Tag Archives: Africa

Ethiopia: A Journey Within

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“Testing, awe-inspiring & heartbreaking – a journey you’ll never forget. You don’t explore Ethiopia for a relaxing getaway, you venture here to be moved.  And moved you shall be.” 

–Lonely Planet Guide to Ethiopia


And moved I was–completely changed, in fact.  Ethiopia is a place where everything that is intrinsically real and raw meets the road–where every conclusion you might have about life is truly challenged.

The chaos there is so intense, it leaves little room for the thoughts in your own head…but of course they come anyway, finding their way in through your pores and into your dreams.

All assumptions vanish quickly, while any previous sense of entitlement becomes a distant memory.  Materialistic impulses fly out the door, followed closely by everything else that seemed so important before.  Suddenly you feel naked, stripped of all you thought you knew.  Standing alone and perfectly still, your mind goes on spinning with the sights, sounds, and smells of each day.

Then, something else creeps in…gratitude?  Not for all of the “stuff” you have back home (although we in the western world have much of that to be grateful for–our opportunities for education, for example–but that’s another topic for another day).  No, it’s more of a humbling gratitude to just be here, in this land that seems even God him/herself has forgotten.

I found myself thankful to meet the people here who have so little in terms of power, prestige and possessions, yet what they have instead seems so much more valuable.  These are people who know how to be…how to value what’s real–in each other, without otherwise filling their days with mindless, ceaseless activity.

The children of Ethiopia are magical, good, pure…untainted.  They value education, as it is the means to their very survival.  Hanging on to my every word, I saw hope in their eyes–for a future that’s brighter.  I continue to be in awe over the fact that these kids do not yet seem to wear the worry of their parents on their faces–as if no one has had the heart to tell them that their lot in life will be a difficult one (and who could?).  Instead, they carry a joy with them that resonates in the very fibers of my being.  Words like, “mine” don’t seem to be known to them.  Simply put, they are a beautiful inspiration to me.  When I look in through those transfixing eyes, into their divine souls, I see a wonderful testament to the human spirit that I shall not soon forget.

I invite you to come be changed with me.  If not by plane, then come, read along as I journey into the soul of Africa–into Ethiopia…so maybe this land won’t be forgotten after all.


The Birth of a Cause

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Art Aid for TesfaIt’s 1998 and I’m sitting in Durbar Square Katmandu taking in all the wonderment around me. I see a little girl no more than 10 years old approaching me. Her big brown eyes shine as she fires off a variety of languages in an attempt to find the one I speak. I recognize a few, French, Spanish, English. I am humbled that I can’t identify more. I use my best travelers Spanish on her, but I am no match for this wise one…

She has gum to sell me to help with family finances, this is what she does instead of going to school. Forced by a world that isn’t fair… she learns languages from tourists. I pause and send a request to the universe that her personality and perseverance will serve her to the fullest someday. I leave feeling helpless and wonder what I could do, how can I help?

I was 24 and backpacking my way around the world. I could do that, and apparently my passport and a little ambition afforded me more opportunity’s in life than the sweet children I meet all over the developing world. I was learning so much from the people and ways of life I found outside my own boarders. I was gaining so much… how could I give back?

The years went on and my passport stamps added up. As did my love of art. Art changed my life, it has that power. What would happen if I could give children in the developing world exposure to the world of art… and if that art could help support  their education?

That what if… became a reality in 2007. I told anyone who would listen my dream to share art in the developing world. Someone knew someone in Ethiopia and I boarded a plane… founding Art Aid for Tesfa.

Art Aid for Tesfa
Tesfa