This morning I volunteered at a flu clinic targeting Albany's refugee community, families from Bhutan and Nepal, Thailand, Iraq, and Africa, among others. The clinic came about a joint effort between Koinonia Primary Care, Albany's Refugee Health Round Table, and SUNY's School of Public Health. Koinonia is a family medicine clinic and federally qualified community health center serving the Arbor Hill community; most of their patients are African American and religious Christians, although they are open to all and serve some refugees as well. For this event, there was a specific drive to reach a different community, including Muslim families.
Accordingly, the student groups who volunteered for the flu clinic came from three campus clubs: Care from the Start, where students see patients at Koinonia; IMANA, which runs clinics at a mosque; and AMCRI, which works with the refugee families directly. We learned to fill syringes with vaccine and give shots, while downstairs, interpreters welcomed families and explained paperwork. Dr. Bob of Koinonia supervised but once we got running, we ran entirely independently, even training the next group on our own.
So what if we had a student-run clinic every Saturday, built out of the three clubs whose efforts currently run in parallel? Imagine the possibilities...
Then I came home to a quick lunch of cold sesame noodles, all components made ahead of time and just in need of assembly. A lunch produced through cultural exchange:
I am reblogging* this recipe from here, which was adapted from Fuchsia Dunlop's cookbook Land of Plenty, which translates Chinese recipes for American home cooks. Think of it as a recipe that has traveled a long way to your computer screen.
(*I used the condiments that I happened to have at home, and thinly sliced cucumbers instead of the other veggies.)
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