POST FROM JACOB WHEELER via the Glen Arbor Sun

Sunday January 16th, 2011

The Run Across Ethiopia expanded today, with Timothy Young’s daughter Stella, and Hans Voss’ wife Maureen and daughters joining us on Day 8. Filmmakers James and Jamaica Weston have returned to us after spending much of the past week in Addis Ababa. And even our local support crew — nurse Mamoosh and interpreter Egga — donned sneakers and left the van to leg out a few turns in the road. As such, the team that ascended 15 miles into the Sidamo coffee-rich region was nearly 20 people strong. We’ve become accustomed to villagers, and children in particular, swarming the runners whenever they pass along the road, but we got lucky today because Sunday meant that many were attending church. Fifteen miles completed today, which puts us at 198 since leaving Addis last Sunday. Only 52 more to go before the victory jog into Yirgachefe on Thursday.

The past two nights we’ve stayed at the stunningly beautiful Aragesh mountain lodge near the remote village of Yirgalem. We’ve slept and dined in a series of round bamboo woven huts that are constructed entirely of local materials and held up by one post in the center of the room. Such architecture reminded me of indigenous earth lodges and was a welcome departure from the urban grit of previous towns. Since Thursday, we’ve traded diesel exhaust, bass music thumping until the wee hours, heinous smells and old condoms found under a hotel room bed, for serenity, long walks into the green valley, locally grown (and sterilized) vegetables, a bonfire pit …. and wildlife.

Around dusk at the Aragesh lodge a groundskeeper throws food scraps down a nearby hillside, which immediately attracts giant vultures and hyenas — more wolf than dog, and the primary reason why Ethiopian runners never train along and before sunrise.

Tonight, northern Michigan musicians Seth Bernard and Mae Erlewine rejoined our crew, and played an after-dinner performance around the campfire. One could almost imagine the hyenas listening curiously from the forest below as the duo offered new songs they had written in Ethiopia, as well as the Johnny Cash favorite “Ring of fire”. Suddenly we looked through the smoke, and in a clearing on the other side of the fire pit, filmmakers James and Jamaica had begun to dance — they had become nymphs from the deep forest, their feet moving so rapidly and effortlessly that they hardly touched the ground. As graceful as Ethiopian marathon runners, I thought, whose bodies move forward always, instead of bounding up and down. Watching this was poetry.

To return to our website please click here, www.runacrossethiopia.org

POST FROM CLAIRE EVERHART

Sunday January 16, 2011

Today as we ran through the Sidamo region I tried to imagine my life as an Ethiopian. Am I a child? Did my mother wake my 7 brothers and sisters and I from our curled positions on the dirt floor of our hut and tell some of us to go fetch water from 10 miles away? Are we lucky enough to have a donkey to help carry the water jugs? How many jugs are we blessed enough to have? Will the wheel my older brothers fixed yesterday make the trip there and back? Am I a single mother struggling to support 5 children alone? Am I a coffee farmer working to support my family, while being paid very little for the beans I grow?

With the help of an interpreter, one of the Ethiopian runners with us, Bekelish, told us through tears that she once lived just like the impoverished children we see every day. Her mother died when she was very young and her father struggled to support her and her five brothers and one sister. She was too upset to say more. Just as easily as I have been born into my life, I could have come into this world in Bekelish’s situation, and she into mine. Who am I to never have to worry about my next meal? Who am I to always have money for toothpaste and a toothbrush? Who am I to afford running shoes? I do not deserve these things more than Bekelish.  (She is on the far right in this photo.)

L to R Meheron, Zinash, Xilahun, Abera, Abdul Qadir and Bekelish.

Bekelish’s story is one of millions, and many are much worse. As we run through such poverty every day, a feeling of helplessness often overtakes me. Our world is too broken. There are too many suffering people, there is too much to fix, it just cannot be done. I am reminded of an applicable saying, “The fact that we cannot solve all of the world’s problems does not absolve us of the responsiblity to fix the ones that we can.” Building schools through On the Ground’s “Run Across Ethiopia” is a huge first step. But let us not stop here. Our responsibility extends much further.

To return to our website click this link, www.runacrossethiopia.org

POST BY JAMAICA LYNNE WESTON

Sunday January 16th, 2011 – Day 8

I just couldn’t stop crying, for 3 miles the tears pooled on my shirt, Egga’s shirt, Su’s shirt. I was too overwhelmed and haven’t had time to process the emotional intensity of what I was right in the middle of. The fast progression of poverty we’ve witnessed in only 15 miles has astounded me to the point of pure emotion. From village to village we meet so many children and people, but without a chance to really get to know them; there are only moments. Yet today I couldn’t handle it. We went from shaking hands to seeing a boy who snagged a water bottle, get surrounded by kids twice his age. The poverty is quickly coming apparent as we head further south, because the reaction of the villagers has a air of desperation; their basic needs aren’t being met and survival is the number one priority. Seeing us all, the villagers think of a chance for opportunity and holding on to that before it passes is a must.

So for the runners, on foot, it is hard. Catching a picture of it, is hard. I’m only one person and I can’t do it all is the tape that played on repeat in my head, but today that record was not enough. So I cried, I cried it all out and thank goodness for this team, because I got gentle reminders of what we are actually doing here: building schools. We ARE making a difference in the lives of the surrounding communities (we just haven’t reached it by foot yet!). The focus within the group now is to reach the schools and be able to really connect with the people there. We are hanging in there by comradery and the thing that translates in any language, laughter.

To return to our website click this link, www.runacrossethiopia.org

POST BY JAMAICE LYNNE WESTON

Saturday January 15th, 2011

Only 2 hours out of the city and the atmosphere has drastically become calmer. The always hussle an bussle of Addis, cars and people weaving in and out of each other along with donkeys and marketers. Shoe shiners line the streets and poor sit next to businessmen while Muslims and Christians talk over milk with coffee. Always going…..

Now, Teff fills the air with every sift from the roadside homes. It’s so fresh and open.

The Run Across Ethiopia kids are ready to see their fathers, and so are their counterparts! The kids are doing so well with acclimating and it is has been hard days filled with stimulating scenes. I’m so impressed by how well everyone can adjust to the different atmospheres of their surroundings.

 

After arriving in Awaso, monkeys greet us as the families reunite. I feel a sense of relief as the whole group is together again. I never realized how much I missed everyone, the humor, the smiles, the hugs. Never being in a large group dynamic, because I was the only child who didn’t play sports, I’m so grateful to be embraced with this kind of love.

AND FROM NORM PLUMSTEAD

Day seven of Run Across Ethiopia in the books! 183 miles down. Everyday we receive massive support from the Ethiopians we run past. And, everyday I’m reminded of the many privileges we enjoy in America. To learn more about you can help go to www.runacrossethiopia.org.

 

 

POST BY ANNE STANTON

Saturday January 15th, 2011  DAY 07

I was going to write a whole funny report on the bathrooms here in Africa, because while the landscape is gorgeous, the bathrooms leave much to be desired, and you just have to laugh (or, um, curse). My new best Ethiopian friends, Fenet and Su, our translators who I want to bring to TC, always say, TIA. “This Is Africa.” But tonight we are at the lovely Aragash resort outside of Yergalen (sp?), and talking to the three Ethiopian women who are running with us gave me perspective on toilets that don’t flush and showers that won’t turn off the entire night and sockets that don’t seem to deliver any electricity (some all at the same time). And drawers that have used condoms in them (YUCK!)

But after I tell you about my conversation, I will describe getting locked in a bathroom yesterday. Too funny.

Anyway, we had dinner tonight with Fenet translating, and we sat with Bechala, Zehnash, and Meron (the three Ethiopian women) along with Mary Moore (Traverse City, who is actually a Spanish interpreter and has learned enough words to communicate with the Ethiopians), Claire, the pretty blonde from Ohio who is a great hit among the Ethiopian boys running alongside her), and me.

Through Fenet, we asked them about growing up, and all of them are from very large families who grew up on farms. Meron almost got engaged at the age of 7 and married off at the age of 12 (at which time the happy couple moves out of the paternal home and sets up shop themselves), but her brother stepped in and stopped the process early on. I asked them how they felt running on this highway seeing all these very poor children run alongside us. As I mentioned before the kids don’t seem to be unhappy, but they wear shredded clothes (I saw a shirt that said “Michigan Loves Gore) and they want food. One old woman, I bet she was 70, gave Dan Zemper kisses on both cheeks and then asked for food. She kissed me too!

Meron, 19, and Zenish, 23, said they weren’t so poor, but Bekalesh, who is very thin with a pinched face, said she grew up very poor and was often hungry-her mom died and her dad raised her five brothers and one sister by himself. The run, she said, gave her bad memories—she’s only 19 so the memories are fresh. And she began crying, and then we did too. Mary told them she came to Ethiopia to meet the Ethiopian runners, and that she didn’t make much money back home, and was only able to come because so many of her friends helped her. And she told the women not to give up on her dream. The women all work cleaning houses, and earn the U.S. equivalent of about $10 a month. I’m thinking they must get help from their families because rent is about $20 a month. Zenish said the trip has been exciting, but also hard because she is seeing how the other side lives. And this all goes back to my complaining about the bathroom at the last motel, where the ants crawled up my top sheet to bid me goodnight.

I also closed the door completely at this other motel-resort place in Awassa (which was at a gorgeous lake) so no one could peek in from the unisex washroom, but then I realized there was no door handle. I knew no one would miss me (because they were down at the lake), so I felt a little panicked. I tried to edge a credit card through the gap, and then my reporter’s notebook, and then I started knocking. No one came. Finally, I thought I could edge my motel key card through the gap to unlock it, and it didn’t work. So then I put the key into a hole, turned it, and the door opened. I have never felt realized, because I swear I might have had to have spent the night in the bathroom, and it was not nice.

Fenet (after laughing hysterically when I told her about it) mentioned it to one of the hotel workers about it, and she said she didn’t have enough money to fix it. TIA.

Doug asked me to give him an idea of the basic schedule.

We begin breakfast as early as possible to take advantage of the cool weather. We take turns making it, and I volunteered yesterday morning because we had to serve it very early (4:30 a.m.) and the runners needed all the sleep they could get for the 30 mile run that day. We make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and serve boiled eggs (lots of salt) and oranges.

The runners did four straight 30 mile runs and had to get on the road as early as possible to finish about 1:00 p.m. or so. During the run, the “bus people” (I am one of them ) hand out water every 30 minutes, and food every hour. At the half-point of the run, lunch (again peanut butter and jelly sandwiches), bananas, popcorn, etc. is served. The runners, not unreasonably, are eating fewer and fewer pbj sandwiches. Joyfully, it was announced after the run today that we would eat breakfast at a restaurant this morning since the run is only 15 miles long. I jump on and off the bus to run along and get color.

We then get on the bus and ride back to our motel and often have St. Georges beer, shower, and then eat dinner at 4:30. Early on, we’d have a runner’s meeting to discuss low and high points, then something fun, like Seth and May playing a concert tonight, or watching a hyena getting fed tonight. Or a boat ride on the lake.

The runners get around fabulously. All are well, and all ran today. No one is sick, and the injuries are healed or are manageable. We are ahead of the original running schedule, and Chris was worried that 15 to 20 miles a day was too easy. I said, Chris, what is it about you and suffering. He admitted being brought up Catholic (okay, name of book if you write about Treter: Beer and Suffering).

The crowds of kids and grown-ups have gotten really big the further south we go. Lots of applause. The kids love to shake hands with you, giving you these wide, often yellow-teeth smiles. They look at us like we are aliens.

Well, I should head to bed. We are meeting up at 6 a.m. for breakfast. Love to all and thanks to all of you who helped support the runners.

To return to our website please click this link, www.runacrossethiopia.org

POST FROM SETH BERNARD

Saturday January 15, 2011

Sitting on a robin egg blue wrap-around porch looking out onto a clear lake in Awassa. The path from the hotel restaurant to our room is covered in bright violet flowers that have fallen from the trees, they pop out against the reddish brown soil. There are birds everywhere, giant water birds with long hook-like beaks, soaring eagles, kingfishers, pure white little water birds, giant parrot like tropical birds with large beaks, love birds and on. Even the smallest little bird that would be our common sparrow has a little splash of unique color.

This morning we awoke with a group of visitors on our porch. Monkeys! They are little Grivet Monkeys and they are darling. They are everywhere and we have been feeding them bananas by hand. There are many mothers with their tiny little babies hanging on for dear life. They are a joy. Later in the day we also discovered a group of Colobus Monkeys too! They have giant paint brushes for tails. You can also take a boat from shore to see hippos out wallowing in the waters. I am in heaven with all of these little beings around us.
We are here and have had this day to focus on our songwriting. Our time in Addis was rich with musical inspiration and we found ourselves fueled with excitement, the creative juices are flowing! We have worked out four songs today and we have four more in the making and a few instrumentals floating around in our minds. We have had the opportunity to see some of Ethiopia’s finest musicians and have been welcomed by them with so much warmth. The music scene and the music is incredible. All of this leaves us really excited to record the album when we return home. Here are a few of the bands we have seen/met/jammed with.  These are Facebook links:
Working in the schools was incredibly moving and we learned so much from the children here. On Thursday morning we wrote two songs with the students at Mercado school Addis. The first song entitled “I love Animals” and the second “We are Inside Nature Always”. The kids wrote all of the words to the second song themselves in English and I can’t wait to share with you their insights. After spending three days at the same school it was hard to say goodbye to the children. We’ll miss them and we came to the conclusion that we’ll just have to come back again.
We met up with the group of runners yesterday and the families were finally reunited. What a beautiful moment to witness. So much love! The runners seem to be doing incredibly well and those of us on the sidelines are in awe of their strength perseverance and positivity! They have done three 30 mile days in a row! Now they get to taper down for a few days.
Well as I write these final words a giant tortoise is meandering across the lawn… Sending you all big love!
Missing you and looking forward to sharing more when we return.
love,   May and Seth
To return to our website please click this link, www.runacrossethiopia.org

POST FROM NIGEL WILLERTON

Saturday 15th January 2011

Our exertions during the previous five days where we ground out a 28-mile and then four consecutive 30-mile runs allowed the Run Across Ethiopia team a relatively easy seventh day on the road. We ran our shortest distance yet with a ‘mere’15-mile, 24 KM effort. It took us just over 3 hours to complete.

Spirits were very high after the luxury of both a lie-in and a full breakfast at our hotel at Lake Lagano which did not consist of hard-boiled eggs, PBJ sandwiches and, the crime of all crimes, black coffee with out sugar!! The pain of the last six days was almost forgotten.

The 15 miles almost took us to our lodging at Aragash. The RAE team’s cumulative mileage in a week is now 183 miles or 294 KM and that equates to exactly a marathon a day. As we close in on our destination of Afursa Waru, we are starting to see a marked increase in the poverty level of the local people in the villages we pass. It reinforces the teams understanding of the desparate needs in the communities and the positive impact we all hope and believe the Run Across Ethiopia can have.

The villagers themselves though remain as happy and as welcoming as ever in every community we pass shouting encouragement and the obvious question puzzling them  “Where you going?” they cry, “Jirge Chefe” we respond whereupon they look puzzled for a moment and then grin and shout “Very Good, Very Good!” It is great fun to just be a part of this great experience.

However, the run certainly still has its challenges for us as runners. Despite our strong efforts eating into the schedule and reducing the final distance left, the balance of the run will be extremely hilly. We actually started today with a near 2-mile or 3KM ascent. We also still have to work on our teamwork even more strongly ensuring we give each other full support. It can be great fun running with a significant crowd of locals, young and old, many of whom join us often for one, two or even three miles but that sometimes makes it tough to all stay together. It does of course also make the experience complete as you see the joy on the faces of those who just want to be part of the fun that is RAE.

Finally, I will finish by confirming the teams arrival at the fabulous Aragosh Lodge in the Ethiopian Highlands. This is a sprawling hotel where we are staying in bungalows with 4-5 people sharing a three-room open space. I am staying with Norman, Abera, Ichigu and Jacob.  The lodge has its own coffee plantation and the area is awash with wildlife including monkeys and hyenas. It’s certainly luxurious in comparison to some of our prior accommodations but I have to admit that best of all, it is run by a German family so everything like lights and showers actually work!!  (Here’s a video from journalist Jacob Wheeler.)

I would conclude that sadly for myself, we are nearing the end of our epic run but I have hope in my heart that the bigger and more important journey in delivering education for hundreds if not thousands of deserving Ethiopian children is just beginning.

To go back to our website click here, www.runacrossethiopia.org

POST BY AMALIA FERNAND

Friday January 14, 2011

Vast plains of sand spread below the airplane window as the orange light of the setting sun illuminated sandy peaks and a winding river.  The Sahara desert is the largest in the world, covering one third of the African continent!  Looking out over that endless desert, the immensity and ancientness of Africa becomes more present and the journey that I am about to embark on more real.  A thin band of orange rings the horizon as the deep blue of night sinks down upon the earth.  I think of the many nocturnal desert creatures as they leave their underground homes to enjoy the cool reprise of the evening and can’t help but be enchanted by the mysteries that a desert beholds.  Is there a Saharan cheetah down there, poised and ready to run?  Is there a wild gerbil, poking his head above the sand and scanning the sky for raptors?  Are there crocodiles in that river?  Can people really live within that vast emptiness?  Two small children peak over their seat at me, exclaiming loudly in their native language and I know that I am on the other side of the world.

I left the icicle draped snowy world of Traverse CIty Michigan on Monday to fly to Detroit, and then across the Atlantic Ocean to Amsterdam.  From there the plane turned South to Khartoum, Sudan, and then on to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.  After 27 hours of travel, we arrived in an ancient land.  The cradle of human kind, Ethiopia is where our hominid ancestors evolved.  The only country in Africa, except for Liberia, that has never been colonized, the culture here is vibrant and deeply rooted.  We have spent the last 2 days in the capital city of Addis Ababa.  In this bustling city of 8 million people, poverty is apparent, yet so is love and compassion and the importance of family and community.

I will be sharing my experiences with you as regularly as I can!

Return to our website by clicking here, www.runacrossethiopia.org

POST BY CLAIRE EVERHART

Thursday January 13, 2011

We just completed our 5th day of running, also our 3rd of four 30 mile days. It was brutal but we made it! Believe it or not, the first 20 miles go by fairly quickly, it’s the last 10 that seem to take forever.

Long Road

We had several moral boosts as crowds of children in every village we passed through ran with us, some for over a mile, gliding over jagged rocks and thorny bushes in bare feet as though they were running on lush grass. Their skinny figures, tattered clothing and obvious lack of dental care does not stop the chorus of laughter that surrounds us the entire time they’re running.

Many will often grab one of our hands while they run, or say “you! you!” If we say it back they just double over in giggles. Matt Desmond has quite a way with them. He often can get the whole group repeating him in unison, as he shouts team member names or soccer teams. It is quite heartbreaking, however, when they all beg for our empty water bottles. One runner can often be surrounded by 20+ outstretched hands and only one empty water bottle to give out.  (Editors note: ironically, in America discarded water bottles are a nuisance along roadsides and in communities.  In Ethiopia these simple toss-offs are sought after commodities because of the value they have in being refilled with water from community wells. Ethiopia ranks as having some of the worst access to safe drinking water in the world.)

Water Pump

We have all been reminded of how easy it is to take for granted water always coming from the faucet.  Most here don’t even have faucets, and those who do, cannot count on water always coming, we didn’t have any water for several hours where we’re staying tonight, what a harsh difference from the states.

(Claire is a recent graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University and ran on their cross country team. She is an intern with Global Village Collection, one of our sponsoring partners in Delaware, Ohio.)

If you’d like to return to our website just click this link, www.runacrossethiopia.org

POST BY MATT DESMOND

Wednesday January 12, 2011   DAY 04 of the Run

Matt's Sore Feet

Day 4 of the run, 108 miles down, 108,000 mind-blowing strides, approximately! The Run Across Ethiopia team gelled today over the 30 mile run with an earlier start and extremely efficient support along the run: water every half hour, food every hour, no lolligagging. That added up to an earlier end time and about an hour and a half less in the hot afternoon sun.

We made big waves in the small communities we passed through, including many consisting of round, mud-brick, thatch roofed houses. Folks welcomed us even more heartily today. Adults and children joined us en masse as we passed by, some for several miles.

The highlight of the day was midway through the run when 60 or so people ran with and behind us, mostly children. A chant erupted from the kids: “Chelsea! Chelsea! Chelsea!” referencing the English soccer team. Nigel, our Liverpool loving British teammate was none too pleased! Soon, however, we were able to redirect the cheer to honor our visionary leader: “Treter, Treter, Treter!” The moment was well deserved for Chris and provided a timely pick-me-up for us all.

To return to our website please click this link, www.runacrossethiopia.org

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