Posts Tagged ‘Malaysia’

Tips for Not Volunteering with a Terrible Organization in a Foreign Country

March 8, 2011

Kuala Lumpur, where we learned a few things the hard way

So you’re motivated, you’ve got skills, and you’re looking for a little adventure. By all means, pick up and move to another country and get to work. That’s what we did (and are still doing) and I can’t imagine having done anything else. That said, there have been a few bumps along the way, some of which were probably avoidable. Here are a few things to keep in mind (plus real-life examples!) so you can get more of what you want and less of what you don’t want from volunteering internationally.

1) Just because an international volunteer opportunity is posted on a respected job board or website doesn’t mean it was vetted

I contacted Net Impact after we left our toxic volunteer situation in Malaysia to share our experience and suggest strongly that they didn’t permit future listings. They subsequently banned the organization but there was no way for Net Impact to know anything about the organization until a complaint was made.

2) Just because the founder looks good on paper and the organization has received prestigious-sounding awards doesn’t mean that they are good at what they do or that they even do what they say they do

As we quickly found out, a lack of grant oversight coupled with some companies more interested in good press for their CSR than in actual, documentable impact created a smoke screen behind which incompetency could fester.

3) Just because there were volunteers in the past doesn’t mean they had positive experiences

Get references! This was the biggest mistake we made. You should ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS ask to contact the current volunteer, two previous volunteers, and any staff members you can get a hold of. We made up for lost time as soon as things started to feel fishy (which was almost immediately) and it took less than a minute of Internet research to get useful contact information. Had we spoken to the previous volunteer sooner, we would have saved ourselves some serious drama and headaches. And if the president/CEO/founder doesn’t want you to speak with anyone else, that’s a major red flag.

4) ALWAYS HAVE AN EXIT STRATEGY

If we’ve learned anything from America’s foreign affairs over the past ten years it’s that you always need an exit strategy. We had savings, I was still employed, and we knew that we would be just fine bumming around Southeast Asia for three months if things didn’t work out. As we got closer to our departure, we started to suspect that our host was not “crazy like a fox” but rather just “crazy” and we were already thinking through our options before we even landed. Whatever you do, don’t skimp on this step.

5) Don’t let yourself be isolated

We quickly met a number of fun, interesting, and helpful people after our arrival in Kuala Lumpur and their support was a real lifesaver. If you don’t know where to start socializing, don’t be shy about attending an expat event or two. Yes, it’s nice to meet and hang with locals but sometimes you just need the reassurance and comfort of your fellow countrymen and women. Plus, you’ll probably discover that the scene is quite small and that your new acquaintances will have some perspective on dealing with questionable local organizations.

6) Be prepared for haters

We felt that our experience was so egregious that we reached out to US-based organizations that have worked with this troubled local organization in the past. Our main concern was that future volunteers or fellows should not be subjected to the live/work situation we encountered, particularly if they have limited exit strategy options. While people were mostly appreciative of our feedback, one organization decided that the best way to handle our head’s up was to threaten me. Fortunately, the threat of “telling my employer” what I was doing – ratting out an unethical organization – wasn’t much of a threat as far as I was concerned. I figured it probably wouldn’t look so bad for me to, you know, have ethical standards. Also, our local contact had lied about her association with me and with my employer so I figured they’d take my side. But this goes back to #2 which is that some people and organizations have a vested interest in looking like they’re doing good whether or not they’re actually doing good. Try to have your support system in place if you go the whistle-blower route.

7) Take it all in stride

Yes, there were stressful moments. Yes, we literally planned an escape after we heard the details of the previous volunteer’s experience. But we also knew that things were going to be just fine, one way or another. Lean on your new friends, lean on family, escape to the beach, and just thank your lucky stars (as my grandmother would say) that you’re out of a bad situation with your reputation intact and that three weeks of dysfunction will make for years of stories. Also, how many times to you get to see for yourself how dysfunctional non-profits, NGOs, and other aid organization can be? That’s one reason you picked up and left, right? To get outside your comfort zone and learn something new about the world? Well, mission accomplished in our case but that doesn’t mean you need your experience to be as eventful as ours.

~

I’m sure I didn’t cover all the bases so if you have anything to add or your own international volunteer horror stories, please share them in the comments. Happy volunteering and traveling!

We ended up making a nice home for ourselves at the YWCA in Kuala Lumpur. Stadium Negara was right down the block as were three train stations and all the food you could ever hope to eat in Chinatown. A very happy ending.

Very incomplete microfinance profile

March 8, 2011

Amutha in her sewing studio

I’m very embarrassed to admit this, particularly since I’m now a Kiva Fellow and documenting microfinance clients is an important part of my job, but I didn’t take any notes during our visit to a local entrepreneur in Kuala Lumpur so I’m just going off of my recollections here. On top of that, I had completely forgotten about this draft which I started four months ago(!) but I liked the pictures so much that I decided to go ahead and publish, serious faults aside. I promise it won’t happen again.

But to give you an overview, Amutha is a refugee from Sri Lanka who has put her considerable sewing skills to great use. If I recall correctly, she was given a sewing machine by her church and has since purchased a few more either outright or through microloans. In the six months since since she received her first machine, she trained additional staff to meet the growing demand for her services.

Amutha is in a tricky situation, though, since Malaysia isn’t a signatory to the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees. What this means is that refugees in Malaysia are considered illegal immigrants, are subject to arrest and detention, and are unable to work legally. To get around this, work orders for Amutha and her staff are routed through an intermediary who gets a 20-30% cut. Even so, her business is profitable and growing quickly. It was clear from our visit that she’s an incredibly savvy entrepreneur who is committed to building skills and increasing opportunities for others in her community.

Amutha's Sewing Studio

Everyone was really excited to look serious and pose for the camera

One of the sewing machines

Amutha was a lovely host and we couldn't turn down the offer of teh tarik and tea biscuits

Trying to get through my holiday pics: Mt. Kinabalu

February 8, 2011

The second morning. We were rather cold. You can see my sock-glove in the lower corner of the photo.

Okay, I’ve trimmed down our Mt. Kinabalu pics as best as I can but it’s really hard to cut out the pretty sky pictures even when objectively I know they all look the same. So humor me. Also, I think there are a few more Mt. Kinabulu pics hanging out in another folder on my computer so don’t be surprised if there are more sky pics up my sleeve.

Oh, I guess I should give a few details about the hike. By the time mid-November rolled around, Dan and I were feeling pretty guilty about not yet visiting Borneo. We had heard great things about hiking up Mt. Kinabalu and decided that if we could getting a booking on the mountain lodge (the only option if you want to ascend to the peak), we were just going to get ourselves to Sabah for a hike. Well, we got our booking, purchased our plane tickets, and then proceeded to be too busy in our final week of work/moving/drama in Kuala Lumpur to buy a few essentials such as gloves, flashlights, snacks, etc… But fortunately, everything more or less worked out except for that fact that I clearly forgot that “climbing a mountain” means walking uphill for a long time and then walking downhill for a long time. Let’s just say that I wasn’t in the mood but I managed to get to the top and get to the bottom eventually.

But more on the hike itself. I’m a big fan of wikitravel in general and you can read their post on Mt. Kinabalu here. Basically, you walk up the mountain for 4-5 hours on the first day, eat dinner and sleep at the lodge, wake up at 2am for breakfast, start ascending to the peak around 2:30am/3am, hit the peak around sunrise, hike back down for second breakfast, and take the next 5-6 hours to walk all the way back down to the starting gate. Easy, right? Yeah, maybe I should have trained a little more for ascending ~7500ft over 8.5km (and then descending, of course) but I really had myself convinced that walking to KLCC Park followed by runs of no more than 6km would do the trick.

Sky 1

Sky 2

Sky 3

Hiking

You can see some of the porters on the left-hand side. They carried supplies up and down the mountain and weren't paid particularly well for it.

The lodge 1

The lodge 2

Morning 1

Morning 2

Dan

On our way down. Gotta love those ropes.

Kota Kinabalu

Freaking out at the Woolworths

February 7, 2011

As is the case with most of my food pics, this was better than it looks.

I’m generally not a big shopper but there are two situations where wires cross and I’ve been known to lose touch with reality. The first is buying gifts for people while traveling. I go nuts. Postcards, pillowcases, beaded animals, bowls, bizarro artwork made from cinder blocks, foreign food, toiletries – just about anything remotely portable is fair game.

The other time I go crazy as a shopper is at yuppie supermarkets. Particularly when I’ve been traveling for a while and I’m suddenly presented with organic fresh fruits, muesli, Greek yogurt, pesto, delightful treats in cute packaging, and any number of things in bottles that I’m suddenly convinced I desperately need. This happened at the Woolworths in Richards Bay over the weekend. The fact that I had to go to the mall had already weakened my defenses and even though I didn’t feel hungry at the time, I was shopping like I hadn’t eaten anything in the past week.

But, unlike past instances of Shopper’s Freak Out, I actually made something of the madness. And it was good. Really good. I’d been craving some of the flavors we became accustomed to in Malaysia and I also wanted to prove to Dan that I was totally, definitely going to use the sesame oil, sambal, soy sauce, fish sauce, and rice vinegar that I insisted I needed. So I created a marinade for the chicken then mixed together arugula, cilantro, an orange pepper, and steamed brocollini. Next up, the udon noodles which I eventually fried with an egg. And finally, the chicken. As my friend Jen can attest, I’m very squeamish around meat so the fact that I mostly cooked it myself with only the occasional consultation with Dan was quite the feat. Then I just mixed it all together with a little white pepper and sea salt and called it a day.

Hanging at the beach in Richards Bay

Not Packing But Should Be

January 19, 2011

Kuala Lumpur looking moody

Instead of packing for what feels like the millionth time in the past month, I am cleaning up the desktop on my computer. In doing so, I’ve come across a random assortment of Kuala Lumpur pics that I’m going to upload before I forget all about them. I also have a ridiculous number of Mt. Kinabalu, Bangkok, Angkor Wat, and Chiang Mai pics but that’s a whole other can of worms. Hopefully I get to those before the new crop of Southern Africa pics starts rolling in. Which reminds me, I never did a very good job of sharing the first batch from 2009. One of these days….

Waiting for the monorail

Visiting an artist's studio

Lush garden just off the artist's studio

Vanilla beans

Christmas decorations in KL were pretty ridiculous. Not only that, the worst Christmas music ever was piped through speakers in Bukit Bintang.

Our room at the YWCA was VERY bright. No sleeping in allowed.

Storm watching

Central Market in KL. The light and architecture reminded me of LA.

Walking down Jalan Hang Jebat

Loved the skyline in KL

Domestic Life

January 8, 2011

My computer. We spent a lot of time together in Kuala Lumpur.

Our home at the YWCA.

Kuala Lumpur Events

January 8, 2011

While based in Kuala Lumpur, I attended many social enterprise events and occasionally found a few quiet moments to make a drawing. The first is from the announcement of the DiGi Challenge for Change finalists (I was one of the competition judges) and the second is from a Global Entrepreneurship Week celebration event, which Dan and I attended in spite of the preceding 24 hours of hijinx.

Usually I try to finish all my drawings in one go but this one took several weeks to finish.

Tasty food and cool decorations

A Few More Airplane Drawings

January 7, 2011

I love traveling for the quiet time I have to draw so it’s no surprise that I have dozens of sketches of the backs of airplane seats. Here are three from our recent trip:

Kota Kinabalu to Kuala Lumpur

Kuala Lumpur to Bangkok

Seoul to Los Angeles (you can see SoCal on the map)

Vacation

January 6, 2011

Hi all,
I’ve been on vacation and it’s been great. I’ll be getting back into this blogging thing soon but in the meantime, here’s a sketch Dan made on our epic day stuck in the Kota Kinabalu airport. As soon as he drew it, I made him put it away since I didn’t want to end up on some terrorist watch list. Hopefully writing “terrorist watch list” doesn’t lead to ending up on an actual terrorist watch list.
Cheers,
Alexis

This is how we felt about our AirAsia experience

Trying to be on vacation but stuck in the airport

December 6, 2010

Quick post before my iPod Touch dies. We’re currently stuck in the airport at Kota Kinabalu after our AirAsia flight was cancelled. Got here around 5:30am and spent the next 4.5 hours in line trying to get this flight rebooked and our connecting flight to Bangkok rebooked. On top of that, our hotel was hosting a rager until 2am so let’s just say that we are not particularly well rested. No offense to Malaysia but we’re really looking forward to leaving. Fingers crossed that actually happens today.


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