
I didn't know about the over 500 year presence Portugal had and that it was a major slave port where people were taken from their homeland and brought to the Americas, especially to Brazil. I didn't know that they had a poverty rate of 70%. The average life expectancy is just over 40 years old.
I didn't know that they had suffered over 40 years of war; from 1961 to 1975 they fought for their independence from Portugal. They immediately fell into civil war from 1975 until 2002. Over 500,000 people died during the civil war, two sides fueled by the two sides of the cold war. The country was pretty much ignored once the cold war ended. Today, the remaining million or more landmines (there is really nothing close to an estimate of how many landmines there are in Angola, some estimates are as high as 15 million) continue to injure, with one of the highest per-capita incidences of landmine fatalities/injuries in the world.
The good news is Angola is rebuilding and growing. Volunteers that I've known who were there for 6 months said the difference from when they arrived to when they left was unbelievable. School and health are two of the major needs, which is why I will be working at a teacher training college. More teachers means more schools and more children educated.
I am only beginning to learn about Angola's story and expand my own. I leave this Thursday with a day long layover in Lisbon. I am fueled with just about everything possible to prevent mosquito bites...from mosquito nets to citronella incense and neem oil, bee propolis and even a deet spray just in case going natural doesn't work. Here I go!
No comments:
Post a Comment