves of the bocare --
first rains

moss growing
on the bark of the pinus --
first rains

monkey playground --
brown carpet of pine
needles

It was the loveliest ginkoo ever; in the heart of nature's abundance of trees and sounds of monkeys, birds, insects and children.

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At the end of the Ginkoo, the haijin enjoyed a moment of interaction, telling each other about the participation of the Bamboochas in the Japanese Cultural Week, counting up to ten in Japanese, and having a song and dance session, while the jury selected the prize winners.


Song and dance, and Japanese!


Here they are :

1.
---
the Caledonian pine
deserted by its needles --
this makes me feel sad


~ Arnold Ambogo

2.
---
under a tree
two lovers seated --
makes me happy


~ Emily Wanga

3.
---
staring at the clouds
under a Polynesian tree --
I feel lonely


~ Catherine Maina

4.
---
kids in red
play and run around
looking happy


~ Beatrice Awuor

5.
---
down the hill
two monkeys scratching each other --
makes me happy

~ Anne Wairimu

6.
---
African wisteria
dry, leafless and bent --
it makes me feel sad

~ Margaret Nzilili

7.
---
cool breeze
coming from the shaking trees --
making me feel happy

~ Sebastian Kimeu

Photo © David Kimani Mwangi


8.
---
up and down
kids swing on a trunk --
happy mood


~ Loice Wangeci

9.
---
a troop of monkeys
climbing from tree to tree --
it makes me feel happy


~ Angeline Muthoki

10.
----
young grasshopper
stuck in the mud --
makes me sad

~ Joan Barasa



Haiku 11 to 20 (in no particular order)
-----------------------------------------------

happy afternoon
students watching flowering trees --
I feel happy

~ Abraham Mulwa

tree
with leafless branches --
making me feel sad


~ Khadija Rajab

cold breeze
under rathmannia tree --
I feel happy


~ Wandera David

under a tree
crawling of insects --
this makes me feel lonely


~ Gilbert Livuku

on a bunya bunya tree
black ants moving silently on a path --
makes me feel lonely


~ Hussein Haji

weeping banyan tree
reminds me of a weeping philosopher --
it makes me feel sad


~ Paul Alala

small monkeys
perching across the trees --
I feel happy


~ Onesmus Kyalo

araucariaceae tree
with ugly spread branches --
it makes me feel sad

~ Elphas Libusi

one legged grasshopper
strolling under the bignoniaceae tree --
it makes me feel sad


~ James Mbudi

cheeky monkeys
playing in a bunya pine --
make me feel excited


~ Duncan Omoto


Congratulations to all the prize winners!


Kokeshi doll, won by Emily Wanga


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Conclusion

Rain clouds threatened. The Arboretum sent word that they would be closing. Our bus driver was ready, and another matatu had been hired.

Very sadly and reluctantly, we packed up to leave and make our traffic-choked way home, without having concluded the lesson on feelings conveyed by kigo. This will be for another day.

Big thanks to the Patrons (particularly Patrick sensei and Madame Mercy), to Anthony Njoroge (the Master of Entertainment!), to David Kimani (without whom the computer graduates would not be able to communicate with each other), the other teachers and the adult haijin -- all of whom did so much to make it a great day! And the haijin themselves -- the star attractions! Already looking forward to the next kukai...

More photos of the event
© Isabelle Prondzynski and David Kimani Mwangi here :

ALBUM : Arboretum Kukai 29 March 2008


Text and photos
Isabelle Prondzynski (unless otherwise stated)



*****************************
Related words

***** More on Ageing in Kenya

***** The Haiku Clubs of Nairobi

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12/08/2006

BUTTERFLY Haiku Club

nnnnnnnnnnnn TOP nnnnnnnnnnnnn

The BUTTERFLY Haiku Club


..........VERY FIRST ADULT HAIKU CLUB IN KENYA...........!





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flooded land...
landslides in
Kiambu District

children enter
the house with muddy shoes...
mother mops all day

at Budalang'i,
houses submerged...
homeless families

climate change...
floods ravage
Kenya

queues of customers
with muddy shoes...
busy shoeshines

haiku imparting
knowledge to club members...
bravo kenyasaijiki


~ Joseph Lumwamu



demonstrators
carrying placards...
use condoms

tearful eyes..
houses demolished
leaving many homeless

piled at chief's camp...
wailing refugees
beat their breasts

(Mathare and Molo tribal Clashes)

strangers pretending
to be scouts...
cattle raiders


~ Duncan



floods sweep away
people and houses...
Red Cross workers

mud on shoe...
disgusted, I wipe
it on the grass

houses and property
destroyed by bulldozers...
houseless tenants

helicopters
flying a kite...
Keep the Promise

(World Aids Day)

~ Jasper Ratemo


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Related words

BAHATI Haiku Club, Kenya

FALCON Haiku Club, Kenya

OAKS Haiku Club, Kenya

PEACOCK Haiku Club, Kenya

SPIDER Haiku Club, Kenya

*****************************
THE KENYA SAIJIKI
Please send your contributions to
Gabi Greve / Isabelle Prondzynski
worldkigo .....

Back to the Worldkigo Index

11/14/2006

World AIDS Day

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World AIDS Day

***** Location: Kenya and worldwide
***** Season: Hot dry season (Kenya), Winter
***** Category: Observances


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Explanation

World AIDS Day takes place every year on 1 December.
From small and thoughtful beginnings, which I remember in Kenya over a decade ago, it has become a major event, not only in Africa, living so directly with AIDS, but also in the global North. The main purpose of World AIDS Day is to raise awareness and support, and increasingly to focus on specific issues around HIV and AIDS.

In order to express solidarity with AIDS patients, the red ribbon is worn by many supporters around the world. Here it is, taken from the Daily Nation on 2 December 2005.

In 2005, the focus was on the "3 by 5" programme -- three million AIDS sufferers to be supplied with anti retroviral drugs (ARVs) by the end of 2005.

In Kenya, World AIDS Day is taken very seriously by the government, and the newspapers devote significant column inches to it. There are many events attracting the general public, and the schools perform plays and sketches with AIDS as their subject. It is sadly amazing how great is the awareness of AIDS among young school children, who in another place and time would have been innocent about problems sexual.

Isabelle Prondzynski.

http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgindex.asp

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Students at Bahati Community Centre School in Kayole, Nairobi, present a skit on rape and AIDS


© Isabelle Prondzynski

One of the students from Bahati Community Centre writes :

My name is Alfrine Akoth Okuku. I was born in 1990. I did my K.C.P.E in 2004 and scored 268 out of 500. I joined Bahati Community Centre in 2005 and am in Form One North. We are five children in our family: four girls and one boy. Our parents died of HIV/AIDS and now we are orphans. My father died first then my mother followed. Currently, I am staying with my uncle in Soweto, but life is very hard for me; sometimes I have no place to sleep because we are too many in my uncle's house. Sometimes I go without food for a whole day.

When I look behind, there is no alternative because I don't have anybody to assist me pay school fees; I went to all my relatives but nobody agreed to take me to school. As for now, I do not know what to do because I do not have books to write in; when it reaches time for writing notes, I usually borrow from my friends. I only have one dress which I change everyday.

I would like to become a nurse so I can help the orphans, less fortunate and the neglected. I like assisting my friends whenever they are in need of learning. My hobbies are reading storybooks, making friends and cracking jokes.

http://bahatia.blogspot.com/

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War on Aids losing steam

Publication Date: 1 December 2005
Today, Kenyans and the rest of the world mark the World Aids Day. Unfortunately, only a small number of those infected, and a rapidly growing number of those directly affected, will see any significance in the ceremonies arranged to mark the day.

If it is true that Kenya has shown signs of a decline in HIV prevalence over the past few years, with adult infection rates decreasing from 10 per cent in the 1990s to seven per cent today, this should not be any reason for complacency.

And if it is true, as the National Aids Control Council (Nacc) says, that Kenya has managed to put 50,000 people under anti-retroviral treatment, which prolongs life and generally improves the health of the sufferers, this, too, should not lull us to sleep.

For this must be just a fraction of those infected and those needing medical assistance to cope. Most likely, three times as many die of Aids complications every year, and are quietly buried.

Going by the most recent statistics, more than 1.5 million Kenyans are living with Aids - out of 40.3 million worldwide - a huge number of them Aids orphans. What, then, is there to celebrate about?

If, as has been claimed, about 80,000 Kenyans were last year alone newly infected by HIV, it means that at least 7,000 Kenyans are "catching it" every month, leading to the conclusion that the message is still not quite sinking in.

Although HIV/Aids was declared a national disaster in Kenya before 2002, the campaign to drive the prevention message home has not been as vigorous as would have been expected.

Most of our leaders seem to have more important things to think about than preventing the death of thousands of young Kenyans every month. There should never be room for complacency on this most vexed of epidemics. Right now, the world's attention is riveted on bird flu, a disease that has killed only 68 people worldwide.

The danger is that Aids might be forgotten in the Western fascination with the novelty, which means that a few million more will be consigned to an early grave due to ignorance and neglect if we relent in the fight.

http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=24&newsid=62511

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In Kenya, 29 Anglican dioceses held a national week of prayers for people living with AIDS. Anglican Church of Kenya Provincial Secretary Bishop William Waqo said that in the past, the church had "joined the bandwagon of condemning people infected by AIDS," but now there is growing awareness of the need to preach hope amidst the pain and despair of the disease.

http://www.anglicanjournal.com/130/01/world01.html

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Members of the Administration Police carry a placard along Jomo Kenyatta Avenue during the World Aids day celebrations in Mombasa yesterday.


Photo by Gideon Maundu
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgindex.asp


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Kenya's HIV infection rate declines
Story by MUGO NJERU
Publication Date: 2 December 2005

New cases of HIV infection among Kenyans have fallen by four per cent in the past two years, fresh statistics show. Figures released during the World Aids Day celebrations yesterday show that the figures have dropped from 10 per cent in 2003 to 6.1 per cent this year. The statistics also show that more than 20 per cent of those infected are now aware of their status, having visited the voluntary counselling and testing centres countrywide.

The decrease in infection rate is attributed to behaviour change, including abstention from casual sex and the use of condoms.

Kenyans were urged not to waver in their behaviour change which could reverse the gains realised in the fight against the scourge.

The celebrations were held at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre and was presided over by Health permanent secretary Zachary Ogongo and the director of the National Aids Control Council, Dr Patrick Orege, among others.

The United Nations Development Programme representative, Mr Andre de la Porte, said the infection rate could be reduced further if the campaigns targeted young women aged between 15 and 24, who were the majority of those infected. "There is little evidence of progress in addressing the deep-rooted gender inequalities which fuel the epidemic," said Mr de la Porte, who spoke on behalf UNaids.

He said increased rape incidents, female genital mutilation and other sexual crimes had made women vulnerable. He asked the Government to use Aids funds efficiently.

http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=1&newsid=62598

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Nimechill

NAIROBI, Kenya, July 21, 2005

PSI/Kenya's "Nimechill" youth abstinence campaign, the first of its kind in the country, has became so popular that the phrase "chilling" has been incorporated into the language and culture. Reports also show that almost half of youth surveyed had been exposed to the campaign, and those exposed to the campaign's empowering messages were more likely to believe in their own ability to abstain than those who did not see the campaign.

The campaign seeks to delay teen sexual debut by changing social norms and reducing peer pressure, creating stigma regarding irresponsible, early sex among youth and making abstinence a "cool", smart and responsible choice.

A cartoon logo of a yellow hand giving a "V" or a "peace" sign is used to brand the campaign, and the phrase "Nimechill," (Swahili-English slang meaning "I have chilled" or "I am abstaining")
has become a powerful and instantly recognizable slogan. The logo was recognized by 85% of the target group (10- to 15-year-olds) and nearly two-thirds (64%) understood that "Nimechill" refers to abstinence from premarital sex, according to a national media evaluation survey conducted by PSI.



PSI/Kenya's "Nimechill" campaign seeks to delay teen sexual debut by changing social norms and reducing peer pressure



This poster is from a PSI/Kenya campaign encouraging youth to abstain from sex.
http://www.psi.org/

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VCT

Voluntary Counselling and Testing Centres (VCT) have sprung up all over Kenya and have made it much easier for Kenyans to seek advice about HIV and AIDS. Many sports and youth clubs expect members to have passed a HIV test before joining, and to repeat it at regular intervals, e.g. every six months. This, together with the very successful "Nimechill" campaign, is helping to reduce peer pressure to engage in adolescent sex, and is very welcome among community leaders.

The following web sites list VCT centres and explain how they work.

http://www.straightalk.or.ke/vct_centres.htm
http://www.youthaids.org/action/kenya.html
http://www.fhi.org/en/RH/Pubs/Network/v23_3/nt2333.htm


Isabelle Prondzynski

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Worldwide use

Lesotho

AIDS is an every day reality for the people of Lesotho. With adult prevalence rates at 29%, the Kingdom faces one of the greatest burdens of AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa.

In an effort to urgently address the growing epidemic in the country, on World AIDS Day 2005 His Majesty King Letsie III led his nation in a renewed commitment to halting and reversing the spread of AIDS in the country with the launch of a new plan to have every person in the country know their HIV status.



Photo credit: UNAIDS
http://www.unaids.org/

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United Kingdom

Welcome to World AIDS Day - the international day of action on HIV and AIDS which takes place every year on 1 December.

This year in the UK, World AIDS Day is about wearing the Red Ribbon, as a sign of support for people living with HIV and a symbol of hope for the future. We want you to Wise up and Wear it. If you would like to get hold of your own Red Ribbon you can find your nearest outlet here and you can also download a Virtual Red Ribbon from this site to wear on your website or in your email signature.

World AIDS Day is about people getting the facts about HIV and AIDS. It's a day for people to get involved and there are many ways in which you can do so. We have a listing of events where you can search to find the ones that suit you, or if you are organising an event, you can add details of your event. If you would like to get involved in other ways, we have some great ideas for you!

No matter how you decide to mark the day, you can help create a more AIDS Aware society in which everyone takes action, so please make sure you show off your Red Ribbon on 1 December! http://www.worldaidsday.org/default.asp

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Things found on the way


46664
"AIDS is no longer just a disease it is a human rights issue."
Nelson Mandela

46664 is Nelson Mandela's campaign to help raise Global awareness of AIDS/HIV. 46664 launched last Autumn by Mandela in London aims to highlight the emergency of AIDS/HIV through unique live events and music related initiatives.

46664 was the former President of South Africa's prison number when he was held in captivity for 18 years on Robben Island in Cape Town. Last November a huge Concert was held at Green Point Stadium in Cape Town which featured a galaxy of international music talent including Beyonce, Bono, Dave Stewart, Queen and Anastasia. This show was the first of many planned world wide events.
www.mediazone.com/channel/mandela/jsp/index.jsp

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HAIKU


Rosemary --
your absence still present
every day



AIDS test
even the good outcome
with trepidation

Isabelle Prondzynski, World AIDS Day 2005

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aids report. . .
her tears fall
on her baby in arms

torn between -
sick child, sick husband
aids report and god


Aids is a very big threat in India, but an awareness is definately building up amongst the people.
Still we have a long, long way to go.

Kala Ramesh, India

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Plump healthy strong man
I looked elsewhere for a while
Now frail and thin, AIDS


Galefetolwe Sethapo
http://www.thuto.org/english/courses/eng434/botshaiku.htm

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learning how deep
sexless love can be - holding hands
in the spring meadow


http://www.ahapoetry.com/twchp2.htm

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From my toes on up
I'm learning to survive this
HIV and AIDS

http://www.hivstopswithme.org/contributor_article.aspx?t=EN&l=home&c=stevan&id=110

.........................................



HIV / AIDS Awareness event in Kayole
17 May 2008

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happy happy bar--
drunkards take HIV test
when drinking beer


HIV rally--
jack declares his positive
status daytime


HIV virus--
she has lived positively
twenty years


Barrack Elungata
Kenya, June 2011


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Related words

*****

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11/05/2006

We Beat Festival

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"We Beat" Festival

***** Location: Trinidad & Tobago, Caribbean
***** Season: Wet or Rainy Season
***** Category: Observance


*****************************
Explanation

`we beat': a community festival of pulse and passions when the city of St James in Trinidad, pool their energies in a display of Art and Craft items, rhythms and movement in the indigenous genres of Calypso, Soca, Pan, Tassa. `we beat' spans nine evenings/nights during the last week of May and first week of June, since 2001.

A most apt phrase to describe this festival is `collective responsibility' for within the perimeter of the rhythmic, are the social responsibilies of health environment and rewards.

gillena cox

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... www.visittnt.com/ToDo/Events/webeat2003/


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Worldwide use


*****************************
Things found on the way


St. James is a suburb of Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. It is known as "the city that never sleeps".

`Smokey and Bunty' bar is a social tresure for the night life of St. James in Trinidad & Tobago.


LINKS:
http://www.webeat.org/
... www.thebackpacker.net/st.james_worldbars.htm


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HAIKU


the rains
at last
`we beat festival'


© gillena cox 2007

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Related words

***** Festivals, Communities, Art and Craft, Pan, Calypso, Soca. Tassa.

*****************************

Please send your contributions to
worldkigo .....

Back to the Worldkigo Index