Welcome to my first official blog entry! As you can imagine I’m very excited and a bit nervous at the same time about my trip to Afghanistan. I just hope that I’m able to do a good job and support schooling for young girls who haven’t really had a chance to go to school until recently. Basic literacy in particular is critical if we really want full societal and civic participation of women in the future – hence, my mission to start with younger girls now.
An Oruj Student learns to read.
My immediate concern right now is just getting logistics in order. Visa – check. Plane tickets – check. Dari lessons – um, anyone out there have any tips on this? It’s been crazy doing all of this in between finals, recent family matters that have come up, moving out, couch-surfing for the rest of May, and fundraising. But I’m really looking forward to being involved in women’s rights as well as my first trip to a non-Pacific Rim country. Most of my experience has been in east/Southeast Asia or with east/Southeast Asian communities in the States, so this will be a new challenge. Approaching education from both a human rights and international development perspective will be something new for me as well.
I definitely need to profusely thank all the people who donated and made this experience possible. You guys were GENEROUS and averaged over $100 per donor – and even those of you who gave smaller amounts were willing to do so in less-than-ideal circumstances (i.e. those of you who are students, still job-searching, or just had a baby). You were so generous it made me feel guilty and put my stingy ways to shame! I also want to thank the two people who didn’t donate money directly but donated thousands upon thousands of frequent flyer miles. I will have to wrack my brain to find a way to adequately thank all of you. And to anyone who may be reading this and hasn’t donated yet – AP will still be accepting donations throughout the summer on the same webpage. Thank you everyone!
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Posted Jul 3rd, 2007
1 Comment
Richard Chen
May 23, 2007
I googled within Afghan, aidworker, and travel sites using search format “learn dari site:domainhere” where domainhere is
irj.org
afghan-web.com
afghansunited.com
afghansolidarity.com
afghanmania.com
theworldforum.org
fulbright.forumco.com
forums.military.com
ewb-international.org
wikitravel.org
reliefweb.int
ifj.org
travelblog.org
for Dari learning resources with only book titles and no audio titles. Better ask your advisors at AP!