The following is what my sister wrote (with input from my mother) about our trip. I didn't edit it or (as of yet) even read it. I hope you enjoy it as much as I am sure I will. (My sister is an amazing writer).
Monday, December 6, 2010
Intro
The following is what my sister wrote (with input from my mother) about our trip. I didn't edit it or (as of yet) even read it. I hope you enjoy it as much as I am sure I will. (My sister is an amazing writer).
From My Sister
I have no idea if this will stick, but what I am coming to realize now, months after returning home, that I did not realize while on my trip is the magnitude of what I experienced. During quiet and still moments of my day, with almost no exception my mind turns to my brief Africa-adventure. I think back to the smiles, the food, the dozens of marriage proposals, the look of astonishment on many faces at my behavior, my look of astonishment at the behavior of others. I believe it has taken me this long to write this account because, truthfully, I am not done gathering my own thoughts about it. When I describe my trip to my friends, I often feel at a loss for words. My fancy-pants left brain that so dutifully served me in the past isn't sure what to do with a culture so focused on right brain territory- the here and now. To describe my trip is, in many ways, to fracture it. How does one apply language to an experience so... well, experiential?
But before we dive into the recounting of the adventure that was Mom and Karin Visit Katie in Niger 2010, I'd like to ask you something. Do you know how to carry a bucket of water on your head? Have you ever filled a bucket to its very brim so that the only thing keeping it from overflowing is water tension, then bent down and heaved this bucket onto your crown for ease of carrying?
Which begs another question- on a trip where the rules of the world do not apply, how does one blog about it?
In the lines that follow, please forgive any confusing or erroneous messages. Please forgive the sheer magnitude of this report. And certainly please forgive any lack of thorough explanation- that's kind of how it goes.
Our Arrival:
Waiting is a sport in Niger. We would arrive at places with ten or fifteen minutes to spare, then wait for hours for the actual event. Things don't happen at a specific time. They happen when they happen. What time will the bus leave? Soon. When will our passports be ready? Soon. Everything is soon. As in, sooner or later. What's your hurry, Anasara? Do you have other places to be?
As I look back on the number of 'touristy' things we did, we really fit a lot in. But the real adventure was just being there. Walking around on African soil, talking to Africans, smelling African food, watching African lifestyle were all a sight to be had in themselves. As much of our time was, as Katie said, "Hurrying up so we can wait," we had a lot of time to observe how Nigerians live.
Some highlights from our first week:
Giraffes! Real, tall, funny-looking, vegetarian, giraffes. I can honestly say that never in my life, before deciding to go to Africa, did I think I'd go run around with a bunch of giraffes. Katie hired a driver to take her, Mom, and me out to a Giraffe preserve, where the last of the wild Nigerien giraffes live. We drove about an hour out of Niamey to a small, open structure with a little sign that said something like: "Giraffe preserve." We hired an official guide who directed our driver off the highway (and I don't mean onto another road) in search of a giraffe herd. Every now and then, he would order our driver to stop, then would get out of the car, climb a tree, and look around for tall giraffe necks peeking out of the landscape. He'd then get back in the car, point to this direction or that, and off we'd go, bumping over dirt mounds and swerving around bushes and trees. Sure enough, we found them. Upon our arrival, they were being herded away from the highway. There are no fences surrounding the preserve (not that a fence would exactly be effective... I mean, they are giraffes after all...) so in order to prevent these animals from being struck on the busy highway, a man on a small motorcycle spends his day chasing the herd away from the road. I would love this job.
We got a lot of attention at the well and everyone wanted to meet us and shake our hands. Zarma meetings are extensive and each person greets the other with a long list of scripted questions. Imagine what your life would be like if every person you see in your day stopped to ask how you, your family, your health, etc. has been.
Once we had our buckets full, Katie and I each put a bucket on our heads to walk back to her house. In the same fashion that I'd giggle at someone who didn't know how to shovel snow, I got a lot of laughs for not having any idea how to carry a bucket on my head, although I have to brag that I had only minimal spillage walking back to Katie's house.
The wives of Katie's concession were pounding millet, which is their main food staple and quite a process. The women use a long, think, smooth pole that is five or so feet tall and, lifting it in one hand, thrust it full force into a wooden bucket with a deep cavern and stable bottom. Then they lift it up and repeat. This creates a rhythmic drumming sound that adds to the magic of the evening (there is no magic about it at sunrise, however. You think you're alarm clock is a pain in the butt, wait until you are sound asleep and someone decides to pound millet 10 feet from your head.) Pounding millet can take up 90% of a woman's day.
Our evening meal, prepared by the wives, was a delicious squash sauce over rice, fish, and millet. We sat on the ground with the women (the men having already been served) and ate with our right hand. The food was different- different in taste, smell, and texture (texture is largely affected by the amount of sand in everything). I enjoyed the fish and squash very much. Katie has learned to like much of the food there, but Mom and I struggled with the strange taste of the millet- yuck. It has the consistency of a flour gelatin and feels like wet cement in your mouth. I mostly tried to put a little bit in my mouth and swallow it without tasting it. No one ever gets to call my sister a picky eater. Ever.
The next morning, we woke to the melodic sounds of chanting prayer and shortly thereafter the effective pounding of millet. We spent much of the morning playing with the 6 month old baby in Katie's concession, a joyful, alert, and downright squeezable boy. He entertained himself for a good 20 minutes playing with Mom's skirt. Katie is clearly fond of this ball of fun and often plays with him. His mom, however, has gotten in the habit of leaving Baby in Katie's tanda unattended. Katie believes the mom expects Katie to be doing the childcare- in Niger, a child begins caring for their younger siblings once they turn 7. It is not unusual to see a small child tied to the back of a slightly bigger child.
We did more meet and greets around Katie's village. I was often asked if I am married, if I'd like to get married, and why I am not married already. Katie told them about my partner Dan and everyone decided to come to our wedding when (not if) we have one. They were also amused to find out that I am older but shorter than Katie. This amuses many Westerners too, so there's a piece of culture we share. Katie gave a lot of advice on hygiene and caring for infants, which was cool to hear. I learned a lot about the struggles kiddos face when growing up in village.
Later, we went for a walk into the bush. We followed a dirt road made by donkey carts and foot traffic and were led quickly into a rolling field of green millet. Millet is planted in every free square foot of dirt outside the walls of the village concessions and the feeling of being very much so in the country comes upon you quickly as you enter the rows of green. There were no human structures other than the occasional grain hut made out of grass. The land felt at once untrodden and ancient. The farmers have lived there for hundreds of years, farming the same land, living in the same place. Yet even for all this history, the land has not changed. It has not seen social evolution, development, chemicals, smog, irrigation, tractors, mining, or even a solid building since most houses have to be remade every year or so as the mud melts in the rain. The land isn't the enemy of these people, it is not something to be conquered or taken advantage of. It is something to exist with as a team, something that provides when left just by itself. It needs no coaxing, no instruction, to grow the food that sustains the village. Odd to think that the land is doing what it is meant to do without the farmers telling it how.
It was fun walking in the bush, waving at men hoeing the ground and women breaking up the soil for planting while their hampa'd babies snoozed on their backs. Getting each family enough food for the year seems to be the main task of most citizens of Niger. Not only is there a hot/dry and wet/cold season, there is a hungry season. This is where food stores are running out, food gets more expensive, and it is not yet time to harvest more food. Mom and I visited during hungry season, which Katie says is one of the reasons merchants are so pushy with getting tourists to buy things. In Katie's village, they stretch food out as far as possible, even to the point of 'recycling' dishes- if a dish is not fully eaten one night, the sauce is rinsed off and the grain is eaten at the next meal. This is trickier than the western "leftovers" idea since there is no refrigeration to keep food from spoiling.
One of Katie's villagers told her that he needs to make sure his family of 7 has at least two 50 pounds bags of millet per month. The culture revolves around food in a big way- it demonstrates status, beauty is seen in large people who have a lot to eat, celebrations involve feasting, and a family's "savings account" is in food stores. This makes me wonder how having such an abundance of food has affected the West. We don't have to focus most of our time and energy on food so we can develop our culture and lives in other ways. On the other hand, our scope is so large that we don't have nearly the same kind of friendly, leisurely companionship or camaraderie that I felt in Niger. We feel entitled to what we want when we want it and curse what stands in our way to get it. We are angry at each other, in a big hurry, full of fear, and generally dissatisfied. We have all the material we could ever need plus a plethora of luxury, yet we strive for the simplicity found in belonging to a community. We want it all and we want everyone else to want it our way. How does this attitude really stand up next to a place like Niger?
Our drive from Katie's village-
Our ride was exciting, to say the least, as we flew down the dirt roads of rural Niger. Our driver stopped no less than 5 times in the 30 km distance to fill the over-heated radiator with water. It spurted up like a geyser as he filled it and I cannot imagine how he didn't burn himself on that water. He ran out of water, though, after the first stop and subsequent stops involved hoping the car made it to the next village. In order to do this, there was definitely a speed-to-engine ratio where we had to go fast enough to make it to the next village before the engine overheated but also not so fast that the engine overheated too quickly. It was about this time I began having the thought, "What do I know about what makes car engines explode?" Once we made it to a village, our driver asked whoever was around for water from the well. Again, we drew quite a crowd of people at each village who wanted to stare at the Anasaras, but now they also wanted to put in their two cents on how to keep the car running. Nigeriens get around mainly by small motorcycles, buses, and old cars from the 1980's. While in America, we would send these vehicles off to that big junk yard in the sky, Nigeriens have developed amazing mechanical skills and keep things running. While it took some doing, we made it back to Dosso in one piece.
Making it to Benin-
Looking out the window, it was hard not to notice how much more developed the world seemed just miles away from Niger. Buildings were made of cement, stores had storefronts, the cars are newer, they have trash cans on the street, and there were even outdoor stadiums for playing sports. Katie made the remark that even remote Benin is more developed than Niger's capital city, Niamey.
Once in Natitingou, we found a place to stay. Our hotel, Hotel De Bourgonge, was another lovely, exotic African hotel with beautiful flowers blooming everywhere, tile floors, spacious patios, and beds with mosquito nets strung over them. The rooms had two beds, which we shared, and a bathroom with a sink and shower. We had our first shower in four days and settled in with a delicious dinner, air heavy with tropical perfume, and a feeling of quite and leisure.
Kota Falls-
Park Pendjari-
We made it to a waterhole that had a man-made lookout where you could observe the animals from a distance. There, we saw hippopotamus swimming, waterbuck, antelope, and large, black, stork-like birds with brightly colorful heads. The quiet of the place had a majesty about it as though this space was permitting you to witness it.
Our guide, a gruff, uncouth man who spoke in hasty French, chain smoked, was missing several prominent teeth, but who proved to be a gold-mine of information on the park, the animals, and Benin, set up a bench on top of the Toyota Four-runner we were driving. The rest of the way, Katie, Mom and I took turns sitting on top of the car keeping a lookout for animals (as well as hanging on for dear life and ducking from tree branches as we whipped down the dirt road). It was using this system of lookouts who kicked the roof of the car when seeing an animal that we spotted more antelope, waterbuck, a mom hippo with her baby running for cover, and a family of warthogs. The park holds many other animals like lions and elephants, but given the wet, cool season, they were all well-hidden in the grass and trees. We did see work of the elephants who can push over a large tree and passed several palm trees that were fallen by elephants, split in the middle with brute force.
The park itself is not fenced and several villages, centuries old, still live in it with the animals. We wondered aloud about the relations between the natives, the animals, and the park caretakers. Our guide informed us that the park was seriously underfunded, making it all the more incredible that it exists.
On our way home, our guide took us briefly to a waterfall hidden behind a village. A small group of local boys guided us up the stream (literally, in the water and uphill) and while we swayed and slipped up the rocky stream bed, they were barefoot and solid in their stance. The waterfall we came upon was at least 60 feet high and fell out of a rock face concave around a pool of water. Once again, we felt the ancient energy of a place with more wisdom than any human could know. One of our guides informed us the water was over 100 feet deep. To demonstrate this, he climbed the rock face to the top of the waterfall, gave a brief wave, and leaped off the cliff to plunge into the water below. He arrived back at our shore unharmed, but Mom's eyebrows were raised in motherly skepticism.
Parakou-
The ride was what we had come to expect from buses in West Africa and everyone pushed and shoved to get on the bus first. Some sat in the aisle as the seats ran out and near me, a dad knelt on the ground with two small children. The children, while surely crammed and uncomfortable, did not complain once in the three hour trip. A little into the ride, a few Hadjas got into an argument over whether to have a certain window open. ("Hadja, literally means a woman who has made the pilgrimage to Mecca, but in Nigerien slang is used to refer to any large, rich woman.) One Hadja wanted the air blowing near her but not too much, thus kept opening this window. Several others wanted the window closed, saying the breeze was too strong for the children. They yelled at each other in French and told each other to shut up. The whole ordeal was like a tornado- fascinating to watch but not something you want to be in the middle of.
We made it to the bus station the next day around noon for our 2 p.m. bus back to Malanville. Katie and I bought some meat rolls from a nearby bakery and oranges (which, in their authentic form, have a bright green peel) and waited for our bus. Most bus stations, comprising of a large dirt lot, some benches, and a tanda, are pretty laissez-faire. The schedules are more estimations and buses tend to come when they come. Still, when 5 rolled around and there was still no bus, we were pretty antsy about our traveling situation. Each time we asked the staff about when the bus would arrive, they would simply say, "It's coming." Finally, around 6:30 we were on our way for the 6 hour ride to Malanville.
Niamey Part Two-
We also spent some time in a Touareg market called Chateau Un. Here, artisans sell jewelry, baskets, leather goods, and so on. Everything was beautiful, handmade from old customs and styles. The only difficulty was the hoard of sellers that surrounded us, shoving their goods in our faces and demanding we follow them to their shop to buy their things. At first we could ignore them but every time we turned around, there were two more. They were very pushy, putting things in our hands and talking over one another in broken English. Then they followed us as we went from one stand to another so it became impossible to escape from them. I kept saying "No" but finally started ignoring them completely. Katie speculated that they were being such vultures because it was hungry season. This was hard to process. Here I am, an Anasara, with enough money to buy presents and these men are just trying to feed their families. It was a similar feeling at seeing the kids begging on the street. The level of human suffering here is such that my brain almost can't understand it. It leaves me with an intense feeling of guilt at being born where I was and having what I have. Katie gave us strict instructions not to hand out money to the beggars because it perpetuates an expectation that Anasaras give free money and thus a culture of dependency. While I understand the logic , there is something core within me that believes somehow I could be changing their lives. While I feel the apathy many Nigeriens show, I cannot comprehend how we can have developed, first world countries and not have addressed this suffering.
And thus our trip came to a close. We spent our last evening waiting in the thick evening breeze, passing the time in the same fashion we had during most of the trip. When it came time for our midnight ride to the airport, I was surprised that I felt a deep sadness. I had been here only three weeks, and did not want to say goodbye to my little sister who, really, is not little in any way. I know her path is much longer than mine and travels to many more corners of the Earth as she explores who she is and what makes the world turn. There is also no evidence whatsoever that this will change. I don't want it do. She seems happiest when following her heart to places most people don't know they can dream about. But she is my sister and a part of my soul, leaving me both celebrating her choices and missing her presence. I love her like I love to live and I am proud to call her sister.
Saturday, November 6, 2010
A Good-Bye of Sorts (Sorry if it's Cheesy)
October 15, 2010
I only got to have one conversation with Stephanie Chance. It happened at the demyst party in Dosso, her second week of training. It wasn’t a particularly significant conversation; and, now I think of it, I’m not sure she would even remember my being at the party. Shy as I am sometimes, I hung back, participating only passively in the banter.
Nevertheless, I liked Stephanie immediately. First of all, she was tall, and I always feel a kinship with other tall ladies. As a female, every ½ inch over 5’9” either emboldens your personality or becomes a burden on your self-image. (Women are supposed to be petite, right?) Stephanie had clearly found the self-confidence needed to carry herself well. She was poised and happy. She seemed like fun too. She had been dancing, and so her hair—undone by her exuberance—floated around her head. Best of all, she had been wearing a cone-shaped party hat; only sassy, fun-loving ladies dare don cone-shaped party hats.
I had no idea this one mundane moment would later gather so much significance, and so did not take the time to remember it properly. What we talked about is foggy, but I know (among other things) we talked about dating. Peace Corps Niger is 80% female. Needless to say, such a small dating pool can breed intense competition among friends, and thus a tricky love life. I told her to focus on herself and her service, not boys, wishing I could take my own advice. She smiled. Dating trouble: the great unite-er of women.
I’m sure I talked to her several other times before she returned to Hamdallaye, perhaps while choosing the music or serving her pancakes. I may have even hugged her before she got on the bus back to Niamey. I know I saw her several other times, during site announcements and swear-in. But…I’m really not sure…the mind is so self-obsessed; details always fall through the cracks.
The point is, as this was my one clear memory of Stephanie, I would be a liar if I claimed she was my dear friend, or even more than an acquaintance. She may not have even been able to tell you my name. Our story is this: I met her several times and liked her. As such, I felt like a bit of a fraud when I found myself grieving so deeply at her passing. I tried to reel in my pain, since it seemed my grief (which poured fourth so liberally) could somehow cheapen that of her dearest friends who laughed and cried with her for decades.
I think this feeling is shared among many of my fellow volunteers.
No matter if we deny it, our pain is real…and I find myself asking why I should grieve so much for someone I knew so little. After casual deliberation, this is the conclusion I have come to: Stephanie and I were not friends (we never got the chance to develop a friendship), but we were members of the same family—a family of volunteers, united by common ambitions, then shipwrecked on the other side of the world.
In Niger, we are perpetual outsiders. As residents of our communities, we may make good friends with host country nationals, but as Americans, we will never be able to fully blend with the indigenous landscape. After a year here, I have come to see that Peace Corps volunteers working in the same country are citizens of a rare community, members of the same family, children of the same dreams. We are alone on this island called Niger, but we are alone together.
Stephanie was a part of my family, and no matter how estranged or unknown, we always mourn the death of family.
On a deeper level, (not to go all psychobabble on you all) it’s clear (in this mess) I am also grieving my own mortality. How could I not? I find so much of myself in her. She was: young, tall, sassy, educated, fun loving, a rare breed of person who is willing to live in a mud hut for two years, and…a lover of cone-shaped hats. This scares me. Death is scary. After all, what solace can we find in our own vitality when a healthy, vivacious 26-year-old can meet her end so unexpectedly?
I have often remarked to myself how much closer Death feels since coming to Niger. After having attended the funerals of so many villagers, often people who I know well, Death morphed from a nebulas possibility to a peril that lurks in the business of everyday. I can gauge the gravity of an illness simply by looking at a person. I can most often say if a newborn will survive its first weeks. I know the strange qualities a dead body possesses, how they are frighteningly familiar, yet somehow dulled and blurry around the edges.
Yet, even after having met death so many times in the past year, I see now that I still felt exempt from the many fates that befell my Nigerien friends. It seemed my American-ness could put of death. I am affluent. I am special. I have a team of doctors waiting for me in Niamey.
Obviously to some degree being rich does insolate a person from hazard. For example, the Peace Corps furnishes me with a treated mosquito net, an unending malaria prophylaxis, and enough bug spray for an elephant. Even then, if I did develop the symptoms of malaria, the Peace Corps has the drugs to treat me, cars to drive me to the clinic in Niamey, and even money enough to fly me back to America until I’m well…but in that critical moment…we will all face Death with helpless equality.
The funny thing is, throughout my 24 years on Earth, I have developed a pretty solid faith in the immortality of the soul; but this faith has brought me surprising little solace in the face of this tragedy. For me, Death has never been more tangible.
So, acknowledging how tender and short our tenure may be, the next leap of the mind seems painfully obvious… In light of what’s happened and my reaction to it, how can I not ask myself this question: Am I living a meaningful and fulfilling life? Also, what would I change? It reminds me of this poem:
If I had my life to live over,
I'd dare to make more mistakes next time.
I'd relax, I would limber up.
I would be sillier than I have been this trip.
I would take fewer things seriously. I would take more chances.
I would climb more mountains and swim more rivers.
I would eat more ice cream and less beans.
I would perhaps have more actual troubles,
but I'd have fewer imaginary ones.
You see, I'm one of those people who lived sensibly and sanely,
hour after hour, day after day.
Oh, I've had my moments,
and if I had to do it over again,
I'd have more of them.
In fact, I'd try to have nothing else.
Just moments, one after another,
instead of living so many years ahead of each day.
I've been one of those persons who never goes anywhere
without a thermometer, a hot water bottle, a raincoat and a parachute.
If I had to do it again,
I would travel lighter than I have.
If I had my life to live over,
I would start barefoot earlier in the spring and stay that way later in the fall.
I would go to more dances.
I would ride more merry-go-rounds.
I would pick more daisies.
Stephanie, I did not know you well, but I will think of you often and send you light and love across the many folds of the Universe. I hope you are well and at peace. May Allah ease the pain of those who love you so dearly. May Allah show us each other.
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Peace Corps Niger Mourns the Loss of Volunteer, Stephanie Chance
"This is a loss for our community. Peace Corps volunteers represent the best America has to offer – compassion, generosity of spirit and an enthusiasm for what is possible through cooperation. Stephanie’s sudden passing is terribly painful for the entire Peace Corps family," said Peace Corps Director Aaron S. Williams. "Our thoughts are with her family and friends."
“My aspirations for my community are to assist them in identifying their needs, and helping them imagine the changes they would most benefit from,” Stephanie wrote in her July 2010 aspiration statement about her work with Peace Corps.
Before serving with Peace Corps, Stephanie was an experienced certified public accountant. Through Peace Corps service, Stephanie hoped to gain a more global perspective and a better understanding of other cultures. She held a B.S. in business administration and an M.A. in accounting from the University of Arizona.
In recent weeks, Stephanie had made significant progress in learning the local language of Hausa. In September, she completed nearly three months of intensive pre-service training in the village of Hamdallaye, Niger. She was fond of her host family and enjoyed talking with them in her newly acquired Hausa. Stephanie was an active leader among her training group. She organized basketball games and coached local youth in the sport. She was known by Peace Corps training staff for her smile and willingness to help others. She cared about the people of Niger and found ways to contribute, including participating in the annual tree planting to celebrate Nigerien Independence Day and promote conservation.
Currently, there are 75 Peace Corps volunteers in Niger. The first group of volunteers arrived in Niger in 1962. More than 3,000 Americans have worked as Peace Corps volunteers in Niger on a variety of projects focused on health, education, agriculture, natural resource management and community development.
More information at: http://www.peacecorps.gov/index.cfm?shell=resources.media.press.view&news_id=1621
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Helping the Women and Children of Niger
Yesh. It’s been a while. Sorry. Here’s what you missed. In June I visited Zinder for a three-day all volunteer conference, which included “prom” and “open mic night,” at which I convinced my training class to perform “Season of Sun,” a parody of the Broadway classic “Seasons of Love.” (Lyrics available upon request.)
In July my mother and sister came to Niger to visit. I’ll let their account of the trip speak for itself (they may or may not have promised to write a little blurb for the blog…), but I will say through all the delays, lost baggage, mosquitoes, heat, mystery rashes, squat toilets, potholed-bus rides, snakes, marriage proposals and breakdowns (both mechanical and emotional) they were both total troopers.
I’m not really sure what happened in August, but it’s September now…almost October…
As for village life, you haven’t missed much…and by much, I mean anything at all. Rainy season is the MOST BORING SEASON for an anasara in Niger. Besides the nice weather, rainy season is totally lame. All my villagers are busy subsisting, a.k.a. working in the fields. Consequently, the actual village is abandon during the day, leaving me the choice of going to the fields or entertaining myself.
Other reasons why rainy season is lame: With the storms, the chances of your house/latrine/shade hanger collapsing increase by a million percent. Roof leaks are as inevitable as they are destructive. Also there are infinitely more bugs (one of which I pulled out of my nose the other day…Lord only knows how long that’s been up there). So, except for the additional element of excitement a downpour can bring to traveling in an open-back truck with things like your laptop and ipod, rainy season = my second least favorite of Niger’s three seasons. (Hot season is my least favorite and cold season—my third least favorite.)
I managed to keep myself busy, in spite of the rain by reading smutty novels and painting maps for the local primary school. See pictures…
I also seized this rare moment of downtime to reflect on my service in Niger—I’ve been here a year after all. I ask myself, why did I come here? Was it for the food or the weather? Oh yes, to help the women and children of Niger! (In my opinion, most men can help themselves. And they do…usually to more tea.) But the women and children…that’s where the real development potential is! (I’m narrating this paragraph sarcastically in my head, but I really believe that last sentence.) Anyway, it’s true. At least part of the reason I joined the Peace Corps was to help out the global community. Since coming here…I have definitely gained some insight on this subject and so I decided to write a whole blog entry re: the women and children of Niger.
The Women of Niger
Not a day goes by I don’t thank Allah I wasn’t born a Nigerien woman. I’m a tough, sassy lady, but I honestly don’t think I could hack it. Before I describe the average Nigerien woman’s day for you, I would like to highlight the different manifestations of her lower social status.
First of all, (and most concerning in my mind because it keeps things from getting better) girls are often skipped over when it comes to enrolling kids in school. Mariama, one of the women I live with, was the only child in her family not to attend school—she is also the only girl. This is a pretty common story.
Other disadvantages: Unless women are old or widowed they generally are not allowed to go to the market. (This may sound like a small thing, but going to market is a big deal. It’s the only time entire communities are brought together and able to social on a regular basis. Thus it serves as the venue for a lot of political and social discourse.) Young, married women also aren’t allowed to go to parties or other community events, unless they have their husbands’ permission. Actually, aside from going to the well, the fields, and occasionally the town’s shop—women are expected to be home all the time. It is considered disreputable for a woman to wander about town chatting with people/visiting her friends. Usually, only very educated or unmarried women work outside of the home. This means that, unless a woman finds a way to earn her own money by selling things, her husband controls all of the family finances. In general, women are 100% dependent on their fathers and husbands—who are legally allowed to beat them, as long as it’s not in the face. If a woman should ask for a divorce, the man automatically gets custody of the children. (Divorce is possible for a woman, though more difficult for women than men to arrange.) The smaller things bother me more, for example, women eat only after their husbands and kids are fed, and usually a less-delicious version of the meal, aren’t allowed to interact with men outside their family, can’t shake hands with men (even as working professionals), are expected to stay at home, have babies, take care of the children, cook, and serve their husbands. And Nigerien men wonder why I won’t marry them…
Young marriage is another huge problem for women in Niger. The law says no one under the age of 18 can be married, but in the rural villages it’s very common for 15-year-olds (often younger) to be married to men three times their age. Besides the whole creepster element of this kind of arrangement, it can pose serious health risks to the girl if she should become pregnant (which she almost certainly will). While adolescent girls do menstruate, their bodies are not strong enough to support a pregnancy. Thus these young girls often develop obstetric fistula, which (according to Wikipedia) is: “a severe medical condition in which a fistula (hole) develops between either the rectum and vagina or between the bladder and vagina after severe or failed childbirth. The fistula usually develops when a prolonged labor presses the unborn child so tightly in the birth canal that blood flow is cut off to the surrounding tissues, which necrotise and eventually rot away. The resulting disorders typically include incontinence, severe infections and ulcerations of the vaginal tract, and often paralysis caused by nerve damage. Sufferers from this disorder are usually also subject to severe social stigma due to odor, perceptions of un-cleanliness, a mistaken assumption of venereal disease and, in some cases, the inability to have children.” I know—so gross. Even worse, people do not generally understand the cause of the fistula (early marriage) and usually blame the girls for their condition. She is most often divorced, forced to move back in with her parents, never married again, and more or less shunned.
The condition is most often correctable with surgery, and there are centers in Niger that will perform the operation for free if the woman is able to travel there. But most women to not know about these centers or that their condition is fixable. Money can present another barrier. More often than seeking help, the woman is shut away.
As for older women who can sustain a pregnancy, they still face a gambit of other medical risks that women in developed countries usually don’t worry about. First of all, most women give birth at home, in their mud huts over a plastic tarp. It’s very dangerous, and Niger has the highest maternal mortality rate in the world. Most villages do have a mid-wife, but these old women are rarely formally trained, and most often just show up to cut the umbilical cord. Also, women have very little control over how many kids they do have. First of all, it is not possible for a man to rape his wife, which is to say that a woman legally cannot say no to her husband. The pill is available at the clinic in my village (so I assume most places), but it is not really socially acceptable for women to take it (and trust me, everyone in the village will know that you are, no matter how you try to hide it.) Plus, as kids serve as a kind of status symbol in Niger, the way parking spaces in your garage do in America—the more you have the better you are doing. Thus, a lot of women do want to have a lot of kids. But, I swear, most first-time mothers I talk to are terrified to give birth, and fear is not something any Nigerien normally expresses.
Nigerien women are also at high risk for contracting HIV and other STDs. During cold season, most men travel to the coast to find work. While they do bring back money and presents, they also often bring back venereal disease. Like birth control, condoms have a social stigma attached to them. And, if you are using them, the whole village will know—mostly because there is no waste disposal system, trash just lies around until the kids play with it or it decomposes. Consequently, most men refuse to wear them…and women do not have the right/ability to insist upon it.
I know, this is all very depressing, and I don’t have much to say to brighten the entry. One thing that is clear, however, is I make myself more miserable than the women thinking about how miserable Nigerien women are. They still laugh and have fun, and I really don’t think they comprehend what a disadvantage they have…
So, what do women do all day? It changes for each season, but here is a rough, average schedule:
Early Morning: Wake up at dawn. Begin pounding millet for the day. Sweep concession. Wake children. Go to the well to carry water for the day. (For an average family, this may entail five or six trips.) Prepare breakfast. Serve children/men. Eat breakfast.
Mid-Morning: Pound more millet. During rainy season, go to work in the fields. During cold season, go to cultivate the garden. Weave mats for sale. Collect ingredients for sauce. Do laundry.
Mid-Day: Prepare lunch. Weave mats. Rest.
Afternoon: Separate the millet from the chaff. Go to the well, again. Sweep the concession. Feed livestock.
Late Afternoon: Pound millet for dinner. Buy ingredients for dinner’s sauce. Begin cooking dinner.
Evening: Serve dinner to kids and husband. Bathe kids. Set up beds. Put children to bed.
Late Evening: Go to sleep.
Men do work very hard during planting season, but most days they get to rest all afternoon/evening. Also, during cold and hot seasons, the men that don’t go on exodus mostly just sit around and drink tea.
Ramadan just made things worse for the ladies. A lot of men postponed projects and just rested through the afternoon, but women can’t deviate from their schedule. In spite of heat and exhaustion, women were still out pounding millet and carrying water. Also, something that can make fasting more difficult for women is the fact they are almost always either breastfeeding or pregnant. Of course, according to the Koran, women who are pregnant or breastfeeding are excused from fasting; it’s not healthy for the mother and certainly not good for the baby. But if the women do not fast during the month of Ramadan, they have to make up the time at a later point. This is an okay idea in theory, but think about the fact that Nigerien women are on average pregnant once a year. This means that if I woman followed the rules and didn’t fast while pregnant or breastfeeding, but the time she was done birthing children she may have as many as ten months of Ramadan debt to make up. Plus, who wants to be the only one fasting?
So, the women fast in spite of the impacts it will have on their and their children’s health. Like I said, Nigerien women are some of the toughest on Earth. Nevertheless, I could see how Ramadan worn on the women of my village. At one point one of the women I live with, Mariama, almost collapsed while pounding millet. (I guess maybe you have to see it to understand how physically demanding pound is, but I can only do it for two or three minutes before my arms ach. Nigerien women do it for hours and hours everyday.) Anyway, I was talking to Mariama one day during Ramadan and she started to get really loopy and incoherent. Then, realizing she needed to rest, she started to walk back to her house, but stumbled and nearly fell. It was just another, normal day, but she had tried to do too much without resting. Though it wasn’t serious and Mariama was fine after resting some, seeing her stumble scared me. It was a kind of proof of how hard these ladies push themselves.
The Children of Niger
One element of rural African life I’m reasonably confident holds constant throughout the continent is kids. Wherever you go, whatever you do, there will be a small mob of children shadowing your every step. They stare. They ask questions. They giggle. They yell. They harass. They try to sell things. They throw things. They ask for money. It’s easy enough to understand what causes this phenomenon. First of all, as a stranger and a Caucasian, I am somewhat of a spectacle—that’s understood. Secondly, there are A LOT of effing kids in Africa—especially in Niger, which has the highest birth rate in the world! On average, every woman gives birth to 7.68 children in her life. Also consider: 49.6% of the population is under the age of 14. (Thank you CIA World Fact Book.)
Now, let me preface the follow rant by saying I believe all Allah’s (and God’s) children are beautiful, priceless gifts from Heaven. To be clear, I am pro-the existence of children. That being said, I also think the Nigerien children are little terrorists. No, I don’t mean that they use violence to achieve political aims (nor am I making some sly reference to AQIM). By terrorists, I mean they (sometimes) strike hot, electric, gut-wrenching panic and fear into the hearts of Peace Corps volunteers—not to mention debilitating frustration and unholy anger.
Actually, in my village, the kids are pretty good. They say funny things and make me laugh. They help me carry things. Perhaps most importantly, they are sufficiently afraid of me, and thus I am able to scare them off if the situation calls for it. Though…they do throw rocks and a few nights ago a mob of them woke me up by screaming in my ear… (Warning: do not wake a sleeping Katie).
Other places, the kids are much, much worse. They are impressively loud at all the wrong times of day. Kids will follow you, regardless of where you are going or how much you try to deter them. They are the ones who yell “anasara” the loudest and the most frequently. They mock you and laugh at you. Worst of all, they are oblivious to most social cues, and thus will continue to torment you until you are not so subtly mean to them. (Which, in spite of previous experience, most of us are reluctant to do.) Other volunteers have reported kids stealing from them, throwing stones, bugs, and dead lizards, making heroic efforts to violate the volunteer’s privacy, and even ripping up a volunteer’s garden for no apparent reason.
This kind of treatment is very dehumanizing, and can bring out the worst in a volunteer. For example, a fellow volunteer told me a story about an especially bad experience. One morning, my volunteer friend was having a slow morning and trying to enjoy some quiet time, but the kids kept climbing over the high walls of her concession. In spite of her obvious agitation, they kept peeking over the walls to yell at her, giggling when she told them to go away, throwing things, and yelling insults. She told them to go away. She tried laughing with them, then yelling at them, and finally chasing them with a stick, but they just laughed and kept coming back…until FINALLY, my dear friend totally lost it. She exited her concession, stick in hand, and proceeded unfurl upon these children a mixture of the most profane Hausa and English one could imagine. Her irate verbiage only barely eclipsed her spasms of anger and very clear intent to injure. Now, one would hope under such duress, the kids would have enough respect to show the appropriate amount of fear and run away, but once more they just laughed. This display was so infuriating to my friend that she began to yell louder and swing at the kids with her stick. In laymen speak, she totally lost her shit. Finally, the commotion forced mourners from nearby funeral to come break up the scene…not exactly the brightest moment in my friend’s service.
It actually doesn’t sound so bad as I type it up, but trust me kids know how to bring you down to their level. What is most unfortunate is that since kids are always disciplined with violence, they usually don’t recognize/understand/respect other forms of punishment, like American-favorite time out. This puts volunteers in a bit of a bind when it comes to establishing ourselves as authority figures—unless you are prepared to hit a kid (which most of us are not) they are unlikely to mind you.
In the face of all this frustration, poor behavior and violence, some volunteers rescind on their I-will-never-hit-a-child pledge. (Though I should mention I only know one volunteer who actually hit kids, and I think she did it just once.) Others develop extra-tough skin and divine patience. An even smaller minority may make it though their two years of service and still profess a love for kids—namely, my friend Sara. But I think most of us just walk away from this experience with a lot less sympathy for and a little bit more terrified awe of Nigerien children. Years from now when we see those just-75-cents-a-day-will-buy-this-kid-with-flies-in-his-eyes-shoes commercials, we will think to ourselves, I knew that kid, and he was an asshole.
For those who do suffer breakdowns and lose their patience, please do not judge. I consider myself a pretty dedicated pacifist: I don’t like violent movies, I am anti-war, I don’t kill bugs, I do not intend to ever hit my own children, and don’t like it when other people hit theirs…but even I have been driven to full-on, detailed fantasies about how great it would be to smack a kid with my flip-flop. (Sometimes I don’t even feel guilty after such mental digressions.) I don’t ruminate over these temporary shifts in my disposition. Mostly, I just write it off as a consequence of watching Nigerien parents constantly beat or threaten to beat their kids.
Now, like I said, I am pro-children existing. In general, I like kids. And when you look at the conditions these kids grow up in you begin to see what causes all this outrageous behavior. As I mentioned before, they’ve been hit by the parents their whole lives. It is the same in schools. Though many teachers, administrators and government officials denounce it, corporal punishment essentially ubiquitous in Nigerien public schools. Does violence make them more aggressive and unruly? Perhaps. I’ve seen toddlers chase each other with machetes. What’s more, Nigerien children have a very unstructured childhood, especially compared to children in the West. From day one, American babies face an onslaught of stimulation and structure. This is not the case in Niger. Let me ‘splain:
The old adage, “it takes a village to raise a child,” makes most of us picture an African village. But (ironically) in Niger, it feels more like: “it takes a village to neglect a child.” Besides the times when kids are working in the fields or going to school (however infrequently), they are pretty much on their own. They are safe in the confines of the village (no one lets the kids do anything too dangerous or stupid), but they are only minimally supervised—certainly nothing up to snuff with American baby-sitting standards.
Nigerien babies are carried on their mother’s backs while she works, or left to sit around the concession, supervised by older kids (and by older, I mean like seven). When they stop breastfeeding they will follow their mothers when she ventures somewhere as far as the fields, but otherwise are left to entertain themselves. Nigerien mothers obviously love and value their children. They are cared for, but considering the mothers’ schedules, it makes sense that kids are pretty much left to their own devices. until they are old enough to start working and caring for younger kids themselves. One of my friends once commented, “In Niger, there is hardly any time from when a kid is carried on someone’s back to the time when she is expected to carry someone on her back.”
The treatment of Nigerien children is rough, but witnessing it has also made me realize Americans are WAY over protective of their kids. We don’t realize how durable children really are. We baby proof everything, demarcate boundaries for our children to play it, and have millions of safety regulations for anything involving kids. Parenting books regarding child safety are infinite. Kids are constantly supervised, not allowed certain toys, and rushed to the doctor at the slightest hint of an illness. I read an article in a magazine my dad sent me recently shunning the children’s classic Good Night Moon for depicting a fireplace without a protective gate. Yikes.
In constrast…Everyday, I see Nigerien woman do things to their kids that make me think, if this were America that mother would be scolded or reported to social services. For example, mothers often pick their children up by the arm, let their toddlers chew on mirror shards, or leave a baby within ten feet of a cookfire. Kids also fall off of a lot of things here. For example, napping babies off of beds. There are no cribs in my village. (Now also seems like a good time to mention Nigerien children don’t have toys, except the ones they construct for themselves out of trash.)
Obviously, this difference in the way children are treated stems from a divergent view of what children are. American children are prodigies. They have personalities and interests, which are cultivated throughout year and years of education. They are little adults, given responsibility and choices. They are urged from day one to reach their fullest potential. They are little name-bearers, groomed to carry a family tradition into the next generation. In Niger, children are not entitled to fun or even school. Kids are little workers. Girls, especially, almost never get to just play. I’ve had families tell me point blank the reason they have so many kids is to help work. They also serve as a bit of a status symbol—the more you have the wealthier and more stable your family. “If a family has a baby each year, you know they are happy and doing well for themselves,” a woman in my village told me.
I blame neither American nor Nigerien mothers for these two extremes. It’s the culture you live in. An American mother of two once told me, “From the moment you get pregnant all you hear about (in America) are the endless ways you can screw up your kid.” So…we try to mitigate every possible risk.
In Niger, the mother is only raising her kids the way she was raised. The kids may be a bit malnourished, bruised, or ill, but mom’s doing the best she can and most often just trying to get through the day. In rural villages women don’t have the time/resources to be sure her child is always supervise, and therefore not exposed to unnecessary risks. (I met a kid in Gotheye, whose brother, while playing, accidentally pushed him into his mother’s cook fire, giving the child third-degree burns from his hips to his ankles.) Everyone in Niger bears scars from previous, serious injuries. Besides physical threats, women don’t often know about simple sanitation practices could prevent diarrheal disease, which is the number one killer of children in third-world countries.
Unfortunately, it seems to be a self-defeating cycle. An article in X issue of The Economist, publicized new research that shows countries with lighter disease burdens tend to have a higher average IQ. While correlation does not imply causation, it makes sense children who are constantly fighting off various diseases do not develop as quickly or as fully—especially when you hear that 75% of a toddler’s energy goes to maintaining brain function. It was a really interesting article…you should check it out.
In the end, my point is this: Kids may be little assholes from time to time, but when you understand what they are up against, it’s hard not to have sympathy. Not only that, but supporting them seems to be a huge key to development. (Don’t even get me started on middle-school-aged girls going to school and how much that will better her life and the life of her children.) So…I guess I’m back to feeling bad when I see those just-75-cents-a-day-will-buy-this-kid-with-flies-on-her-face-shoes commercials.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Bad News...
Bad news...I wasn't going to say anything about this until I had the time to write a whole post, but then everyone keeps asking me about him, so I have to tell you....that...Gatsby...has...died...
Here's what happened: I came home after putting my mother and sister on the plane to find my dear little kitty dead in my house. He'd been there for a while, so I'm not going to lie, it was pretty gross...smelly...
My host family was absolutely wonderful and cleaned up everything for me while I stood outside, not looking. They even scrubbed and swept the floor, then instructed me to light my candles to help with the smell. They also told me they had been giving him food regularly but one day, shortly after my mother and sister's visit to my village, he stopping coming out of the house (he could get in and out through a window). They said they think he ate something bad (e.g. a poisoned lizard).
They did their best to comfort me, telling me I could get another, better cat. But I think I'm done with pets in Africa. Only Allah knows how long I will be staying here or if I'll be moving around more. Gatsby and I shared a special bond, short-lived as it was...
It's sad...but as one of my favorite Pop, Uruguayan musicians sings, nada se pierde, todo se transforma. "Nothing is lost, only transformed."
Friday, July 2, 2010
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Advice for the New Kids
1. Don't worry about language. You will have plenty of time to learn what you need to know during training. I came in not knowing a word of Zarma/having never studied French and I did fine.
2. If your looking to get more specific advice about packing, etc. check out the facebook group (Peace Corps Niger July 2010) your peers have started. My fellow PCVs and I posted a list of things you may want or not want to bring. You are also more than welcome to send me a message on facebook. For privacy reasons, I don't want to give out my email here or to tell you my full name, but I am a member of the facebook group. I have my head in a bucket in my profile picture.
3. Seriously feel free to send me or any of the other volunteers questions you have. We are all super excited for you to come and really enjoy helping you make the transition into your new life.
4. Don't bring a lot of clothes. You can buy used clothes and Nigerien clothes here. Bring snacks instead. SERIOUSLY BRING SNACKS. Pre-service training is hard because you are living with a homestay family and don't cook for yourself. It is during this period I experienced my most intense food cravings.
5. Enjoy your time in the States before you leave. Don't bother trying to do a bunch of research before you get here. It's better to come in without a ton of expectations. They will teach you everything you need to know during training.
6. Bring one or two outfits that will make you feel really American. Trust me, after months of being hot and sweaty all the time, you will relish the chance to get cleaned up.
7. Remember that training is nothing like your actual service. Some people really hate training and love being in their village. I loved both. So just remember to have patience and if you are having a hard time, really try to stick it out until you've been in your village for a few months to be sure you are getting a real taste of what the Peace Corps is.
8. Remember to be very polite, patient, and kind with yourself when learning new things.
9. Have your parents/your friends send you a package two weeks before you leave. It will get there during the first two weeks of your training, when you most need a pick-me-up.
10. Keep in mind that the first two weeks of training were the longest two in my entire Peace Corps Service. Once you get going, time really flies!
That's the basics... again, check out the facebook group and feel free to contact any of us for advice! Enjoy your time with your family and have a safe trip over!
Be well,
Katie