January/February 2021
Dear Friends,
We hope that this publication of the Fellows’ Flyer finds you and your family well. PiAf began the new year by interviewing candidates for the 2021-22 fellowship year. This was our first time hosting exclusively virtual interviews. While it was sad to not have the opportunity to meet the nearly 200 exceptional applicants in person, the new format allowed for alumni from California to Zambia, and many places in between, to join in our selection process.
We are continuing to work with our host organizations to carefully monitor COVID-19’s impact on the continent and our ability to restart onsite fellowships. In the meantime, we have surveyed our host organizations and have had overwhelmingly positive feedback about the ways that the current Fellows have been able to adapt to the challenges of remote work and make positive contributions to their organizations. In fact, 100% of reporting host organizations have expressed that their Fellow has been effective in their role and an added asset to their organization. Additionally, 91% of reporting host organizations say their Fellow’s skills and experience match well with their fellowship role and 91% reporting say their Fellow has adapted well to the organization’s work culture. We are grateful to the host organizations and Fellows for their flexibility and perseverance through this uncertain period.
Thank you to all of the alumni, donors, and friends who continue to offer support to the Fellows and host organizations and we look forward to seeing what the next couple of months will bring.
Warm regards,
Jodi & the Piaf Staff
PiAf Connections
Please click below to check out pictures of our Fellows, Alums and other members of the PiAf family meeting up at home and around Africa.
Notes from the Field
By Michelle Lee, '20-'21 Fellow with Kupona Foundation in the United States
I’ve been working as the Resource Management and Development Fellow for Kupona Foundation for 5 months. In my role I support Kupona Foundation and CCBRT in business development, helping to write grants and develop partnerships with organizations that are also working towards disability inclusion and strengthening health systems in Tanzania. I’ve learned a lot about the kinds of partnerships and collaborations needed across organizations and across sectors in order to ensure that the movement towards universal health coverage in Tanzania is successful. I am so happy to be working with Kupona Foundation and CCBRT in supporting Tanzanian-led community health interventions that have an important impact on the lives of hundreds of thousands of Tanzanians each year.
Being located remotely in New Hampshire while I conduct work based in Tanzania, has me thinking a lot about the linkages between what is occurring in Tanzania and what is occurring in the United States. Many of the subjects I write funding proposals about—such as disability inclusion and a lack of respectful maternal care, are prevalent in the United States, as well as in Tanzania. What does it mean to be working to fund health systems strengthening projects in Tanzania, when hospitals in the United States are being overburdened due to Covid-19? To write about reducing maternal mortality in Tanzania when Black women in the United States face an increasing maternal mortality rate? To talk about strengthening resiliency for nurses and midwives in Tanzania, when Black birth workers have been systematically disenfranchised and discredited in the United States? The parallels are heightened too when thinking about the Tanzanian elections in October 2020, which led to the internet and social media being limited to reduce opposition, and the false claims of voter fraud in the United States that led to a white supremacist insurrection at the Capital building. I find myself reflecting often on these false binaries between “local” and “global” problems and wondering about collaborative solutions that could be pursued.
These questions feel even more urgent when considering the similarities in the causes of these racialized problems, both in Tanzania and the United States. While the health disparities may manifest themselves in slightly different ways, the root causes can be found in centuries of racist and white supremacist exploitation, slavery, colonization, and oppression. I wonder how to connect these movements and, even more importantly, ask myself who is already connecting them? What would a Black-led, global response look like and how can it be funded? How can I, as an individual within the development sector, support movements that are equitable, address historical inequities, and adopt
reparations-based frameworks? While these are large and perhaps unanswerable questions, I am glad to be in a position where I can contemplate amongst a community of like-minded co-Fellows.
Notes from the Field
By Afi Bello, '20-'21 Fellow with the African School of Economics in Benin
Teaching English during a pandemic was never something that I had imagined myself doing, but here we are, and I am enjoying the experience! This is not to say that the journey has not come without its challenges, because it has; however, these challenges have not come without creative solutions. For example, in the middle of one of my lectures, Zoom decided to crash, and from there, a thread of other technical difficulties. What did we do? Well, we transitioned class to WhatsApp! With a little creativity, flexibility, and proactivity, I have been making things work. I cannot stress the importance of those three things and how useful they have been in teaching during this pandemic.
English instruction has paved the path for an exploration of diverse topics. Throughout the semester, our class has discussed a variety of topics ranging from Pan-Africanism, to the EndSARS Movement, to the preservation of indigenous languages in Africa, to brain drain, among many others. I have used these topics to facilitate instruction on various grammar points, and in introducing new vocabulary and concepts. The diversity which the students bring to the classroom has also been very enriching, which I highly value. Many backgrounds are represented; I have students from Benin, Togo, Nigeria, Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, and Cameroon, all contributing different perspectives to the classroom.
One thing I am most proud of, that I have been able to accomplish in my class, is helping students to grow more confident in their use of the English language. I can remember the first day of class where students were very shy to speak, but now, they zealously unmute themselves in order to answer questions and share their opinion on a topic. I am also proud of the community that we have been able to build as a class. This manifests in the way students treat each other in class. This communal energy has facilitated learning, creating a space in which people are able to feel valued, to really learn, and not be afraid to participate in class out of worry about what others may think. Throughout the semester, I have seen and witnessed my students’ growth, also reflected in their writing assignments and assessments, which has been very rewarding.
My responsibilities at ASE are not limited to teaching. I also mentor and advise in the Pre-Doctoral Fellowship program and work with the Communications department, where I translate and publish articles and other cool things like video subtitles and
documentaries. One of my favorite projects with the department has been the translation of a documentary on the Smallpox pandemic of 1951 in Benin. This documentary compared the effects of the Smallpox pandemic of 1951 on Benin with that of the current effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.
As I wrap up, I send greetings to you from Charlotte, NC. I am very excited about the rest of the fellowship year and what it has to offer!