Tuesday, August 28, 2012

My New Signature


Zambezia Science Fair participants with our chique new shirts
For the past few weeks, provincial capitals all over Mozambique have be holding Peace Corps organized science fairs. For the province of Zambezia, myself and my counterpart Joao Ferraz from the Delegacao Provincial de Ciencia e Tecnologia organized the three day event. For most of Saturday, 45 secondary school students and teachers from 10 different districts prepared, presented, and celebrated experiments and innovations in the areas of chemistry, physics, and biology. Each of these students were selected as the best from each of their schools, so the competition was fierce. Their presentations covered all levels of difficulty and types of science, from the implications of Newton's 3rd law to the fermentation of alcohol from stale bread to the construction of an chicken incubator. By the end of the fair Saturday, the judges had a very difficult time selecting the top three projects from 1o ciclo (8-10th grade) and 2o ciclo (11-12th grade), and an even harder time selecting the student from each ciclo who would represent our province at the Feira Nacional de Ciencias in Chimoio. In the end, an 11th grade student from Gurue and a 9th grade student from Alto Molocue, Belchoir, won first place in their respective categories. This means that in 3 short weeks i'll be visiting the city of Chimoio with these 2 students, a teacher from Gurue, and my counterpart Joao. Though I don't want to be cocky, I have high hopes for these two students, and look forward to seeing how they match up with the winners from the other provinces.

Zambezia's science fair winners. Belchior is the little one
But before all of this had happened, the Zambezia fair had to be organized, which came down to one word: money. Each year, Peace Corps Science Fair proposes for the entire operating budget of this national event from PEPFAR (The Presidents Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief), which means that each province's Peace Corps representative is responsible for allocating and distributing the funds. As a result I had an uncomfortably large amount of money sitting in my bank account for the past couple months while I worked out the costs of each item with my counterpart Joao. Since plans stay liquid here for much longer than they should, the full value was still sitting in my account when I went to the Barclays in Quelimane the Friday before the fair for the big withdrawal. Arriving there just as the bank opened at 8a, I learned that they were only doing deposits at that moment, but I could begin waiting in line for the withdrawals which would start "very soon". After waiting there for an hour, I called Joao so that he could find someone to hold my place in line for me while I do other, more important  things. As it turns out, the only other thing for me to do was to go to each of the 4 working ATMs in town and withdraw the daily 5,000 mt ($185) limit for immediate costs. Finally around 11:30 I went back to the Barclay's where I was able to hand in my deposit slip and receive my money. Or so I thought.

Practicing my new signature
For years, I have been using a barely legible, sport-star-autograph inspired scribble as my mark for everything from checks to college admissions documents. Never before has it mattered that it varies from document to document, but before coming to Mozambique I realized that if not even I can read my own signature, there is a problem. So when I was in training and had to open up a bank account, I decided to start fresh with a new, legible, signature. Unfortunately, after not using it for 10 months, I had completely forgotten what I had used. So by 2:30p, half an hour before the bank closed, I had still not withdrawn my money. After various conversation with Barclay's in Maputo, Peace Corps Maputo, Barclay's Quelimane, and the Delegacao Provincial de Ciencia e Tecnologia we finally were able to change the official signature on the account and complete the withdrawal of the money for science fair, which started the next day. Phew...

Hopefully this will never happen again, because immediately after I had withdrawn the money, I spent the next hour signing 70 certificates of participation, 20 honor certificates, and countless other science fair related documents.  Needless to say, I got some good practice.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Sam, I never see comments on your blog. Please do not let this discourage you. Keep writing! I love reading your Thoughts, Sights, and Feelings as you travel, work, and live in Mozambique.
    Laura Charron

    ps: after trying to work my way through a dozen captchas, I realize now why you don't receive many comments. I'll try a few more times, then I'll write an email.

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    Replies
    1. True, I don't get to many comments. Thanks, maybe it'll start a new trend.

      Hope you arrived well in Japan.

      Sam

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