GO CANUCKS GO
Friday, June 17, 2011
I'm From Vancouver and I'm Embarrassed
Here I am in Africa where people are protesting over corruption and oppression, and at home in Vancouver they riot over a hockey game. On Wednesday night I wanted so badly to be at home watching the Stanley Cup finals with all the other Canucks fans but by Thursday morning I was happy to say I was nowhere near that city. It was the weirdest feeling to be sitting in my guesthouse in Africa in the quiet of the early morning, watching the coverage of the riots and feeling like I was safer here than I would be at home. Because if I was at home I am sure I would have been downtown Vancouver that night, trying to escape what looked like a war zone in a politically volatile country. I never thought it could happen, but right now I am ashamed and embarrassed to say I am from Vancouver.But I also have hope that the world will see the cleanup efforts by the people of Vancouver, and realize that senseless violence and destruction are not what our city and our hockey fans are all about. The people that were there by 7am Thursday morning in their Canucks jerseys cleaning up the mess of the night before are the real fans and the real face of Vancouver. Thank you to those people and thank you to those that are working to identify the criminals that attempted to destroy our beautiful city. I'm proud of where I'm from and normally I want to shout it to the world. I just hope that the next time I tell someone I'm from Vancouver they don't immediately associate me with the ignorant acts that took place that night over something as stupid as a hockey game. I hope they think of our great hockey team and of the beauty of Vancouver and BC. It really is the best place on Earth. Please don't let this change that.
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Under the Same Sun
Recently I had a meeting at Under the Same Sun (UTSS), a local NGO that aims to improve the lives of persons with albinism (PWAs) in Tanzania through advocacy and education. Albinism is a genetically inherited condition that affects people all over the world. In Europe and North America it affects approximately 1 in 20,000 people, while in Tanzania and the rest of East Africa albinism is much more prevalent, affecting around 1 in 2000 people. I’ve only ever seen (or noticed) a couple people with albinism in Canada, while in my one month in Tanzania I’ve already seen quite a few. The effects of albinism include a lack of pigmentation in the hair, skin, and eyes. This leaves persons with albinism more vulnerable to sun exposure and other bright light, and they have a much higher risk of skin cancer and impaired vision or blindness. The sores and scars they get from sun burns and skin cancer can look like a contagious disease to people who don’t know any better, so PWAs are often avoided, mocked, and bullied. Another serious problem in Tanzania is widespread social discrimination of PWAs because of powerful beliefs, including the belief that raping an albino woman will cure AIDS and the belief of many people that the body parts and organs of PWA’s have magical properties that can help people obtain wealth and success. PWA’s are often killed for their body parts which are then used in potions and spells by witch doctors. This is a problem that has not been majorly publicized, as there is a belief that PWAs in Tanzania “disappear”, they don’t die, and therefore deaths are not often reported.
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Some interns and I with the staff of UTSS |
Read the article by Vicky Ntetema that first brought attention to the murders of persons with albinism in Tanzania here.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi1Vpmf49opA51kCL2mfZFhoPb6zhPZNJMuwNIDEGIW8uch_vvuxmTjQbP2tRKvENxPNQzT3s9I_P4WaR79OsVhKk5tTo5ITlQ8BgDiVSx1hqfi9qo2S2E0hCeFEf_kc_2diGu3l1pmYcoA/s400/165339_183910551629825_183870941633786_526464_2594898_n.jpg)
The majority of PWAs are classified as legally blind, and this makes excelling in school and the workplace extremely difficult. Glasses, magnifiers, and special vision sensitive computer equipment are in low supply in Tanzania. Students often do poorly in school simply because they can’t see what they are reading. A lot of them fail the standardized grade 7 exam because the font size on the test is too small, and they end up dropping out of school. Without an education PWAs are often discriminated against in the workplace and have difficulty holding down jobs because of their impaired vision and inability to work in the sun. Once teachers are educated on the condition they can make provisions for these students by letting them sit closer to the blackboard, giving them more time on exams, and increasing the font size on class handouts. Parents also need to be educated on the condition. Many parents don’t bother sending children with albinism to school, because they don’t see the point. Sending a child to school is seen as an investment, and if a parent doesn’t expect their child to excel, or even live past the age of 30 (the average life expectancy of PWAs in Tanzania), why spend what little money they have on them? To combat this problem, UTSS is currently sponsoring 318 PWAs to go to school through their Education Scholarship Fund, in levels ranging from primary school to PhD programs. Students chosen for these scholarships are generally from rural, more vulnerable areas or they have already been attacked or abandoned. The post secondary sponsorships are particularly important, as very few PWAs pursue higher education. The hope is to have a high output of educated PWAs in Tanzania, so that they can advocate for and defend themselves.
Persons with albinism have a lack of melanin – the pigment that protects skin from ultraviolet light - putting them at an extremely high risk for skin cancer. Students sponsored by UTSS are taught how to protect against the sun’s harmful rays and are provided with items essential to their health which may be unavailable in rural areas such as high SPF sunscreen, long-sleeved shirts, trousers, and wide-brimmed hats. They are also provided with health education and medical treatment such as eye exams, skin care, and cancer treatment should the need arise. With adequate protection from the sun and access to medical treatment, persons with albinism in Tanzania should live as long as any ordinary person, as they do in other parts of the world.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrEvIbMg8GfnNR5e3ytrY9-ERGOKsf1wvogxTOV3Dfb9vCO_J8GLFxaZ0ZnQxJ6whHDl9m-lcmdgl3Y64ToV_Fz7cefC5jx5mu9cs5zgHms9yUePqAtZnniI7N_jO5zEUM8HFwdyg2___c/s320/Pale-Persecuted-Albinos-Hunted-Terrorized-Tanzania.jpg)
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The problems facing PWAs are much more widespread than just Tanzania. One witch doctor has said there is a powerful network of people involved in the murders of PWAs and the export of body parts all across East Africa, including police officers and politicians. Murders of persons with albinism have also been reported in Kenya, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Swaziland, South Africa, Guinea, and Nigeria, and have surely gone on unreported all over Africa. I had no idea that persons with albinism in Africa faced such hardships, as I’m sure most of the world has no idea. More people like Vicky Ntetema, Peter Ash, and the staff of Under the Same Sun need to take the risks and publicize this issue, or innocent men, women, and children are going to continue being murdered or mutilated simply because they were born without pigment. The rest of the world needs to hear about the heads of infants with albinism being transported across borders and the fingers of PWAs being worn on necklaces as good luck charms. The world needs to wake up to this tragedy and something needs to be done.
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