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Friday, June 29, 2012

How Do You Say, “Yin and Yang” in Moore?


The past two days have been a study in duality, and a test of my nerves. I awoke yesterday morning out of an intermittent sleep, still a little damp. A dust storm had woken me up around midnight the night before followed quickly by a deluge of rain. After running around grabbing my things outside, throwing them blindly into the house, closing the curtains and shutting the door, I lay down on my bed and listened to the storm hammer out its violent mixed-meter music on my tin roof. Not wanting to get too far away from the dream I’d been having, I closed my eyes and tried to drift off. Then I felt a drop on my forehead. I opened my eyes to more darkness and the beginning of a light spray from above. Apparently my roof was not designed to withstand this much water. At some point, somehow, I fell asleep. Now I got up and stretched. Lifting my arms above my head elicited a strange, foreign pain in my armpits. I felt around and found a cartilage-like lump surrounded by loose swollen flesh under each arm. After a short bout of sleepy confusion, my limited knowledge of human physiology led me to the tentative conclusion that my lymph nodes were swollen. I had been sick the week before and felt that this made sense, though darker prospects came to mind. I called the medical officer who told me to take 800 mg of Ibuprofen with every meal to reduce the swelling, keep an eye on it and call her in a few days to rule out the most benign possibilities.

 After a quick, distracted breakfast I set out for a meeting with my association. I arrived ten minutes late to an empty office, which is not unusual. After another ten, our accountant showed up and said that the meeting had been cancelled. The consultant was not able to come due to the flooded roads and would have to reschedule. So, unsure of who was going to show up anyway, we had to wait as a slow trickle of association members came to the office just to be sent back to the fields they’d come from. I took the opportunity to add to my comprehensive contact list for our association, a rather lofty project consisting of amassing names and phone numbers of all 2000 plus members, which would ideally prevent such communication problems in the future. Part of me was glad to not have to sit through a meeting as I was now free to go help my homologue in his field. He would be planting beans today.

Leaving the accountant to inform the late-latecomers, I headed out to the bush. My homologue met me at a bridge and I followed him further down the road. Almost immediately I heard a squeak and a sharp pop and felt my bike veer. I stopped and looked down, hoping for jammed gears. What I saw instead was a broken quick-release. The screw had snapped in half. Deciding to deal with this later, I left my bike with some friendly cultivators and we headed to the fields together. “I’ve never seen this much rain!” my counterpart remarked, jolting through rocky streams and getting stuck in the wet sand. “It’s a gift.” “I must have brought it with me,” I said, thinking of the fires currently engulfing my home state.

We made it to the spot and found Philip’s wife, Wendende, sitting unhappily on a donkey cart. We greeted each other and as I reached the limit of my Moore, the couple began to talk and argue. I heard something about “tomorrow,” “rain,” “cultivate,” and “kids,” but wasn’t sure about their connection. So I used the time to take in my surroundings. It was an amazing day, a cool breeze circulating the humid air under the graciously mostly overcast sky. All senses were alive; the high multi-layered mingling of bird song; the sweet heavy smell of rain and some kind of spring bloom; the familial, earthy feel of other cultivators in the distance; the green, the GREEN, everywhere. It was truly beautiful. Suddenly Philip said, “Okay, let’s go,” and started walking back. “Wait…what? Why?” I asked, perplexed. He replied, “It’s too wet to sew. We’ll come back tomorrow.” This is something I never thought I’d hear here. All we’d talked about since I arrived in Burkina was how dry the past few years had been, how terrible the harvests were. Now it seemed we had the opposite problem. This morning the Chef de Village, a member of our association, had told me that the water level in the dam was higher than expected and that all the rice he’d planted would die as a result. No good. For everything else though this rain is a God-send—assuming that it lasts through August and that people can actually get their seeds in the ground.

We retrieved my bike and wheeled it back the 2 kilometers into town where we found a blacksmith who soldered the quick-release back together. Upon trying to refit it, however, we discovered that the axle had snapped as well. In the Burkinabé’s typically hurried helpfulness, many hands were set upon my wheel, ball bearings went flying, and parts got switched around before I knew what was happening. After a short while everyone admitted that they had never seen a quick-release or a hollow axle and that we should talk to the bike guys in the marché. I probably would have cried at this point had it not been for Philip, who led me to the bike boys and when they also didn’t know what to do, patiently helped me reassemble my back wheel, though still broken, and walked beside me back to his house, pushing his motorcycle the entire way. “We have a saying in Moore,” he said. “Rise early if you want to get your work done on time. You never know what will happen on the way.” I thought about this as together we ate the Tô with Baobab sauce and Pork that Wende had made, each of us pondering this strange, frustrating day. My only positive thought was that I really have a family here, that I have a Burkinabé father and mother that truly care about me. It really means a lot. This however did not prevent me from labeling the day as a fail, locking the gate when I got home, getting drunk and watching Arrested Development until my computer’s battery died.

The next day I woke up weirdly refreshed, ready to right the wrongs of the yesterday. The first good sign was that my armpits were no longer sore. Always a good thing. I put on the coffee and, today being a grande marché day, made a huge shopping list. After breakfast I headed out on foot, saying hello to all the strangers who come into Titao on Fridays and aren’t used to seeing me around. Because I was early, the place wasn’t too crowded yet and I made my way easily through the milling Friday shoppers. I found everything I needed; a new, regular axle, a number 15 wrench, extra ball bearings, grease, bananas, even eggs, which I hadn’t seen here since my second week at site. Feeling good, I stopped at my neighbor’s house for some samsa, a delicious fried dough ball made with onions and bean flour. These I ate and then went about fixing my bike. Due to my never having repaired or seen the inside of a bike axle before, this took some time before I figured out the theory behind it and got my bearings (pun points!). It took a few test rides and adjustments, but I finally got it in riding order.

Now able to get about town easily, I went and visited each of the four elementary schools in town collecting the permission slips for a camp some other volunteers and I will be doing in Ouahigouya in July which I had distributed earlier that week. I met two of the boys that will be going who seemed bright but reasonably shy in front of their director and a strange American. One of them had recently received the highest mark in the entire province on his Certificat d’Etude Primaire (CEP), the test which allows one to move on to middle school. Bon Travail, kid!

With all four permission slips collected, I chatted with the director who had read me some of his slam poetry before, M. Sou. I asked him how the poetry club was going. “Unfortunately, with summer vacation, the work in the fields, and some teachers and kids returning to their villages, it’s on hold for the summer,” he said. “We’ll recommence next year.” He told me that in the meantime, what he really wanted was to work on his slam, to find some musicians, a guitarist or balaphone player to accompany the poetry. This sounded amazing to me, like folk rap where the words and music are tied only by feel, not flow. Always on the lookout for new waves and surprises in music, I was about to suggest myself as his man for the job when the words “sustainable development” popped into my head like a subliminal warning from training. I mumbled something about hearing one of my neighbors playing guitar sometimes when suddenly I thought, fuck it. I’m here for a year and a half. Why shouldn’t I be selfish and start a crazy band? “I play guitar. Do you want to play a little tonight?” I asked. “Pourquoi pas?”

Back at my house we sat outside in the fading light and I played him a few of my songs, finding them hard to explain in French. He seemed impressed. Then he read me one of his slam poems entitled, “l’herbe n’est pas toujours verte chez le voisin,” which we turned into a kind of slap-happy shuffle. I was really loving playing music with someone again, feeding off someone’s energy and contributing my own. We also tried a slower, sadder one called, “un preservatif pour ma sœur,” (a condom for my sister) about the social taboo surrounding the discussion of sex in Burkinabé society and how it leads to the augmentation of such problems as HIV/AIDS and teenage pregnancy. I was amazed. I had never talked with a Burkinabé about this kind of thing before. Here was a leader, a social deviant who wanted to shock, to shake things up, to encourage change by creating music and art. An African punk-rock-art-folk-slam band. Never thought I’d see the day. The additional beauty of it is that this could be considered a project. This is VRFable. This is WORK. I love the Peace Corps. We played until dusk, discussing recording possibilities and playing on the local radio station in the near future, until Monsieur Sou said goodnight and headed home.

To top off this day that more than made up for the day before, I made myself a four-egg veggie omelet with vache qui rit. That night, I dreamt of how we would sound with the resonance of a balaphone and djembe behind us.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Le Tour de Burkina 2012


Greetings from Burkina, family and friends and readers!

I'm writing to inform you of the 3rd edition of the annual PC Burkina Bike Tour, kicking off on August 29th. This year the tour will cover 1500 km of Burkina's finest paved, semi-paved, and dirt roads, visiting 30 volunteer's sites over the course of 24 days. I will be (attempting to) ride the whole way on my Peace Corps issued Trek Mountain Bike. Wish me luck!

While seeing this country, getting in shape, and visiting volunteers' sites are the major perks for riders in the tour, the main goal is to raise money to fund Gender and Development projects for the upcoming year. In years past the tour has raised almost $6000 and this year we hope to top that. Examples of projects funded in the past by bike tour include providing the start-up costs to a women's group for an independent income-generating activity, and youth camps, such as the one which I will be helping run this summer in Ouahigouya.

If you're one of those who has always wished to donate to a worthy cause but were unsure how the money would be spent, now is your chance! ALL donations go straight to community projects. There are no administrative expenses (we are volunteers after all). Each full-time rider, like me, is encouraged to raise at least $150 before the tour starts. That's only $0.10 per Kilometer! A little bit goes a long way here, and it's all tax-deductible. For more information on the bike tour and how to donate, please visit the bike tour blog at http://www.burkinabiketour.blogspot.com/.

Thanks and love

Saturday, June 9, 2012

An Attempt at Art


Hey all. I think the time has come where I can begin to see Burkina with an artist's eye, to begin to comment on what I see here. Perhaps it is the artist's folly to say he has created art, but there it is. Before delving into the human part of this, I have began with an (arguably) easier subject; nature. This is for various reasons.

Firstly, technology here is at the awkward stage where it is widely known of, but hard to acquire. This means that pulling out a camera, say, is an act that can set you apart. For example, during the hour or so that I was out taking these pictures, a man came up to me, and without going into any of the usual greetings, asked me how much my camera costs. This camera is a Kodak C340 digital camera that I inherited from my grandparents five years ago and which they in turn had used for awhile. It's a nice camera and fits my needs perfectly but is not the newest model by any means. To this man I said, honestly, that I didn't know, that it was old. He went on to say that I should give it to him when I leave, and continued to insist on it despite my repeated jokes and refusals.

I should say that this is quite common here, but as a joke. People will tell you your shirt is nice and tell you to give it to them. You pretend to take it off, they laugh, you laugh, it's over. It's a compliment. But sometimes it goes further and it's in these situations things can get tricky. Usually if you stick to the joke line, they'll take the hint. With this man, however, I had to walk away.

Secondly, some people take offense to having their pictures taken. Rightly so, and it is always necessary to ask people's permission before taking a picture. While I was taking the picture of the bricks drying in the sun, a man yelled to me that they belonged to him and said I should pay for taking the picture. This is ridiculous. I told him it was just a picture and I could erase it if he liked. Luckily he didn't press the issue. Another half-joke.

So you see why I started with subjects that can't directly ask me for money or take offense. Anyway, here is the link to the "show" in my flickr "gallery." Enjoy!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/mollyquixote/sets/72157630024716633/

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Wedding Season!!!

Yesterday- a mix of good and bad, as usual. Woke up with the wife on the mind, fearing the results of this huge decision I have to make. Without going into too much detail, I, ahem, despaired for awhile, listened gratifyingly to Counting Crows for probably the first time in my life, and then went off for the day's work.

I visited every elementary school in town (4) to ask the directors to choose one top student to send to a camp some of us volunteers will be doing in Ouahigouya in July. I got some good ideas for sessions and guest speakers and field trips and am excited to plan and do this camp. It's my only real planned project for this summer, though I have a lot of ideas and leads that are pushing against my mind with potential like water on a dam. One director read me some of his interesting, somewhat literal poetry (apparently if it rhymes, it's poetry). I could see a good session coming out of this. He's very energetic and would make a good guest. One director told me he wants to start a correspondence program between his class and an American class. An interesting idea. Because of the language barrier, perhaps it would be good to match his 6th year class with a 2nd or 3rd year French class, maybe 8th grade, I don't know. For them, it would be good French practice, and for all the students, an interesting cultural exchange.

That afternoon I was disturbed from my repose by some loud music coming from about a block away. Earlier, I had seen a huge crowd at the Catholic Church when I went to visit the Saint-Mary's Elementary and later saw the horn-blaring motorcade heading to my neighborhood, leading me to the conclusion that there was a Catholic wedding afoot. Here that means lots of drunken madness and dancing. I decided to crash it. It's okay to crash a wedding here as long as you greet everyone and dance. This I did.

Even before I reached the courtyard, I was stopped by an extremely drunk man who told me to come get a drink with him at the dolo bar across the street. I accepted the pregame offer (postgame for him), a mistake I realized as he commenced to tell me to take him to France with me (and pay for his dolo) despite my repeated attestations that I was American and didn't have enough money to go to France myself. Also, here if someone invites you for a drink, it's them who pays. After two calabashes, I was rescued from this man by  some slightly less-drunk guys who pointed out these things to him and escorted me to the reception. There was no less craziness there; music, drinks, colorful matching family pagnes. I greeted the father of the groom, a groovy tall guy whom I had talked with before, but apparently the bride and groom had gone out to sign the wedding papers and as I found a beer in my hand, I decided to wait to greet them. This waiting took awhile and after about an hour I somehow found myself in a dance-off with about a million kids. One of my dolo bar rescuers was pulling kids one by one from a massive circle around us into the center so that I could try to imitate their dance moves. Pretty soon the whole wedding party got involved and I danced away in the eye of a Burkinabe hurricane with infants and grandmothers alike. Sweat poured and I hurriedly replaced it with Laafi bottle after Laafi bottle. This lasted until I could take no more. I broke free and sat down, declining more drinks, and though the true stars of the day hadn't yet arrived, I decided it was time to go. There's only so much thunder I can steal in one day.