Sunday, July 22, 2012


Site Visit



At the Site Announcement ceremony on July 3 it was confirmed that I am to serve in the southwest region, replacing Matt, who has been teaching math at the lycee (high school) there for the past two years.  My village is the home town of the family of Alice, my present host mother, but she was raised in Ouagadougou and does not speak the Dagara language I’ll need to learn in order to communicate with children and pretty much everyone outside of the school setting.  Mooré and Djula are also spoken there, but the region is that of the Dagara people who also populate northern Ghana.  I will need to know at least the standard phrases of greetings and salutations in each of these languages.  There are several dialects of Dagara, too.

The next big step for our stage was meeting our homologues, or counterparts, at a 2-day workshop in Ouaga (no one says Ouagadougou, I’ve learned) that kicked off the eventful Week 5 of Pre-Service Training.  My homologue is the principal of one of the elementary schools, and I am to do some tutoring at his school, the École A.  As an added bonus, Florent is a Dagara speaker and Dagara teacher, and his school is changing to become a bi-lingual elementary school, so I will have greater access to Dagara lessons.  A second gentleman was also present as one of the 5 supervisors invited to the workshop.  Gustave is one of two conseillers who oversee the schools in the village, or town, of about 10,000 inhabitants, and he will be a further contact person for me. 

At the conclusion of the workshop, Florent and Gustave accompanied me and explained the intricacies of travel from Ouaga using one of the bus companies as far as a crossroads and a bush taxi for the final 12 km.  The trip, entirely on paved roads, took about 6 relatively comfortable hours. As we drove west from Ouaga, the landscape changed slowly but dramatically from brown houses surrounded by scattered scruffy trees in brown fields pleading desperately for water to the lush green of the southwest region where the annual rains, having started about one month later than usual, have brought the corn to a height of 30 to 50 cm and filled the lowlands to accommodate fields of rice and a profusion of water lilies.  Men, women and children are bent over their rows and mounds in the fields, working with short handled hoes known by their Djula name, daba.  My delight in the verdant panorama was dampened somewhat, though, by the knowledge that mosquitos are happily breeding here to spread malaria, and that many people suffer from diarrheic illnesses at this time of year from drinking the dirty water they find in the fields.

The final leg of the trip descended gently through fields of corn and millet, dotted with an occasional palm tree, and thwarted by wide spans of gray and white rock, larger and rounder than the Turtle Rocks at Petit Jean but not as big as the pink granite Elephant Rocks near Belgrade, MO.  Photography was not possible on the trip.  My camera was jammed into one of the many pockets of my amazing little backpack on top of the bush taxi.  I sat in the very back, with the feet of the man who loaded my bike and all the bags on top of the van, and then stayed there, dangling just within my field of vision. 

Matt had gone shopping in the bigger town of Diebougou and was unable to get back in time to receive us because none of the bush taxis available to him was going in the right direction.  I had a coke with Florent and Gustave and met one of the town fous who, attracted to my shiny new bicycle, and maybe to my glaring whiteness, thought he’d found a sure bet for a handout.  My hosts chased him away, much as folks deal with dogs and pigs who wander into their courtyards, but without the throwing of bottles or launching of stones with slingshots.  That stupid bicycle!  I was required to take it along on the entire trip as part of my training, although I knew full well I wouldn’t ride it in Ouaga, where the traffic is insane, or in the village, where we planned to walk to the many points of interest, or in Gaoua, which is very hilly.  Later we had to hunt Gustave down to recover the dumb bicycle tools that had been removed from the bike just before the bus trip and tucked into his bag.  Hauling the tools and pump all around creation is also a required element of training. Grrrr.

I waited for Matt at the home of his homologue, a young math teacher, and watched Brazilian soap operas and a French movie with his daughters and their friends on satellite TV.  Florent and I had planned to try to meet many of the local officials that afternoon, but with Matt’s late arrival and my not-to-be-denied desire for a bucket shower and clean clothes, we were only able to stop in at the school superintendent’s (Gustave’s) office, the gendarmerie, the police station, the hospital, and a number of shops and market stalls.  When we returned to the house with the makings of a spaghetti dinner, the neighbors were home and I was able to meet the amiable inhabitants of the two other houses in the courtyard.

Matt’s, and soon to be my house, is the one in the middle.  Dig the crazy columns!  There are three rooms, an indoor ‘shower,’ an enclosed and covered latrine, i.e. with a roof, and electricity.  Matt is leaving a fan and a little fridge.  The lap of luxury!  Yea!!  Peace Corps requires screens on all doors and windows, and doors that lock.  Here you have the view of the house from the courtyard, and the view of the courtyard from the house. I plan to be good friends with my neighbors!

On day two we visited Florent’s elementary school, the lycee, the library, one of the three cyber cafés, several carpenter shops, numerous shops and bus stations and the boulanger’s unattended oven.  The boulanger himself was probably at the wedding, the same one that took the mayor and the prefect out of their offices when we tried to find them in the afternoon.  Florent was able to introduce me to the chef de terre, which was an interesting encounter and may be the topic of a later, shorter post.  This one is getting pretty long-winded.  We were able to meet with the prefect later in the afternoon at the conclusion of the wedding.  
Matt has quite a following!  I pulled out the camera to get a shot of the biggest baobob tree I’ve ever seen (the area around the tree is sacred and cannot be cultivated), and within seconds had a crew lined up and ready to try hard not to smile.  This was in the poorest part of town, and there is such a thing as poorer than poor.

The final two days of this trip took me to Gaoua, a regional capital I am unlikely to visit again because getting there on public transportation is not easy.  I enjoyed meeting Daniel, an IT volunteer who, like Matt, has integrated very well into his community, as well as a couple of French ex-pats and their delightful Côte d’Ivoirean and Burkinabé girlfriends.   Côte d’Ivoirean food is fantastic! 

It is highly unlikely that any of the places I visited on this trip, or anywhere else other than the capital city, is anything like what you may be picturing in your mind.  For example, ‘town’ takes on entirely new meaning in West Africa.  A carpenter’s shop may be a bench and a plane at the side of the road, and if I mention a restaurant, I’m probably referring to a collection of rusty metal tables and chairs under a tree, screened off from traffic with woven grass mats called secko.  For those of you who’ve been here, I must sound like such a clueless novice.  And that’s exactly what I am.  Boy, do I have a lot to learn!

6 comments:

  1. Susan, you dont seem too clueless to me, and after a few weeks on this side of the water not sure you are a novice either. Sounds like you are settling in ok, take it easy, let BF come to you...you will find before you know it, that you are as busy as you want to be. Our Group 10s in Swaziland arrived 28 June, and they swear in 23 Aug--same day as you. All in your blog sounds good. Looking forward to figuring out how we can meet sometime...we have extended, and will be in Africa, at least until Oct 2013. Cheers, and Sala Gahle (Stay Well). Mike and Gail Messick

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  2. Susan, this is all fascinating. I assume you're speaking mostly French for now? (I envy you that skill!) Your house sounds excellent and I love the columns. I understand why Gail and Mike (above) say they don't think you are clueless, but I can totally related to how you are feeling - whenever I do something for the first time, I feel like the world's biggest slow learner. Thank you for such a wonderful post. I loove forward to more. Alles Gute, liebe Gruesse,
    jeanette

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  3. Sorry for the typos above - will proofread better next time! - jc

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  4. I want to come and visit you...especially, if you are living in such a glamorous house!!

    Mom wants you to know that the drought in Arkansas has continued; she hopes Africa is fairing better.

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  5. I don't know if anyone has ever told you, but you're a talented writer, Frau. Your accommodations are better (by American standards) than most in Mongolia, certainly mine. At some point, send me your address, and I'll send you a care package.

    Enjoy your service wholeheartedly (I carefully chose that adverb),
    Herr Mobbs

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  6. Susan, Lorelei gave me your blog. What an experience you are having. Patience the dog .... oh my.

    Bless you. I will keep checking in on your blog -
    XXX Gaby M.

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