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Monthly Archives: April 2015

Shameless Self-Promotion

26 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by victoriaperpetua in Appalachian Trail, Cherokee National Forest, Great Smoky Mountains, Hiking, Hiking Tennessee, history, Nature, Tennessee State Parks, Waterfalls

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Hiking, Hiking Tennessee, Tennessee

HikingTennessee

I try to refrain from promoting my books too much on this blog, but it seems particularly apropos this time as I chronicled my adventures here while working on Hiking Tennessee from October of 2013 through August of 2014.

So, finally, Hiking Tennessee is available via numerous outlets (I’ll provide links at the end of this). First, a little about the book, itself, in the words of the back cover copy:

Hiking Tennessee is your complete guide to 83 of the most scenic day hikes in the Volunteer State. From the Woodland Trail in Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park to the Hidden Passage Trail in Pickett State Park to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, this handy guide will lead you to the best trails throughout the state. In this one-of-a-kind resource, you’ll find the following features:

  • Detailed descriptions complete with GPS coordinates for every hike in all three regions of Tennessee
  • Special points of interest, including Civil War-era and Native American historical sites; descriptions of the topography, flora, fauna, and climate; estimated hiking time and distance; and difficulty ratings for each trail
  • Phone numbers and websites, park hours and rules, and available facilities for the state’s most scenic hiking areas
  • Easy-to-read maps for every park and trail to help you navigate your hike and locate landmarks and other points of interest
  • A convenient trail finder that provides a summary of each trail’s features and available facilities

Hiking Tennessee brings to life the history, terrain, wildlife, and natural features of each area. The vivid descriptions of the foliage, animals, and well-known and local historical accounts of each area provide and invitation to explore and experience the trails yourself. Hiking Tennessee is your guide to enjoying the great outdoors!

You can get your own copy of Hiking Tennessee in a number of places and in numerous formats, including:

From the publisher, Human Kinetics

From Amazon

Or find it at GoodReads where you can enter to win a copy. The Giveaway ends April 30, so hurry!

You can also order it through your local bookstore.

 

 

I find you, Lord, in all Things and in all

19 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by victoriaperpetua in God, Nature, Poetry, Rainer Maria Rilke

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Rainer Maria Rilke

Sunrise in the Okefenokee

Sunrise in the Okefenokee

I find you, Lord, in all Things and in all
my fellow creatures, pulsing with your life;
as a tiny seed, you sleep in what is small
and in the vast you vastly yield yourself.

The wondrous game that power plays with Things
is to move in such submission through the world:
groping in roots and growing thick in trunks
and in treetops like a rising from the dead.

~~Rainer Maria Rilke

And the original, auf Deutsch:

Ich finde dich in allen diesen Dingen,
denen ich gut und wie ein Bruder bin;
als Samen sonnst du dich in den geringen
und in den großen giebst du groß dich hin.

Das ist das wundersame Spiel der Kräfte,
daß sie so dienend durch die Dinge gehn:
in Wurzeln wachsend, schwindend in die Schäfte
und in den Wipfeln wie ein Auferstehn.

Gihembe Today

12 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by victoriaperpetua in Gihembe, Refugees, Rwanda

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by Wendy Karr Johnson

by Wendy Karr Johnson

There are numerous ways to think of Gihembe Refugee Camp in Rwanda, but I found the most helpful for me is to think of it as a small town. It is a small town made up of more than 17,000 people squeezed into an area about the size of a pro football stadium.

Imagine the difficulties associated with that set up. My first thought, being an American, was that there must be absolutely no privacy. Every one would know what every one else is doing. I’ll leave that to your imagination . . .

Some facts and figures:

  • Of the 17,130 people in Gihembe as of March 2015, 14,798 were refugees and 2,332 were asylum seekers.
  • 9% are Congolese originating from Masisi, Rutshuru and Kalehe in the North and South Kivu Provinces (as well as the Katanga and Orientale Provinces) of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
  • As far as the refugees are concerned: 3,561 are girls between the ages of 0-17; 3,531 are boys in the same age range; there are 4,458 women age 18 and over; and 3,248 men in the same age range.
  • Those age divisions are helpful because anyone under the age of 18 was probably born in the camp. The remainder are survivors of the massacre at the Mudende Refugee Camp in 1997—a little more than half of the refugees in the camp.
  • The average family size in the camp is 5 people but it can vary from as little as 1 to as many as 14.
  • Only 50% of the refugees have a basic primary education, 15% have a secondary education; and very few have a university or post-university education.
  • 2,127 of the refugees are considered special needs cases, which will often get them resettled more quickly: 530 are considered women at risk, 418 are unaccompanied children or children that have been separated from family, 619 are single parents, and 560 have serious medical conditions.
  • The major cause of death in infants is respiratory infections mostly due to conditions in the camp, which can be cold and damp because of the elevation at which it is located.

Because more than 93% of the refugees surveyed said (emphatically) that they were not willing to return to the DRC because they not only fear persecution but there are no guarantees they would get their land back (many of the refugees were subsistence farmers), Rwanda and the UNHCR are targeting 30,000 refugees for resettlement by 2018. Most of these refugees will end up in the United States with some being taken in by Finland and Denmark.

Unfortunately, unless you are a priority case (one of the special needs refugees), it may take as long as three years to reach your new country. And, that time frame can be affected by a number of things including the birth of child, marriage, health issues and more.

Fortunately, things are happening in the meantime to help sustain the level of hope as well as improve the lives of the refugees.

by Wendy Karr Johnson

by Wendy Karr Johnson

Education

There are now education programs at Gihembe that cover primary education through the 6th level and secondary education through the 3rd level. Educating children in the camp will give them a head start once they reach their new homeland. In addition, nursery education was introduced to Gihembe in 2014.

Health and Nutrition

A health center was established to provide primary care to the refugees, and includes a maternity ward, laboratory, consultation rooms, a pharmacy and in-patient wards. There is also voluntary counseling and testing for HIV/AIDS. Raising awareness of HIV/AIDS, and particularly mother-to-child transmission has resulted in no children being born with HIV for more than two years. In 2014, 115 refugees were treated with anti-retroviral therapy. The camp’s nutrition center provided support to malnourished or vulnerable refugees, including 817 children between 6-23 months, 750 pregnant and lactating women, malnourished children under 5, and 26 refugees with chronic illness.

Empowerment and Self-Reliance

Where once food was distributed to refugees on a monthly basis, a cash and voucher system has now been implemented in which refugees can pay for food using cell phones they received as part of the program. They are given a monthly allowance and use mVisa on their phones to pay in order to make their own choices and diversify their diets. This also gives refugees a chance to shop in the local village where they get to know the local community.

by Wendy Karr Johnson

by Wendy Karr Johnson

Cooperative Farming Project

A group of 50 HIV-positive women have started a cooperative farming project in which they grow mushrooms and passion fruit both to supplement their diets as well as to help provide them with a source of income in addition to their monthly allowance. Since the beginning of the project, 12 have been resettled and thanks to technology they are able to keep in touch with these women. The project may supplement diet and income, but more importantly, it offers some empowerment and a community of support within the camp.

English as a Second Language (ESL)

Refugees at Gihembe who have been approved for the resettlement process can now take an ESL course if they meet the qualifications. They must be between 18 and 65 years of age with some literacy in their native language (in this case Kinyarwanda). They then are enrolled in the class for 3 hours a day for 20 days. The refugees have about a 75 percent retention rate (on average) once they finish the course. Their ESL teachers are fellow refugees who were trained as teachers before ending up at Gihembe. So far, 213 students have completed the ESL program, with another 41 currently enrolled for a total of 254. And while it is only a fraction of the total population that is being considered for US resettlement, learning some English greatly improves a refugee’s ability to succeed once they reach America.

Frank Logue used the Waterlogued app on these photos

 

Easter Wings

05 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by victoriaperpetua in Easter, Poetry

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angelpanorama[1]

Easter Wings

Lord, Who createdst man in wealth and store,
Though foolishly he lost the same,
Decaying more and more,
Till he became
Most poore:

With Thee
O let me rise,
As larks, harmoniously,
And sing this day Thy victories:
Then shall the fall further the flight in me.

My tender age in sorrow did beginne;
And still with sicknesses and shame
Thou didst so punish sinne,
That I became
Most thinne.

With Thee
Let me combine,
And feel this day Thy victorie;
For, if I imp my wing on Thine,
Affliction shall advance the flight in me.

~~George Herbert

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