Wednesday, October 28, 2009

The Whipping Fete

Once again I return after a long hiatus. I can blame this latest absence at least in part on my two summer visitors, Jessie and Sammy, who each promised to write a guest post describing their trips and never did – though I’m not sure they can excuse me for three months away. (Jessie has since begun Peace Corps service in Azerbaijan and started her own, much more regularly updated blog – I’ll post a link on the side – check it out!). I have even less of an excuse for procrastination these days because I now have – drum roll, please – internet in Penessoulou! It’s expensive and a bit slow because it’s routed through my cell phone, but nevertheless I find it incredible that I can check gmail after I pull water from the well. In short, technology is amazing and I am lazy. I apologize!

I won’t bore you with the details of all that’s happened since my last post (I can’t remember it all anyway), but suffice it to say that after a crazy travel- and visitor-filled summer I was glad to come back to Penessoulou at the end of September to start a new school year. This second year is already proving much easier and more enjoyable than the first. Teaching is still exhausting, but it’s a lot more fun now that I know the kids and the system. I was surprised by how much I missed my students this summer and how happy I was to see them when I came back. I’m beginning to realize how hard it will be to leave them, and I’m not looking forward to it! Highlights from the school year thus far include: me knocking over a table (it only had three legs!) and ever-so-gracefully falling on top of it on the first day; singing “If you’re happy and you know it,” in one class and hearing my other classes join in (I don’t think their teachers were very happy about it); and showing students pictures of my house and Marlborough in the snow (it blew their minds!).

Outside of school, my girls club is off to an auspicious start – the girls who came to Camp Success this summer have been very active in planning and running the club and we’ve had forty girls each week! – and English club will start next week. Add in my women’s group, law school applications, and the occasional trip or fete, I’ve been very, very busy… I love it!

I was inspired to post at long last because the past two days have been two of the best in my Peace Corps experience. I’ve just returned to Penessoulou from the Badjoude whipping fete, a Lokpa coming-of-age ceremony where boys and men demonstrate their readiness to defend the homeland by whipping each other with wooden chicotes, or whips.

Every Lokpa village has its own annual fete, but the Badjoude fete is known to be one of the best, and it didn’t disappoint. Bands of boys and men dressed in outlandish attire – ranging from (stuffed) bras and skirts to animal skins and feather headdresses – processed through the village singing, dancing, and drumming followed by crowds of spectators. When the groups met, combat erupted spontaneously. Leaders from each group loosely regulated the frenzy, assigning sparring partners and declaring winners, but mostly it was a free-for-all. Then suddenly, at the leaders’ signal, the fighting would become dancing and the party would continue on to the next battleground. Singing, dancing, eating, drinking, and, of course, whipping, went on from dawn ‘til dusk, and I’m sure continued ‘til long after we had gone.

Thirteen volunteers went to the celebration – eleven out-of-towners, plus our gracious hosts Rut and Heidi. In Badjoude, we were welcomed as honored guests. The king fed us not once but twice (yam pilee with delicious sauce, rice, and copious amounts of tchouk, a local millet beer) and the mayor’s deputy didn’t seem too offended when we only picked at his meal afterwards. They all told us again and again how proud and happy they were to have us celebrate with them; they had worried volunteers wouldn’t come back after last year’s tragedy. It meant a lot that we – Kate’s friends – were there. Though they didn’t say it, everywhere we went it was evident how much the people of Badjoude had cared for her and that Badjoude was really her village. It was easy to see why Kate loved Badjoude so much; Badjoude loved her, too.

We volunteers didn’t talk about Kate much during the trip – I don’t think anyone wanted to be the one to dampen the festive mood – but I’m sure I’m not the only one who couldn’t help but feel her presence throughout. From the moment we arrived in Ouake commune, greeted by one of the most brilliant sunsets I’ve ever seen, we were struck by the beauty and wonder of the place. The starry, pre-dawn sky when we awoke to prepare for the fête; the red, baobab-lined paths winding through the village; the mountains looming majestically in the distance; Kate would have noticed those things, and she would have wanted us to notice them too. I remembered Kate as we were swept up in the dancing melée, as we saluered the village elders, and even as we laughed at the crazy dancer licking a wild cat hide. Kate loved village life and would have reveled in the chance to celebrate with her friends and neighbors. The entire experience reminded me how fortunate I am to be in Benin, how fleeting my time here is, and how important it is to appreciate it while I’m here – and I think that’s exactly how Kate would have wanted it.

Though I’m sad she couldn’t be there to celebrate with us, I’m so grateful I got to see Badjoude and remember Kate on such a happy occasion. It seems only fitting to remember a person as joyous and cheerful as Kate with a celebration of all the things she cherished. It was a day she would have loved!

Friday, July 17, 2009

Accra is awesome!

Greetings from Accra! At some point I will have to write a post (and put up photos!) from our girls' camp last week (it was fantastic -- the best thing I have done in Peace Corps thus far), but while I have the chance I wanted to post a few lines about our trek to Ghana.

We arrived on Wednesday afternoon after a long but not-too-unpleasant day of traveling. We made it through all the borders without a hitch, and since we rented taxis at each junction we never had to wait around for anyone.

When we pulled into Accra, you would have thought that none of us had seen a city before -- we were pointing left and right, jaws dropping at the sight of manicured lawns and highway dividers, shopping centres and traffic lights. The streets of Accra are lined with "Akwaaba Obama!" posters from the President's visit last week; we're sad we missed him, but it's definitely cool to see the city decked out in Americana.

After we found our hotel, got cleaned up and changed some money, we went out for delicious Mexican food at a sports bar around the corner. We told the waiter it was my birthday (it almost is!), which earned us a free round of drinks from a creepy old guy and cake from a real birthday party nearby. Several pitchers of Star later, we went out dancing at a club and then somehow found our way to a reggae party on the beach -- an excellent start to our vacation!

The next morning, we meandered our way to the Ghana Peace Corps bureau (definitely not as nice as ours!) and then bee-lined over to the Accra Mall for a little taste of home. It was like stepping into another world -- beautiful clothes, expensive electronics, a food court, a book store...we didn't know what to do with ourselves. Again, I found myself feeling incredibly villageoise and out of place -- I felt like people must know that I didn't belong in this clean, air-conditioned paradise. I had to stifle the urge to greet everyone I met (in French, of course) and to discuter for prices. It was very bizarre.

But the best was yet to come. Walking through the mall, I had seen several movie posters; it occurred to me that maybe, just maybe, there was a movie theatre in the mall. I asked around and sure enough, tucked away on the second floor there was a cinema and it was playing the new Harry Potter movie! I couldn't have been more excited -- I immediately ran crazily around the mall telling the girls that we would get to see Harry Potter just days after it had come out in the States. We saw the movie (and met several Ghana PCVs in the theatre) later that afternoon. It was fantastic-- and such an amazing surprise!

Then, last night we treated ourselves to a fabulous sushi dinner at a nice restaurant downtown. Afterward, we made our way to a fun reggae bar, and then a few of us called it a night while others continued the party at a swanky nightclub. We really do love Accra!

Today we head to Krokrobite for some beachside R&R. This really is quite the vacation! More to come soon...

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

A few more photos...


Amdiath, Suruma, Maldiath, and Moulika...my little buddies.

Matt, former Djougou volunteer, came back to visit and introduced me to his work partners, Nady and Dean. They run a scholarship program for underprivileged, at-risk girls and are in the process of building a dormitory to house the girls in Djougou.

A bird's eye view of a Djougou CEG.

Yes, that is a twig holding the power lines apart.


The Germans have a pet monkey!


Dismembered snake

Melissa, Serpent Slayer!

Bébé au dos


Maldiath seems a bit alarmed that I'm trying to put her on my back...


... but we got the hang of it!


Jessica's a pro





Benin in pictures, Part II

Maldiath, my favorite little munchkin, and her caterpillar from Mom!


An ominous sky as rain descends on Penessoulou


Planting mango trees on Arbor Day -- as Jessica said, we're real Peace Corps Volunteers now! We were some of the last to arrive, so we got prime planting spots -- a trash heap and the grave of an unsuccessful sapling from last year's planting. Let's hope our trees fare better...

Benin in pictures

It's been a while since I've posted any photos, so here's a smattering from the last few months...


On Easter Sunday, Jessica, Melissa and I introduced my Director and his family to the tradition of Easter egg hunts. The kids -- and the adults! -- got really into it.


Our finished products...ils sont jolis, non?


While the kids play, mom makes Easter dinner... goat! Mmm...


My Director's family at Joyce's baptism

Jessica and Lydie at the baptism

My little neighbors in their palm-leaf fort. I must admit, I was pretty impressed by their workmanship!

Jessica and Amdiath play "King of the Mountain," or "Mouton," in my front yard

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

It’s been so long since my last post that I don’t even know where to begin. I stopped writing after Kate’s death because I didn’t know what to say, and though I still don’t know what to say about it – what can one say about such senseless, terrible tragedy? – I don’t think I can keep using it as an excuse not to post here. What I will say about Kate is that she was a warm, wonderful person, an exemplary Peace Corps volunteer, and she is missed very much. We still don’t know enough about what happened to her or why, but I think we have learned enough to know that no explanation or justification will satisfy. Sometimes horrible things happen to good people, and Kate was one of the best.

---

My first school year in Benin ended last week – not officially, of course, but the national examinations have begun and grades have been calculated, so consequently all students have stopped coming to school. Although I’m certainly glad to have a break from lesson plans and grading and telling kids to be quiet, I’m sad that I won’t see my students for four months. They’ve been trying my patience lately as the vacation approached, but I usually have a lot of fun with them. Plus, I don’t know what I’m going to do with all my free time now that I’m not teaching!

Actually, that’s not entirely true – although I’ll certainly have more downtime this summer than I do when school is in session, I do have a lot planned for the next few months. Our regional girls’ camp is coming up in a few weeks, which will require quite a bit of preparation. We’ve invited 60 of the best and brightest girls from 15 schools in the Donga to a week-long camp in Djougou to talk about health, family planning, and career and life goals, play sports, and do crafts and other activities. We’ll also take a field trip up to Natitingou to visit a cyber café and a women’s bracelet-making cooperative. It will be the first time many of these girls have seen either of these “big” cities, so even the journey will be exciting – the rest of the program will be icing on the cake!

After the camp, I’m traveling with a group of PCVs to Ghana for some sight-seeing and beach-lounging. We’ll get back just in time to greet the newly-arrived Stagiaires and to celebrate my birthday (24! I’m old!) in Cotonou. My sister Jessie arrives for a two-week visit on the 27th, and after her departure I’m hoping to be joined by a few more visitors somewhere on the continent, details TBD. I’ll be working Stage the first few weeks in September, and by then it will be time to head back up north to get ready for school again…phew! See – my summer’s gone by already!
In addition to my travels and visits, I have several other work and personal goals for the summer. First on my list: learn more Anii! I was really working hard at it when I first got to Penessoulou – saluer-ing people as I passed, talking with Mamas in the marché, asking people to translate what they were saying – but as time has passed I’ve slipped more and more back into French and have become lazier about asking questions.

Then, I am determined to have my law school applications ready before Thanksgiving, which (again, considering my schedule) means I need to start writing personal statements and editing my C.V. as soon as possible. To facilitate this process, I’m looking into getting internet on my computer through my mobile phone – it’s expensive, but it might be worth it if it means I don’t have to spend weeks on end in the capital glued to the LSDAS website. Don’t get too excited – I don’t know if it will work – but it might soon be a lot easier (and cheaper!) for you to contact me! Stay tuned.

I also want to get to work on a few of the secondary projects I’m hoping to get started next year. I’m looking into helping my school set up a computer lab (they have the computers, but they need some additional equipment and assistance), and if it works out, Jessica (my post-mate in Bassila) and I might be able to teach some sort of computer literacy course in the fall. We’re also hoping to do some kind of sex education/health sensibilizations, either in the form of a weekly class or a few programs. (There is no sex education in Beninese schools, and as a result kids (and adults) are often woefully misinformed about the mechanics of reproduction and disease transmission. Being here gives me a new perspective on hot-button U.S. debates like abstinence-only sex education and school busing. Though I still have strong opinions on both topics, now I’m simply thankful that we can have those debates -- thankful that we have sex ed and school buses to fight about!) I’m also hoping to get a jump start on my English club by meeting with some students over the summer. So far I’ve only got three students sitting on my porch on Friday afternoons, but it’s a start!

Additionally, last weekend I was elected Scholarship Girls Coordinator by the Gender and Development Committee, which means that next year I’ll be in charge of administering and hopefully revitalizing Peace Corps Benin’s scholarship program for girls. Currently, the Scholarship Girls program sponsors about twenty high achieving, financially-needy girls in secondary school. Once a girl is selected for the program, her scholarship follows her through graduation, provided that she meets a few minimal academic requirements (when I say minimal, I mean minimal – i.e., you can only repeat a grade once). The program stopped taking on new students in 2005, in part due to a lack of renewed funding (I’m not exactly sure yet where the original funding came from). There were also problems with the program’s administration and monitoring (it’s difficult to track girls across the country, especially if there is no PCV in her school) and its structure. I’m hoping that we can deal with some of those problems this year and get the program re-funded so we can take on new girls in the future. It will take some work – probably more than I realize! – but I think that putting girls through school is one of the most (and maybe only) effective way to empower girls in this country, and Peace Corps volunteers are well-positioned to identify and support strong female students deserving of assistance. So, I really must get to work now on figuring out how to make this program work!

And, to procrastinate this lengthy to-do list, I’ve been watching copious amounts of West Wing (I’m already in the third season) and reading good books (rather, re-reading, at the moment – Anna Karenina). To be fair, I did have the excuse of being laid up at home for the past few days with what resembled amebiasis or giardia…I’m not sure which, but whatever it was, it wasn’t pleasant. It seems to be resolving itself, fortunately, so hopefully I’ll be back on track with my summer work soon!

I know I always say this, but I do hope to update this a bit more regularly in the future as well. These lengthy updates are all well and good, but I know I miss so much of the small stuff that really shapes my experience here when I’m writing about several months at once. For example, I might forget to describe how my neighbor kids rush outside ecstatically shouting “Avion! Avion! Avion!” whenever a plane flies overhead, or say that killing a chicken is a lot harder than it looks, or mention that my next-door neighbors’ baby (Maldiath, my favorite little munchkin) is starting to crawl and has her first tooth poking through! So for now, à toute à l'heure -- more to come!

Friday, March 6, 2009

I'm the worst blogger ever

Hello All!
Here is an entry that I wrote back in February but haven't had a chance to post since...sorry! I'll post something more recent soon!
Lots of Love,
Naima



16 February 2009
The fabled harmattan has come and gone, and once again the breeze floating across my porch at night is a warm one. It is 11 p.m., and the thermometer on my alarm clock now reads just over 90 degrees Fahrenheit. I must admit that this New Englander was rather underwhelmed by the promised fraicheur of the Beninese dry season. A few mornings where I am comfortable wearing a fleece jacket is not exactly what I call winter. Plus, the cooler weather lasted less than a month. It’s February -- shouldn’t there be a few inches of snow on the ground right now?
I must apologize yet again for the length of time between entries. Much has happened since I last wrote (which is part of the reason it has been so long since I last wrote): Christmas and New Year’s, Mom’s visit, the second devoirs and end of the first semester of school, President Obama’s Inauguration, a birth, a baptism, and a wedding.
I spent the holidays with Jessica and Melissa in Bassila. We had stockings (I sewed mine myself from a scrap of my Peace Corps bedsheet! I could scarcely believe my own resourcefulness haha), shortbread cookies, and even a miniature Christmas tree. On Christmas day, we feasted with the German linguists living in Bassila and sang Christmas carols ‘til late in the evening. I certainly missed spending Christmas at home with my family, but like my Beninese Thanksgiving, my Beninese Christmas was both so pleasant and so dissimilar from the Christmas I am used to that I could hardly be homesick or depressed. It was a unique but very Merry Christmas!
Shortly thereafter I made my way south to meet Mom in Cotonou. I was elated to see her, as well as so proud of her for making it here all by herself (and with four giant suitcases, no less!). We spent just one day in Cotonou, where we purchased a big mattress and mom rode her first zemi-jahn, before making our way north. We celebrated New Year’s Eve in Natitingou with a nice dinner and a visit to the PC workstation, where mom got to meet a bunch of my fellow PCVs and distribute the gifts she obligingly carted from other Peace Corps parents to their sons and daughters, and where I stayed out far too late fete-ing with other volunteers.
On New Year’s Day we headed to Park Pendjari for a three-day safari. The safari was wild and a lot of fun, if a bit exhausting. We only saw one lion (we got a great photo so it counts!), but we saw tons of hippos, several varieties of deer/antelope, crocodiles, monkeys, buffalo, and, best of all, elephants. In one rather comical (at least in hindsight) incident, Mom and I were seated atop the roof of the 4x4 when an elephant began advancing toward the car. Mom and I were ecstatic – what a photo opportunity! – but became annoyed as our guide quickly started up the engine and continued driving forward. We banged on the roof signaling him to stop, but to our dismay he kept going. At that moment, we realized that the elephant was not just coming to say hello, but was instead charging our vehicle! We had gotten a little too close to her and her baby, and we were lucky our guide was more animal-savvy than his camera-toting tourists. On our way back from the safari, we made stops to swim at the Tanagou waterfalls and to tour the Tata Sombas in Boukoumbe – both very worthwhile sights. We emerged from the safari tired and coated in reddish dust, but satisfied.
The next day mom and I returned to my village. It was wonderful to be able to show her what my life is like here. She was a trooper: she pulled water, did laundry by hand, learned how to ecraser tomatoes and piler yams, and even made me curtains while I did schoolwork. I took her to the market, introduced her to my friends in village, and fed her all of my favorite Beninese food. Best of all, she came to class with me a few days to watch me teach. She helped me demonstrate Simon Says with classroom commands and prepositions of place for my younger students, helped me make musical instrument flashcards, and took photos of all my classes. It was fun!
We rounded off the trip with a few days at the luxurious Hotel du Lac in Cotonou, home to a large pool, air-conditioning, and free wireless internet. We also visited my host family in Porto Novo, who were incredibly welcoming and excited to meet my mother. They had even commissioned a ceremonial Boubou to send home to my Dad – I can’t wait to see photos of him wearing it!
After Mom’s departure, I had to hustle back up north for school. The few weeks that followed were a whirlwind of classes and make-up classes due to the impending Devoirs (finals). My classes were still a bit behind due to my prolonged absence in November, so we had a lot of work to do. I started an after-school English club and our basketball team finally started practices, so my usually free Wednesday afternoons and Saturday mornings are now totally booked, and I spent a few weekends working on a Peace Corps Partnership Proposal with my post-mates in Bassila and Djougou for a girls’ camp this summer. It felt good to get so much accomplished, but it’s been a bit exhausting!
It’s also been an exciting few months for my friends in Penessoulou. My director and his wife had their third daughter, Joyce Nina, in January, and my closest neighbors were married and baptized their baby, Maldiath, in February. The Congres de Penessoulou begins next week when all of the sons and daughters of Penessoulou will return to visit and feter.
I, on the other hand, have had several near disasters this month, most of which were my fault: I nearly burned down my house a few weeks ago (the wind blew the curtain in my kitchen window into my stove…I’m really lucky that my house is made of cement!); my dog chewed through some supplies in my medical kit (he hasn’t eaten anything else, just dangerous poisons!); I found mice entering my house through my shower drain (I have since closed it and caught two of them in traps, but I’m sure there are more lurking somewhere); and I had my second bout of mild food poisoning (I think as a result of drinking juice au village). One thing’s for sure: life in Benin is never dull!
February vacation begins tomorrow, so I will travel to Sirarou to visit my friend Katie for a few days before we head down to Porto Novo for our TEFL In-Service Training. I’m excited to see the other TEFL volunteers and to experience the delightful conveniences and luxuries of the south (ice cream! air conditioning! pineapples!), but I’m very much not looking forward to traveling. It’s such a hassle here!