Sunday, February 19, 2012

Spring (or the apocalypse) is Coming!

Despite the unusually cold weather (read: 80 degrees) we've been having this month, hot season is definitely on its way. This is not entirely unfortunate because hot season has two redeeming qualities: mandatory afternoon naps and mangoes. The baby mangoes have just started to form and now my daydreams are filled with thoughts of the coming bounty.




In addition to the mangoes, it seems the apocalypse may also coming to Kolda. Due to the annual Harmattan winds, the entire Sahara desert has relocated itself in a giant cloud above Senegal. Last week the sun was partially blocked out behind thick clouds that looked either pre-blizzard and post-nuclear holocaust. I imagine it's something like what the dinosaurs saw.

Check here for an actual report of the recent weather phenomenon: http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE81706Z20120208

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Coming up Next...

It seems like forever ago that I wrote my last "coming soon" entry about my plans through new years (I should go back and see if I actually did it all...) but here's what's coming up through the spring:

-Finish construction on the wells
-USAID training in Tamba on behavior change and Community Lead Total Sanitation
-Begin a latrine building project with the help of USAID
-Continue monthly growth monitoring
-Initiate a Care Group to train a group of health workers in my village
-Begin a bed net education campaign before a universal bed net distribution project
-Potential Kolda-wide malaria tournee
-GAD Games: Olympics to promote gender and development
-Continue promoting homemade enriched flour and porridge
-Midservice medical appointments and assisting at training for new health volunteers in early April
-My brother comes to visit in mid-May!

At times I've felt like 2 years is an eternity, while at others it seems impossibly short. I believe the next few months will be dominated by the latter feeling.

Tuesday Night Smackdown

Last week I returned to town in time for an exciting night of traditional Senegalese wrestling, aka "sipiro." Fences were commandeered from nearby houses to create an arena, while 250 cfa - about 50 cents - bought an all access pass.

I arrive around 6:30pm to find pre-event drumming accompanied by the requisite circle of women dancing. The style of dance involves bending 45 degrees at the waist, sticking your butt out and stamping the ground with the apparent objective of kicking up as much dust as possible. Arms are either held straight out to the side or bent at the elbow like a scarecrow. Of course, I am lured into the center to make a fool of myself in yet another activity that everyone else can do with style. Thankfully, I am saved from a second round of ground stomping when the main event begins.

Sipiro is equal parts skill, showmanship and silly outfits. Amateur wrestlers, unlike their overpaid and overfed professional counterparts, are extremely fit young men with a penchant for spandex and pom pom adorned kilts. Given Sare Sara's lack of electricity, I assumed the festivities would be over by sundown. Oh how wrong I was. As the sun melted below the horizon the fun had only just begun. The first wrestler to appear could only be described as spritely as he pranced around the makeshift ring "warming up" with dramatic lunges, hops and sprints. Others followed suit until 10 or so beefy young men were circling the ring trailed by "handlers" and a whistling trio of drummers.

With no pre-arranged round robbin schedule, pairs of wrestlers began to match up seemingly at random. A bout begins with the opponents swinging their arms at each other - a sort of windmill mixed with fly swatting and bitch slapping. Then they take each other in a bent over head lock/double half nelson. This position is held for minutes at a time - what they're waiting for I couldn't tell you - until one makes a move to grab the leg/belt/skirt/neck of the other. This is when it gets exciting. Unlike professional matches which end after a few seconds (why bother fighting when the outcome is rigged anyway?), these fights went on for many minutes as the pairs attempted to trip, flip and pin each other. With no designated ring the tussling pairs frequently sent spectators leaping from their benches to avoid a rogue elbow or clod of dirt in the face. The winner need only get his opponent down for a second before taking a well deserved victory lap. With 2-3 pairs wrestling at a time it's important to keep an eye out in all directions. With the sunlight gone, a roaring bonfire was built in a corner opposite the ring from where I sat. Dust swirling in the firelight looked like mist rising from the ground and illuminated the athletes and onlookers with an eery, infernal glow. Of course, this is when I wished I had my camera.

Due to another transit strike, the merry band of wrestlers was stuck in town for a few extra days. They eyed me with obvious confusion and I wondered the physics involved in growing necks so thick.

Project Update

Construction on the wells is underway and nearing completion! All of the bricks are molded and dry, nearly all of the well heads are finished and supplies for the covers are en route. Everything should be done in a week or two, then I'll post pictures of what we've done. Thanks again to everyone who chipped in!

WAIST

After bidding goodbye to my mom - and the luxury of the Radisson Blu - I headed east to the PC training center in Thies for the annual West African All Volunteer Conference. The 2-day event brings all of Senegal's 240+ volunteers plus a handful from other countries together to discuss projects, best practices and training. It is one of the few times all of PC/Senegal gets together and is a good chance to see out of region friends. While no sessions were truly earth shattering, I saw many interesting presentations and got excited about new things to do back at site.

Before going home though, there was WAIST aka the West African Invitational Softball Tournament. This annual event is hosted by the Dakar expat community and includes teams from Peace Corps, the US Embassy, the International School of Dakar and anyone else interested in 3 days of mediocre ballgames. Each PC/Senegal region fields a themed team, while other countries take the games semi-seriously and the legitimate teams actually bother to practice beforehand. Team Kolda was themed "South of the Border/Wild West" in reference to our position south of The Gambia.

As usual, Kolda-ites ran in many directions with their costume choices but we maintained a modicum of cohesion with outfits ranging from marriachi band members and mexican peasants, cowboys and saloon girls, a taco, a pinata and Ms. Chaquita Banana. I spent the first day as "spring break cabo" and the second as "border patrol." We successfully forfeited every time. I played in just one game, wore no shoes, missed the one pop fly that came to center field and scored one run! Despite a nasty head cold that rendered me voice-less for a week, it was a great time.

Due to the influx of homeless PCVs, generous Dakar dwelling expats agreed to take many of us in for the weekend. I had a fantastic homestay with 7 other girls, a real house with hot water, TV and living room furniture. We were well fed, if not entirely well rested due to a few very late nights out.

To add to the fun of formal WAIST activities, each night is a themed party. This year we had a talent show, PC Prom and date auction, and the grand finale dance party. Despite a few broken chairs, pots, mirrors and bones it was a great time.

Dog Days Are Over

It is with great sadness that I must report the death of my blog co-host, Tigi Tigi. She was hit and killed by a passing car while I was on vacation in London, just days before my mom arrived with bags of christmas treats. My host dad did what he could, but with no "dog medicine" available, there was little to be done. It really was a May to December love affair and she will be sorely missed.


Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Guest Post: Nene Koumba in Senegal

After a relaxing, indulgent and only mildly culture shock inducing week in London, I returned to Senegal with mom in tow just in time to ring in 2012. We spent 11 days braving Senegalese transportation, catching our dinner in village and working on our tans in Dakar. She did geat and didn't complain once - setting the bar quite high for future visitors. Here's the guest post she wrote for me...

Katie and I traveled to her village the Peace Corps Volunteer way: by sept-place. This literally means seven-seat—it’s the number of spots in a small Renault station wagon.




Like most vehicles I saw in Senegal, both the odometer and speedometer had been disconnected, with the last recorded mileage at 585,549 kilometers. Our vehicle for the first leg of our two-day trip to Kolda

was hired at the garage of Pompier in Dakar. Garage would imply a structure, but this was an open-air trip marketplace where one seeks out a driver going to one’s destination, and then sits in the Renault until it fills with seven passengers (plus children on laps, who ride free). How to make friends with fellow passengers at Pompier? Do what we did, and purchase all the remaining seats, (in our case three extra) and the now-fully bought car leaves right away. Is the driver pleased? No. He’s paid extra for the baggage, which is tied to the roof. So with only two bags for five places sold, he’s grumpy. Cost per seat for the 500 kilometer trip: about $20.


One of our fellow passengers was a Senegalese teacher-trainer who was heading out to the provinces. The other was a young man of uncertain nationality reading a book by the Dalai Lama in Spanish. French was our common language, though the Afro-pop on the radio drowned out much conversation. After an hour or so the music became less noticeable. Outside of Dakar the dry-scrub countryside of Senegal north of the Gambia River was visible in the form of flat, dry land punctuated by baobab trees. Animal life consisted of free


-range donkeys, cows, sheep, goats and chickens as we passed through villages. A few vultures circle high overhead or roost in the larger trees. A pair of disturbingly large monkeys streak across a field as the traffic passes. The excitement of the day is provided by the condition of the road, the main paved route north of the Gambia River between Dakar and Tambacounda, the midpoint in our journey, where we will spend a night. Potholes of all shapes and depths appear at fairly regular intervals. The driver prefers not to slow down, but to play an elaborate game of chicken for several hours. He calculates the shortest, flattest route around the trucks, bikes, donkey carts called charettes, pedestrians, livestock and deep potholes. Sometimes it’s quickest to two-wheel it onto the dirt shoulder; others it’s best to plunge ahead. “I don’t look, Mom,” advises Katie from the back seat.


It’s hot, dry, dusty. The heat and sun are mitigated by the black muslim curtains hung around the back and side windows of the Renault. Sleep is possible, and then there is the PCV solution: an I-Pod filled with NPR podcasts. I catch up on “Fresh Air” and “Feakonomics.” Katie’s alone in the far back seat, enjoying videos via her hidden Netbook with earphones. Best not to flash electronics around. We arrive in eight hours.

We head to the Hotel Niji, the best in town. The restaurant and pool area are simple and pleasant, though the rooms upstairs have the look of a third-world fugitive’s safehouse. Outside groups of Talibe (TA-lee-bay) boys hunt for alms with their yellow margarine-tub begging bowls.


Poor families give their sons—ages seven through fourteen—to men who will feed and instruct them in Islam. Part of their work is to beg much of the day, usually in cities far from their families. Katie gives them food, never money. When I later inquire about the potential for abuse I’m told it is a choice made by families who cannot feed their sons.

We hunt for a cab the next morning, and they are suspiciously absent from the dirt streets. We take a horse-drawn charette to the Tambacounda garage and learn the problem.

Drivers are striking to protest the $8 a gallon fuel cost, which has recently risen. No cars to Katie’s village can be hired that day. Rocks are being thrown at drivers on the roads. We’re back at the Niji for another 24 hours. There is nothing to do, see or buy in dusty Tambacounda. Here again, technology saves the day. I continue my reading of the Steve Jobs biography on my I-Pad, and then watch the entire season of “Homeland” on Katie’s Netbook.


The following day we are successful—Katie pulls strings to hire a small pick-up truck, with a pleasant, less-aggressive driver. I don’t mind the second-hand Marlboro smoke, as it serves to mask a mix of other smells. Katie is then asked the usual question: “Have a husband?” And she gives her usual reply, “No. But my father wants 50 cows for me.” She’s too costly for our driver; a typical dowry is the value of one cow. Our trip is uneventful, and then we are flagged down by a man in military uniform. Should I be worried? No. It’s the “bush mail” system at work. The soldier needs a package dropped off some 20 minutes drive down the road. He doesn’t know the driver, but trusts it will be delivered, and it is. After three hours and 100 kilometers we arrive in Sare Sara, Katie’s village. What follows could be called “Friends: the PCV Episode.” We are met by Sharon and Dave, PC colleagues who live relatively nearby.


They’ve biked over to welcome us and catch up on PC gossip. The Kolda region’s PCVs seem to have an admirable support system, facilitated by cell phone connectivity, a comfortable regional house and frequent bike trips. We share lunch, made by Khady Diamanka, the mother in Katie’s host family. It’s fried fish balls over rice, with an excellent brown sauce. As we’re guests we get large spoons (vs. hands), but otherwise eat Senegal-style, seated on a mat and sharing a large aluminum pan. Etiquette requires no use of the left hand, and sticking to one’s own roughly defined section of the bowl. Also, conversation during the process of eating is frowned upon. One eats and then conversation recommences. All future lunches and dinners will be a variant on this formula. Rice, or pounded millet or corn meal fills the bowl. Then fish, chicken, or peanut sauce is placed on top.


I’ve reflected on my visit to Sare Sara, on what life is like for those who live on a few dollars a day. What I saw were strong extended families, and women who work from dawn to the moonlit nights. It’s said that babies are carried “a year in front; two in back,” and this is true. Infants are nursed on demand for two years, and are usually wrapped around their mother’s or aunt’s or sister’s back with two rectangular lengths of cloth. That constant connection makes them quite content. Once they are two-year-old walkers their independence begins. Except for a daily bath, which involves vigorous scrubbing by mom, they are free, and are expected to entertain themselves with friends, sibs and the free-range livestock. Cooking fires, well openings, animal droppings, road traffic and other hazards seem to be avoided with little maternal intervention. Mom is pounding grain, killing a chicken, scaling fish, hand washing garments, shelling peanuts, planting a garden, or harvesting hibiscus flowers, and has no time to hover.

Omar Diamanka, Katie’s host dad, is a local mover, fixer, entrepreneur and café owner.



From dawn to evening he’s running his roadside café, serving breakfast of peppery bean-paste on bread and tea, or fruit slices at mid-day, to travelers, mostly truckers. Many other men in the village seem to be less gainfully employed, and are found conversing at the mosque, or outside Café Omar. Early January is neither planting nor harvest season, so there’s less work for the men.

What there is always time for is greeting, and here I see Katie’s (aka Koumba) popularity. “Koumba!” is called from all sides as we enter a family compound. I was taught various greetings appropriate for the time of day: “A fini” or “Jarama” and then the all-purpose “Jamtan.” My mix-ups are cause for giggles. Everyone shakes hands, and looks you straight in the eye—it’s endearing, not formal. Omar has christened me “Hawa Kunde,” his mother’s name, and I have the fun of being the “tokara” (TOK-ara) or namesake, of several “Hawas” in the village. This gains me bonus points during the meet ‘n’ greet festivities. I see that Katie is respected, valued and genuinely liked in Sare Sara. Her Pulaar is now advanced enough to encompass good-natured jokes and necessary bargaining.

I see Katie’s connection with the young mothers of the village while I help out at a monthly baby-weighing.


The scale is hung in the branch of a mango tree, and Katie records the little squirmers’ weights, checking them against a standard growth chart.



My assistance involves taking photographs of the mothers with their infants. Later Katie will use the pictures as an incentive for future weighings.


Meanwhile many women have gathered to process hibiscus-flower heads that were harvested that day. I assist with the stripping of the fleshy red leaves (to make bisap tea) and saving of the seed-heads. My competence here pleasantly surprises some. We return to Katie’s home compound for a daily afternoon rest, reading time and the daily bucket bath. Dinner is late, after sunset.

After dinner around the fire we sat on low stools or a woven bench and enjoyed the peace and the moonlight. The women are finally at rest, their work over. There is no television or radio, no bills to pay, nothing to fix, no email to read, no preparations for the next day. The serenity of those nights of fireside conversation remains with me. I see why my daughter loves Africa.