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Togo: Togo Smiles!

Today I was handing out mattresses and I saw the most smiles ever.  By the time
the children got to me - the last station - and saw the colourful mattresses
they were receiving, the smiles were huge - and the 'Merci  beaucoups'
plentiful.  I couldn't believe how excited they were as I placed that mattress
on their heads.  There were a few disabled/blind children today and I had tears
in my eyes as they went by.  Unfortunately there was no time to take pictures as
I was so busy but certainly today was the best day so far for me.


Barb for 
Team Togo 2018
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Togo: A Sideways Day!

We had a normal start to the day and then it went sideways. As we were sitting down to breakfast, Messah, one of our OVPs, said that Laurent had called and said to delay our departure by half an hour. We were told that this was because the truck carrying the mattresses and bedkits was delayed on the road to Kpalime. We all thought that it was a mechanical issue, only to learn when we got to Yokele for the distribution that it was because the President was going to be using the main NNW road to Kpalime and that all heavy goods trucks were banned from using it.
 

As such, we used the time to entertain the children with music, singing, blowing bubbles, tossing a Frisbee back and forth with them, and even playing soccer. There was no doubt that the Togolese teems from the local area were not affected by the heat and humidity as much as much Ian Culbertson was when he was playing soccer with them.
 

The AED truck with our bedkits and mattresses finally arrived at the sites to cheers from the recipients and from the members of our Travelling Volunteers and the OVPs [Overseas Volunteer Partners]. We all pitched in again to unload the truck and bag the mattresses so that they could be presented to the children.
 

We had started taking pictures of the children while the unloading was going on and had the children stay in one of the classrooms form until the kits were ready to be handout. Once they were, the team was able to hand the kits out to the children with their broad smiles and grins. Despite the delay, it was another great distribution as can be seen in this team photo as the 5,000th bedkit was handed out.
 

On the way back to our residence in Lome, we stopped at the Centre de Formation de Haute Couture – Heritier Eternal, which the tailor shop where the skirts and short for the 6,000 bedkits were sewn. The owner and master sewer welcomed us and the apprentice students sang and danced traditional Togolese songs. It was great to see where the clothes were made, but even better to experience the culture.
 

It the evening, we hosted our OVP team partners at “Les Nuits des Orients” restaurant in Lome. The food was delicious and it gave us an opportunity to know our partners better. They have done so much work to make this set of distributions a success.

Team Togo 2018
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Togo: A Distribution Unlike The Others!

Our 9th distribution day was unlike any other! The truck bringing the bedkits to the distribution site broke down en route during the night. We delayed our departure two hours and were greeted at the site by  Le Club Fraternité Maman, a women’s club devoted to bettering life for women in Togo. They treated us with wonderful singing and dancing.  Once they finished, the children entertained us with rousing songs as well. 


Once we knew that the truck was repaired and on its way to the site, we set up for pictures. 

After the truck arrived,  more than 25 people helped to unload the knapsacks and mattresses, including some of the ladies from the women’s organization as well as older children from the distribution site. Assembly lines were spontaneously formed and everyone pitched in to get this distribution underway. 
 

 At the very moment that the last child received his bedkit, it started to rain. We were so thankful that we had finished in time. 

Today’s distribution showed us what can be accomplished when many people, sometimes complete strangers, give willingly to help reach a common goal. Today we had another memorable distribution and 500 children will have a better sleep tonight!


Ricki Miles
Team Togo 2018
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Togo: And Today On the Eight Day!

After our 8th distribution, this one in the central plateau region a few kilometres from one of the schools that we did a distribution at last year, we took the time on our way back to Lome to visit a “Support Education Togo” or SET school that our OVP helped build this past year in Bedjeme.


We did a distribution at the school in April 2017, and it only had three brick classrooms at that time, the rest being open air classrooms with a thatched roof. There were 400 students at the school then. Last July, Action Enfance et Developpement (AED) Togo and SET contracted to have three new classrooms built. The project was completed in only three (3) months. The new classrooms currently hold 180 students, but they hope to raise that number to 240 students in fall with the addition of another teacher. We talked with the two principals of the school and some of the teachers. They are very thankful for the new school building because it means so much for the villagers and their children in this very remote area of Togo.
  

We also saw some of last year’s bedkit recipients near the school. They were working in the fields helping their families with planting the new corn crops and yam crops – all being done by hand. The children were easily recognizable because their distinctive SCAW clothing that we gave them last year. We did not have the opportunity to see inside the mud and thatched homes that they live, but we will be visiting more recipients tomorrow as well as the tailor who makes the skirts and shorts for the children who receive a bedkit.


For the children,
Bill Sergeant
Team Togo 2018
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Togo: Day 7 - Part 2!

Team Togo 2018 finished its 7th distribution today in a small village well north of Lome. The Travelling Team and the OVP volunteers work very well together and the coordination between the two groups is fantastic. We have become the proverbial "well oiled machine". 

We made it back to Lome at 1515 hrs despite the torrential downpour that we went through at the half way point of our return journey. Thank goodness that it did not rain at the distribution or back in Lome. The rain was so heavy that the water pooled quickly and became streams and rivers along each side of the road in a matter of minutes. We had to slow right down as we travelled for safety's sake. Thank goodness the storm ceased just as quickly as it started. 


When we got back to Casa Blanca, our cook had prepared a typical Togolese supper for us. It consisted of mutton in a peanut sauce, chicken in a tomato sauce, Togolese spinach with hot green peppers, fufu (mashed yams) and corn puree. We also had fresh mangos and pineapple for dessert. It was quite the experience and we ate it with our fingers (right hand only). What a treat - an unexpected bonus for all of us on this trip. The picture does not do justice to the experience - one that we will never forget. 

Team Togo 2018
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Togo: A Day In The Life Of A SCAW Travelling Volunteer!

It is already the day for distribution 7 and so we are gathered in the van for a 7 am start, after having our usual breakfast of croissants and baguettes and delicious pineapple and mangoes. We sure will miss that when we return home. We have a long way to go and the earlier start helps to avoid the heavy traffic as we head out of Lome.

It is fascinating to watch the people - on foot, on motorcycles, and in cars and trucks, many loaded down with all kinds of things, from produce, to furniture, to goats on the roof.

We reach our destination - safely and in good time due to Mensah's excellent driving.


The site looks a little chaotic, but quickly the teachers organize the excited children, who are already dressed in their bright SCAW t-shirts. They wave and clap as we drive in and we have the setup down to a science now. Ian and Stuart get out the harmonicas and soon the crowd of children are singing and clapping with big smiles on their faces. We also get the bubbles and the balloons going while they wait for the distribution to start.

My job today is to interview 3 parents of children after they have received their bedkits. We ask them about their family life, their sleeping habits, and if they have any suggestions for items for future distributions.

Most of the children sleep on the ground with no mosquito nets and so they are excited to see the mosquito nets in the bedkits. Suggestions for things they would like to see include a hat, a container for water, and closed toe shoes. Suggestions for a bed or a bicycle get a big laugh. Most families walk to the distribution but today two came by motorcycle, one from 22 Km. away.


Things go quickly and we are back on the road shortly after noon to have lunch in the van - Bill's delicious avocado sandwiches.

We run into a torrential rainstorm on the way home but in Lome, it has not rained.

So we're home by 3:30 - for showers, to write reports and check the pictures.

Another successful day. Another 500 bedkits distributed and we are now up to 3500.

Only 2500 to go.

Barb Simpson
Team Togo 2018
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Togo: Journeys to the Damonou Distribution

The sun rises hot in Togo. We left early this morning for our distribution in Damonu 130km north of Lome. If felt a bit grumbly - a combination of our early rise and a somewhat unsettled stomach. But off we went. Two hours later we arrived at the distribution site and my petty concerns about my own circumstances quickly gave way to what I discovered of others. 
 

A team from our volunteer partner group had loaded 500 bedkits into their truck in Lome and departed at midnight - arriving in Damonu for 5:00 a.m. to ensure the site could be set up for our arrival. During the distribution, I interviewed an older man and woman who had left their mountain villages at 6:00 a.m. and walked 15km with their children over high terrain to arrive at the distribution site. Then they had to wait anywhere up to two hours until their children received their bedkits before they could turn around for the long walk home. 


Such is the value of the bedkits our donors generously provide that both local volunteer participants and recipients undertake such notable efforts to ensure they get to those who need them throughout Togo


Stuart 
Culbertson
Team Togo 2018
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Togo: The Football Story!

Today we're back out for another distribution, this time near the border with Benin. After another great breakfast from our cook Bill, we're packed in the van and watching in awe as our driver dexterously weaves between potholes, goats, and a small army of fearless motorcyclists. Driving here is a fine art.

We arrive at our distribution site and are met by a gathering of 500 Togolese schoolkids singing away. I am continually amazed by how ingrained music is in day-to-day life, and I breathe in as the voices of this 500-person gospel choir echoes through the air. 

Only on day three and we've already fell into a good rhythm to set up for the day, one that usually sees me and my dad engage in a harmonica duel in front of the kids. A few balloons, bubbles, and puppets later and we're ready to go.

I'm on backpack handout today, and I do my best to make eye contact with every child that comes my way. With the help of one of our local volunteers, I also start to learn some of the local language. Before long I'm able to say hello, how are you, and you're welcome as the kids pass by, and I am rewarded for making this small effort by watching so many surprised children breaking into giant grins.

As the distribution enters its last 100 kids, I feel the pull of the football game that is quickly unfolding at the nearby pitch. I undutifily abandon my post; our team here is phenomenally cohesive and my nearest teammate agrees to work double time while I vanish to partake in the national pastime.

The gathering of kids seem surprised as I join them in a game of what I can only describe as get the ball, turn, and shoot. Suddenly, as if in a West African version of Field of Dreams, local school kids begin to emerge out of the nearby woodlands in steady numbers. Before long there are about 100 kids running and laughing on the pitch. I feel so honoured to be able to join their game, and I feel the warmth of camaraderie with a group of kids who's lives are so different than my own. I also feel the warmth of the 37-degree sun on my pale Scottish skin, and I am soon imagining how the Scottish nationals would fare in a friendly in Togo. I teach the kids how to properly celebrate after a goal, which is, naturally, to run around the field with your arms out like the wings of an airplane. I remind myself to find out how to shout 'goal' in the local language, and as I net one myself I realize I'm likely the recipient of Canada's only international goal in this part of the world.

As we leave the distribution site I am elated that not only have we once again managed to disperse 500 bedkits to families in dire need, but I have some new football friends on the other side of the world. I get the feeling I won't ever forget this day.

Ian Culbertson

Team Togo 2018
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Togo: Our Day Off!

With the first 3,000 bedkits lovingly given to each deserving child who had been selected in the remote villages of southern Togo, the team took a much needed break. 

We went down to the ocean this morning and walked the beach for an hour. It was noticed that there were very few of the locals on the beautiful, white sand beach. The water is very warm, and even without large waves being present, there is still lots of power behind each wave, some going a long distance up the beach. 


There is the Conference of the First Ministers of West Africa here in the city this weekend. As such, many fo the streets in the city center near the parliament buildings are closed. Our driver managed to drive via a circuitous route to la Place d'Independence today for us to take some pictures. We were the only 'non-official vehicle' in that area and no one said anything to us. 


In the afternoon, Stuart and Ian Culbertson went to a local soccer match with Bill the Cook. It was quite the interesting time for them and they had many stories to tell and the passion that the Togolese have for their 'football'. It similar to the passion that the average Canadian has for hockey.  



Team Togo 2018
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Togo: Not Just Bedkits!

Below are pictures of the Principals of the schools who either hosted the distributions this week or the Principals of the schools whose children were selected to receive a bedkit. None of their schools has a First Aid kit at it. To provide this necessity to the schools, Doug MacDougald, put together 56 FA kits for the SCAW Travelling Volunteers to hand out to each one after the distributions. 



The Principals were very thankful for this kind act and assured the SCAW team that the First Aid kits would be put to good use in their schools. 



Bill Sergeant
Team Togo 2018
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Togo: Rain Brings Unexpected Joy!

It has taken the team some time to get used to the variable weather in Togo. We had a violent thunderstorm during the second evening that we were here. It knocked out the power in Lome, and toppled large trees in the southern part of the country where we were doing our distributions. Thank goodness, none of the trees blocked the roads that we were taking. 

The rain did play havoc with the distribution on Day 2, in that our OVPs had to bring up a second shipment of clothes for the children to wear during the distribution, since the original sets were wet from the driving rain that seeped into the storage area. The delay in the distribution allowed our team to entertain the children using the Harmonica that Stuart and Ian Culbertson brought along. Our OVPs also sang songs and did dances with the children, which were enjoyed by all present. 

The SCAW travelling team is thoroughly enjoying the interaction with the Togolese children. They were thrilled when they were shown what they would be receiving in the bedkit. The 500 children who were waiting to change into their new SCAW clothes cheered and screamed with excitement when each item was shown to them, especially once they know for certain that this was their gift from the SCAW donors. What a heart-warming memory for members of our team. 

For the Children,
Team Togo 2018
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Togo: Our Official Team Arrival Blog!

The Togo team has arrived in Lome!!! After a seven hour flight flight from Toronto to Brussels and an eight hour flight from Brussels to Lome, we were greeted with huge hugs by Overseas Volunteer Partners Laurent, Gladys and several others.

After a delicious dinner and a wonderful sleep, we set out Sunday morning to the supermarket for groceries and had a quick stop at the open air market for fruits and veggies. We wrapped up the day with a visit to the warehouse where the bedkits are being stored. It was a great sight to see all the mattresses and backpacks waiting for distribution to the children!

Warehouse filled with bedkits!


We start our first distribution tomorrow bright and early and are looking forward to seeing all the excited children with big smiles on their faces!!

Ricki Miles
Team Togo 2018
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Philippines: 7000 Bedkits Delivered!

The last day of the distribution and our team is a little on the quiet side. We’re already missing the happy, shy, very well behaved children. We’ve all been touched by getting to know some of the people and seeing where they live. This has been a real eye opener to understanding extreme poverty. We’ve been treated like royalty. Children touching their forehead with our hand “Thank you Po!” Interviewing mothers who try to stretch $3.00/day for feed five people. Meeting very caring, hard working teachers and principals, and enjoying the kidding around, dedication and organization of the Philippine SCAW team and all of their volunteers. These people desperately want SCAW to return. We want everyone receiving a picture of a child and their bedkit to realize that this has made a huge difference in this child’s life! 




  





7000 Bedkits!

Cheers from all of us here in The Philppines!! 
Pamela Horricks
Team Philippines 2018
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Togo: The Value of Flip Flops

It is our first distribution day in Kpalme some 100km north east of Lome. My job today was handing out 500 backpacks containing school supplies, mosquito nets and sundry clothing items to the children. Included in the backpacks are a simple pair of flip flop sandals. As most of the time I was hunched over, eyes fixed downwards to place the back packs upon the happy recipients, I was afforded a wonderful vantage point to observe what these flip flops would be replacing. In some cases worn out sandals. In others, mismatched shoes - in one case two mismatched left shoes and no rights. In some cases, oversized sandals; in others cramped undersized ones. In several cases, children had no shoes at all. One child's worn out sandals finally flipped their last flop and actually gave out at the photo shoot. Happily, a few minutes later, she had a new pair when she received her back pack. At the end of our day at the site, I encountered a young girl going through her backpack and clutching with glee a new bright pink pair of flip flops as if it were Christmas morning and she had just received what she had always wished for - Simple Flip Flops. Just a very small part of what our donors contribute to our recipients. And, as is often discovered,  something that we take more than for granted at home is something that is much cherished here - and very much needed as well.

Stuart for Team Togo 2018
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Togo: The Team Is Well

I have received an email from Team Togo today who have arrived safely and are working hard. They have finally been able to connect to the internet and have completed 4 distributions!

More blogs to come soon!

Laurie - Blog administrator
for Team Togo 2018
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Philippines: Our Almost Last Day!

Left our lovely hotel where all the people on the front desk came outside before we departed to line up and say goodbye...so thoughtful.





The first site we arrived at in the morning appeared totally deserted....do we have the right place??? Seems we were at the wrong side of the building but things were happening out back!! Our volunteers and some SCAW team members had an impromptu dance fest which drew huge smiles from all the onlookers! Great fun. After the distribution we were taken to an outdoor holiday house owned by one of the  Filipino volunteers and fed a wonderful lunch.




Our second site in the afternoon was in a beautiful church, large, bright and airy. Luckily we had the perfect set up inside because the heavens opened up and it POURED! The distribution carried on flawlessly with no diversions. We sure have been lucky but then our team all work well together so there wouldn't be too much that we can't work around. Our days are numbered now as we approach the last double distribution tomorrow of a 1000 kits.

  


'The best view comes after the hardest climb'


Sharon Andrews
Team Philippines 2018
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Philippines: Teamwork, Fun & Smiling Kids!

Today was the hottest day of the trip and with the help of many amazing teams and a whole lot of water, we made it through the day with smiles on our faces. In the morning we were treated to wonderful dance performances and songs. After a delicious lunch that was prepared for us by our gracious hosts and volunteers from Kiwanis, we were set for the afternoon. The streets were sizzling with excitement as we arrived to the afternoon distribution, and we enjoyed taking some time to meet and chat with the parents who were waiting for their little ones. It was another successful day of teamwork, fun, and smiling children.
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Melissa Baker
Team Philippines 2018
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Philippines: Always An Adventure!

We are “on the road again “ for a five hour or “two pit stop” trip to our next destination.After about an hour of driving through tropical lowlands covered in rice fields we take the “zig-zag” road over the mountain through a Philippine National Park to the China Sea. We we re greeted with a tropical rain storm as we drove south along the coast through various oceanfront towns and villages. Suddenly a “blow out tire” and because of the excellent driving skills of our driver all are safe and sound. We arrive at our destination about an hour late but the 400 bedkit distribution goes off without a hitch and there is another 400 happy children and parents.









P.S. Here is our dedicated driver changing our 'blow out tire'.



Team Philippines 2018
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