If you can’t tell by the fact that I haven’t posted anything for a
while, I’ve been really busy. I often
wonder where time goes, especially since I’ll often have 3-5 day stretches
where nothing happens. Literally
nothing. My days will consist of sitting
under people’s trees and watching them clean fish for hours at a time, drinking
tea with my homologue, napping, reading, eating, napping again, taking a bucket
bath, eating supper with my neighbors, setting up my moustiquaire to sleep
outside for the night, and doing it all again the next day. Tough life.
And then all of sudden everyone
decides they want to do something and need/want me to be there: Let’s make tofu! Wedding dance tonight! Show us how to make bread! Polio shot campaign happening at the
clinic! Come to the primary school and
do a lesson about hygiene with the kids!
Paint the library shelves! Hold a
meeting for women who want to learn how to read! Do this!
Come to that! Go here!
And that – the never-ending program of daily activities – is exactly
what my last month and a half has been, ever since I got back to village after
my month in Ouaga due to my bush taxi accident.
Whew, I’m exhausted! Whatever
happened to sitting under a tree all afternoon and staring at the goats near
me? Or reading a whole book in a
day? I’d love to just curl up in a
sweatshirt in a freezing cold room and sleep for a week; I’m so tired and ready
for a break! Not that I’m complaining,
of course. I’m glad there’s so much
going on and everyone seems motivated to do something or learn a new
skill. I’m just starting to worry that
there’s not enough time left to do everything before I COS, and that I’m not
going to have any more lackadaisical days in village as I attempt to make the
most of these last months in Burkina.
So what has kept me so extremely busy lately?
Well, I finally got home after almost a month in the med unit. When I stepped off the bus, it was about 5pm
and some of my middle school math students were playing soccer near the Pharmacy
aka bus stop. They immediately ran up to
me, greeted me, and took all my bags so I didn’t have to carry a thing. A parade of children accompanied me to my
house, with some of the little children crying because they also wanted to
carry a piece of my luggage but were left empty-handed as all the older
children had already claimed everything.
As we marched through the village pathways to my house, neighbors waved
and shouted blessings of welcome and good health.
Once everything
was deposed inside my house and all the month’s worth of goat poop swept off my
cement porch, the kids said goodbye and I made a brief tour around the village
in hopes that my dog and cat were around (and not eaten by my village). I’m sure they must have missed me terribly
(my cat and dog. well, maybe the
villagers, too). Also, my stroll through
town gave many people a chance to see that I was back. I’m not sure they even noticed I was gone,
but in case they had been wondering why they hadn’t seen the white girl for a
few weeks or why their children hadn’t had math class all month, I wanted to
reassure people that I was still in Lanfiera – I hadn’t gone back to America,
or died, or gotten malaria… So, I stopped at the boutique and bought a yogurt,
waved at all the women in each courtyard who were busy preparing tô and sauce
for supper, sampled some weird deep-fried fish meatball things that a lady was
selling near the road, finally spotted my dog and cat playing with some other
animals (Sabari was beyond overjoyed to see me and wouldn’t stop jumping on me;
Kamikazee couldn’t have cared less that I was back), and at the very end of my
walk, actually stopped into my neighbors’ courtyard to chat. While there were tons of people who would
have loved to have me enter their courtyard and sit for a bit, I knew that if I
did one family, I’d have to do them all.
And sitting for a bit doesn’t mean 5 minutes. It means 5 hours. Seriously.
I’d have to greet everyone, one by one, shake all their hands, receive
all their blessings in a mumble of words I didn’t understand, hold all the babies,
stay for the evening meal, etc. Since it
was already sunset, there was no way I even had time to do this. Besides, after riding in an over-crowded bus
for 10 hours, I just wanted to go back to my house, wash the caked-on layer of
red dust off my skin, and sleep under the stars. So I didn’t really stop to talk to anyone or
sit down under anyone’s tree, until the very end, when I arrived at the yard of
the neighbors who live right next to me.
Batoma and her daughter Barakissa are essentially my host family, along
with everyone else who lives there: about 10-25 other women and children who
float back and forth from this yard to the bigger house/yard…aka chez la grande famille …which is
just across the dirt path and is where the men live. So it was only fair to them that I actually
do stop and talk.
As I approached them, they all stood and smiled; some of the women even
laughed and shook their heads at me.
They knew what had happened because Molly had told them for me and asked
them to keep an eye on my house and my animals.
They sent a kid to get a chair from the grande famille’s yard,
and another kid to bring me a cold water from the nearby lady who has a fridge in
her yard and sells various juices and waters in sachets. If I’m lucky, sometimes they’re even kinda
frozen/slushy! What a treat, especially
when it’s 120 degrees out. We chatted
and they gave me blessings, I held every baby, shook everyone’s hands, and, of
course, ate tô with them. I hadn’t had
tô and leaf sauce since mid-March, and I thoroughly enjoyed it! I forgot how good it is! (Yeah, I know… my taste buds have gotten
really weird in Burkina, if not destroyed altogether, and now I do actually
find most tô and leaf sauces to be tasty!
Key word: most. Some are still
nasty.) I explained to them a little
bit about the accident and what had happened, and they were very concerned and
kept asking about my current state of health.
They declared that kids would be sent over to my house the next morning so
that I didn’t hurt my back and could rest, aka sit under my tree and read. They would do my laundry for me and help me
clean my house – it’s unbelievable how much dust can accumulate inside a mud
brick house, even if the windows are closed!
By this time it was about 9pm. I
told them I was tired and they accompanied me back to my house, where I
immediately passed out for the night – I didn’t even wash my skin’s coating of
red dust off!
And right away the very next morning, the craziness began. There was cleaning to do, people to see, and a
visit to my school to inform the director (in addition to my students) that I
was back and math class would be starting again the very next day.
Resuming math class after the students had been gifted with over a
month of break was difficult. Although,
I’m not sure if it was more challenging for the students…or for me. They had forgotten most everything we had
learned prior to Easter break, and with only 3 short weeks left until the end
of the school year, all but about 3.5 of my 250 students weren’t the least bit
interested in learning how to find the volume of a cube or how to plot a point
on an x-y coordinate plane. It was a
struggle. The classes needed to learn
something – anything – and, unfortunately, we hadn’t even come close to
finishing the assigned curriculum for the year.
Fail on my part, I guess. But how
was I supposed to know I’d miss almost of a month of school and that no one
would cover me during my absence?
I wasn’t all that surprised to find out the students had had no math
while I was gone, but I had thought/hoped that maybe, just maybe, the director
or another teacher would have given them some exercises or told them to look at
a page in their crappy 1984 textbooks (only about 1 in 5 students even have the
book) and then do the homework… but they didn’t. Not a thing.
They literally let my students run wild every hour that was scheduled
for math time with Madame Hauth. I asked
my students what they did when I was gone; they told me. “Madame,
Moussa always took naps. Those boys went
outside and played soccer. Fatimata
braided other girls’ hair. Many
students went to town and bought food to eat.
One day Siaka played music his cellphone and danced in front of
everyone. We didn’t do any exercises,
because we can’t learn if you’re not here, Madame! We just waited for you every day. We thought you had gone back to America.”
So no math learning occurred for over a month. Except for the one day when my homologue (the
other math teacher at the school), gave my 5e class (8th grade) a
quiz a few days before I came back, about powers and exponents. You know, 33 = 3x3x3 = 27. However, I was the one who had to correct the
quizzes – they handed me the big stack of loose-leaf papers when I returned to
school that first morning back – what a great welcome back gift. Correcting the quizzes myself meant I had to
actually look at how bad these quizzes were, rather than just the grade written
on the top. Considering I had already
done several lessons on exponents followed by a big TEST, right before Easter
break, it was very depressing to see that my students apparently had forgotten
everything. Or maybe not learned it in
the first place… I’m gonna blame the low
scores on their poor memory skills and lack of ability to retain information,
which is probably a result of their being malnourished as a baby/child: their brains didn’t fully develop. Not to mention the overall school system in
Burkina and the fact that it is horrible…
After a few days of lessons and pulling teeth, I realized that the last
weeks of school weren’t going to be successful, no matter how hard I tried or
how interesting my lessons were. We
performed experiments and took polls and surveys; we measured and compared the
volumes of various objects by both mathematically calculating the volume and
also by just filling the object with water, dumping out the water into a
measuring cup, and reading the measure.
I brought in various sizes of balls, of which
we found the circumferences and surface areas; we sang songs. Heck, we even talked about sex. SEX!!!!
But these middle-schoolers were long gone. There was no getting them back. Their eyes were only on the upcoming prize of
summer vacation, and I’d been away from them for far too long. It was useless. I didn’t even care myself, anymore. Just
had to give these kids a couple simple quizzes so that I had some grades for
their last trimester, give them their final cumulative test that I had written
last year in order to measure student progress throughout the year, calculate
final grades, fill out their report cards, and send them home. Then I’d be free!!!
***In case you’re wondering how I
talked about sex in the math classroom, I’ll tell ya! I’m quite proud of it, actually... even
though it was a failure. It coulda been SO good, but the kids couldn’t focus to
save their lives…
So we were trying to
learn about x-y coordinate planes, and in order to practice placing points,
everyone got to graph their birthday.
Obviously we were only using the first quadrant, but that’s fine. I don’t think these kids could’ve handled
using negative numbers… Months were on
the bottom (l’axe X) and the days went on the side (l’axe Y). For example, my birthday of January 23 was
placed by finding 1 on l’axe X and climbing up to 23 on l’axe Y. A
birthday of October 5 would be placed on 10 of the X-axis and rising up to
4. After all 100+ kids had placed their
points, we were able to see if anyone shared a birthday, how many birthdays
occurred in July, that no one had a birthday on the 7th of
September, which month was the least popular, etc. After
looking at some of these results, I transitioned into the sex portion of the
lesson. How long does a baby need to grow inside the
mother’s tummy? Nine months, of
course. The students knew this, but when
I asked them to apply it and tell me approximately which day/month they had
been conceived, i.e. when their parents had sex, they were lost. Or just really shocked that I was even
talking about this. Finally we got to a
point where they understood they had to count back nine months. We made a new graph on the chalkboard with
each student plotting his/her respective point of conception (i.e. nine months
before his/her birthday). For example,
my point was placed on April 23 since my birthday is January 23. We then interpreted our points on the graph and
decided which months were the most and least popular for conceiving children. Interestingly, the most popular months were
December and April, with December being one of the coldest months (that makes
sense: when you’re cold you’re more likely to snuggle…) and March being in the
middle of hot season (that makes no sense: when it’s extremely hot, you don’t
wanna be near anyone…unless it’s exactly for that reason: it’s so hot you can’t
sleep…so you don’t sleep…). Anyways,
interesting stuff. And I guess the
lesson really wasn’t about sex. But even
mentioning the word causes the entire class to go hysterical, so I’m glad my
lesson was still mainly geared toward math.
Not that any of the kids were really learning anyways. *Sigh*
The last few days of school also included a random day off that no one
told me about until I showed up to school and no one else was there…. Love Burkina Faso. Oh well, at least the free day gave me a
chance to correct quizzes. The very last
real class I had with my students was giving them their cumulative tests. 120 questions. 120 minutes.
Multiple choice. Exact same test
I gave them at the beginning of the year.
And yet almost half the kids didn’t understand what to do. I had to repeat over and over, “Choose the
best answer. One choice is correct, the
other three are incorrect. If you pick
more than one choice, I will not give you the point. You can only choose one answer.” I had kids recopying the entire test
(questions and answer choices) onto their notebook paper rather than just
answering the question on the test I had given them; there were kids who forgot
to put their names on despite me saying at least 4 times, “Write your name
NOW. Look at your neighbor’s paper. Did he write his name?” Oh, just so many problems.
After the cumulative tests, we still had a few days of math class time,
but I mainly did America culture lessons, or we sang songs. And then every afternoon, from about noon to
5pm, I sat outside and graded test after test for about a week.
All throughout the couple weeks of school, my busyness was further
escalated by library work and activities, Camp HEERE prep, getting henna on my
feet (both traditional while with my neighbor and fake/Chinese ink while at
Careth’s village for one last girls’ day hurrah), going to a baptism, a
community soccer game and women’s bike race, choosing 4 students to go to Camp
GLOW in Dedougou in July, arrangements and paperwork for a replacement
volunteer after I leave, Augustin and Lady’s wedding, and me personally trying
to readjust to the heat. A month in the
med unit’s air conditioning had spoiled me and now I could no longer tolerate
the 120 degrees without being completely exhausted by noon every day and
continuously covered in sweat.
See, I'm not lying. It really is 120 degrees. Hotter, actually. |
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Here are some pictures from all these different events, with tons more on facebook.
HENNA with my neighbors (Traditional)
Day one: taping my feet and putting on the green leaf powder paste which will sit for about 3 hours before we wash it off |
Day two: after the green paste again, which turned my feet red, a layer of grey stuff is put on to turn my feet black |
The finished product |
it should last about 2-3 weeks, depending on how often I scrub my feet and how much soap I use... |
SOCCER GAME - les célibataires contre les
maries (single men vs. married men)
Molly, Careth, and Me |
Guys play soccer either barefoot or wearing flimsy jelly shoe-sandals |
half-time entertainment (middle school girls dancing) |
no community event is complete with the town gunsmen?....he'll shoot off his rifle randomly, as he pleases |
Top winners of the Women's Bike Race, presented with awards during soccer half-time |
The champion of the bike race won a brand new bike! |
Team huddle. I can't remember if these are the married guys, or the single ones |
Reading Time - at my house
We'll often just sit and read, sometimes for hours at a time. |
Buying stuff - at the marche
So much good stuff to buy -- both food and fabric. Love the fresh veggies: eggplant, okra, avocado, fresh mint, tomatoes, cucumbers, mangoes, etc. |
Browsing the marche and just looking at everything is one of my favorite activities. It's like going to the mall. |
peanuts! |
Yup, that would be meat. A chunk of beef, actually. And yes, it's attached to a bike. So sanitary. |
So much squash! |
My primary school won the regional soccer tournament, so the boys paraded around the marche in their jerseys with their trophy. |
Girls' Day and Henna (Fake/Chinese ink)
Brook, Careth, Molly, and Me got together for a girls' day. We ate yummy food (spring rolls and stir fry), did henna, napped, and gossipped. |
Sierra's Birthday
The "cake" |
We even had a candle and sang Happy Birthday. With Vida, Elijah, Molly, Sierra, and Me. |
Progress at the Library
Trying out the preschool room. |
Molly painting the number wall. |
Baptism Celebration aka Hangin' Out
We knew we'd probably get bored at the baptism celebration, so we came prepared with paper and markers and did some doodling. Molly drew this picture of Oumar. |
And Oumar drew this picture of me! Ain't I pretty? |
While we hung out, I took some pictures of passing people. These boys are bringing water back to their house. |
Peuhl women selling milk and yogurt. |
Time for lunch!!! mhmmm |
Yup, that would be a random bone shard. Also, there's some intestine and liver pieces. |
I love the big canaries that everyone has in their courtyards. This is where they store their water for drinking and cooking. |
________________________________________________________________________
Before I knew it, Camp HEERE time had arrived. (Camp HEERE is the 4-day, 3-night camp for
5-6th graders focused on hygiene, environment, and education. It was in my village so I was in charge of
the food, logistics, scheduling, etc.) I had more than enough to do with Camp HEERE,
but I also still needed to finish grades.
Well, I mean, I was done with my grades….it’s just that none of the
other teachers were (of course), so I couldn’t calculate the overall reports
cards and tell my 6e students if they passed into 5e or not. And with camp starting, how was I going to do
grades and sign reports cards?
Urgh. According to all the other
teachers, there wasn’t even anything to be concerned about.
Teachers: “It will be fine. You’ll finish.”
Me: “How can I finish when you
guys aren’t done with YOUR grades yet? I
can’t even start!”
T: “Well, that is complicated,
isn’t it. Hmmm. You can do it during camp?”
M: “NO! No I can’t!
I will be busy all during camp. I
will not have 5 hours to leave and do grades.”
T: “But you’ll be here! You’re not leaving village.”
M: “Yes, I will be here, but I
will be occupied with camp. Last month
you said school would be over with and grades all done by May 15. Today is May 21, the students haven’t had
class for a week now, camp starts tomorrow, and no one else has even started to
record their grades -- besides me!!!!
What am I supposed to do? Who
will do my grades for me?”
T: “Ah! No, you need to do your grades yourself. That’s not our responsibility.”
M: “UGHHH….” ***go
off and cry in my 110 degree house***
About half of the kids in my 6e class.... since we were done with "math class" a lot of kids didn't show up for the last few days I did activities with them... |
this student did very well and was ranked 29th overall. |
The lovely book of report cards and carbon copies. |
Further complicating matters was that my school director was now suddenly
claiming that I could NOT bring 4 students to camp GLOW unless I paid for their
transportation myself (camp is free – the only contribution we ask is that the
school/community provide the students’ transport to/from camp). We’ve talked about Camp GLOW since last
year. And at least 5 times the month of
May alone. I’ve sat in his office
numerous times; I’d given him the names of the 4 students I’d chosen. He’d received multiple information
letters. And yet now he was claiming
that he didn’t know anything and the “American system” was complicated. (Actually, it’s not the American system
organizing camp: Yes, Peace Corps will
be there and, sure, we helped with the programming and financing, but Camp GLOW
in Dedougou is mainly run by Burkinabe…so. Yeah. That dang American system.)
Me: Since school is ending and I’ll
be busy with camp HEERE this week, is it possible to get the 16 mille (i.e. $32
USD) for the 4 students’ transport today?
Director: No. We can’t do that. 16 mille.
That’s too much. You never said
we had to pay.
Me: Umm, yes it’s 16 mille and every school is providing the transport
costs for the students that were selected to represent their village at
Camp. Last week you said it would be
fine.
D: No, I never said that. I don’t
anything about this money….
M: Well, I believe I mentioned it several times and—
D: Nope, this is the first time.
M: Uh, okay. I’m sorry. But it was also in all the letters you
received.
D: No, it wasn’t. I didn’t get an information letter until this
one you’re showing me today.
M: …..?.....
D: This is not good. What kind of system is this? You invite kids to camp, say it’s free, and
then make them pay for their own transport!?!
I don’t understand your American system.
M: Well actually, it IS free for
the students. It’s just the transport
that Camp doesn’t provide, and that’s why it must come from the school itself. Paying for their transport is also a way of
showing that you support them and want them to represent our school at camp,
learn new things, and come back and share those experiences with the rest of
the community here.
D: No. The kids will have to pay themselves this
year. We don’t have that kind of
money. This year was very
difficult. We had lots of visitors and
regional supervisors come to observe, and each time I had to take them to
Grilled Fish Place and buy them fish and at least 2 beers. That’s not cheap! And now the pump is broken. No money. At the end of the year all the money is
gone. You should have had camp at the
beginning of the year, then we’d have given you money. But not now. There’s
no money left. Tell the kids to pay for
it themselves….or you can just pay for them.
Okay? You can do that; you have
money.
M: Well unfortunately that’s not
possible. If the school doesn’t provide
the transport, then the school doesn’t get to send kids. I guess I’ll just have to tell Peace Corps
that Lanfiera Middle School will NOT be sending students after all. Thank you for your time. ***escape
out of the office and go home and cry in my 110 degree house***
So not only was finishing report cards impossible before camp, but then
this bomb was dropped on me too. I didn’t
have the heart to tell my 4 students that they’re no longer going to camp, nor
did I have the time to search out other transport financing options or possible
community members who could donate. So,
as of now, 4 kids are still going from Lanfiera, and yes, I will probably be
paying for it myself, and I will lie and tell them their money was provided by
their community. Oh well, it’s only 16
mille. I can spare it. That’s like four pizzas in Ouaga. Oh god, that’s like FOUR whole pizzas!
But the frustration doesn’t stop here.
Oh no. It continues. One of the girls I picked for camp GLOW comes
to my house the next morning while I’m packing things up for Camp HEERE, and
she’s crying. She tells me she can no
longer go to camp. Why? Because she needs to go to Cote d’Ivoire for
the summer to work. If she doesn’t work,
she can’t pay for her school fees the next year. Her parents said that if I and/or Peace Corps
will give her the money for school next year (like a scholarship), then she can
go to camp with me. But if we can’t give
her a scholarship, then she can’t go to camp.
I didn’t know what to say. This
girl, Haoua (prounounced Ah-wah), is awesome and my best student. She’s just really quiet. But that’s okay. But I couldn’t promise her her school fees
for the next year, even though they are only about 30 mille total ($60
USD). Besides, if anyone else found out
(Peace Corps or Burkinabe), I’d be screwed.
Not a good situation to be in. Everyone would start asking me for money. So, the only thing to do was tell her that it
was her own choice, and if going to camp meant not having money for school,
then she probably shouldn’t go to camp.
A year of education is much more important than a week at camp. I had a back-up girl in mind, but still. I really had wanted Haoua to go.
Oh, and those cumulative pre/post-tests? Well,
most kids improved, but not by very much, and a significant chunk of kids
actually received lower scores. Not sure
what to make of that. Either the kids seriously
did not learn a thing all year (fail on my part), they learned but quickly
forgot (fail on my part and their part), or they tried to spite me and
purposefully not do well on the test (fail on their part…or success, depending
on how you look at it).
And this post is getting way too long, so I’ll stop here. But check out my next post, where I’ll
(hopefully) write about the awesomeness and success of Camp HEERE and my
adventures with my friend Sarah Jensen, who came to visit me from May 27 – June
12.
**Also, if you think I sound angry/unhappy now, imagine what I was like
when it was actually happening. I’ve now
had about a month to cool off and “reflect” upon these situations. Ha.