If you’ve never ridden into an unfamiliar African village and been warmly embraced with singing and dancing after your small van has bumped along on an unpaved, dusty road with more naturally-grooved speed-bumps than trees alongside it, you really can’t fully appreciate how the Fulbright Association’s Service Tour in Malawi came to plant 1700 trees in a watershed area in the village of Naphambo near a river in Zomba.
That is just a glimpse into our delegation’s powerful experience in Malawi this past July. Through the Fulbright Association’s Travel Program, Fulbright alumni have the unique opportunity to further their international exposure and make an impact. The Association organizes two types of purposeful travel programs: Insight Tours are primarily educational, while Service Tours focus on volunteering and fieldwork. The Malawi trip marked a key milestone along a journey that began in 2014. In 2015, the Association officially aligned its travel program with the Pathways to Peace strategic framework, establishing key areas for collective impact that guide our service projects. The Malawi trip became the nexus of three of those impact areas: Global Health, Sustainability, and International Education. The trip also built upon the foundation laid by our institutional member Mercer University’s “Mercer on Mission” trips to many similar locations.
Among others, the Fulbright delegation included Dr. Zipangani Vokhiwa, Mercer University professor and President of the Georgia Chapter; Kim Eger, Vice President of the national Fulbright Association Board of Directors and Chair of the Pathways Initiative; Dr. Gale Workman, a journalist, professor, and International Rotarian; Dr. Sharon Nickols, a professor and former dean at the University of Georgia; and Dr. Jack Allison, a former Peace Corps volunteer who served in Malawi from 1966-1969. During Dr. Allison’s tour, he wrote a number of songs and jingles to promote public health, one of which became a #1 hit on Malawian radio stations. As the delegate went from village to village, singing the songs they learned from Dr. Allison, they found that to this day, many in Malawi still know his songs by heart. Song and music is one key component of how the Fulbright Association grant proposal intents to facilitate sharing of best practices related to sanitation and hygiene, and Dr. Allison has graciously agreed to help write and record some new songs for the RAIN grant-proposal project.
Kim Eger shared his excitement about the depth of connections built on the trip and the future of the Malawi team’s work, saying: “So called ‘downtime’ was rare on this trip. It was usually filled up with something not initially on the agenda, but where one contact led to another — often through the extensive network of our Fulbrighters. The multiple avenues for strategic partnerships sprang up from many directions daily.” As the Malawi delegation moves forward with their grant proposal in the months ahead, we look forward to sharing their work and its impact with members of our Fulbright community.
To see more photos from the Malawi trip, click here. These photos were taken by delegation participant Sabrina Khan, who generously served as the trip photographer! For more information on the Fulbright Association’s Travel Program, click here.
—Kalyn Cai, Communications Intern
