How many of you who are going to be doctors are willing to spend your days in Ghana? Technicians or engineers, how any of you are willing to work in the Foreign Service and spend your lives traveling around the world? On your willingness to do that, not merely to serve one year or two years in the service, but on your willingness to contribute part of your life o this country, I think will depend the answer whether a free society can complete. I think it can! And I think Americans are willing to contribute. But the effort must be far greater than we have ever made in the past.

-John F. Kennedy

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Thanksgiving!

I love Peace Corps life, but the worst thing is not being able to see my family.  This is especially true during the holidays. Thanksgiving, my favorite holiday in America (no fluff Christmas, plus football! what's better than that?), was celebrated with a Senegalese twist this year with my new family in Kolda. We even got a turkey! (Please try to understand how amazing this is.)

 Yours truly even worked in the kitchen for a while.

Oh yeah, and it might have been Hobbit themed.
Getting ready the kill Boromir the Turkey.
Group Thanks.




Kolda Wall of Thanks!
Just grabbing some organs for the gravy

FEAST.
Mulled wine... yum

Malaria Tourney

The real reason I've been MIA since after I got back from vacation is that I was very busy with Kolda's Malaria Tourney. What is a malaria tourney? This is apparently very difficult to describe, because when I tried to describe it to some of you while it was happening it just came out as "We're riding our bikes around and talking about malaria."  This is the gist, but it leaves out a lot.

My dear friend Courtney and I decided to do this malaria tourney last spring.  The idea was to have people bring out their mosquito nets and we would provide the materials to wash, sew, and transform their mosquito nets.  Mosquito nets (at least the good ones) are give out with an insecticide on it that kills mosquitoes, thus eliminating the vector that spreads malaria.  Washing nets yearly is important to keep the insecticide potent.  Sewing holes obviously keeps mosquitoes out.  And transformation, meaning changing a square net into a circle net, is popular now because it's much easier to put the net up in the morning and bring it down at night.  It also makes sort nets longer, which is essential to tucking the net in at night. We had varying degrees of popularity with transformation, mostly because net distribution has been trying to give out more circle nets for the aforementioned reasons (which is good!).

So what Courtney and I did was wrote the grant, chatted with local health officials to keep them informed, buy the supplies, load up our bikes, and head out to the open road to personally stomp out malaria.  We opened up the project to the entire region of Kolda and got 18 bites. That's 18 sites, covering about 200 km on our bikes (my calves look really good right now), with baggage strapped to our bike racks.

Look Mom! A transformed net!

Part of the reason was to extend new practices and reinforce old ones.  Washing nets, for example, is an old practice that a lot of people don't do or don't do right. You have to use ordinary soap, i.e. not detergent, which surprisingly few people know. You have to hang it in the shade. These are both to keep the insecticide and maintain the life expectancy of the net. With all three practices, materials are the main problem and we wanted to remove that barrier.

After a fun filled morning of net care and repair, the day could go three ways: it could be over, the health care worker could lead a causerie, or a local group could put on a malaria related theater sketch.  Our original plan was to have every site do a theater sketch, but some just didn't have the energy, time, or resources. The sites that did causeries ended up being really great anyway. Sometimes we invited the heads of households, sometimes just older men and women, and sometimes everyone. We had a lot of productive discussion and I'm happy with how things went.


Theater sketches had varying success. Everyone who prepared a sketch did a great job, but sometimes the draw could be too much. Too many kids, too much talking, and no one would be able to hear anything, which was the whole point! The theater sketches were part of a larger contest. The top three sketches are going to be recorded and played on the radio in January! Thanks and congratulations to Stephanie McAlexander and Nathan Rehr, who came in first and second. Third was my health post, organized by our matrone, Tako Balde.

With 18 sites ranging in size, proximity to the main road and therefore education, goods, and amenities, we had a wide range of experiences through our month long experience. A generic morning would have us begin the program around 9, pulling water for washing, hanging rope for drying, prepping needles for sewing, and tubes for transforming. At our low we washed two nets in a morning and at our high we washed 65 nets. By "we," of course I don't actually mean "us."  I can barely wash my clothes let alone a heavy, rough mosquito net.


So the work was fun, but the play was also fun. First year health volunteer and friendship bracelet maker extraordinaire Lexi Merrick accompanied us for about 10 sites near her, and was therefore a part of the most biking intense part of the trip, and first year health volunteer and my site mate Nathan Rehr was with us for the five sites closest to us.  Being an on-point Pullo for that long can be exhausting, so it was good that we could switch on and off who was going to be lead person each day.

It was also really awesome to see so many of my friends, who I know in their America, Peace Corps contexts, as their Pullo alter egos. We got to see where they live, where they travel, who they live with, what they eat, everything. It's amazing how different every site is and how very similar everything actually is.

Oops.
What baggage?

Scholarship 2014

Oh hello! Just recently remembered that I have a blog, but in my defense I've been very busy! Forgive me, but I'm going to go a little bit out of order and start with my scholarship girls because I love them the most.

So as my Facebook friends will know, I did the Michelle Sylvester Scholarship at my local middle school again this year.  The goal of the scholarship is to keep at risk girls in school. "At-risk" includes risk from poverty, risk of early marriage, and risk of pregnancy. It also awards high achieving girls- all of my girls were at the top of their class.

You'll all remember my girls last year (pictured below). I had six of the smartest girls in the school in the program. This year, one went on to high school, one failed her finals but passed her BFEM (the test one needs to pass be allowed to go to high school),  two are in 3eme this year (9th grade) and were awarded the scholarship again, and two got married and will not be continuing their education. In an effort not to turn this specific post into a rant about my feeling on teenage marriage, I'll just say I'll write about it later.

MSS Scholarship Recipient 2013

This year, though, we added three more girls to the list.  Peace Corps (and by "Peace Corps" I of course mean my wonderful donors) paid for their inscription fees (about $10), bought them notebooks and pens, and the American Embassy in Dakar sweetened the deal by giving out free book bags literally full of everything a student is supposed to have and is almost always too poor to buy. This includes more notebooks, pens, pencils, protractor, ruler, mini chalk board, pencil case, and I'm forgetting everything else, but trust me, it's good. I told everyone it was from Obama, and were the mid-term elections in Sanankoro, I would now have total confidence in the Democrats sweeping it.


Scholarship Recipients 2014
I had a much better time of it this year for several reasons. 1. I speak Pulaar this year. Last year I had to get the project started my first week at site, which was overwhelming, and I'm pretty sure not everyone understood everything, myself included. 2. I have a relationship with the school this year, and they trust me a lot more. 3. I have a relationship with the girls, and getting the scholarship is actually a really big deal now. 4. I had a much better outfit.

Let just conclude with a congratuatory note to Dienabou and Khady, who received the scholarship two years in a row, Mariama Sow, Fanta Seydi, Dienaba Kande, Mariama Balde, Assette Balde, Salle Mballo, and Asmou Seydi, CEM Sare Koutayel's scholarship girls and Senegal's future presidents, doctors, lawyers, and ministers. Not that I have high expectations or anything.

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Let's Talk About Ebola (in Senegal)

In reality, the number one question I got while I was home was about Ebola.  Is it in Senegal? Are you close to it? Is Senegal worried about it? Are you safe? I was not really receptive to it, and let me explain why.  My service has not been about Ebola, my service has been about meeting a wonderful village and focusing on education, malaria, and nutrition.  I can talk about those things until the cows come home.  I can tell a really great travel story. I can give you the low down on Pulaar culture.  But anything on Ebola I am terribly undereducated.

This is West Africa
This has changed since I've seen most of you.  I became aware of Ebola in February at the Stomping Out Malaria Conference.  At this conference, there were two volunteers from Guinea and three from Liberia; all have since been evacuated.  After the initial "What is Ebola and what are the chances it's coming to Senegal," I mostly left it alone.  I did a little research, talked about it with my Peace Corps friends and my village friends, and became a little more knowledgeable (I can tell someone I'm afraid of bleeding from my eyes in Pulaar!).

My compound had had a guest with us for a couple of months, a Guinean woman named Binta, and around late February she wanted to go home (to Guinea).  Her husband was there, and her extended family, and she missed them.  The only problems were that there was Ebola and Senegal had closed all of the borders.  So she was stuck for a little while, and didn't seem overly concerned about getting Ebola.

Binta eventually got through, and I'm not sure whether it was because the border closing was ineffective or around the time Senegal realized the border was ineffective and re-opened it.  The initial border closing was non-effective.  All of my information is second hand, but I heard of cars just rolling through piled with Guineans, paying a bribe or not even being stopped, and entering the country.  A lot of these people were only in Senegal to go to the markets, and then they would go home.  Senegal closed their borders again while I was home, and now the markets are noticeably smaller.

While I was home Senegal got their first (and only, Alhumdouliliah) case of Ebola.  The patient was a Guinean kid attending university in Dakar.  He was staying with relatives in the suburbs, and was feeling ill.  He went to several different health facilities.  The first couple diagnosed him with malaria, and only when he continued to get more sick was he properly diagnosed with Ebola.  He, along with several dozen people he had come into contact with were quarantined.  The student survived Ebola and was deported back to Guinea.  No one he came into contact with showed any symptoms.

Senegal has been pretty active on the education front since Guinea announced the outbreak.  Radio shows were immediatly made and the news was listened to religiously.  My family is Guinean, their parents moved to Senegal for land, and they still have a lot of relatives living in Guinea.  It was troubling and sad, but as far as I know they don't know anyone who had Ebola.

Right when I got back the health posts started doing house to house visits to make sure people understand where Ebola comes from, how it spreads, and what to do if someone gets it.  I was in my compound when our health worker came, and it was interesting to be on the other side of a home visit for once.  Everyone in my compound already knew a good deal, I'm assuming from listening to the radio.

Some responses: "It's being clean.  Wash with soap.  You don't know where other people have been, so when your kids come home from the field you wash them with soap."

And they're right! More and more businesses are supplying hand santizer.  When I went to the hospital the other day, they had us wash our hands with bleach water on the way in and on the way out.  When my flight landed, they checked all of our eyes and then made us use hand sanitizer. It's suddenly OK not to greet everyone by shaking hands. Every health post is supposed to be supplied with a quarantine tent.

So Ebola in Senegal? The people are educated, much more educated than those in southern Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia.  Senegal does not have the same history of civil war and ethnic tension that they have.  Senegal has been preparing.  While the misdiagnosis of the Guinean student it worrisome, I think it sufficiently embarrassed the Senegalese health system enough to be extra cautious from now on.  Conclusion: I'm wary, but I have hope that Senegal will be OK.

Eurotrip 2014: A Belated Telling

Hey! So this is a little belated, but here is an article I wrote for Peace Corps Senegal's quarterly magazine, the Sabaar, back in May!

 For two weeks during the end of May and beginning of June, I took a casual Eurotrip with my fellow PCVs Courtney Ruble (Kolda) and Anna Adams (Matam). Courtney and I took went to London while Anna and her boyfriend, Dan, took a trip to Barcelona, only to meet back up in Paris. Courtney and I decided on London after procrastinating too long and ultimately deciding we really just wanted to speak English and eat a lot of cheeseburgers (spoiler: we did both).

This was my first trip out of Senegal since arriving in March 2013, so our first stop was to get Egg McMuffins in the airport. Since I was in charge of booking the hostel reservation, the obvious choice was a cute little place right around the corner from the British Museum. Courtney didn't mind because there was also a Starbucks. We spent a day in the museum, strolling through most of the Acropolis, admiring hijacked mummies, and weaving through tour groups. We also sprinted past Westminster Abbey,
Big Ben, London Bridge, and the Tower of London on our way to BLTs and pints of beer.

    While I was sad to leave the English, my bank account was not, and so we took the high-speed train under the English Channel to la belle Paris. This time Courtney was responsible for booking the hostel, and while the hostel was clean and had private bathrooms, it was located in the Vietnamese Red Light District and therefore a little worrisome. Making fun of Courtney later, I looked up
reviews online and found one from a gentleman who encouraged us "not to look them in the eye." Great advice!

     We sucked it up, however, and walked 8 blocks to a movie theatre where we watched Maleficent (IN ENGLISH), while eating some of Ben and Jerry's finest ice cream. Note to travelers: it is not a good idea, after wearing flip flops for over a year, to purchase any form of fancy footwear while on vacation and then walk in them to the movies. This will most likely result in horribly sore feet that will plague you for the rest of your vacation. Your friends will probably still make you walk everywhere, since they're sadistic, but support you when you try to numb your pain with boissons.

 Unfortunately for our Vietnamese friends, Anna and Dan didn't want to stay in a hostel, so we moved to an Airbnb apartment. I would highly recommend Airbnb. I thought it was reasonably priced and the apartment owner gave us a tour and left us with some restaurant choices before kindly getting out of the way. We had our own space, a great bathroom with water pressure and hot water, and a kitchen with a fridge and stove that we could hypothetically use to cook.We were also conveniently located near the metro, two grocery stores, and numerous restaurants that stole all of our attention away from the kitchen. The apartment was wonderfully furnished, but the best parts were easily the washer/dryer and insanely fast Internet. While we never quite figured out the dryer part, it was much more efficient than hand washing. Now, it would be impossible (and kind of dull) for me to recap every site we went to see, because we saw all of them. Nine days in Paris gave me 10 extra pounds (suck it, Jim Courtright) and a lot of pictures of French monuments. I will say we climbed a lot of
things. Every time we saw a church, or a monument with stairs, for some reason it was necessary that we climb it. At Notre Dame, none of us particularly wanted to climb it, but instead of saying that, we decided to stand in line while we made our decision. No one ever made that decision, so we still climbed Notre Dame. The only thing we didn't climb was the Eiffel Tower, because that had an elevator and we are very hardcore tourists. In case you were wondering, yes we all have rock
hard thighs now.

We couldn't go to Paris without going to the Louvre, and we spent a whole day there. Not wanting to
miss out on any education, we all got really patron "headsets" that were actually "Game Boys." (Fun
fact: there's a Game Boy game for the Louvre.) You could click on items you wanted to learn about,
pulling up the history of the object as well as the time period from which it came.As anyone who has been to the Louvre will know, she's exhausting. There's so much stuff to see, it's exhausting
At the top of something
Just Louvin Life
to try, and it's also exhausting to accept the ultimate defeat. We kept ourselves going with puns: "I want toLouvre it Louvre it." "I'm Louving it." "Louvre free or die hard." "#yolouvre." "Louvre until you can't Louvre no more." We did Louvre until we were exhausted and hungry, so we meandered over to a cafe in the Louvre. Now we were expecting ridiculous prices. Fine, it's worth it to not have to leave the building. But we were expecting to get full. The sandwiches were something from a Senegalese establishment, just a baguette with a little meat and vegetables. The penne pasta chicken, which our dear Dan was so excited for, had very little penne, pasta, and chicken. And the milkshakes were sub-par. Needless to say, trying to Louvre on a half full stomach is difficult, but we pulled through and sprinted past an impressive number of exhibits.
Versailles garden

Look Mom, I'm a goat!
Another big day was our trip to Versailles. The gardens were in full bloom, and every other tourist in the entirety of France (I'm assuming) also came out. We ran through the bedrooms, meandered through the ballrooms, gazed up at portrait upon portrait of French victory after French victory, and didn't chat too much. Dan and I didn't even realize we’d seen the Hall of Mirrors until after the fact, and no one else was really up to go back. I thought it'd have more mirrors. After we were done with
the walk-through, we headed out to the gardens, which were beautiful, and took lots of pictures imitating the very serious statues throughout the garden. Some might think this was immature, we thought it was funny.

What trip to a European city would be complete without a bar crawl? Not this one, so we dutifully Googled "bar crawl Paris" and signed up for the first one. This, it turned out, was questionable shopping. We got off the metro, gazed around, and realized we were in the Red Light District of Paris. The sex shop/XXX movie theatre ratio per block was out of this world. We also got to see the world famous Moulin Rouge, which of course was ridiculously expensive, and even our bar crawl
leaders couldn't get us in.

We managed to go most of the trip without actually going to the Eiffel Tower—just gazing at it across the horizon from whatever monument we climbed that day. I took a lot of Eiffel Tower pictures; no skyline picture of Paris seemed complete without it. Our trip ended, however, in it's shadow as we celebrated Anna "Grandma" Adam's 26th birthday with a cruise down the Seine. We drank French wine, ate escargot and cheese and varieties of meat (none of them green),and had semi-wonderful service from a waiter named Sebastian. It was a great way to celebrate Anna's birthday, and a great way to end a great trip with great friends.










Monday, September 29, 2014

Post America Trip: FAQs

For those of you I have not seen recently, let me tell you that I recently went on vacation to the United States of America. Specifically upstate New York, and mostly to celebrate two wonderful weddings.  Let me take this time to say congrats to Larkin Ryan and Trevor Andrews as well as my beautiful cousin Stephanie Chard and her husband Kyle Chard.

I'm going to use this blog post to answer a lot of the questions I got while I was home.

1. How hot is it?

This is a difficult question to answer since I don't own a thermometer and I don't have regular access to internet, and when I do I like to do other things.  Monday, September 28 at 7:00 pm it is 91 degrees Fahrenheit.  This week, according to Google, highs will be from 88-95 degrees and lows will be almost consistently 75 degrees.  To give this a little perspective, it's not to hot, not too cold, and I don't need a light jacket.  Cold season starts around November until February, when hot season picks up again.  Hot season is really hot and pretty miserable.

2. What do you do?

My title is Preventative Health Volunteer.  The health program in Senegal focuses on preventing malaria, preventing malnutrition, and increasing access to water and sanitation.  As a secondary goal we focus on gender equality.  We have a board, called SeneGAD (Gender and Development), that facilitates gender based work, including the Michelle Sylvester Scholarship to middle school girls.  This also includes the various camps around Senegal, a new Grassroot Soccer curriculum focused on empowering girls, having girls groups, the list goes on and on.  If you can't tell by the rambling, I really like Senegad work and this it is one of the best focuses a volunteer can have in country.  That being said, I also have a lot of experience doing malaria work and nutrition, which is usually done in conjunction with the brand new school garden.

3. What are living conditions like in your village?

My village is 7km up the road from our regional capital, also confusingly named Kolda. I technically have two villages; the village I live in is called Sanankoro, but there is another village directly across the street, called Sare Koutayel. Sare Koutayel is the capital of the community rural, which is like a county.  I'm just going to skip the description of how Senegal is divided up and governed because it's French and confusing.  This just means that we have a community building and tend to get more visitors and some of the governmental perks not available in other villages.  We have a school, a brand new mosque, and a brand new health hut.  We also have one family who runs a cashew transformation business.  
We are in the process of getting electricity.  This is a sore subject for my compound because they left our section off the map by accident and did not order enough materials.  We are one of six compounds that will be left off the initial grid, although they are trying to get more materials. 
We have no running water and everything has to be pulled: bathing, laundry, dishes, water for the animals, drinking water, etc.  I take care of just myself and I think this is annoying sometimes. Women and teenage girls do most of the pulling, and well as the labor that comes after the pulling.  We do not have an abundance of wells in either of my villages.  In Sanankoro there are sections of the village that have to walk 50 yards round trip to collect drinking water.  The women do usually try to filter their water with a cloth beforehand, catching larger dirt and worms, but disease can still get through.
The Peace Corps volunteer before me focused a lot on water and sanitation, and her big project was bringing latrines to the entirety of both villages. This has increased adult open air defecation, but children still use nature as their bathroom 100% of the time.  Soap is not utilized to the fullest, and germs are a major concern.

4. What do you eat?

Please see blog posted circa June 2013.

5. What are you doing after Peace Corps?

Eating.

Any other topical requests, send me an email!

Jam tan,
Aissatou
    

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Maps, Malaria Booths, and Moringa

The Kolda work zone has been ablaze with work these past couple months, and I'm going to brag about it.  Back in May we did a world ma tournee.  My co-coordinator, Jenny Cobb, led our valiant team from village to city.  We gridded out sections of the wall, then drew on a world map with chalk, and painted it in.  My favorite art, apart from giving the gift of education, or at least a new talking point, was mixing the colors.  Our natural artist, Jim Courtright, was very particular about his continents, and did a wonderful job.  He has since begun work for a future African map tournee, which has created large metal stencils for: stay tuned.




Around the same time we began doing malaria market booths as art of World Malaria Month.  We each went to different markets and sent the morning talking to people about roer net care and repair.  We used the Networks cards, which provide detailed descriptions and picture, to start discussions.  We set it u as a game, where market goers would select three cards, read and answer the questions.  Correct answers and enthusuastic participation were rewarded with mint flavored candy.

I met some of the women from my village while we were doing this activity again last week.  "Come over and lay," I harassed them.

 They dutifully obliged their toubab, but before I could help them pick out cards, one of the women was shuffling through the cards and explaining in detail how to take care of her net.  This was odd because the cards were in French and she can't read.  It was only while I was trying to comprehend her raid ulaar that I remembered she had participated in a previous round of Networks sessions... three years ago.  Amazing!







And finally, a moringa production scheme has gotten underway in the village of Santancoye.  This is where my assigned health post is, and also where my closest sitemate, the aforementioned Jenny Cobb, is an agroforestry volunteer.  Last week we planted a garden of about 260 trees.  Once the trees have grown about waist high, we will cut them to ensure they don't grow higher and harvest their leaves.

Moringa is amazing because of it's high vitamin content.  This is especially amazing in regions that don't have access- financially or mobility-wise- to meals high in nutritional value.  Our plan is to train the community health workers at the Santancoye ost in moringa powder production.  This requires stripping the tree of its leaves, drying them in the shade, ounding and sifting them into a fine powder, and then selling the idea to the community.  We would like to start by giving bags of powder out to the mothers of malnourished children with verbal and written instructions on how to produce moringa powder on their own, and then perhaps start selling it on the chea to other community members.  This, of course, is all for the future.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Conversational Pulaar

I've got less than a year left and I've realized I've never fully discussed my local language.  So here it is! The low down on Pulaar.

The language we speak down south is broadly know as "Pulaar" but can be broken into several different types, and in Senegal we have Fulakunda and Pullofuta.  They're only slightly different, and for the native speaker only slightly different; it's like an American speaking to a Brit or an Australian, slightly different yet they can mostly understand each other.

I learned Fulakunda during training, as the majority of Pulaars in Kolda are Fulakundas.  What a lovely surprise it was to find out that my immediate village would not be Fulakunda, but a mixture of Pullofutas, Bambarans, and Mandes.  The good news is that everyone speaks Pulaar, the bad news for 2013 Kim was that it was Pullofuta Pulaar.  It was a bit of an adjustment at first, but that's exactly what those first couple months were for, and once my village realized that I knew more Fulakunda words than Pullofuta words, they'd either switch to Fulakunda when speaking to me or yell the Pullofuta word at me until my brain remembered it.  Both techniques worked.

As I've mentioned in previous posts, greetings are especially important in all Senegalese cultures.  The first thing you do when you see a person is greet them, and exchange that can last for 2-100 back and forths.  Some Westerners find this annoying, but I find it wonderful.  What an easy way to make people happy!  And the best part is you can repeat the same greeting and even throw in some"Ca va?" and you're golden.

Here is a typical morning exchange with a neighbor:
Me: Walle-jam! (Good morning, or literally, sleep in peace)
Them: Jam toon! Tana finani? (Peace only! Good morning, or literally, you woke up?)
Me: Jam toon! Hono bimbi o? (Peace only! How's your morning?)
Them: Jam toon! Hono bandu ma? (Peace only! How's your body?)
Me: Jam toon! (Peace only)

Now this conversation can go a lot of different ways.  My favorite way it can go is just pointing out the obvious.  Senegalese people love to point out this obvious.  This is another cultural quirk that some people find annoying and I really love.  Again, less work for me during a conversation.  I can be doing anything, reading, pulling water, sitting, etc, and someone will inevitably ask.  "Oh, you're reading?" "Yes, I'm reading."  "Oh, you're eating?" "Yes, I'm eating."  "Oh, you're pulling water?"  "No, I carry full buckets of water around on my head for exercise." "Oh Aissatou, you're so funny!"

I know.


Sunday, July 13, 2014

Ramadan: Year 2

For my faithful readers out there, you might remember 2013 Kim was not a huge fan of Ramadan.  In my defense, I was hungry.  Last year I had a certain expectation: to be fed.  Sure, I was fed, but one small bowl of white rice and maggi at 10 am split between me and 5 children isn't going to tide me over all day.

This year I had no such delusions.  While, I didn't go as far as purchasing that gas stove that would be so useful, I have been eating.  Aside from the bread I can buy in village every day, and the fruit I can get in Kolda, my beautiful, wonderful, generous mother sent me an amazing care package that has gotten me through this week and I am trying to make last another 2 weeks. It's not that the amount of food in the package is insufficient, it's just that I get very bored sitting around waiting for people to want to move again that my stomach inevitably fakes a rumble and gives me an excuse to munch on those white cheddar Cheese-Its I love so much.

But what's an average Ramadan day? As per usual, I leave my hut at 8:00am on the dot.  I wait around to see if I'll be served breakfast.  Sometimes they've already eaten, sometimes there's no leftover rice, and always I have to guess.  I don't love eating rice for breakfast to begin with, so for the past couple days I've just been eating in my room.  A baguette from the day before and some honey, maybe an apple and a granola bar, breakfast changes.  Then, inevitably, once I'm done Ramatou will barge into my room with a big bowl of rice and 4 kids trailing behind her, triumphantly announcing breakfast, and I have to stomach a spoonful or two of rice for politeness sake.

Once breakfast is eaten I'll try and do some socializing.  "Try" being the key word.  What actually happens is I wander semi-aimlessly around my village looking for people to talk to.  I've been semi-successful.  Everyone's tired, even in the morning, and don't talk much and automatically gravitate to a place they can lie down.  When this happens I go home and try and con Soso and Oumou into hanging out with me, and this always turns into Oumou making my hold Aissatou while she does something.  I wouldn't mind this as much if she peed on my less.  Once relieved of Aissatou, I seek shelter in my room.  I'll read, listen to a podcast, and at some point make myself a beautiful lunch (yesterday I ate 5 chocolate chip cookies and I cup of powdered milk. Score.).

So yes, I'm eating.  But there's something missing again this year: people.  I miss my friends, I miss conversations not formed around fasting (and my lack thereof), I miss working, and I miss drinking tea. T-minus 2 weeks until I get my village back! In the meantime, book recommendations are welcome.

Jam tan,
Kim

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Don't Tell Me What to Wear, Teach the Boys Not to Stare

During my most recent trip back from Dakar, I passed the trip in peace while listening to podcasts.  One of these in particular, BBC World News, had an interesting story revolving dress code.  In America, this story would probably not gotten my attention. Middle school dress codes? Boring. But after living in Senegal for a year the underlying issues between these American girls' situation and the Senegalese middle schoolers in my village are undeniable. It's about women's rights. 

For those of you who are unfamiliar, here is the link to the BBC News Article.

A couple months back, I was sitting with my good friend Amadou Ba. Despite being a Ba, he's a good guy.  I'm good friends with his wife, and he takes an active role in the community, especially in helping the women with their school and financial projects.  So I was surprised when he told me about his most recent meeting at the local middle school.  The parents and teachers had a meeting to enforce a dress code on girls.  
Now these girls would be asked to wear a traditional skirt and head scarf to school every day.  This meant no jeans.  In the same case as these American teenagers, boys and male teachers alike found the clothing these girls were wearing to be distracting.  

This, to me, seemed ridiculous.  "Amadou," I said, with a bit of incredulity in my voice. "Why?"

Amadou explained to me that it was to protect the girls.  If a girl is attractive and dressed "provocatively" in tight fitting clothing, they are more likely to be approached sexually by a fellow student or even a teacher.  Then they get married or get pregnant.

A tactic that Peace Corps and many NGOs in the area are taking is teaching the girls to say no, or teaching them that their bodies are not worth the clothes, the cell phones, the little presents that men might give them.  And I like to think this is working.  But what about the boys? Are we teaching the boys that just because you find a girl attractive doesn't mean you have the right to access their body?  
So I feel little sympathy for these boys who are distracted by leggings, just as I feel little pity for the men who find jeans provocative.  They're going to come across many attractive women who dress nicely throughout their lives, and it's better to learn earlier rather than later how to respect women.  

"It’s a lot like saying that if guys do something to harass us, it’s our fault for that." -Sophie Hasty, 13 

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Camp Pictures

I could write a book about how much I loved camp, and I probably write a pretty lengthy blog at some point, but for now here are some wonderful pictures! Enjoy!