
The run up to Christmas has been quite hectic and so I only find myself now on Christmas Day with a little time to jot a few memories down.
The beginning of December marked Indonesian National Health day and so as you would expect this was a big event for my office. I was a little surprised however to find that the event was being marked by the Dinas hosting an enormous party for all the office staff and any other health employees who happened to be in Maumere on the day. The party stared at about 11 o clock with the guys drinking arak and singing karaoke and the women doing the cooking. They had a proper PA system in the large meeting room and as usual I was astounded at how everyone seemed to have a fantastic singing voice. Indonesians seem to be born to sing and are at their most comfortable with a microphone in their hand standing in front of people. As a tribute to me they sang a number of songs in English and I made the mistake of singing along from my seat. As soon as they spotted that I knew the words a microphone was quickly dispatched and I was urged to stand at the front and sing. Now as anyone who is acquainted with my singing voice can attest to, it is not something for public performances. So I sat there bright red holding a microphone wishing I had joined the choir at school and actually learned to sing Abba numbers properly. (Incidentally, the lyrics to a famous Abba song were printed out in a church leaflet, but they had got the spelling wrong so the chorus read ‘I believe in angles’, which could be the anthem for architects and feng shui practitioners).
The following week I was picked up at my house at 5 am by a team from the office as a group of us was heading for the island Palu’e. There were various aims to the trip as members from various departments went along. I was there specifically to help with the training of the ‘Kader’ volunteers who are responsible for running the Mother and Baby clinics. Others were there to fix the Health centre radio, the island’s only means of communication. I had heard that Palu’e was some six hours away by boat and as most people here can’t swim and are afraid of long boat journeys they had decided we would drive along the coast road until you are able to get a boat across in two hours. The drive was bone crunching along a truly terrible road for 4 hours until we reached the crossing point but there was a bit of a party atmosphere. We had brought along lots of food and as soon as we stopped some of the guys built a small fire on the beach and cooked a large squid they had bought on route.
The boat trip was one long picnic with food being constantly passed around. This did surprise me a little as I had been told that Palu’e was dependant on food being brought in by boat, only really having corn and green beans growing on the island and so I was under the impression that we needed this food to ensure we wouldn’t be a burden on the locals for the duration of our stay. But what do I know? The trip over was beautiful and Palu’e with its active volcano rising up and dominating the landscape was a much larger island than I had expected. As we approached the jetty I was lost for words at the sheer beauty of the place.
The Paediatrician from Maumere had accompanied us to check all the children with malnutrition and as we walked from the jetty to the health centre, a distance of about 30 metres, we saw literally hundreds of women and children waiting. We were told that as Palu’e has not had a doctor for nearly a year all the women and children had travelled down from their villages and had waited all morning for this precious opportunity to see the doctor. We prioritised the children with malnutrition, then the rest according to symptoms and village location as some women had walked carrying their children for four hours down a very steep mountain and still obviously had the journey home. The health centre and a few simple houses for the staff make up the main port of entry to Palu’e. The mountain begins more or less immediately behind these premises and the climb is steep from the outset. I was entranced by the site of colourful dots snaking their way up and down, some not moving and taking a rest and others carrying children or shopping.
I spent the afternoon asking the mothers with malnourished children about the government scheme of providing supplementary food. This was to determine its effectiveness and learn about specific logistical issues for the island and distribution to the villages. This was the first time in Indonesia that I felt I needed an interpreter to assist me. I was in a small room crowded with about 30 mothers and children all talking and it was so difficult to understand what they were saying, especially the village names. I was feeling a little dejected about my language skills until one of my colleagues found herself asking the same question over and over as she couldn’t make out the reply either. It seems that the accent is so different from the rest of Flores that it was difficult for all of us.
I had been warned that water is scarce in Palu’e, they do have a volcanic hot water source, and I mean burning hot, but it is salty and so not great for the skin long term. We were only staying for a week so I wasn’t worried but the locals were so kind that they insisted we used the precious collected rain water to mandi (bathe). Refusal was simply not an option, especially after a 10 year old girl had filled buckets from their rain water reservoir especially for me, how embarrassing. I perfected the art of having a mandi while using the minimum of water. It was a good lesson, the appreciation that with each scoop of water I would be depriving someone else of that scarce resource. I realised how lucky we are in our home in Maumere having a well. To cool down I sometimes pour scoop after scoop over me, much like my love of standing under a hot shower for ages in the UK, but here I found myself thinking about what a luxury that was.
I was awoken at 5 am the next morning, the last to get up of course, and found myself sitting on the beach in my pyjamas watching a most beautiful sunrise feeling a little like I had arrived in paradise. Everyone I met was so incredibly friendly and much more generous than they could possibly afford to be. I am still embarrassed about the fact I wasn’t permitted to fetch water for myself or anyone else, there was always a willing small child to do that.
The day was a planning day for the training sessions that would be held the following day: one at the top and one at the bottom of the mountain. From the moment I had arrived I knew I couldn’t leave without climbing the mountain so I volunteered for that session. So at 6am the following morning I and a few local staff set off hoping to get up before the day became too hot. We took it nice and slow but it was hard going. Having done little exercise since arriving in Indonesia I knew it would hurt but I was also looking forward to getting the heart pumping. Needless to say, before long I was dripping in sweat and kept suggesting that this was a good spot to take a picture so I could recover a little with less shame involved. These guys climb up and down twice a week. After being assured that we had climbed the last part and reached a plateau we turned a corner and I was confronted with a pretty up together village. Some houses made from stone, some even with ceramic flooring. I had carried a small back pack up with some water and that was hard enough. We passed through the village to where the training session was being held in a covered area next to the church, or should I say Cathederal, this church was huge. I couldn’t get over the site of 20kg cans of paint stacked up in the corner, the coloured glass that lay in sheets waiting to be cut and the piles of wood frames. All of this stuff can only be brought up one way and almost exclusively by women. Palu’e is essentially an island of women and children, the men mostly having left for Malaysia to find work sending money home when they can.
Some of the staff had arrived the night before and I was impressed at how smart they looked compared to my still recovering appearance including completely dripping T-shirt. Then I spotted that the guys I had climbed up with had changed into clean clothes and were now looking fresh as a daisy. I realised what a basic error I had made and couldn’t believe that I was going to be on stage all day (yes they even had a stage and a microphone) looking like a complete scruff bag.
I am more comfortable with a microphone now (except while singing), and so I gave long introduction about who I am and who VSO are. I organised a simple team-building game called ‘the corner game’ whereby everyone stands in a circle, holding hands, and have to go to a specific corner without breaking the circle (usually causing chaos as everyone tries to pull the group to a different corner). A physically demanding existence at the top of the mountain has made the Palu’e women tough and strong, and they almost ripped my arms out of their sockets as the pulled me around the room.
Later that day it was a much quicker walk down the mountain, but hazardous in flipflops, causing me to trip and almost wipe out the guy in front of me, but he was clearly used to this and managed to catch me before I tumbled down the slope. Later I went for swim in clear blue sea with the local kids. All my Dinas colleagues looked on as they are afraid of sea (surprisingly few Indonesians can swim), amazed that I can swim on both my front and back, which they mistakenly ascribe to some special quality that only westerners possess.
We decided to take the direct route home to Maumere, but as this is the monsoon the seas are rough and few skippers are prepared to make the longer journey. The only skipper brave enough to do it had the smallest boat. 40 people were huddled under a tarpaulin on board this small craft for six hours: three hours of burning hot sun followed by three hours of torrential rain.
Whilst it is not one of the easiest places to get to, I cannot wait to return with Dom, go trekking up the volcano and introduce him to the amazing people who eke out a living there.

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