21 December 2007
Update - 21 December 2007
Bonjour/soir! I am now over six months into my Peace Corps service and just loving all of it. Things are moving along - I am integrating, making friends, starting to visualize my future work... Allow me to gush just for a moment.
Being a Peace Corps Volunteer, at this point in my life, is just the coolest job, ever. Admittedly, I am high off the holiday season and all the great times I have been spending out of site with my American friends. But I am loving being in site too...
We've started a volleyball team that has been playing in front of the school in the evening until the sun goes down. One fonctionnaire, a teacher in village, played volleyball for years up to the national level in BF. The first time he and I got together to hit the ball around, we were both shocked. You can play! And it's the perfect marriage of skills - I'm a setter, he's a hitter. Now we are training other adults in village to play, thus creating a regular group.
I am also spending time almost every day sitting and working in village, with women. In a previous post I mentioned my Koranfe-speaking Fulfulde tutor who has been introducing me to village life. Well, Poitiba and I have stopped language class for the moment (I want to buckle down and study before I go back to vocabulary instruction) but lately I have benefited from her simply as a connection to the villageoise! I'll show up, for example, in the morning to say hi. Then we will gather with other women outside her courtyard to pound millet, corn, and nuts. Every time I join the women, I pound at least a little bit. Sometimes I help clean or prepare beans or other grains and foodstuff. The women don't speak French but Poitiba, as a rare exception, can translate most things if I ask. There are also young, out-of-school girls who haven't yet lost their French. With or without translation though, I am finding that communication is constant. Whether we are silent, gesturing, or speaking in our own mother tongues, at the bottom line, we are sharing physical work. It's just not hard to spend hours on end in the company of these women sharing tasks, food, and work.
I am also loving the challenges. Heck, that's what I came here for! Some of you may have heard me say that following university graduation, I wanted to do something hard. Well, living in Burkina is not that easy but it is also, honestly, not that hard. There are so many diverse (and daily) challenges that you are constantly experiencing both failure and success. I love this dichotomy. I love to succeed. Yet, is there no better motivation than complete non-success? failure? blunder? misadventure? loss? The language issue is a good example. As I struggle to make local language progress, I am succeeding in communicating my intent. Most people I deal with now understand that I want to speak Fulfulde.
I have worked to set my own precedent. And it is a pleasure to demonstrate that all Americans are not the same, and for that matter neither are all "whites". At the beginning, it felt like all my predecessors' friends and acquaintances approached me, visited me, even accosted me with news of and obligations for our "friendship". You will come visit me. You will teach me English. We are friends, I met you once. You will do this for me. I will show you how to properly do that. But you met me - you do not remember my name? You know me and I know you because you waved while you were passing by riding your bike once.
I actually enjoy the process of making my own friends; my own personal connections. Many of those initial people have finally backed off. I am glad for this and grateful to have also met so many enthusiastic and encouraging people so far. I have enjoyed watching the changes in people's behavior - they are no longer greeting Sara when I walk down the road or into the market, they are instead adapting to interacting with me, a different individual. As time goes on, village feels only calmer and more comfortable. So, I am grateful to have done much of the hard work that I have already done.
I will start a girls' sports club in January. Eventually, it will be open to the equivalent of girls in grades 5 and 6. But I will work with the older girls first to train them as leaders for the group.
I am also going to start holding once-a-week English classes for the teachers and a few other fonctionnaires. Fonctionnaires are people who work for the government and are therefore much better educated than the average Joe, or should I say Moussa. We will work on improving conversational skills.
Finally, there is a long way to go to define the new white woman in town, and I am only just starting to tempt my real work... but I actually do love an uphill battle.
Being a Peace Corps Volunteer, at this point in my life, is just the coolest job, ever. Admittedly, I am high off the holiday season and all the great times I have been spending out of site with my American friends. But I am loving being in site too...
We've started a volleyball team that has been playing in front of the school in the evening until the sun goes down. One fonctionnaire, a teacher in village, played volleyball for years up to the national level in BF. The first time he and I got together to hit the ball around, we were both shocked. You can play! And it's the perfect marriage of skills - I'm a setter, he's a hitter. Now we are training other adults in village to play, thus creating a regular group.
I am also spending time almost every day sitting and working in village, with women. In a previous post I mentioned my Koranfe-speaking Fulfulde tutor who has been introducing me to village life. Well, Poitiba and I have stopped language class for the moment (I want to buckle down and study before I go back to vocabulary instruction) but lately I have benefited from her simply as a connection to the villageoise! I'll show up, for example, in the morning to say hi. Then we will gather with other women outside her courtyard to pound millet, corn, and nuts. Every time I join the women, I pound at least a little bit. Sometimes I help clean or prepare beans or other grains and foodstuff. The women don't speak French but Poitiba, as a rare exception, can translate most things if I ask. There are also young, out-of-school girls who haven't yet lost their French. With or without translation though, I am finding that communication is constant. Whether we are silent, gesturing, or speaking in our own mother tongues, at the bottom line, we are sharing physical work. It's just not hard to spend hours on end in the company of these women sharing tasks, food, and work.
I am also loving the challenges. Heck, that's what I came here for! Some of you may have heard me say that following university graduation, I wanted to do something hard. Well, living in Burkina is not that easy but it is also, honestly, not that hard. There are so many diverse (and daily) challenges that you are constantly experiencing both failure and success. I love this dichotomy. I love to succeed. Yet, is there no better motivation than complete non-success? failure? blunder? misadventure? loss? The language issue is a good example. As I struggle to make local language progress, I am succeeding in communicating my intent. Most people I deal with now understand that I want to speak Fulfulde.
I have worked to set my own precedent. And it is a pleasure to demonstrate that all Americans are not the same, and for that matter neither are all "whites". At the beginning, it felt like all my predecessors' friends and acquaintances approached me, visited me, even accosted me with news of and obligations for our "friendship". You will come visit me. You will teach me English. We are friends, I met you once. You will do this for me. I will show you how to properly do that. But you met me - you do not remember my name? You know me and I know you because you waved while you were passing by riding your bike once.
I actually enjoy the process of making my own friends; my own personal connections. Many of those initial people have finally backed off. I am glad for this and grateful to have also met so many enthusiastic and encouraging people so far. I have enjoyed watching the changes in people's behavior - they are no longer greeting Sara when I walk down the road or into the market, they are instead adapting to interacting with me, a different individual. As time goes on, village feels only calmer and more comfortable. So, I am grateful to have done much of the hard work that I have already done.
I will start a girls' sports club in January. Eventually, it will be open to the equivalent of girls in grades 5 and 6. But I will work with the older girls first to train them as leaders for the group.
I am also going to start holding once-a-week English classes for the teachers and a few other fonctionnaires. Fonctionnaires are people who work for the government and are therefore much better educated than the average Joe, or should I say Moussa. We will work on improving conversational skills.
Finally, there is a long way to go to define the new white woman in town, and I am only just starting to tempt my real work... but I actually do love an uphill battle.
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4 comments:
Hey, Chrissie! This is Kathi and Mikey! Loved your latest entries and the pictures!
We were in Cresskill the day after Christmas. The boys went to a Nets game and the girls went out to dinner where your mother ordered dessert first! Chocolate fondue!
We had a great time. Everybody looks great, misses you tons and are happy knowing that you are happy over there. Sounds like you had a great Christmas in Ghana!
Not much new here. Meggie goes back to school on the 14th and Mikey went back today.
Meaghan got a 3.84 first semester and is very upset because she got her first ever grade below an A...a B+...brings her overall cum down to a 3.95...poor baby.
The two Michaels had a ball together playing video games until 3 in the morning. Needless to say, the little one slept all the way home in the car. We woke him up in time to get him to a holiday basketball tournament game. He scored 22 points and had one assist so maybe we should make him stay up until 3 more often!
Miss you tons and tons.
Kathi and Michael
(ooops...wrong link in original post)
As a member of Friends of Burkina Faso, I'm reaching out to all current PCVs in Burkina right now. We are trying to win "America's Giving Challenge" and we need your help. I'm hoping that you'll have internet access soon and that you'll be willing to upload the widget from the project website onto your blog. Help spread the word so that this project wins an additional $50,000! Merci.
Where are you Christina? I'm hoping for news, the good and the bad and all of everything.
Don Skog
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