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Sunday, June 10, 2012

Book 1: A Theory of Relativity


7 AM start
Chronicles of Legal and Semi-Illegal Activities

Book 1: A Theory of Relativity 
(Previously titled Shades of Gray, until I realized a book with dissimilar content had already used my title. Wishing to avoid confusion, I yielded.)


Much to everyones joy, I'm sure, I'll try and limit this blog post to travel epiphanies and anecdotes. Reason #1: It was a LONG two week trip. (Hence, the name, the Chronicles of Legal and Semi-Legal activities; Book 1.) Admittedly, most of the activities implied in the title happened the second week, but that just means I'll leave you all in suspense.


Preparing for travel: the epitome of organized chaos


By 7:30 AM we were gathered at Garage Pompiers to get a car to Tambacounda.


7-place to Tamba group: The Dream Team reunited

The time has come for travel. And since the political situation pushed around our vacation dates, our rural stays and our spring break landed back-to-back. Last semester, I went to the island of Mar Lodj in the blog post titled Hyenas, Cobras, and New Friends. This semester, my friend Katie and I were packing off to a small village in the Kolda Region of Senegal. We would be living with a Peace Corps Volunteer (PVC) in a village called Goundaga, home to nearly 250 people. However, to get there, it required several stops along the way...

 

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Here's the plan: 
Dakar -->  Tambacounda (spend the night); orange region above the Gambia
Tambacounda --> Kounkane; yellow region south of the Gambia
Kounkane --> Goundaga

However, 7-place taxis had other plans for us...


Roadside Repair Sesh #1: fixing the steering column in Kaolack


Tubaabs are fascinating people


Roadside Repair #2: 175 km from Tamba (not really sure what the problem was)


Double-fisting the carbs! Sweet roll and chocolate cake!!


Roadside Repair #3: 18 km from Tamba


Pape, the PC Regional House mascot... yes, those are lines of catnip
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Once we finally got to Tamba, we waited for the PCV posted there to show us to the regional house. Unfortunately, this is the only picture I documented our stay with. For 1,000CFA/night/person ($2) we could spend the night while en route to visit our own PCVs in the villages. The house was like a dirtier version of a frat house. It is simultaneously used as a crash-site for traveling volunteers, as well as their regional home where they go to get out of the village once a month and have some fun. It's the kind place where the doors/windows are always open, thus the dust is always settling and lizards climbed around/over our packs-which rested by the front door. This is also where we met Pape, the endlessly playful mascot. Since his hyper nature was already our evenings entertainment, another PCV wondered what would happen if we laid out lines of catnip. Unfortunately, with that experiment came the disappointing realization that catnip has no effect whatsoever on cats under the age of 1 year... 

The night in the PCV house is the first example of my "shades of gray" travel epiphany. 1 year abroad is generally considered a long time. It's generally seen with appreciation and the result is an unforgettable immersion and mixing of two cultures. So I went into my year abroad prepared for challenges of cultural reversal. And I found a lot of what I was looking for. And now, in my last semester, after having seen 3 different groups of peers come and go, I confess that I feel old compared to the new batch of students of Spring Semester. I've gotten used to being the person some people go to for advice about Dakar living. Now, having conversations with the PCVs in the regional house, I was facing volunteers who were reaching their COS (Completion of Service). They had been in this country twice as long as me, some three times as long (2-3 years). Besides that, they had been living in villages for most of it. I live in the city, where it's hard (but possible) to find a few nostalgic creature comforts from the US, while they were in villages. They ate the local food no matter the season, mastered local languages, and had a complete cultural reversal to a degree that I would find astonishing the more the week progressed. So all experiences are shades of gray. There are those which find the foreigner in a hut, eating bush meat and local grains around a bowl. And there are those which find a foreigner learning city mass transportation and city street smarts in a whole new culture. So even though they labeled my experience as "a respectable amount of time," I know my experience was nothing as hard as theirs. And so the evening passed, and for once I wasn't telling stories of Senegal, but listening to theirs. For once, I was able to try and put myself in their shoes as they told of living in the epitome of “cultural immersion.” 
Just a side not here…let me tell you that joining the Peace Corps does something to your sense of what is "gross" or not. I sat through lots of descriptions of the latest little diseases or rashes they had picked up. I heard more descriptions of armpit hair and diarrhea than I care to repeat. Thank goodness that I worked in a vet hospital in High School, and can therefore handle anything "gross," but when it started to turn into a detailed discussion of foot fungus, I felt it was time to leave them to it. 

That night we slept wherever there was space, and the next morning we were up at 6:30 AM and on the road to Kounkane. 

A 4-hour 7-place ride later, we get dropped off in Kounkane. Our PVC's name was Ally. She found two extra bikes for us and we biked 7 km into the bush. But here's the thing, I forgot how hot it gets when you're more than 10 km from the coast. It was now nearly 1 PM, hitting the hottest part of the day at roughly 41-2 C. And not only did I realize how heavy my own body was, but I was also propelling the weight of my myself and my heavy rucksack through occasional troughs of sand. Katie and I labored along after Ally. Who, being acclimated the climate, hardened after 18th months in the village, and unencumbered with a large backpack, barely even broke a sweat. My journal entry for that moment reads: "Heat. Thirst. Pain. How is Ally not even tired??"

Road town of Kounkane! Strapping my backpack to my back for the 11 km ride to Goundaga
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On our first afternoon, we went on a walk around the village and visited her Master Farmer Project. She works with the local farmer to implement new gardening methods and introduce other food-plant species.

Unfortunately, a random bush fire wiped out nearly half of the garden. All her hard work of the last 6 months was gone-leaving her to wait until the next planting season to begin her project. It was a sad story to hear about, the destruction of all her work. But it was one of those things no one can control.


Ally's Master Farmer project



My fellow pirate



Master Farmer project, with the river in the distance

Tree used to cross the river between the women's gardens
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Nearly everyday of our stay, we walked to the river. All long the banks, with wells dug to about 7 feet, were the women's gardens. Older women have large plots with huge plants and produce. When women get married they get their own plot, but before then, they work on their mother's plots. Okra, tomatoes, eggplant, and some squash could be seen. As we walked between the rows of plants, the soft conversation of working women mingled with the smell of wet earth and the sharp tangy scent of tomato leaves. 

No matter what time of day we passed, or how many times we passed, we had to call greetings to all the women within earshot. "Ramatoulaye!!" (Ally's Pulaar name) would ring across the rows of green plants and we would have to shake more hands, attempt more Pulaar language skills, and generally try our best to show how happy we were to be there through sign language. One old woman, she must have been in her 70s, with small bony hands which nevertheless gave me a semi-painful handshake. She welcomed us with a stamping, clapping, song that made the other women in the garden laugh and clap along with her.

Dual tree examination


The leaves fold up when you touch them!!

Housing Tour: path to the bathroom (hole in ground) and shower (bucket/cup of sun-warmed water)



Housing Tour: Back door of Ally's hut (about 10' across)

Mud bath! Essence of hippo poo. Swim back from the island washed the mud off

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One afternoon, the heat chased us to the river. Topping 100 degrees does that to you. So we packed up some mangoes, a can of Pringles, filled our water bottles, and headed off. Before the relaxing swim could take place, however, you had to walk about 30 feet through knee-deep mud. And once we were out there, why not swim to the island?? 
With two local village boys in tow, we followed hippo tracks to where it sleeps at night. On our way back, Ally and I slipped in the mud, and discovering its "fine quality," we decided to smear it all over our bodies. I mean, exfoliation, right? Katie waited until Ally and I had spread the mud on every part of ourselves that we could reach before casually mentioning the correlation between hippo tracks and hippo poop. After a moment’s pause, it took Ally and I only a few short seconds to convince ourselves that-of course!-hippo poop has hither-to unknown curative properties...


Katie thought I was crazy


Kids getting us some mangoes. :)


Mansang and my fiancée
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The patterns of our days went a little like this...
7 AM- wake up when the rising sun spiked me in the eyes.
8:30 AM- breakfast of oatmeal or bread with water
9:30 AM- emerge from hut for various morning activities (see the gardens, swim, etc)
1:30 PM- drag ourselves through the heat back to the village in time for a short nap before lunch
2:30 PM- eat lunch
2:30-5:00 PM- nap/journal/reading/talking time. Too hot to move.
5:00 PM- leave the hut for evening activities. (Soccer games, walking along the river)
9:15 PM- dinner
10:30 PM-bed!!

It was during these cement-floor naps that Ally and I had time for some great conversations. But also some not-so-great conversations. She told Katie and me about the high level of domestic violence that took place in the village before she arrived. Husbands beating wives/daughters, mothers beating their children, or any elder beating anyone younger. She was uncomfortable with the state of the violence that she told them she would leave the village (taking all of the PC resources and projects with her) if they didn’t stop. The assistance of the PC has had a huge impact on the village, so her threat was taken seriously. Now, the beatings take place where she can’t see them, as she knows they are still occurring. 

Her other struggle is with the disparity between women and men. The expectations for a young woman are very clear. They are “supposed to” study until the end of primary school (elementary school), or until they are married. Marriage occurs between the ages of 12-20. Most of the time the marriages are arranged between families with no regard to the personal attachment of either bride or groom. Once marriage takes place, the girls are expected to produce as many children as possible, all the while working her garden and supporting any family that might be in need. In terms of education, a girl who finishes middle school is unusual, and even that feat requires her traveling to the road-town 7 km away every day. In terms of health, death in childbirth is common. Just in the 5 days that Katie and I stayed in the village, there were 3 funerals in the area for young women who had died in childbirth. Husbands are unwilling to spend the money to send their wives to bigger towns for healthcare. Some families don’t have the money, but for those who do, births happen far too frequently to send mothers to hospitals (or even health clinics) every time they are due. 

But these disparities are not the fault of the society, but of the system. Rural educational and health resources are minimal in Senegal. Senegal has great statistics for education in terms of the number of teachers and schools in rural areas. It’s true that a lot of Senegalese villages have schools (at least, primary schools) with in walking distances of villages. However, when it comes to resources or the quality of the teachers, they are as bereft as ever. What use is a brand new schoolhouse if there isn’t a qualified teacher to run classes? 

And more often than not, it is NGOs from "1st world" nations that swoop into these villages and build schools/medical clinics/wells. Their cause is noble, and their aims are admirable, but it breeds a culture of dependence in the villages they are trying to help. The villages begin to assume that, of course, the “white” people have nothing else to do than run around the country building things they want. What do they need to do? Sit back and watch it all happen. They are not empowered; they feel no sense of responsibility for that schoolhouse. But at the same time, substandard teachers are still teaching, and unqualified health personnel are still healing. So what has really improved in that community besides a new cement building and a tick on that NGO’s checklist? I hate to bring up the “it’s the system” rant again, but IT’S THE SYSTEM. Change the system and you change the world. Educate the educators, and teach the healthcare workers. Involve villagers in projects, empower them in change and they will change.


They loved my water bottle
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(As a side-note. The little boy on the left is my husband, which my boyfriend, Max, will have to come to terms with. The boys are deathly afraid of frogs- the big ones. And by the river, there are a lot of them. So just to freak them out, I told them a story of my friends and I in high school. During a bonfire one summer, we wondered what frog legs taste like. So we ran down to the pond, caught and killed some frogs (humanely, don’t worry), stole some tin-foil from a friend’s burrito, then stuck the legs in the fire. I told the boys they tasted like chicken. Well, once their mouths closed, the little boy on the left said, “if you were my wife, I would cook you A LOT of frogs legs.” Who can deny true love like that?! So, we were married with a high-5, and from that moment on he was too shy to get near me. Until I left, and I got a hug.)

Slipperiest mud EVER. Waiting to cross the river



Helping the ladies in.


Ally's awesome Pulaar hat


Ran into some boys on the other side of the river... who then requested a picture...


Oh the violence...

Soccer match










The sunset boat ride back, bailing out the boat with each trip...



Waiting for my turn in the boat.



We spend an afternoon working on the world map mural.



Babies!!!



Swim spot. Where Ally and I amazed the boys by swimming across the river and creeping out some neighboring gardeners as we emerged from the water...



We seem to have found a fishy.


Some boys found an old canoe to play King-of-the-Ship with, some things are international.



 
Our afternoon snack spot: the cashew-apple tree




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Leaving the village was complicated. Of course. We thanked our host family for opening their homes to us, and set off down the track with our bikes and backpacks. Since it was early in the morning, I was now able to appreciate the way the early morning light fell across the grass, and how the trail would its way around fields of mango trees and wild bush land.


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Throughout this particular week, everything threaded together in my mind. A thousand tiny details linked together, a thousand tiny pieces that fuse to form a whole. Whether it’s these people in the village, with Mansang and his goofy tricks, the mothers dying in childbirth, or the importance of local soccer matches. Or whether it’s the life of a PCV, Ally’s daily rice and fish ration, or her never ending love of the outdoors. Or whether it’s my life, the mixing between city and rural, between American and Senegalese cultures. All these circles of norms intersect and overlap to create an ever-changing sense of time. For although I have left the village, their lives are, and always have been, just as real as when I was there. And the PCVs lives move at a rate seemingly slower than normal, yet each day brings them closer to the end of their service. All the tiny details of this week, all the tiny memories that could easily fill these pages beyond capacity, form a link and a whole memory that cannot be created again. And as I sat in the 7-place, finally on the way to Tamba, I realized how lucky I am to play the role of a lens. I am a lens that can travel over these different lives, and then I move on. Which is a bizarre feeling, as I sit here writing this blog on a bullet train crossing Italy, feeling how far away these experiences feel, when I know that their lives are continuing just as I left them…. Which leaves me to see that Life is nothing more than overlapping norms relative to each other. That's it. It's all relative.

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