6 Aug 2012

Back home again



Hello, friends of Mediterránea!
We
have just returned from another trip to Ethiopia, tough but necessary (as always).
The
projects are never easy and if they look like they are then we are either giving you the wrong impression of reality or it is being disguised.
Of course its not all negative and we will keep you informed of the good things and the not so good things.
Thank
you very much to Conchi, a great travelling companion and now a soulmate.
We
thought youd like to see this lovely photo which reflects what we achieved in spite of the difficulties.

Another Tribute


TRIBUTE TO A TEACHER

THIS TIME WE PAY TRIBUTE TO THE TEACHER!!
Sami is one of the teachers at Abugida and he goes there practically every weekend to help Phil and he’s now decorating the games room. What a great artist and hard worker he is!! He’s a delightful person too.
These are the “before” and “after” photos after his weekend’s work.



Tribute


TRIBUTE TO A VERY SPECIAL CARER

CONTINUING WITH OUR TRIBUTES AND RECOGNITION, WE WOULD LIKE TO PAY TRIBUTE TO A VERY SPECIAL CARER
All of the carers who look after the babies do a great job, however, this one is very special. She has a great deal of natural intelligence which enables her to learn at the speed of lightning, her head and her heart are in tune with each other, and we have seen with our own eyes how difficult she finds it to hand Dagem back to his mother.
So we are feeling very calm about the two new babies with cerebral palsy who will be starting soon. Although there will be an additional carer to look after them, we know that Nuriya will supervise and help her, but we can’t help remembering when Dagem first started and we were really nervous, in spite of the fact that he was being cared for by a nurse (in theory).
The photo speaks for itself.

Training Special Need's Teachers


NEWS FROM LAURA I AND CRISTINA

This morning we have received news from Laura I and Cristina who are doing some brilliant work. The letter below is proof that fighting against discrimination and integrating is always worthwhile in spite of the dificulties involved and, Abugida is always a shining example of this with its special needs children.  
The training of the special needs teachers at Akaki Mengist school has also been successful and everyone is very happy, teachers, children and their families. 
Fighting for disabled and special needs people in societies where they are not easily accepted is an extremely arduous but gratifying task. 
Jonas, the boy Laura mentions in her letter suffers from hemiparesis caused by cerebral palsy but he can walk and his hand is much better since he has been doing physio exercises for the last year. He is one of the children who graduated this year, he is on the right in the photo and is such a friendly and affectionate child.  
It’s over to Laura, her letter gives us goose pimples. It’s a lesson in life.
The photo shows Laura and Cristina with the special needs teachers at Akaki Mengist school.

"The training finished on Friday, it’s been fantastic, we alternated lots of theory with practice and audiovisuals so as to portray the facts as clearly as possible and we have really been able to see in practice that they were taking it all in and they even took to improvising and creating their own ways of doing a certain activity. The families and children with intellectual disabilities came on Thursday, they expressed their gratitude and were very moved to see their children doing other things in addition to their day to day activities. Both the families and teachers hope that things will continue like this and they would like a contact person to provide reassurance and peace of mind if they have any doubts or just somebody to turn to and share their experiences with. 
On Saturday morning the children at Abugida celebrated their graduation which was attended by families, volunteers and workers. There was no shortage of tears, smiles, performances, gifts and looks of appreciation and love.
Jonas got very emotional, today I’m going to make him a new SPLINT, his hand has stayed open but now he tends to turn it outwards from the wrist. We will need to buy him a more rigid boot to stop his foot from curving and to provide better support. Don’t you think that’s a great idea???
Wonderful to see Dagem’s mother at the ceremony. It’s beautiful seeing them together, they look so happy and they blended in with all the other families, there were no looks of pity or compassion or rejection from anybody – here, they were just like any other family. In Ethiopia, as in Spain, parents need to find out what is wrong with their child when they don’t see any change over a period of time. They can’t stop thinking that everything will change and will sort itself out. It is vital for them to know that their child has irreversible brain damage so that the mother and father can be realistic about their child’s condition, to come to terms with the fact that they can’t expect them to act the same as other children of their age, to realise that they will never be able to achieve certain skills, but to know that they will learn to do things, communicate and play in a different way. Dagem’s mother is glowing and looking beautiful and Dagem can smile every day, feeling safe, accepted and loved for the way he is, not for the way he was expected to be. The children from the nursery go and see him, greet him and give him kisses. He looks at them, smiles and listens to them. One of the new children with special needs, Tamrawit, has her bottom lip destroyed, she hears certain things but can hardly see. She responds well to sounds and games manipulation but something needs to be done about her lip, I have thought about trying a special kind of dummy or chew stick and I have asked Bea to bring with her a special one that I know. This is urgent because she is eating away her own lip through self-stimulation and being spastic" .





News from the Sebeta


NEWS FROM SEBETA SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND

We have received some news about the Messi room from Kefale, one of the 4 teachers in the Messi room and our contact person at Sebeta school:
MESSI ENTO FELIZ ROOM (“I FEEL HAPPY” ROOM)
SEBETA SPECIAL SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND
SEBETA (OROMIA)-ETHIOPIA
Kefale sends us a report with photos and informs us that the 37 children who do have vision are making progress in their literacy classes so they will be able to start regular school when they return to their home towns, and 60 children who are totally blind are attending the Messi room each day where they are stimulated through play and learning everyday activities.

The Messi opens in the afternoons and on Saturday mornings but is also being used by other students accompanied by their teachers who go in the mornings during their class time and take part in various activities which is a good thing.
There are 118 students taking part in the activites in the gym.
In the second photo you can see Kefale organising the students arriving at the Messi.