Skills
As I mentioned yesterday, I went to the thanksgiving for Kenbric Vocational Training Centre down the tarmac in Nguluni.

Benard had invited me to talk about the importance of technical skills from the perspective of my culture.
He also invited me to take my radio cassette recorder with me. He left me with his chinese sit-up-and-beg bike on wednesday night so I could carry the huge beast as his bike has a rack and mine has shock absorbers and gears but nothing as useful as a rack. So I set out on wednesday early afternoon with my stereo strapped to the rack of Ben’s bike with inner-tube rubber, while the bike itself constantly tried to pitch me into the ditch by the side of the road. All this wearing smart trousers and shirt with a beautiful silk tie (50 bob from Tala = about 30p). When I arrived my back was wet with perspiration, I was late and they were still setting up the tent.
The event was supposed to start at 12.30 and end with us all having lunch. It became clear at about 4.30pm that I was going to be the **last** of the dozen or so special guest speakers. Katie says that kenyans like to listen to their own voices. I think there was a certain amount of one-upmanship going on. Those who spoke later seemed to think they were more important (and I, of course, was the most important of all) and therefore tey needed to speak for longer than their colleagues who went first.
“Bugger this”, I thought.
When it was my turn to speak I stood up and placed three clean, yellow tennis balls on the tablecloth of the tables that we invited guests were using to protect our nether regions from the audience of students, parents and guardians. I started talking properly, standing still, saying that I expected my friend Benard had invited me to speak about skills because he knew I am familiar with the education process. I mentioned that despite being almost 40 I was still at university just before I came to Kenya, and that next week I would begin training with my Kenyan colleagues in the CISCO programme. This was calculated to lull them into a false sense of security: believing that I was a crusty academic who was goint to deliver yet another dull heap of blather from the safety of the table-cloth zone.
So then I set out to the back of the tent where the students were sitting. The students sit at the back, then their parents and guardians, then the special people at the front, beyond the tablecloths.

I headed for the motor-vehicle mechanics students and asked them if they knew how to tighten bolts. I told them I wanted to talk about skills I never acquired and I lay down on the benches between the students pretending to be tightening some nut under a car, and twisting off the thread while my father shouted protests.
Next I told the carpentry and joinery trainees about how unsuccessful I had been at sawing wood. I mimed vigorous sawing while my father shouted remonstrations about the use of his tools.
Next it was the time of the dressmaking and tailoring trainees. I told them how I had run to my mother when my father continued to shout at me and tried to sew up a pair of trousers. I mimed operating a hand-crank sewing machine, complete with lavish soud effects which made the ladies giggle. Then I held up two hands, representing the sewn cloth, and let one fall slowly from the other while making a swanee whistle noise to show that I had been unsuccessful. Then I told them that when we looked for the bobbin inside the machine it seemed to be surrounded by a bird’s nest of thread.
Benard was valiently trying to translate all this into Kikamba. I gave him talking time by silently continuing my mimes. When he caught up, I walked back to the front and took the balls from the table.
“Here is a skill I have acquired”, I said, and proceeded to do a three-ball cascade*. This caused a murmour of approval, so I threw in a few tricks. The I called (in Kikamba, I’m so proud) the young guy who was in charge of the stereo. I summoned him to the front and handed him the balls, gesturing that he shoudl try and juggle. He did his best and when he realised that his mum (or guardian — it has to be said that many of these young peopel have lost one or both parents to AIDS or other blights of the continent) was laughing along with everyone else, he went for it full tilt and sent yellow spheres in all directions, bombarding the crowd**.
* How sad that I had to use this link for 3-ball cascade, I used to have my own animated juggler and, do you know, I think that animated .gif is lost forever!
I made the point that its not possible to just pick up three balls and juggle but that it takes practise. I demonstated practising with one and then two balls and invited the young DJ to try with one, which he did successfully, of course, and everyone applauded!
My final point was that acquiring skills is a lifelong process and that its no use giving up and crying when you break a bolt or fill a sewing machine with thread, that we continue to learn skills when we’re 40, 60 or 80 years old and that it never gets any easier.
Ben was so busy translating this, and from his tone of voice, I’d say he really appreciated th message, that by the time he’d finished, I’d sat down behind the tablecloths again. When he stopped talking and looked round for me I applauded him as if it had been his own speech (which, to a large extent, it had) and the crowd clearly got the joke and joined in clapping for him.
At last it was time for food.

* * Now it has to be said that I also had a go at bombardment. There was a guy at the event with great ’70s sideburns. He was acting as master of ceremonies and, apparently, he was the chairman of the school committee. I lobbed three balls in his direction when I was demonstrating failure, and one of them bounced on his head. He was cool but, as Ben said, without him we might have eaten at a reasonable time. At the end of my talk he lead the crowd in a sort of ritualised applause which involved
-
Everyone rubbing their hands together
A shout (I don’t know what he said, possibly “Wanker!”) followed by a tripple clacp: clapclapclap
Another, more urgent shout followed by another, louder tripple-clap: CLAPCLAPCLAP!
A final shout and everyone did a kind-of sprinkling-mark-with fairy dust gesture (I should be so lucky!) the kind of movement I used to use back in the UK to let the driver of the next car behind me at the traffic lights know that he had left his indicators on.
Apropos of nothing, this bus was passing while I was giving my speech and I found it lurking in the corner of the first photo on this page (which I had to crop and otherwise process with the GIMP to account for the lousy lighting in the tent with the sun scorching the ground outside) .

Raj Says:
I take it you did not have to bring the "semi-portable" power source (the car battery) as well - I suppose you could have hung the radio from one handlebar and the battery from the other … but steering might be difficult.
PS. you look very dapper in that getup - all you need is a straw boater & a cane and you could quite easily be one of the baddies in a James Bond flick !
So what did you do ?
April 1st, 2005 at 1:39 pmChris Mungbean Says:
Yeah, you look like one of Kraftwerk circa 1983
So what happened after "Bugger this"…? Did you play them some MP3s?
April 1st, 2005 at 2:40 pmMark Says:
Yeah sorry guys, I was only half-way through writing this and uploading the photos when the students came in and started their lunch-time browsing. That means the net becomies virtually unusable as each of them opens twenty windows pointing at "Love on the net" and "christian singles" etc. So I left it as workin progress and you happened upon it.
The lady next to me, a secretarial student, was writing a full description of herself to attract a partner. It was sadly dull. I wasn’t inspired. Sometimes this place seems like a kind of prison and the girls’ only escape is the thrill of finding romance on that Internet.
April 1st, 2005 at 3:27 pmLydia Says:
WOW! What a sexy photo! You look FABULOUS!!! Very impressed by your presentation - really highlights what a great teacher you are. I’m up early for a Saturday - can’t sleep - it really does feel odd that the Pope is dying, what will happen next for us Catholics who aren’t "mainstream" faith? There is so much on websites and newspapers that is incredibly vitriolically anti-Catholic, I’ve had so many conversations recently with other people who seem to feel it is fine to interrogate me (sometimes with quite open hostility probably because I’m not "mainstream" Catholic) for wanting to stay within the church and to tell me how they feel about the Pope and Catholicsm that it has begun to feel that England is a place where being Catholic is outlawed - I dont think anyone’s going to burn me at stake yet but I certainly feel like a weird person (what else is new?). Right now I’m casting my mind back to when I was 7 and my father was explaining the election of a new pope in much the same way that I’m explaining to my 8 yr old and 6 yr old now and I remember how this dynamic Pope John Paul ll was with his fluency in many languages and eagerness to speak to ALL of the Catholics around the globe. Perhaps that’s where the lack of understanding comes in - this is not just a Western church, it’s a global one; it’s not just looking at Western issues but at global ones. And dont give me all that shit about condoms - it’s overly simplistic, I’ve heard it before and condoms on their own aren’t going to help in many parts of the world. I hope that the Pope is dying with people who care about him beside him and I hope that Catholics are allowed the space to get used to the world without him. Ooops I’ve used this space to rant a bit. Sorry Mark, I hope you understand.
April 2nd, 2005 at 8:31 amMark Says:
You’re welcome to rant here. If I can, so can my friends. Adverts for on-line casinos and porn sites are not welcome, but good firends talking about the issues in their minds are welcome here.
I dont know what to say. I found out about the pope about half an hour ago when Sister Pauline was on her way to a vigl. I didn’t know what to say. If its his time its his time and off he’ll to trot to heaven or the grave or whatever and I will not know. I hope the guy dies peacefully. What more can I say?
April 2nd, 2005 at 12:00 pmchristine Says:
Once again Mark, fabulous story teller you are. Hadithi hadithi indeed. And, my, you do look very James Bond. Shelly’s Paul ought to watch his back!
Just a word to Lydia. As an admitted cynic and critic of organized religion (and growing more cynical each day in Kenya), I want to thank you for your rant! And I apologize for the unfriendly and unfair interrogations by those of us who are intolerant to the beliefs of others. I have no idea what the loss of the Pope could mean to you. All the same, I am sorry for your loss. Wishing you the space, peace and grace you need at this time, Christine.
April 2nd, 2005 at 1:28 pmTyg Says:
*hugs*
your entries make me SMILE with a big huge grin like THIS
April 2nd, 2005 at 3:17 pmLydia Says:
Thank you for your acceptance of my ranting. There are a lot of thoughts and emotions running around inside my head this morning including relief that the media appear to have respected those of us who need space to accept that John Paul II is dead instead of rushing in to take his ideologies apart.
April 3rd, 2005 at 1:10 pm