Happy Halloween! Here's a re-post from October 31, 2010 by Eric. He and his girlfriend, Laurel, worked at Hamomi for 8 months in 2010-2011.
-Susie
A Hamomi Halloween
This Saturday we celebrated Hamomi’s 2nd annual
Halloween. It has become a beloved yet little-understood holiday for the
students and teachers here. Last year Jamie and Susie, the directors of
Hamomi-USA based in Seattle, introduced the day and since it was such a
great success, we continued the tradition. We spent this week brainstorming how we could explain
and
celebrate this pumpkin carving, trick-or-treating, fest of goblins and
ghouls to Hamomi, without it being a mess of candy wrappers, pumpkin
guts, and 135 sugar-high students.At first we thought about buying a pumpkin for each class to carve and decorate. However, after thinking it through and pricing out pumpkins, we concluded this was not the best option, nor was it in the budget. Trying to organize 12 to 18 students carving a single pumpkin would not have been
a success in any way. Not to mention, the undersized,
whitish gourds they call pumpkins here, go for an outrageous 400-600
shillings. So, back to the drawing board it was...
Another bright idea we had to dress in costumes and do some trick-or-treating with the students. After thinking this through we determined that maybe we’d attract even more unwanted attention on our walk through the Kawangware slum and into the Kangemi slum dressed as superheroes, animals, or the headless horseman. Also, knocking on peoples doors with 100 plus students, each demanding sweets would more than likely be seen as rude in Kenyan culture and could possibly tatter Hamomi’s stellar reputation with its neighbors. Scratch that idea… Crazy Wazungu and their holidays.
So we settled on an idea brought originally to Hamomi by
the first Halloween facilitators, Jamie and Susie. Decorating masks it
is! Laurel and Val (a French volunteer from Venezuela) spent the next two full days cutting eye and mouth holes out of 150 paper plates. I offered the services of my Swiss army knife and found myself the more fun and less blister-filled job of decorating a few sample masks for the students to see.
The day-of was really fun. We circled up each grade on the Hamomi field and gave them paints, crayons, markers, colored pencils, feathers, water colors,
construction paper, glitter and any other decorative material we could
scrounge up and the mask-making commenced. I’m not so sure there were many superheroes or animals created, but many more colorful, nameless
creatures began to take shape. I was really impressed, especially with
the 1st and 2nd graders' painting skills, although a few masks did end
up that brownish-green color that mixing all the watercolors together
makes.
At one point a teacher insisted I paint his face like a cat. After this I had a crowd of no less than four dozen students chanting “Cha! Cha! Cha! [Teacher!] Me next!!!” After about an hour of face-painting, the
volunteers all
grabbed the candy we’d brought and each group went to a different
classroom. Laurel and I began passing out candy from the baby
classroom and made each student say “trick-or-treat” before we gave them
their sweet.
Most younger kids (who are just beginning to learn
English) really tried to say what we wanted in order to get a treat.
They came out with such things as “tick-and-tweet” or “sick-or-sweet”
some just stared blankly until we gave them their candy. However, there
was a particular first grader who was quite insistent that, while he
wasn’t quite sure
what a “trick” was, he absolutely did not want one
rather than his sweet! We passed out sweets to each student, teacher,
and even a few of the other neighborhood children who couldn’t help
showing up right around candy time.
All in all, Halloween was a great success! I hope you all enjoy the pictures.
-Eric
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