Well, the title says it all. It seems like I only got here a couple days ago, and with the Afghan culture, it feels very much like home - and a very friendly one at that.
So what on earth has been going on these last days? Well, we've been working together on training for the committee members here. AIESEC subjects, skills, all being working on and facilitated by people here.
We got a good partnership going with the Ministry of Youth Affairs - the minister and the Afghan ambassador to India will be accompanying us on our trip to the AIESEC World Congress in India. And more to follow on this I'm sure...
We're getting ready to start the campaign on campus to find the students who will be going on traineeships to Germany and around the world here at Kabul University. At long last we have an application form and process that will allow us to get through the 300 applications as efficiently as possible.
And the beauty of Skype is shining through here - that wonderful program that lets us talk to practically anyone in the world at almost no cost. And introducing it to others can help make us popular as well.
Today we met with the kind folks at KPMG. They have an operation training local students on a correspondance course in accounting and operating the accounting firm here in Kabul. It was a really nice place that they have - very friendly and relaxed environment there.
It was kinda funny, at first Wafi here was concerned that he wasn't quite dressed up enough for the meeting - it turned out there was no need to be concerned! It was quite a good environment!
So the traineeships for people to come here to Afghanistan are well and truly on the way. Pretty soon we have meetings with Tolo - the main broadcaster here, also operating the yellow pages here in Afghanistan, a marketing agency, and other operations.
On a day to day basis I see hardly any westerners - they all seem to live in NGO land. Why on earth would anyone come to Afghanistan and the only Afghan they know is the guard? The culture here is fantastic, friendly, and welcoming, yet many seem not to experience that. It's a real shame, the honour for me is that I have got to experience the life here. That when I'm out and around I see not one other westerner - and that really is the best way to live the culture here.
The amount of work that is put in by the members here is phenomonal - even though it is the exams they are still volunteering their time for the AIESEC work - it's amazing. Very few AIESEC countries are recognised at the level that AIESEC Afghanistan is recognised - and it's well deserved by the members here in Kabul. Already I have had a fantastic experience, many have got the chance to live and work in Germany, and much more is to come.
So essentially the exchange is getting well and truly underway and the external relations work that was done here by before is driving that. But better than that is how small my little role is. That I'm just somewhere in the background, not really doing all that much, and that more and more my role is getting smaller and smaller, that the activity is driven here, just here being trained and facilitating. Getting to live and work with the people here, is really the honour. That it's as close to the normal life here as possible, and that's the experience.
Well hopefully I shall be able to update more often in the future.