My placement is Mandeville, in the Parish of Manchester. This is a small town in the middle of the hills, in the very heart of Jamaica. I work in the Manchester Parish Development Committee, a social organization entitled to promote and organize the community participation, particularly in terms of urban planning and local government. My responsibility is proposing communication materials (like brochures, leaflets, web page, workshops, etc.) about the Development Plan for the Parish that they have finished last years. After years of hard work at different levels of the social life (government, technicians, local community, neighbours), they accomplished a thorough development proposal. My position entails proposing different information strategies to enhance support, particularly in terms of financial and economical improvement, for the city and the region. In this sense, the work is particularly interesting to a development practitioner because they are just in the stage where the diagnostic and projection has finished and they need to foresee new links and relations with different actors in the community to transform the plan in a reality.
Meanwhile, I live in a traditional two floor house in a residential area. The house has five bedrooms, nice view to the hills and dense tropical surroundings, full of wonderful flowers and butterflies. There are many enormous old British mansions with beautiful and well kept gardens, but also strong bars everywhere. Usually, the neighbours remain inside, so the overall sensation is solitude and tranquility. The Manchester Parish is well known as a calm community, and they like to set the difference from the more insecure and chaotic Kinston. The majority of the population are returning Jamaican immigrants and retires from different parts of the island and abroad, but it is also a preferred location for young families wishing to escape from more anarchic centers and the ones that do not feel comfortable in tourist cities. In this sense, my neighbour is known by its British former settlers, but also by its calm spirit and cool climate. I would say the silent here is only interrupted by the singing of different and lively birds.
Because of these characteristics, the city of Mandeville (the capital of the Parish) has many education institutions, hospital, local government offices, shopping malls, entertainment centers, markets, etc. This is a lively community, the opposite from the quiet surroundings and country side; you can see people all around, but from my experience it remains a small town where everybody knows each other and has strong bonds and linkages. The uptown reminds me a lot of some Brazilian cities, but maybe is just the African influence that you can feel it everywhere. Walking around is a whole new adventure.
My first language is Spanish, and I have been communicating in English since fairly recently; hence understanding the patois is an everyday challenge, that sometimes make me feel pretty lost.
Recently, with my roommate and colleague from York Steve, we had the opportunity to visit the south beaches, particularly the one called Treasure Beach, and going there was just an adventure in itself due to the lack of public transportation and somewhat disorganized roads. However, seeing and experiencing the Caribbean Sea was worth all the troubles to get there. The waters are blue and warm, and you can only think about the old pirates of the seventeenth century sailing on those costs and escaping the British navy. All the area already has that essence, which make you feel that time and history stopped there, and anyone escaping from anything could just arrived and makes an easy living in a no man land.
Ah yes, the transportation in Jamaica. Trying to figure out which cabs are green or red and then what the difference is between them. That made for an interesting Sunday about a year ago.
ReplyDeleteSo do you like the work? Have you digested the plan?