From December 18th-30th,
my whole family visited us in Senegal. We traveled, ate local food, relaxed,
threw Frisbees, drank Gazelle (a local beer contained in .63 liter bottles that
tastes like a mix of Corona and Coors light), visited Saraya, & basically cruised
from one end of Senegal to the other.
Picking everyone up at
the airport—like all flights into old Leopold Senghor Airport, they disembarked
almost 2 hours later than the posted time, but we were ready with reading
materials. When we finally saw Mom, Dad, Matt and Emily walking out into
overcast but still harshly bright Dakar, I just started laughing. It was so fun
to see the most familiar people in the world to me in such a crazy place. At
least one dude was eagerly trying to co-carry someone’s bag, and none of them
had ever seen a Wolof taxi stand in action, with tall chauffeurs shouting in an
harsher than German but rounder than Portuguese language. Hugging everybody and
helping them carry their bags to the relative calm of the broad street, I still
just couldn’t believe they were finally here. Anne and I had been planning
their visit since about November 2012 and it was a struggle to not talk
constantly about what was going on around us. I’ve heard some truism about
tourists who’ve spent a week in a new place will explain its customs as if they
were born there; longer term visitors speak with less assurance, and long-term
imigres are at once most and least certain about what drives social currents
and what they mean. Having just reached that medium term-visitor mark (living
in Senegal for almost 2 years), I was self-conscious about coming across as a
complete know-it-all and tried to let my family deal individually with their
own first impressions of a place so different from the US, a place where shoes
are usually removed before entering a room, even if it’s a mud hut with a dirt
floor; where trash (grocery bags, drink wrappers, discarded car tires) are
raked into a pile and burned, right next to houses, schools, restaurants; and
where walking down the street in your town of residence you are treated like a
movie star, people don’t ask for autographs but they sure know who you are and
they’re ready to throw the red carpet down for you no matter the
circumstances—they don’t just do this for Peace Corps volunteers, visitors from
one village in another village receive the star treatment too. In any case,
everyone saw what they saw and thought what they thought but they’ll always
know what we mean when we refer back to this or that from our time as Peace
Corps volunteers.
First Senegalese meal:
everybody was so tired after almost no sleep and too much travel but we went to
our favorite Senegalese food joint, a rice shack near the beach that has such
flavorful ceebou dieun (oily, spicy rice with fish, carrot, turnip, potato,
tamarind and leaf mash). People had conked out in the hotel room after settling
in, so when we finally arrived at this rice shack the couscous was gone, so we
were stuck with the famous rice and either chicken, or maffe (peanut butter
sauce), or ceeb dieun. Luckily, our tired trek to this joint wasn’t long, the
place is just across the street from our hotel. Mom was intent that everyone
use hand sanitizer and lo and behold none of us got diarrhea that day. It’s the
small things that make life sweet.
Visit to slaves’ last
view of Africa:
we gathered our strength--mom and dad were looking so bleary eyed, but they put on a brave face, and we booked it to the ferry terminal across town to visit Goree Island. It was a race. We found our seats on the ferry just minutes before it unmoored.
The island is a terrible, sad place. The send-off point for hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of people whose lives were violently destroyed in the Americas. Hollywood movies that deal with slavery usually include the term mandingo in film dialogue. Mandingo is the Anglicization of the name for Mande language speaking people who were sought by slavers for their strength and endurance. Anne and I live in a Mande community in Kedouguo and it hurts to imagine the flip side of the pre-civil war African American experience, that is the experience of my host family’s ancestors who were terrorized by slavers for centuries. Some say the reason West Africa is the most underdeveloped region on earth is that of the millions of slaves taken to the Americas, most came from West Africa and most were also strong, healthy people—many were leaders of their people. So, visiting slave holding rooms and seeing the last bits of ground in Africa that slaves would ever see is a haunting, important experience and I was proud that my family was so insistent to visit Goree. Our excellent tour guide walked us all around, Dad almost fell asleep in the island cathedral but we eventually got to a café with coffee and our hides were saved. After everybody got a strong injection of caffeine we moved on, bought some cool sandpainted art and headed back to the mainland to eat dinner at one of the great spots in West Africa, the French Cultural Center, with delicious hamburgers and a stunning ambiance with a giant fromagier (Kapok, cousin to baobab) tree growing in the center of the restaurant.
we gathered our strength--mom and dad were looking so bleary eyed, but they put on a brave face, and we booked it to the ferry terminal across town to visit Goree Island. It was a race. We found our seats on the ferry just minutes before it unmoored.
The island is a terrible, sad place. The send-off point for hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of people whose lives were violently destroyed in the Americas. Hollywood movies that deal with slavery usually include the term mandingo in film dialogue. Mandingo is the Anglicization of the name for Mande language speaking people who were sought by slavers for their strength and endurance. Anne and I live in a Mande community in Kedouguo and it hurts to imagine the flip side of the pre-civil war African American experience, that is the experience of my host family’s ancestors who were terrorized by slavers for centuries. Some say the reason West Africa is the most underdeveloped region on earth is that of the millions of slaves taken to the Americas, most came from West Africa and most were also strong, healthy people—many were leaders of their people. So, visiting slave holding rooms and seeing the last bits of ground in Africa that slaves would ever see is a haunting, important experience and I was proud that my family was so insistent to visit Goree. Our excellent tour guide walked us all around, Dad almost fell asleep in the island cathedral but we eventually got to a café with coffee and our hides were saved. After everybody got a strong injection of caffeine we moved on, bought some cool sandpainted art and headed back to the mainland to eat dinner at one of the great spots in West Africa, the French Cultural Center, with delicious hamburgers and a stunning ambiance with a giant fromagier (Kapok, cousin to baobab) tree growing in the center of the restaurant.
Dakar garage: our first
full day together in Senegal, we skipped town and headed to Mbour, city of
sand. Getting there required a visit to the old, giant Dakar Pompiers garage—a
city block-lot with no signage but full, completely full of chauffeurs, sept-places
(old Peugeot 504s), car rapides (bread trucks with bench seats welded in that
seat 30-odd passengers), and people who grab your baggage from the taxi and
haul it to their buddies sept-place then ask to be paid—all before you even
know where you’re going. It was a little stressful getting everybody together
in the garage because our taxis got separated in the traffic jam en route from
the hotel and our two groups unloaded from our taxis in the middle of the sea
of sept-places and had to swim through the crowd and hope we’d meet up in the
right place. As luck would have it, we
made our ways to the same car without misplacing any baggage and soon sped off
toward Mbour and our nice hotel on the beach.
Warang: after a couple
days in Mbour, we found ourselves in a village to the south called Warang, home
to a famous Belgian local fruits liquor distillery. We spent the evening at a tiny
open-air bar right in the middle of a Baobab grove with a stream running
through, sampling spirits distilled from the tastiest fruit on earth. Thinking
of all of us together making merry in the charming setting still makes me
smile. Peace Corps volunteers have been good customers there so the Belgians
give us and our families a nice discount—we left with a full box of bottles.
Mom, Emily, Anne and Matt took a waiting car and Dad and I hitch hiked back to
town.
The beach: playing
Frisbee with Dad, Matt and Emily is always the most exercise I get on vacation.
Unfortunately the water was a little too cold to jump in but the sun wasn’t too
hot, mid-90s tops, so we didn’t even need to jump in to cool off; a little
shade and a boisson did the trick. Of course a beach vendor dude decided he was
in love with Emily and was really annoying trying to crash our party but he
ended up arranging a nice mini-van to take us to Kedougou so it was mostly
worth it dealing with him.
Kedougou!: we got to
Kedougou in time to sit by the pool and relax the afternoon away. The Bedik
hotel/campement is far and away the nicest place to stay in the region and we
enjoyed the luxury—air conditioning, showers, actual mattresses (vs. foam pads)
and a restaurant with tasty salads. We went tout de suite to the Peace Corps
regional house and ate a tasty dinner with the other volunteers. The next
couple days were all about Saraya. Our hut was dusty and so was the town but
everyone had admirable attitudes. I would have loved to read their minds as
they saw our hut and family compound and the places where we work and hang out.
It looks completely normal to us but it was completely new to them. Sad news
greeted us on the way to Kedougou; a good friend in Saraya passed away, so our
first day in town was spent at the funeral. The next two days we made the most
of our time, trekking out another Malinke village called Sanela for data
collection for the malaria project we were finishing up, eating Saraya food,
drinking mostly cold Gazelles at my counterpart’s new bar/conference room, and
just being together.
It was so fun for me to have my entire immediate family together in a new place. It makes me really look forward to the vacations we’ll have in coming years. Our last day in town Anne and I through a tulungo (charity feast) to celebrate the family visiting and musicians came from three separate villages to mark the occasion which included dancing, sitting under a neem tree and haggling with the Saraya concert master about how much to pay the diverse stakeholders in a local music happening (it’s surprisingly complex). Anyhow, the music was great and even Dad and Matt danced. I wish we could have stretched that day out longer—for so many months I’d been picturing my family in just that situation, looking forward to making Matt dance and getting a kick out of seeing Emily on the dance floor and just having a ball with Mom and Dad—but just like that, the music ended and we had to get on the highway back to Kedougou because it was Christmas Eve and we didn’t want to miss the evening Mass.
It was so fun for me to have my entire immediate family together in a new place. It makes me really look forward to the vacations we’ll have in coming years. Our last day in town Anne and I through a tulungo (charity feast) to celebrate the family visiting and musicians came from three separate villages to mark the occasion which included dancing, sitting under a neem tree and haggling with the Saraya concert master about how much to pay the diverse stakeholders in a local music happening (it’s surprisingly complex). Anyhow, the music was great and even Dad and Matt danced. I wish we could have stretched that day out longer—for so many months I’d been picturing my family in just that situation, looking forward to making Matt dance and getting a kick out of seeing Emily on the dance floor and just having a ball with Mom and Dad—but just like that, the music ended and we had to get on the highway back to Kedougou because it was Christmas Eve and we didn’t want to miss the evening Mass.
Christmas Eve: our
dinner went a little late and by the team we got to the Catholic church for
Mass the sanctuary was full. So we stood outside and tried to comprehend the
echoing French service and tried to sing along a little with tunes we
recognized, and all did our best not to fall asleep on our feet. That evening
we had an important discussion about the inter-religious harmony that
contributes to Senegal’s special status as a beacon of peace in West Africa,
and the next day was Christmas!
Christmas was wonderful.
We woke late, and had a slow morning that proved that even in hot, dusty West
Africa Christmas still feels like Christmas. We took it easy and made it to the
regional house in time for a tasty, fun Christmas brunch with delicious quiche,
white elephant gift exchange and Frisbee. Another day I wish we could have put
on pause but days in south Senegal are really short.
Dindefelo: the day
after Christmas we got going late because Anne was really sick but we
eventually took an adventure trip to the waterfalls on the Fouta Djallon
plateau.
The details were exciting. In any case, we made it to Dindefelo in
time to relax in a scenic eco-campement under the overgrown cliffs that look
like Jurassic Park. We could hear baboons and chimps hoot and hollering in the
woods. The next day we hiked, relaxed and recovered from hiking. So sadly,
these days passed too quickly too and before you know it we were heading back
to ‘gou to gear up to head north again. The route back to ‘gou was exciting and
time consuming for different reasons. Our turn around was fast as can be and
soon we were trucking through the national park with wild lions and native
elephants! And that night we stayed in gorgeous Oassadou eco-campement on the
Gambia river. Another night and day I wish could have been paused. This is a
place with hippos in the water below the restaurant and a forest full of
baboons all around.
Tolkien-town: we
persevered through another day of hard traveling and made it to the petite cote
village of Toubab Dialaw in time for a sunset and tour of the whimsical and
strange group of connected hotels that seems designed to be a fantasy movie
setting. We dined, Matt instructed me in new rubic’s cube moves, Dad talked
about how he wanted to do a longer self-guided trip through the Niokolo park to
look for lions and such,
Mom was annoyed that our rooms didn’t really have running water but she was tickled to be together and got us thinking about how soon we would all be together again, but in Montana. (This trip left me with a touch of senioritis. I was honestly pretty jealous to see how everybody could just up and leave and head back to the comforts of life in the States.) And, Emily kept up her encouraging conversational style and got us to talk about how we were really feeling about the prospect of finishing in just a couple months. Goodbyes: heading from Tolkien-ville to Dakar was a huge letdown. Dakar is just an intense, busy, kinda stressful place, and our attitudes were a little sabotaged by a terrible 7-place driver and a non-existent Air France check-in staff. We had a delightful afternoon in Dakar planned but because we couldn’t check bags in early at the airport our plans for seeing the giant Dakar market were dashed! That is a pretty typical Dakar outcome but it was harder because this was goodbye and we were primed to take it personally because the fam’s eminent departure was just really hard to accept. Most days of Peace Corps are much like the day before, so the difference is magnified between a day with your whole family together and the next almost 5 months apart. We made the most of things, I ironed out my feeling of being victimized by the Air France staff, and we ended up having a super pleasant early evening at a bakery and then at a restaurant on the westernmost point in Africa. Then we gathered everyone and everything up, said tearful goodbyes and hugged everyone a bunch of times and sent them off to an extremely different leg of their vacation, a trip to Paris, France and get togethers with one of my best friends and a groomsman, Aurelien. Anne and I spent our New Year’s Eve in Dakar, the family spent theirs under the Eiffel Tower, and from then on the time has flown and now we’ve 30 days left at site and then we’re packing up and heading home ourselves. My family’s visit was such an important milestone in our service giving us something to look forward to and on which to look back fondly. It let us share important realities of the low-income world with people who were so interested to better understand the inequalities present in the world, gave us a chance to introduce our family to the host family that has been so generous and kind to us over the last two years, and just made us feel so valued. Thanks guys and see you so soon!
Mom was annoyed that our rooms didn’t really have running water but she was tickled to be together and got us thinking about how soon we would all be together again, but in Montana. (This trip left me with a touch of senioritis. I was honestly pretty jealous to see how everybody could just up and leave and head back to the comforts of life in the States.) And, Emily kept up her encouraging conversational style and got us to talk about how we were really feeling about the prospect of finishing in just a couple months. Goodbyes: heading from Tolkien-ville to Dakar was a huge letdown. Dakar is just an intense, busy, kinda stressful place, and our attitudes were a little sabotaged by a terrible 7-place driver and a non-existent Air France check-in staff. We had a delightful afternoon in Dakar planned but because we couldn’t check bags in early at the airport our plans for seeing the giant Dakar market were dashed! That is a pretty typical Dakar outcome but it was harder because this was goodbye and we were primed to take it personally because the fam’s eminent departure was just really hard to accept. Most days of Peace Corps are much like the day before, so the difference is magnified between a day with your whole family together and the next almost 5 months apart. We made the most of things, I ironed out my feeling of being victimized by the Air France staff, and we ended up having a super pleasant early evening at a bakery and then at a restaurant on the westernmost point in Africa. Then we gathered everyone and everything up, said tearful goodbyes and hugged everyone a bunch of times and sent them off to an extremely different leg of their vacation, a trip to Paris, France and get togethers with one of my best friends and a groomsman, Aurelien. Anne and I spent our New Year’s Eve in Dakar, the family spent theirs under the Eiffel Tower, and from then on the time has flown and now we’ve 30 days left at site and then we’re packing up and heading home ourselves. My family’s visit was such an important milestone in our service giving us something to look forward to and on which to look back fondly. It let us share important realities of the low-income world with people who were so interested to better understand the inequalities present in the world, gave us a chance to introduce our family to the host family that has been so generous and kind to us over the last two years, and just made us feel so valued. Thanks guys and see you so soon!
P.S. This is Annē now.
After the event I’m about to describe
happened, Ed kept saying that he couldn’t wait to see how I would describe it
in the blog. So here it goes:
As we were walking through the hyperstimulating fish market
in Mbour, with one of a kind sights, sounds, and definitely smells, we were
stopped by a group of fisherman who wanted Matt, Ed and Pat to help them push
their boat up the beach. Matt handed me Nancy’s camera and plastic bag with
market purchases. As I was taking
pictures, the bag fell open and dumped things out onto the beach. I was putting
the contents back in the bag when a teenage boy came up to me. My first thought
was that he had seen me struggling with the bag and thought I needed help. That
is what my experience in Senegal for the past nearly two years had me believe.
But then I felt his hand on the camera. We locked eyes as we both realized what
was happening. We struggled over it for a few long seconds before he wrenched
it out of my hands. To explain what happened next, I have decided that he must
have been on drugs, because we all know I’m not very strong. Nonetheless, in an
act that Matt deemed “Epic Annē”, I grabbed his other arm as he was getting
away and punched him in the back as hard as I could. He dropped the camera. (I
am now convinced that eyewitness testimony is absolutely unreliable, because
apparently Emily caught the camera when he dropped it, and I don’t even
remember her being nearby.) At that point I remembered how to say “thief” in
Wolof and yelled it as loud as I could. The fishermen the menfolk had been
helping converged on him and carried out their own form of justice, which I
actually thought was pretty harsh since he didn’t actually succeed at the
crime. News travels fast, and people nodded approvingly and even clapped as we
headed up at the beach. I’m typically more lauded for my language abilities
than my fighting abilities, so I at first assumed they were stoked about my
Wolof skills. Then I saw someone acting it out and realized that they were clapping
for my scrappy camera recovery.
In the end, I’m just glad that it happened to me and not one
of Pat’s family members. It definitely has made me more wary of strangers
(particularly people coming up behind me). I don’t like feeling on edge, but
it’s probably better to not be so naïve.
I’m also glad that it turned into a great story about my heroism and not a huge
downer of an anecdote about the time Nancy’s camera got stolen.
Well, Ed…what do you think?
Ed and I really enjoyed your great post, Pat!!! It brought back many wonderful memories!
ReplyDeleteEd said, "Nice job, Annē!!!" regarding your retelling of the attempted robbery, Annē.
We can't wait to welcome you guys home in about a month and a half!
Love,
Nancy and Ed
Dear Pat and Anne,
ReplyDeleteWhat a treat to catch a glimpse into your life in the Peace Corps. Thank you for sharing your writing/reflections. Much love as you say your goodbyes and anticipate the next part of your journey! Xo Annika
Anne- I can totally see this attempted robbery playing out, you described it well. Props for being such a badass! Ilsa
ReplyDelete