Travel to Africa to backpack, study, intern, volunteer, work,

or live as a digital nomad, expat or emigrant?

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 Africa

Intro

Backpacking in Africa?

  • Africa is perhaps the continent where backpackers face the greatest challenges and experience the most beautiful adventures. More than in the other continents, you are often pulled completely out of your comfort zone and you travel as journeys were once intended.
  • Characteristics: lots of adventure, lots of local contact, lots of music, lots of wildlife and sometimes some setbacks.

Travel in Africa?

  • Nothing or no one can prepare you for the wonderful world of Africa. From the pyramids of Giza in the Egyptian desert to the annual migration of wildebeest in search of water in the Serengeti National Park (Tanzania). The trips with a Spotting nature: Victoria Falls (Zimbabwe, Zambia), the West African Sahara, the safari areas in East Africa, the surf spots of Guinea or South Africa.
  • Spotting animals: from lions to elephants and from rhinos to penguins.

Internship and study in Africa?

  • Studies: in principle, all subjects and forms of education can be found.
  • Study and internship cities: Cairo, Cape Town, Kigali, Mombasa, Zanzibar.
  • Internship competencies: patience, perseverance.

Volunteer work in Africa?

  • Volunteer projects: mainly in the social sectors, education, healthcare and animal care.
  • Animal projects: protection of monkeys, elephants, penguins, sea turtles, among others.
  • Features: volunteer work possible from 1 or 2 weeks to several months.

Working in Africa?

  • Jobs: temporary work can mainly be found in tourism and healthcare.
  • Work competencies: involvement, empathy, patience, perseverance.

Working as a digital nomad in Africa?

  • Favorite cities and islands: Cairo, Dahab (Egypt), Cape Town, Kigali (Rwanda), Marrakesh, Nairobi, Port Louis (Mauritius), Zanzibar (Tanzania).

Living in Africa?

  • Language: English or French is spoken almost everywhere.
  • Living environment: varies enormously per location, but in general life in some African countries is a bit more adventurous than in most other regions.
  • Care in Africa: ask for advice about insurance policies that provide sufficient coverage for the right care and also repatriation in the event of an emergency.

Supporting content

Supporting content:
Happiness quotes & statements from Africa

Happiness quotes & statements from Africa

Quotes & statements from around Africa by country and contentment

 
Are you going to bed? Put your slippers crosswise on top of one another under your bed. It will bring you luck and happiness - Cape Verde Islands
Happiness is not perfected until it is shared - Africa & Europe

Happiness is not perfected until it is shared - Africa & Europe

Happiness is not perfected until it is shared

Said by

  • It is said to be an old African saying
  • Sir Philip Sidney wrote it in his book 'Aphorisms'  in the 15th century."Happiness is a sunbeam, that may pass through 1,000 bosoms without losing a single particle of its original ray; nay when it strikes on a kindred heart, like the converged light on a mirror, it reflects itself with redoubled brightness. Happiness is not perfected until it is shared."

Variations

  • Happiness is never perfect until is shared with someone else
  • Happiness is not perfect, until it is shared
  • Happiness is only real when shared

 

 

 

Have you lost something? Spit in your hand and watch where the drops go. That is where you will find it - Eritrea
Sing a lot, and it will be beautiful weather - Eritrea
Throw rose petals after a wedding. It will bring the married couple luck - Morocco
When you peel an orange and the peel stays in one piece, you will get lucky - Tunisia
Quotes & statements from around Africa by country and contention (the twelve elements of contentment) - Africa

Quotes & statements from around Africa by country and contention (the twelve elements of contentment) - Africa

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Quotes & statements from around Africa by country and contention (the twelve elements of contentment)

Self-awareness & Self-insight

  • We are what our thinking makes us: Nigeria.
  • Knowledge without wisdom is like water in the sand: Guinea.
  • Those who are happy at home should remain at home.

Independency & Steadfastness

  • Examine what is said, not him who speaks: Egypt.

Limitlessness & Freedom

  • Happiness often sneaks through your door when you left the door open.
  • Dance even if the hump on your back does not allow you.

Usefulness & Meaning

  • Ubuntu: I am a person through other people. (Zulu)
    • Desmond Tutu said: “One of the sayings in our country is Ubuntu, the essence of being human. Ubuntu speaks particularly about the fact that you can’t exist as a human being in isolation. We believe that a person is a person through other persons.. It is a form of humanism which can be expressed
    • "I am, like because of who we all are." Ubuntu signifies emphatically that: “The life of another person is at least as valuable as one’s own,” and that “Respect for the dignity of every person is integral to this concept.”
    • Source

Experience & Feeling alive

  • Those who are absent are always wrong: Congo.

Helpfulness & Attentiveness

  • Happiness is not perfected until it is shared.

Engagement & Sense of surroundings

  • Happiness is like a perfume, you cannot pour it all on others without allowing a few drops to fall on yourself.
  • The chameleon changes color to match the earth; the earth doesn’t change colors to match the chameleon: Senegal.

Goal Orientation & Sense of perspective

  • The big game often appears when the hunter has given up the hunt for the day.
  • The chameleon looks in all directions before moving: Uganda.
  • Anxious about the shoe, but careless about the foot.

Balance & Stability

  • If you are building a house and a nail breaks, do you stop building, or do you change the nail?
  • Who swims never sinks.

Result awareness & Positivity

  • There are no shortcuts to the top of the palm tree: Cameroon.

Connectivity & Contacts

  • Lonely is one: Masai.
  • Alone in counsel, alone in sorrow.

Attention & Focus

  • Coffee and love taste best when hot: Ethiopia.
  • He who learns teaches: Ethiopia.
Happiness quotes and statements from around the world - Theme
Africa: typical African habits, food customs, recipes and philosophies

Africa: typical African habits, food customs, recipes and philosophies

African habits, food customs and remarkable philosophies

    What are typical Kenyan habits, food customs, recipes and philosophies in Kenya?

    What are typical Kenyan habits, food customs, recipes and philosophies in Kenya?

    What are the customs in Kenya regarding food?

    • Because of the many different tribes and groups of people from Asia and Arab countries, among others, Kenya has a very diverse cuisine. For example, the Massai, pastoralists, eat a lot of meat and drink a lot of milk while the peoples living around Lake Queen Victoria eat mostly fish. Most meals in Kenya consist of ugali or potatoes accompanied by meat or fish and lots of vegetables.

    What are the best recipes in Kenya?

    • Ugali which is a mixture of water, milk and corn flour.
    • Mandazi are a type of doughnut that many Kenyans absolutely love.
    • Kachumbari is spicy tomato sauce with meat.

    What are the best drinks in Kenya?

    • Tea is served British-style with lots of sugar and milk.
    • Kenyans like warm beer.
    • Try to avoid locally distilled alcoholic beverages such as Busaa and Changaa. These drinks have caused a fair number of deaths due to the unsanitary conditions under which they are made.
    • Ginger Ale from Tangawizi is a locally brewed drink enjoyed by many Kenyans.

    What are notable holidays and festivals in Kenya?

    • Kenyatta Day is on October 20. The holiday of Kenya's first president, Jomo Kenyatta, is celebrated with parades throughout the country.
    • Jahmuri Day, or Independence Day, is celebrated on Dec. 12. In 1963 Kenya gained independence from England and in 1964 on this day Kenya became part of the Commonwealth. There are throughout the country, speeches, parades and celebrations with dancing and music.

    What are the remarkable habits in Kenya?

    • Cultural customs: there are a huge number of cultures to be found in Kenya, and people identify strongly with their own ethnic group and its customs. Yet there is also a strong sense of national identity. General values found in Kenya are caring for neighbors and loved ones, strong family ties and modesty.
    • Social norms & mutual communication: greetings are important in both business and personal conversations, titles and formal forms of address are used to show respect, and non-verbal communication plays a big role!
    • Etiquettes & traditions: think politeness, respect, shaking hands with a slight head bow, hospitality towards guests, wearing traditional clothing on special occasions. Color and patterns may also be important here.
    • Eating and drinking habits: Meals are consumed together and it is polite to wait for the elder or host to start eating. Many Kenyans eat with their hands in the process.

    What are some Kenian wisdoms and proverbs?

    • "Do not mistake a rained on lion for a cat."

      • even if someone does not feel like hunting he can still kill

    • "Wisdom is like a baobab tree; no one individual can embrace it."

      • wisdom is vast and collective; it requires the contributions of many to fully understand

    • "The strength of the crocodile is in the water."

      • You are stronger in your environment than anywhere else

    • "One who is not disciplined by their mother will be disciplined by the world’

      • If you are not taught at home, then you will learn it the hard way

    What are typical Mediterranean habits, food customs and remarkable philosophies?

    What are typical Mediterranean habits, food customs and remarkable philosophies?

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    The Mediterranean Sea is surrounded by 16 countries. Of these 16 countries, 6 are in Europe, 5 are in Africa, 4 are in Asia. The 6 European countries that border the Mediterranean are Spain, France, Monaco, Italy, Greece, and the island country of Malta and Turkey. The 5 African countries are Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco; the 4 Asian countries are Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Cyprus. Since the Mediterranean area is quite big, it is difficult to generalise, but let's try for a change.

    To me the Mediterranean is famous for food. Often people speak about the Mediterranean diet. A Mediterranean diet consists food that is found in the region like fresh vegetables, local herbs and spices, fish and seafood, lentils, poultry, eggs, cheese, yoghurt, nuts. Consume with (a moderate amount of) wine and plenty of water.  Many nutrition experts recommend the Mediterranean diet for health reasons. There is hardly any red meat in the diet.

    General

    • A Mediterranean habit is everything in moderation and it was coined by the Greek philosopher Cleobulus. It is key in living well.
    • Everyone eats late.

    Habits in Cyprus

    • Family is a priority in Cyprus. Parents take care of their children. When parents grow old, children will take care of them. Old people take care of their grandchildren. Family is everything!
    • People Cyprus are generally slow and they postpone things until the next day. Nobody is in a hurry and try to enjoy every minute of life.
    • The meze is a selection of small dishes, like tapas. The meze is a good formula to enjoy multiple flavors and to socialize over a long meal.
    • Some people in Cyprus believe in the evil eye, which brings bad luck, there are charms to keep you protected.

    Habits in Egypt

    • The hot climate has defined the Egyptians' national character - calmness. People in Egypt like to take it easy. They are often late and spend a lot of time to make a decisions. Non-punctuality and slowness are justified by the habit of living by the "Egyptian time". It is from the Mediterranean habit to relax. Egyptians' favorite word is "Bukra", which means "tomorrow". Which reminds me of mañana mañana.

    Habits in France

    • Fresh and homemade are the two words that describe home cooking in France. Most meals are freshly prepared meals. Everything made from scratch from salad dressings to bread. It is a daily practice for many Europeans. The French are famous for drinking wine with their dinner. All in moderation, then it is even good for health!

    Habits in Israel

    • Israeli diet is considered the healthiest of the world. It totally fits the Mediterranean diet, it is the Mediterranean diet! A lot of vegetables, lemon, chickpeas, moderate amounts of dairy and meat, and all with olive oil. All meals are served in small portions. 

    Habits in Italy

    • I remember my time in Italy with huge meals, of multiple courses, hours and hours spent around the table dining with friends and family. One specific ingredient used in Italy is olive oil. Healthy to the max, used in small portions. 

    Habits in Malta 

    • Daily life in Malta is very laid back. No one seems to ever be in a rush.
    • Many locals enjoy good conversation over a coffee. Malta is a very much family-orientated island, and you can see families spending time together.
    • It is too hot during the day, especially in summer, when the sun is high on the horizon, so the shops are closed and people are resting.

    Habits in Monaco

    • Monacan habits are also connected to food! Daily eating habits reflect a Mediterranean heritage. French and Italian influences can be found in the local recipes. Breakfast is very small, but lunch and dinner often have multiple courses.

    Habits in Morocco

    • Morocco has a small part of the country, which is on the Mediterranean coast. You will find Mediterranean habits in Morocco. Family is for most Moroccans is the most important element in life. It is family before work, friends and sometimes even marriage. Many Moroccans live with their families before and after marriage. The topic family is a populair topic to talk about. It is normal to inquire about details of family relationships of a person you don't know.
    • The people in the country are in general warm, open and do not have any inhibitions. A guest is a gift from Allah. People are likely to invite you to their homes. 
    • Dine and feed your guests even if you are starving is a proverb. The people are generous and will likely send you home stuffed and full. 

    Habits in Spain

    • Flamengo is the example of exercise in a fun way, while dancing. Joy and sorrow threaten to overwhelm you. The raw passion of flamengo can bring you to another world. Get transformed as well and listen to:
    • Pata Negra, Blues de la fontera (1987)
    • Chambao, Flamenco chill (2002)
    • Every one takes naps, the so called siesta. Shops are closed, people eat with family and friends and take a nap afterwards. The nap has the effect that you can't sleep early, so you work until later in the evening, since you had a siesta. You have dinner later and you sleep later.
    • Mañana mañana is a word from the Spanish language that means tomorrow and morning. This word describes the period of time between midnight and noon. It means it is done sometime tomorrow, which means no stress. Take it easy. Enjoy life and relax when possible.

    Please help me adding

    • Algeria
    • Libya
    • Syria
    • Lebanon
    • Tunisia
    Africa Country Bundle: suggestions, stories and tips

    Africa Country Bundle: suggestions, stories and tips

    Content about Africa on WorldSupporter

    Africa: Updates & Travel

    Africa: Updates & Travel

    Travel in Africa

    • Nothing and no one can prepare you for the wonderful world of Africa. From the pyramids of Giza in the Egyptian desert to the annual migration of wildebeest in search of water in the Serengeti National Park (Tanzania). Many travellers who have once travelled through Africa return, because there is so much to discover.
    • Absolute highlights are the unprecedented water violence and natural beauty at the Victoria Falls (Zimbabwe, Zambia), the cultural traditions in West Africa, the safari areas in East Africa and the surf spots with swinging djembes on the beaches of Guinea, or in South Africa.
    • The trips with a 4x4 truck across a number of African countries also remain one of the most attractive and adventurous ways to get to know the continent.
    • Travelling through Africa can also be tough. Due to changing political situations, poor infrastructure and poverty, the dangers and challenges are greater than average. But those who do not shy away from the unknown and adventurous will have an incredible experience.
    • Check the Nile River (South Sudan/Sudan/Egypt): Drift along the green and fertile Nile with the ancient traditions of the Nubian people.
    • Climb the Kilimanjaro (Tanzania): Climb the snow-capped peak of Kilimanjaro, 5,896 meters high and just below the equator in the African savannah.
    • Visit the pyramids of Giza (Egypt): A wonderful feeling when you see these famous pyramids looming up from the deserted Egyptian plains.
    • Bwindi National Park (Uganda): Go in search of the mountain gorillas in this wild but beautiful park.
    • Beaches of Northern Mozambique: Dance together with the relaxed locals on the endless beaches with fine white sand, turquoise water and mango trees.
    • Sossus Valley (Namibia): Experience the lonely and cruel side of nature in the dark red and endless desert of Namibia.
    • Ténéré Desert (Niger): An unforgiving climate, but the most beautiful sand dunes of the Sahara.
    • Go to Lalibela (Ethiopia): Visit the beautiful monolithic churches and learn about the ancient culture of Ethiopia.
    • Do visit: Serengeti National Park (Tanzania): One of the largest game parks, known for the annual emigration of a million gazelles, zebras, wildebeest and other animals.
    • Kruger National Park (South Africa): Real African savannah with the 'Big Five'.
    • Dakar (Senegal): Furious drumbeats, the best art festivals, white beaches and endless African markets form the scene of this great West African city.
    • Dogon Country (Mali): Discover the surreal clay houses built against mountains, the ancient Malian culture on the border of the Sahel.
    • Marrakesh (Morocco): The medina of Marrakesh is a labyrinth of alleys. Busy sellers of gold and silver and the smell of spices in the bazaars make for a day full of wonder.
    • Victoria Falls (Zimbabwe/Zambia): 'Smoke that thunders'. See, hear and experience the power of the water of the Zambezi River.

    Updates Africa

    • More about Africa, updates and contributions, see the link below.

     

    Africa: country bundles

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    Recipes from Africa or with a African twist by WorldSupporters - Bundle

    Recipes from Africa or with a African twist by WorldSupporters - Bundle

    Recipes from Africa collected by WorldSupporters

    Recipe: Kenyan chapati

    Recipe: Kenyan chapati

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    1. Add the flower, salt and if wanted 2 tablespoons of sugar to a big mixing bowl
    2. Stir the dry ingredients
    3. Add a fair amount, say 200 milliliters of the water to the bowl
    4. Mix the water and the dry ingredients with hand of with doughmixer
    5. Mix and add water untill a firm, moist, but non sticky dough exsists
    6. Add 2 tablespoons of oil to the mixture
    7. Knead dough for about 10 minutes, untill dough feels soft and elastic
    8. Cover the dough and let it rest for approximatly 1 hour
    9. After 1 hour cover the worksheet with flower, to prevent the dough from sticking to the surface, than split the dough and unroll it to a slice of 0,5-1cm thick
    10. Cover the topside of the slice with a fair amount of oil
    11. Slice the dough in stripes of 5 cm wide and 30 cm long, if the slice is shorter, dont bother just 'glue' 2 slices to make it one
    12. Roll up the slice with the oillayer faced in, tuck the end of the doughstripe in the middle
    13. When finished with all the small doughballs, let them rest again for 30 minutes
    14. After 30 minutes roll the doughballs out separatly untill they have the diameter of the pan you're going to bake them in
    15. A non stick pan works best for this recipe
    16. First bake all the chapati's in a smoking hot pan on both sides for 30 seconds or untill brown spots appear in the dough
    17. When all the chapati's are baked put the chapati's back in the pan, pay attention this is a quick movement
    18. Add oil on top of the chapati, about a tablespoon or until the top of the chapati is covered
    19. Quickly turn the oil side to the pan and whilst twisting the chapati to prevent it from burning, add oil to the other side
    20. Turn the chapati to let the other side bake
    21. Repeat this process with all the chapati's

     

     

    Serves nice with beanstew, potatoe stew, meatstew but my alltime favorite lentilstew!

    Ready In: 120 min.

    Ingredients:

    • 1 kg of plain flour
    • lukewarm water
    • pinch of salt
    • (optional) sugar
    • sunflower oil
    Recipe: Ndole - Cameroon
    Recipe: Ugandan vegetable Samosas

    Recipe: Ugandan vegetable Samosas

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    This recipe is from: blog.ssekodesigns.com

    I didn't try to make them myself yet, but i ate lots of Samosas in Uganda and they absolutely were my favourite Ugandan food!!

    Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.

    Heat the oil in a small nonstick pan. Add the mustard seeds and fry for about ten seconds, or until they begin to splutter.

    Add the onion and ginger, and cook for 2 to 3 minutes over a high heat. Add the peas, and stir well. Add the coriander, cumin, chile powder, garam masala, salt to taste, and a splash of water. Cook for 1 to 2 minutes, and then add the potatoes, and cilantro, and cook for another 2 to 3 minutes. Taste the mixture and adjust the seasoning as necessary.

    Unroll the phyllo pastry dough, cover with plastic wrap and a damp tea or kitchen towel. Peel off one sheet and keep the rest covered so that it doesn't dry out. Lay the pastry sheet flat on a clean surface, and brush with melted butter. Fold in one third of the pastry lengthwise towards the middle. Brush again with the butter and fold in the other side to make a long triple-layered strip.

    Place one rounded teaspoon of the filling mixture at one end of the strip, leaving a 1-inch border. Take the right corner and fold diagonally to the left, enclosing the filling and forming a triangle. Fold again along the upper crease of the triangle. Keep folding in this way until you reach the end of the strip. Brush the outer surface with more butter. Place the triangle onto a baking sheet and cover while you make the rest of the samosas. Bake in the center of the oven for 30 to 35 minutes, or until golden and crisp, turning halfway through the cooking time.

    Enjoy!

    Ready in: 50 min.

    Ingredients:

    • 3 tablespoons vegetable oil
    • ½ teaspoon mustard seeds
    • 2 ½ ounces chopped onion
    • 1 teaspoon finely chopped ginger
    • 2 ½ ounces peas
    • 1 tablespoon coriander
    • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
    • ¼ teaspoon red chile powder
    • ½ to ¾ teaspoon garam masala
    • pinch of kosher salt
    • splash of water
    • 1 lb and 5 ounces potatoes
    • peeled
    • boiled until soft and crushed into large lumps
    • 4 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
    • 1 package frozen phyllo pastry dough
    • thawed
    • 5 tablespoons melted butter
    • for brushing
    Activities abroad: home bundle

    Main content and contributions for activities abroad

    ,,,accommodations, adventure activities, courses, internships, jobs and volunteer projects

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    Activities abroad: home page

    Activities abroad: home page

    From language courses to gap year abroad, from work experience to volunteering abroad, from paid work to internship abroad, from mountaineering to diving and from backpacking to travel around the world

      What social activities can you do abroad?

      • Opportunities are found in the areas of helping, learning or studying. You can get involved to volunteer in a social project at a school in Africa, Asia or Latin America. You can get involved in nature, in a project with animals or cleaning the sea or beaches. Those who want to learn more can choose for example a language course in Latin America, Spain or South Africa.

      What work related activities can you do abroad?

      • If you want to gain work experience, and/or also earn money, go and work abroad. You can combine backpacking in Australia with temporary work. You can work on campsites in Europe or bush camps in Africa. You can pretty much go all over the world to work in the hospitality industry, hotels and hostels, in the healthcare sector or for example at a diving school.

      What sports activities to do abroad?

      • Have you ever thought of mountain biking, rafting (going down a wild river on a raft or rubber dinghy, climbing or canoeing), survival (which involves building rafts, climbing or canoeing), abseiling (descending a rock face while secured to ropes), zip-lining (whizzing down a cable), canyoning (starting at the top of a river and then climbing, swimming, diving down the bed) or caving (scrambling, wriggling and crawling through caves and crevices)?
      • Maybe you feel more comfortable on a bodyboard (on a half-wave surfboard, you surf the high waves lying down-with flippers), on a hang glider or while paragliding (with a parachute you float down a mountain or dune), hydrospeeding (on a bodyboard with flippers and a wetsuit on you go down a wild river via rapids) or Tiefschneeskiing (racing down through powder snow)?

      Check the pages below for more activities and inspiration and where to go and how to arrange it

        Activities Abroad: for work and intern abroad

        Activities Abroad: for work and intern abroad

        Work Abroad, Work Experience Abroad & Intern Abroad

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        1. What are the issues to bear in mind when emigrating?

        • Keep track of the emigration process; for example write down what to do and what you are going through in an emigration diary.
        • Make use of the media and guidebooks when researching possible destinations.
        • Get an i...

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        Bomvu Backpackers

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        Track & Trail River Camp

        Track and Trail Rivercamp is een bijzondere safarilodge aan de oever van de Luangwa Rivier. De lodge wordt al vele jaren gerund door Nederlandse avonturiers Kirsten en Peter (een zeer ervaren gids en fotograaf). Je kunt er verschillende soorten safaritochten maken. De lodge staat bekend om het regel...

        FloJa Malawi: hulporganisatie en campsite

        FloJa Malawi is a Dutch foundation that provides education, health and nutrition to vulnerable children in Ngara, a village in northern Malawi. FloJa Malawi runs a campsite, and welcomes long and short term volunteers, travellers and interns.  

        Vrijwillig Wereldwijd

        Vrijwillig Wereldwijd is een kleinschalige organisatie die de mooiste lokale projecten in meer dan 10 landen ondersteunt op de continenten: Afrika, Zuid-Amerika, Azië en Europa. Ze zijn er van overtuigd dat vrijwilligerswerk en stags in het buitenland kunnen leiden tot een geweldige win-wi...

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        SPOTLIGHT & FAVORITES

        SPOTLIGHT
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        1. What are the issues to bear in mind when emigrating?

        • Keep track of the emigration process; for example write down what to do and what you are going through in an emigration diary.
        • Make use of the media and guidebooks when researching possible destinations.
        • Get an i...

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        Supporting Content:
        Recipes from Africa or with a African twist by WorldSupporters - Bundle

        Recipes from Africa or with a African twist by WorldSupporters - Bundle

        Recipes from Africa collected by WorldSupporters

        Recipe: Kenyan chapati

        Recipe: Kenyan chapati

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        1. Add the flower, salt and if wanted 2 tablespoons of sugar to a big mixing bowl
        2. Stir the dry ingredients
        3. Add a fair amount, say 200 milliliters of the water to the bowl
        4. Mix the water and the dry ingredients with hand of with doughmixer
        5. Mix and add water untill a firm, moist, but non sticky dough exsists
        6. Add 2 tablespoons of oil to the mixture
        7. Knead dough for about 10 minutes, untill dough feels soft and elastic
        8. Cover the dough and let it rest for approximatly 1 hour
        9. After 1 hour cover the worksheet with flower, to prevent the dough from sticking to the surface, than split the dough and unroll it to a slice of 0,5-1cm thick
        10. Cover the topside of the slice with a fair amount of oil
        11. Slice the dough in stripes of 5 cm wide and 30 cm long, if the slice is shorter, dont bother just 'glue' 2 slices to make it one
        12. Roll up the slice with the oillayer faced in, tuck the end of the doughstripe in the middle
        13. When finished with all the small doughballs, let them rest again for 30 minutes
        14. After 30 minutes roll the doughballs out separatly untill they have the diameter of the pan you're going to bake them in
        15. A non stick pan works best for this recipe
        16. First bake all the chapati's in a smoking hot pan on both sides for 30 seconds or untill brown spots appear in the dough
        17. When all the chapati's are baked put the chapati's back in the pan, pay attention this is a quick movement
        18. Add oil on top of the chapati, about a tablespoon or until the top of the chapati is covered
        19. Quickly turn the oil side to the pan and whilst twisting the chapati to prevent it from burning, add oil to the other side
        20. Turn the chapati to let the other side bake
        21. Repeat this process with all the chapati's

         

         

        Serves nice with beanstew, potatoe stew, meatstew but my alltime favorite lentilstew!

        Ready In: 120 min.

        Ingredients:

        • 1 kg of plain flour
        • lukewarm water
        • pinch of salt
        • (optional) sugar
        • sunflower oil
        Recipe: Ndole - Cameroon
        Recipe: Ugandan vegetable Samosas

        Recipe: Ugandan vegetable Samosas

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        This recipe is from: blog.ssekodesigns.com

        I didn't try to make them myself yet, but i ate lots of Samosas in Uganda and they absolutely were my favourite Ugandan food!!

        Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.

        Heat the oil in a small nonstick pan. Add the mustard seeds and fry for about ten seconds, or until they begin to splutter.

        Add the onion and ginger, and cook for 2 to 3 minutes over a high heat. Add the peas, and stir well. Add the coriander, cumin, chile powder, garam masala, salt to taste, and a splash of water. Cook for 1 to 2 minutes, and then add the potatoes, and cilantro, and cook for another 2 to 3 minutes. Taste the mixture and adjust the seasoning as necessary.

        Unroll the phyllo pastry dough, cover with plastic wrap and a damp tea or kitchen towel. Peel off one sheet and keep the rest covered so that it doesn't dry out. Lay the pastry sheet flat on a clean surface, and brush with melted butter. Fold in one third of the pastry lengthwise towards the middle. Brush again with the butter and fold in the other side to make a long triple-layered strip.

        Place one rounded teaspoon of the filling mixture at one end of the strip, leaving a 1-inch border. Take the right corner and fold diagonally to the left, enclosing the filling and forming a triangle. Fold again along the upper crease of the triangle. Keep folding in this way until you reach the end of the strip. Brush the outer surface with more butter. Place the triangle onto a baking sheet and cover while you make the rest of the samosas. Bake in the center of the oven for 30 to 35 minutes, or until golden and crisp, turning halfway through the cooking time.

        Enjoy!

        Ready in: 50 min.

        Ingredients:

        • 3 tablespoons vegetable oil
        • ½ teaspoon mustard seeds
        • 2 ½ ounces chopped onion
        • 1 teaspoon finely chopped ginger
        • 2 ½ ounces peas
        • 1 tablespoon coriander
        • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
        • ¼ teaspoon red chile powder
        • ½ to ¾ teaspoon garam masala
        • pinch of kosher salt
        • splash of water
        • 1 lb and 5 ounces potatoes
        • peeled
        • boiled until soft and crushed into large lumps
        • 4 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
        • 1 package frozen phyllo pastry dough
        • thawed
        • 5 tablespoons melted butter
        • for brushing
        Quotes & statements from around Africa by country and contention (the twelve elements of contentment) - Africa

        Quotes & statements from around Africa by country and contention (the twelve elements of contentment) - Africa

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        Quotes & statements from around Africa by country and contention (the twelve elements of contentment)

        Self-awareness & Self-insight

        • We are what our thinking makes us: Nigeria.
        • Knowledge without wisdom is like water in the sand: Guinea.
        • Those who are happy at home should remain at home.

        Independency & Steadfastness

        • Examine what is said, not him who speaks: Egypt.

        Limitlessness & Freedom

        • Happiness often sneaks through your door when you left the door open.
        • Dance even if the hump on your back does not allow you.

        Usefulness & Meaning

        • Ubuntu: I am a person through other people. (Zulu)
          • Desmond Tutu said: “One of the sayings in our country is Ubuntu, the essence of being human. Ubuntu speaks particularly about the fact that you can’t exist as a human being in isolation. We believe that a person is a person through other persons.. It is a form of humanism which can be expressed
          • "I am, like because of who we all are." Ubuntu signifies emphatically that: “The life of another person is at least as valuable as one’s own,” and that “Respect for the dignity of every person is integral to this concept.”
          • Source

        Experience & Feeling alive

        • Those who are absent are always wrong: Congo.

        Helpfulness & Attentiveness

        • Happiness is not perfected until it is shared.

        Engagement & Sense of surroundings

        • Happiness is like a perfume, you cannot pour it all on others without allowing a few drops to fall on yourself.
        • The chameleon changes color to match the earth; the earth doesn’t change colors to match the chameleon: Senegal.

        Goal Orientation & Sense of perspective

        • The big game often appears when the hunter has given up the hunt for the day.
        • The chameleon looks in all directions before moving: Uganda.
        • Anxious about the shoe, but careless about the foot.

        Balance & Stability

        • If you are building a house and a nail breaks, do you stop building, or do you change the nail?
        • Who swims never sinks.

        Result awareness & Positivity

        • There are no shortcuts to the top of the palm tree: Cameroon.

        Connectivity & Contacts

        • Lonely is one: Masai.
        • Alone in counsel, alone in sorrow.

        Attention & Focus

        • Coffee and love taste best when hot: Ethiopia.
        • He who learns teaches: Ethiopia.

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