Category Archives: Travel

An Ethiopian Odyssey: The Final Days (Making Books)

Standard

eoiiblog-book-pic13

The rest of my days in Ethiopia found me in the capital city. I’m not a city girl; no matter the country, I love the countryside. Addis Ababa is a bustling, rapidly growing city. It reportedly has a population of 3,384,569, with a growth rate of 3.8 percent, but  both numbers are widely considered underrated, according to Wikipedia.

But it gives you an idea. The city is chaotic, but it has a certain energy and bustle that is charming. I catch glimpses of the mountains surrounding Addis in the distance and I find peace.

Today we are here for bookmaking, and bookmaking we shall do!

First is bookmaking day. My dear friend Jane Kurtz is a very accomplished children’s book  author who grew up here in Ethiopia. She is also the co-founder of Ethiopia Reads. She has a passion for literacy in Ethiopia. Her dream for an Ethiopian Odyssey II was to create simple early reading books for children in their own language. Their are over 80 languages in Ethiopia, but school is always taught in Amharic. Then by, grade 7, school is in English.

eoiiblog-book-pic8

What we have learned is millions of kids never get to read a book in their own spoken language, and studies show this makes learning Amharic and then English that much harder. Plus, doesn’t every early learner deserve books to read? We think so. And so we —  the Ethiopian Odyssey II team, working with Ethiopia Reads — schedule a day working with local children to illustrate and write books.

eoiiblog-book-pic11

eoiiblog-book-pic7

And so we did, all day long. We created. This is just the starting point for the bookmaking, we will have much art to do back in the States, but the ideas, the storylines, the starting points for illustration, has happened here in Ethiopia, on this day, with these kids, and that, my friends, is a bit of the extraordinary!

eoiiblog-book-pic4

In our next blog you will get to visit the artists’ studios … stay tuned. In the meantime, you can read more about Ethiopia Reads and An Ethiopian Odyssey by clicking here.

An Ethiopian Odyssey: Day 10

Standard
eoiiblog-day10-pic4

The whole team, together! An extraordinary group! Thank you to Vast Ethiopia Tours for providing such great drivers — and the best cook ever, Micky (far left).

Bump, bump, bump in the truck we go. It’s a two day drive back to the airport in Jimma. Stop one is Mizan, but this is a day that is about the journey: The magic all happened on the road.

The four painters all travel together, as we can then stop for an “art moment” spotted on the road anytime. Our motto is: “Art First.”

We start out a bit sad, having left our magical little paradise. But it’s not long before Mr. DJ (Yacob) puts on some tunes, and we call for a truck dance party. We have many of these along the way to keep our spirits and energy high. And at the end of the day, if this journey is not fun and filled with joy, we have done something wrong.

Our first stop is to buy pineapples off the side of the road. Or, actually, in the middle of the road. Always an adventure. Those pineapples turned out to be the juiciest, tastiest pineapples I’ve ever had!

eoiiblog-day10-pic6

How many pineapples? 11? How sweet and delicious they were!

Soon we are stopping at a little grass area where our fabulous cook, Micky, cooks us our last meal. It is delicious, but we have an audience. You’re never alone in Ethiopia.  Many children and teenagers carrying huge bundles of wood are passing by.

eoiiblog-day10-pic2

Firewood carriers. That should never be anyone’s reality — that’s it, that is all, never.

eoiiblog-day10-pic3

A much needed rest. Too young for so heavy a burden, in more ways than one.

The contrast of beauty and heartbreak are never far apart, and there is no part of me that wishes to romanticize poverty, something that photos can easily do. It’s a hard life, make no mistake. Yet, there is profound beauty, simplicity and joy — a balancing act, for sure.

eoiiblog-day10-pic5

We try to pick up these huge bundles the children are carrying. I cannot, and the men can barely pick them up. They are heavy, my friends, and life is not fair. Let us all do all we can to try to make it a bit more fair if we can.  And that, after all, is what this is all about. Education and literacy. Supporting Ethiopia Reads and the wonderful work they have been doing: four schools and a library in every region.

eoiiblog-day10-pic8

Portraits from the road.

eoiiblog-day10-pic7

We spend the night in Mizan, too tired to do more than laugh and tell stories over dinner — and connect. Yes, that kind of connect; we have wi-fi, and we laugh at the downside of having our faces buried in our phones. But we do, each of one of us, reconnect with our world, our loved ones, Facebook. And so it goes…

eoiiblog-day10-pic1

Yacob Bizuneh’s piece based on or addiction to technology seems to fit as we all sit around the table with our faces buried in our phones.