Tag Archives: Writing

Americans Patty Huston-Holm (right) and Linda Knicely – volunteer lecturers and coaches for Uganda Christian University post-graduate students (UCU Partners photo)

Third World people investment – USA visitor to UCU offers insights


Americans Patty Huston-Holm (right) and Linda Knicely – volunteer lecturers and coaches for Uganda Christian University post-graduate students (UCU Partners photo)
Americans Patty Huston-Holm (right) and Linda Knicely – volunteer lecturers and coaches for Uganda Christian University post-graduate students (UCU Partners photo)

(SECOND OF FOUR-PART SERIES:  This is the second of four stories about a five-year-old, American-led writing and research workshop at Uganda Christian University. The first article contained reflections of the Ohio woman who founded and leads the training.  This second article reflects thoughts of an American volunteer in 2017 and 2019. The final two articles  feature UCU graduates who helped with the workshop. Parts I, III and IV can be accessed at those links. A video is here.)

By Linda Knicely

“It’s not enough to be busy. So are the ants. The question is: what are we busy about?” So said American essayist and philosopher, Henry David Thoreau.

Ugandans are busy. During the four weeks that I and three other American lecturers spent on the Uganda Christian University (UCU) campuses in four different locations, presenting to graduate students and faculty members during the dissertation clinic and trainings and individually coaching the students in  2019, this was apparent.

Sometimes they’re busy earning a living, taking care of children, and handling other tasks needed to survive. Other times, they’re busy relaxing and enjoying fellowship with one another. On campus, they’re learning. Both formally from their instructors and peers in the classroom sand informally during pick-up basketball games, at the canteens or as they walk and talk with each other. They’re learning how to grow into young adults of integrity, guided by Christian principles in the nurturing environment of UCU.

They’re also teaching.

Linda Knicely, left, with one of her students from 2019 (UCU Partners photo)
Linda Knicely, left, with one of her students from 2019 (UCU Partners photo)

They teach by example – the genuine and warm “You are welcome” that greets us at every turn brings smiles to our faces and is not as common in other parts of the world as one might think (or wish). They teach by sharing their stories with us and sometimes their language and their culture. They teach by risking vulnerability as they reveal their fears, their hopes and their dreams for themselves, their families, and their country of Uganda.

Americans are busy. Sometimes we’re coping with what, as I explained to one of my UCU students, David, we call “first world problems.” Very minor issues, in the scheme of things. We work hard, both on the job and even at play. We can find it hard to relax and just “be.”  Sometimes, unfortunately, we consider ourselves more often as “teachers” for the rest of the world, than learners. What a loss, for those that have that perspective, for there is so much to learn in Uganda.

I’ve been busy. When I first came to Uganda for six weeks two years ago (2017), I had no plans of making a return trip. It wasn’t a personal judgment about Uganda, but more about my craving to explore and experience as many different places in the world as possible.But because of what I learned that year from the people of Uganda, mostly in the UCU graduate school program, and the piece of my heart that I left here, I surprised myself by deciding to return.

In very typical American fashion, as our students (and interns) in 2019 have learned, we (our American team here) like to “keep time” and schedule ourselves tightly in order to be as productive as possible. I came back to teach, of course, and to support the graduate students with whom I interacted, to successful completion and defense of their dissertations.

But I also came back to learn more, and to re-imprint the lessons of two years ago on my memory and in my heart. My time spent here at UCU during this visit has felt even busier. Self-reflection will be a process that may wait until I return to the USA and my life there. But I hope that some of the lessons that I learn in Uganda prompt me to always question: “What am I busy about?”

And then there’s Patty Huston-Holm, the queen of “busy.” Patty was in Uganda for her eleventh visit in 2019 with many of the visits lasting months at a time; she led the student and faculty dissertation training for the fifth consecutive year on behalf of UCU Partners and the UCU School of Research and Post-Graduate Studies. While we (me, Tracy and David Harrison) were along this year, other years she has “flown solo.”Patty is never satisfied with what’s she’s done before, but constantly strives to improve the presentations or extend the program’s reach.

This year, she added coaching sessions at the UCU Kampala campus and faculty and student presentations on both Kabale and Mbale campuses. And the work that we’re directly involved with only represents one of the many roles that Patty has personally embraced in her support of Uganda Christian University’s mission.

I think that even those staff who know her on campus would be surprised at the time that she invests when she is home – continuing to arrange logistics and remain in communication to plan next steps, etc. She commits her tremendous talents and experience to this work out of Christian love for her Ugandan brothers and sisters, both those she knows already and those who will be impacted in the future through the vision and efforts of today’s students and staff at the university.

Patty’s clear sense of what she should “be busy about,” inspires me, and many others whose lives she has touched.

Two years ago, during one of our first conversations about Uganda, she told me that she believed in “investing in people.” I can’t think of a better way to be busy.

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Ohioan Linda Knicely volunteered with Patty Huston-Holm in 2017 and 2019. To learn more about how to become part of this literacy work at UCU, email Patty at hustonpat@gmail.com. For more information about UCU Partners and how to contribute financially to students, programs and facilities at UCU , contact Mark Bartels, UCU Partners executive director, at m.t.bartels@ugandapartners.org.

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Ruth Rose Akongo, right, with Princess Jones, one of her new friends from her New York City writing program experience

From luggage conveyer belt to higher beds, UCU student discovers America


Ruth Rose Akongo, right, with Princess Jones, one of her new friends from her New York City writing program experience
Ruth Rose Akongo, right, with Princess Jones, one of her new friends from her New York City writing program experience

By Ruth Rose Akongo

My first time in New York City (NYC) – this American city’s John F. Kennedy airport to be precise – my suitcase disappeared.  At least I thought it did.  In a panic, I watched my black bag holding clothing that I purchased mostly used from Ugandan street vendors go around a moving belt and up into a hole.

My African-beaded shoes, white tops, jeans and more were gone, I thought. Or maybe my bag was being confiscated for suspicion of drugs that somebody planted inside.  I didn’t know whether to run away or stay in place and scream. It was with relief that the bag came back, which everybody except me apparently knew would happen on an airport luggage conveyer belt.

This was my first experience in the United States of America. Actually, this was my first time out of my country.

It’s writing things like this that got the attention of Dr. Angella Napakol at Uganda Christian University and, therefore, in October 2017, my selection for a four-month writing program at King’s College in the heart of NYC the following year. The opportunity came as a surprise.

“Ruth, follow me to my office after class” were the words of Dr. Napakol after a mass communications research session. Just like with my bag in NYC, I feared the worse. Was my research question wrong? Or did I write an article that offended the department?

With sweaty hands and pounding heart, I faced my professor and heard the words: “You have been chosen for the exchange program in NEW YORK CITY.” My professor told me how having more than 10 story bylines won me the place.

UCU’s Ruth Rose Akongo, right, with American friend, Brooke Sargent
UCU’s Ruth Rose Akongo, right, with American friend, Brooke Sargent

It took about 15 minutes to convince the truth of the miracle to my family. It was such a big deal that when I went to the Entebbe airport in August of 2018, three car loads of family members came along to see me leave.

So what’s it like going from a Third World Country to a developed country like the United States?  I’ll try to narrow my experiences and what I learned academically to five areas each.

Cultural experiences

  • Land transportation – In Uganda, you pay a taxi conductor in cash just before exit. And growing up here, I know where to get on and off and if I don’t, I know the person to ask. In NYC, you need a GPS, which I didn’t have, for walking and riding. And you need tokens to place into a machine. The trains are confusing.
  • Different beds – In America, the beds are higher and softer than in Uganda. When it came to nightfall, I hurried for my comfortable bed, covered with black sheets under a colorful green flowered bedcover for warmth in this much colder climate. The happiness didn’t last long as I found my leg right stuck behind the heater in our room. When I slept closer to the other side, I fell out – twice. After a bruised leg and arm, I started sleeping on a couch that was lower.
  • Friends in NYC– People are the same everywhere. Some will like you; some won’t. I found the best friends like Princess Jones, Kennedy Peacock, Brooke, Janna Millar, among others. We enjoyed special moments from work places to the different parks (Central Park), and the other side of the city (Brooklyn, Queens, Lower Manhattan, etc.).
  • Friends in Ohio – Diane Ross, an American who I met in Uganda, invited me to a few days in Ohio where there is less traffic and noise than in NYC. This was refreshing compared to the awakening noise and limited fresh air in the city. The natural beauty, fewer buildings and more vegetation brought a sense of home back.
  • Friends in Boston – Although most of my time was spent inside in NYC due to the bitter cold and where the learning took place, I got the opportunity to bond with few Ugandans in Massachusetts through a birthday party. It had not crossed my mind to find so many Ugandans living together in one community in the USA.

As I sit back in Kampala, reflecting on my learning and how to apply it, I condense the experience to these five.

  • Narrative non-fiction techniques – curves and structures used to fully build out a story line.
  • Different books – I’m not afraid of books anymore for those that looked like medicine turned out to be my best friends.
  • Religion reporting – Maintaining faith not just in church but also through the media enabled me to embrace Christianity in a different, stronger way.
  • Combining journalism and business (entrepreneurship) – Thinking these had to be separate was not the case. I realized you could be an innovative writer for business.
  • Editorial skills – My experience with Providence Magazine further equipped me with editing skills. Correcting the errors improved my English language in understanding and speech as well.

As American journalist Ellen Goodman says, “There’s a trick to the ‘graceful exit.’ It begins with the vision to recognize when a job, a life stage, or a relationship is over — and let it go.”

My journey to the United States was a stepping-stone towards my career as a journalist. The overall life lesson was that being number one is of little value if there are no other numbers. I will keep working my way up.

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Ruth Rose Akongo is a 2018 graduate of Uganda Christian University.

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For more of these stories and experiences, visit https://www.ugandapartners.org. If you would like to assist a current student or otherwise support the university, contact Mark Bartels, Executive Director, UCU Partners, at m.t.bartels@ugandapartners.org or go to https://www.ugandapartners.org/donate/

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