
Here are couple more good sites I just discovered on what's going on here as far as assisting the Afghans to rebuild.
Combined Security Transition Command - Afghanistan (CSTC-A)
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)
You may recall that Brian has had the nickname “The Terminator” bestowed upon him because of his apparent dismantling of the NMAA management department. There isn’t a day that goes by that something comes up and Brian bears the brunt of a reference to NMAA, not having (at least temporarily) and management major. Here are a couple of examples:
It’s been several days since I last posted anything, so I’ll try to get you caught up. TAIT – thank Allah it’s Thursday. I think I’ve mentioned before that the “weekend” here starts on Thursday and ends on Friday. Saturday (shanba in Dari) is the first day of the week (our Monday). So, weekends are really only a day and a half, but it’s not bad. Friday, was “flight-suit Friday.”

On Friday (jumma in Dari) morning, I slept and when I woke, I stepped on our new carpet in our room. Brian had gone to Camp Eggers the day before and we gave him some money so he would pick us up some carpet remnants for our room. They are 3’ x 5’ and three of them nearly cover the narrow walkway down the middle of my and Lem’s room. Before, we had a bare panel floor that seemed quite proficient at attracting the dust from our shoes and the “dust bunnies” from our clothes. It’s amazing how such a little thing can make such a big difference in our comfort level. After waking, I decided to work out and then take the rest of the day to do whatever I wanted. Well, the thing is, there really isn’t all that much to do around here because we can’t leave KAIA. So, Lem and I went and got some books from the makeshift second-hand library in the Red Barn of our borough. For lunch, we decided to try the Thai restaurant that is on KAIA.



Didn’t buy anything, and then went back to the room to read a bit, then we watched a movie on the laptop – I don’t even remember which movie. We just lounged around most of the afternoon and then when it was starting to get dark, we decided to meander around our little camp called KAIA and see what we could see within the confines of our holding pen. So, here’s a quick little tour. If you recall, I mentioned that each little country borough has it’s own bar (or two).





We then went to “Air Force One” which is a bar/café/club at the main building of KAIA. It has an internet café, gaming café, little movie theater, pool tables, and coffee bar. It reminded me again of the bar scene in the original Star Wars – so many different people, so many uniforms, loud music and videos, and loud stories and laughter. We had some hot chocolate to warm us up because it was so incredibly cold (~ 5 F) and then went back to the room and watched another movie.
On Saturday, it was off to work again – almost don’t mind the short weekend so we can at least get of the grounds here a bit. Our internet connection has been very intermittent, so that’s another reason why I haven’t been posting anything. Funny how spoiled we’ve become to being able to email and even call home practically whenever we want. So, when we lose that privilege, people really start to get grumpy! Saturday was pretty uneventful, and I didn’t do a whole lot at work because I forgot to take my little thumb drive with all my documents stored on it. I spent most of the day listening to the Army guys banter back and forth.
Lem: “Hey, R2, do you want some yogurt?”
R2: “No, thanks, I don’t do fresh-squeezed. Hey, how do you know when yogurt goes bad? They start putting fruit in the bottom. How do you know when cottage cheese goes bad? They call it yogurt.”
R1: “We got some analysis back on the drinking water samples that were collected from the well last week . It’s full of coci-o, uh, cochia-something bacterium, uh …” and before he could finish his sentence …
R2: “Just say, shit. The drinking water tastes like shit because it’s full of shit!”
H: "Brent, your predecessor decided that he was going to get in shape while he was here about two weeks before he left. I told him he shouldn't bother because he had furniture disease."
Brent: "O.K., I'll bite - what's furniture disease??
H: "His chest was falling in his drawers!"
R1: "Hey don't we have those FNGs coming in today."
H: "Yes, there is a full-bird and two majors."
Lem: "Shouldn't that be "New FNGs?"
Brent: "O.K., what are FNGs?"
H: "F***ing New Guys."
So, I guess we're not the newbies anymore - we the full-bird colonel is the new English-mentor and the two majors are civil engineering teacher-mentors - all from West Point. The Air Force contingent is getting a little sparse around here.
H: "You Air Force academic types are polluting the young minds of Afghanistan's future soldiers."
Lem: "Hey, what does an Army Lieutenant Colonel do here at NMAA - he drives the Air Force officers around."
Brent: "And, Army Lieutenant Colonels also wash the cars!" Here's a picture of H cleaning up one of our vehicles.
Apparently, at dangerously high levels – thank goodness we have gobs of bottled water. So, we started to make all kinds of jokes about the drinking water and all the chai (tea) we had been drinking with our Afghan hosts over the last couple of weeks. Those Afghans did seem awful generous with the tea – maybe it was a plot to try and get us sick. Someone said, “No, it’s all right, they boil the shit , literally, out of the water!”
Went to the bazaar on Saturday afternoon and got in an argument with a carpet vendor. He spoke pretty good English and was happy to offer chai (hmm, where did he get his water?) to us while we looked at his carpets. I told him right off the bat I wasn’t going to buy anything, I just wanted to see what he had. He showed me a couple of large rugs – Afghan rugs are typically made from camel wool while the more expensive Persian (i.e. Iranian) rugs were made from silk or “higher quality wool.”

Sunday (Yak shanba in Dari – the first day after Saturday) was the day I would be meeting with my five physics faculty. I had come up with several class activities and project that they could use in class instead of just lecturing to their students. Dr. Wali had translated them for me and we were all to meet in the Physics lab room at 9:30 am. My plan was to show them these activities and some teaching techniques as if they, themselves were a class. We went through the activities and they really seemed to like them because they got them to think in ways they hadn’t before. Perfect – just what they needed and just what they needed to do in their own classrooms. The first activity was a simple measurements activity to get the students familiar with units, dimensions, area, volume, and mass. The activity instructed the students to measure the dimension of their physics text and then calculate the area and volume and mass (given the density of the paper). I even had a to-scale centimeter tape embedded on the handout. I asked them if they thought they (the instructors and their students) could do this problem and they said, “yes, pretty easy.” The next problem had the picture of me in front of the missile and they had to estimate the angle the missile made with the horizontal surface. Again, they said, “yes, pretty easy.” The next activity involved using the above activities along with the concept of vectors to plot and measure a course around the NMAA grounds. I printed an overhead shot of the campus and gave them some criteria to follow. They had to calculate the their total path distance from just the picture and then go outside and somehow measure it and compare the two and explain why they were different (if they were). I asked how might they measure the distances outside – “with a tape measure,” one said. I said, “What if you didn’t have a tape measure?” Another said, “then you could pace it out if you knew about how big your pace was.” Good. And so on – it may seem pretty simplistic, but I think it may be the first time that they’ve really thought about how there could be more than one way to solve a problem. This was evident on another problem where I showed them a video clip of a man trying to jump over a swimming pool.
Just a quick note about Dr. Wali and the other interpretors. They are the smartest and most educated people in their country right now and they do an amazing job for us at NMAA. It is very difficult for them and they all work (translate) in areas outside of the limited education and backgrounds. Dr. Wali for instance doesn't know all the nomenclature or words to describe advanced concepts in math or science, but he has a pretty good understanding of the concepts and with a little help from me, we do a pretty good job. The interpretors are students too and learning so much from their work. At one point during my meeting with the physics faculty, they didn't get one of the points that Dr. Wali had translated. So, instead of Dr. Wali asking me, he grabbed a whiteboard pen and started explaining the concept to the "class" - it was great!
I...I took my left hand and put my thumb at the feet of the man’s standing image on the screen, then I put my index finger at the top of his head and with that indicated the height of the man.

Here's some additional pictures from around the KAIA compound. Notice the towers and walls of our little camp.









Well, that’s all I can stand to type right now – again, thanks for reading. It seems to me that most of this could only be interesting to me, but you get what you get. I'll leave you with this sunset picture from Sunday night. The picture doesn't do the scene justice. You can see that the picture is taken in front of the French borough.

2 comments:
Glad to see this. I have been missing your blog. It is my entertainment at work!
i was there is nice bravo NATO/ISAF.
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