Monday, April 7, 2014

A stick in the water will never be a crocodile. -Gambian Proverb

I wrote the following article for the gender and development newsletter and people here really seemed to enjoy it, so I thought I'd share.


     While in village a few weeks ago something strange, amazing and somewhat offensive happened to me. I was chatting away with a group of men when out of the corner of my eye I saw a man raising his hand to his mouth in a drinking gesture. I had never seen this man before; he was clearly just passing through the village. It was a hot day per usual and he looked very thirsty. However, as I was clearly in the middle of something, and he clearly wasn’t signaling for me to bring him water, I ignored him. After about a minute, he moved into my line of sight again and continued making the “bring me water” gesture. I was astounded. While I see men make this gesture to women all day long, no one had ever made it to me. Normally, when I see women forced to immediately abandon whatever it is they are doing to bring a man water, I am offended, but only in a passive, cultural-difference sort of way. My toubab mind thinks, “You have feet, you walked all the way to this compound, get your own water.” However, now I was faced with a genuine predicament. This man was gesturing for me to bring him water. Even while being offended and mildly perturbed, I also felt a sense of pride and accomplishment. After two years of trying to belong, had I finally made it? Does being ordered around just like all the other women in my village mean I am finally culturally integrated?

     As outsiders, I feel we are often toeing the line of being ourselves and being culturally appropriate, suppressing outbursts concerning certain cultural differences so as to not lose the respect of our community members. But then there are times where we can use our role as outsiders as an opportunity for sharing and teaching. A host country national once described PCVs to me as genderless or even a third gender. I feel that this is an apt description. While I am a woman, I am very different from all the women around me. And while I mostly work with men, I’m not one of them either. I’m something in-between: a third gender. As a member of the third gender, I can talk about things to both genders; things neither gender can talk about with one another. This is a unique and powerful role.
So, did I use this power position to teach that man about how we do things a bit differently in America? I’d like to say I did, but I didn’t. I simply ignored him until he caught the eye of another woman and had her bring him water instead. I’ve thought about that missed opportunity many times in the weeks since it happened. Sometimes I think we work so hard to fit in that we become afraid to step outside of the more traditional gender roles at our sites. Now, towards the end of my service, I know I will never truly fit in; I will always stand out. That being said, I think we can all share pieces of our culture with our community members, even if it makes us stand out just that much more. Whether it be talking to my moms about the fact that I am not married but not a virgin, or telling the teachers at the school that some men in America stay home and take care of the kids while their wives go to work. Or simply telling that man, “You have feet, you walked all the way to this compound, get your own water.”

My mom and my aunts Bev and Monie also contributed the following article to the newsletter at the end of their wonderful visit.  It was well received and definitely worth a share.

     Could our bra-burning mothers who started demanding equal pay for equal work in the 70s have envisioned their grand-daughters as agents of change in the 21st century on another continent with something as simple as a water tap? We can take it all for granted as American women in 2013. But here we are in Changai marveling at the idea of taps for water seeding a women`s liberation movement in West Africa.

     Drawing water is a back-breaking, central part of every woman's day in Mariama's village. In her compound, three wives and a pre-teen helper head out before sunrise and make several trips to the well about 400 meters away with a variety of empty containers: the ubiquitous Gambian wash buckets along with recycled cooking oil containers we've seen put to a variety of uses from one end of the Gambia to the other. When repeated use has worn holes in the bottom of the bidongs, their useful lives are extended with plastic bags stuffed into the holes. The women from each compound appear to have assigned water times but they also rely on a complex scheme to fairly allocate the labor and its fruit. There are women of all ages gathered at the well. Three women on one rope, they work in rhythm to smoothly lower and raise the bucket more than 100 meters roundtrip…more than 15 times just for Mariama's compound of 10 people. Mariama's moms graciously allow each of us to join a team for a pull but freely laugh at our ham-handedness and un-calloused palms. There's camaraderie and cheerfulness in the air belying the brute force required to provide something so basic...household water.

     We made the trip from Banjul to Changai with Seedou, the water wizard from Kombo. Mariama and her counterpart, Mahmad, have laid the groundwork for his visit by assessing the village's needs, defining the project, and applying for a SPA grant to cover the cost of having piping laid, and taps and a pump installed to provide water on demand at several locations in Changhai. All for a mere $10,000, less than a small used car in America, but enough to transform the daily lives of the women (and girls) in Changai. The water project is explained by Seedou at a village meeting on Sunday morning around 10. People are slow to gather, visiting and gossiping taking precedence until some sort of signal is given to begin. Seedou provides an overview with the assistance of a Pulaar interpreter. The men are sitting close. The younger people, looking disinterested like teens everywhere, sit farther away on a circular stone wall. The women sit even further away in a large group behind Seedou. If they are listening, it is hard to tell. They are busy scolding children as needed and attending to babies bound to the backs of moms. An observer would not guess that the topic was one that will affect their lives most dramatically of all.

     Just when it seemed to us outsiders that the women's input and reactions were irrelevant, a hush fell over the crowd. All eyes turned to an elderly woman sitting quietly behind us. The male leaders have spoken and repeatedly expressed their gratitude to Mariama, but now everyone wants to hear from one of the oldest and most respected members of the village. An elderly woman with a nearly toothless smile clearly has clout that makes her words important as the village plans for the project. Such respect for an older woman's opinions was as foreign a concept to us as the idea that three middle-aged white women traveling to Changai was to them.

     We are left to ponder just how the arrival of water taps in Changai might change the lives of two of the village's newest female members might be. Cathy, named in honor of Mariama's American mother, and Oumou, Mariama's youngest Gambian sister, might grow up believing that water always came from a tap. But will that mean that they will have equal access to an education? Will they be able to pursue a career if they want to? Follow dreams and aspirations that may take them beyond Changai and maybe even beyond the Gambia? Will they be free to choose whom to marry or even whether to marry? That seems as unknowable as the idea of a woman candidate for president might have been for our mothers four decades ago. We will need to wait and see.



Saturday, February 1, 2014

Baby steps...sideways.


Hour 1: New Years Day

                  Slightly hung over, our journey begins with a 7 am phone call to quickly get to the car park because our car has filled and it’s leaving leegi leegi (now now)!

Hours 2-5: Basse Car Park

                  After inhaling some bean sandwiches the size of Carly’s torso, we wait…and wait… and…wait, wasn’t our car full?

Hours 6-7: Really Full, like full full

                  Our car is finally full!  We’ve paid for an extra seat giving us three seats in the middle row of the “sept-place”.  Normally, these cars seat 7 people (hence the name) and the driver: one up front, three in the middle, and three in the hatch-back part of the converted station wagon, which has been outfitted with luxurious seats.  However, this is no normal travel.  This is a “quinze-place”: three up front (not including the driver), four in the middle (in our case only three because we’re assholes), four in the trunk seats, two more behind the trunk seats (the way, way back, if you will) and two on top.  It’s cool though, it’s only like a 17 hour ride.

Hour 8: Border x-ings

                  The people on the top and in the way, way back have to get out and walk across all of the border crossings because clearly it would be unsafe and illegal for that many people to be in one car.  Everyone else gets out of the sardine can and waits for just us three toubabs (remember, the ones with all the room? The assholes) to get our passports stamped.  Africans do not need visas to go from country to country, so had we not been there, they could have been on their merry way much more quickly.  But alas, we are there, so all 12 of them had to wait for the customs officers to painfully slowly write out all the information in our passports and visas.
                  We get back in the car, only to repeat this process 6 more times.  I’m still confused as to why there so many checkpoints as we only crossed two borders.  The whole affair definitely added at least two hours to the journey.  If the rest of the people in the car didn’t hate us at first, they absolutely do now.

Hours 9-15: Ridin’ dirty…literally

                  At some point we leave what little paved road we once had.  It’s now nighttime, our driver Momodou Alieu, has only narrowly avoided plowing into several cows, dogs, goats, sheep and one woman.  No one else in the car seems nearly as frightened, nor do they seem to taking a notice at all actually.  At one point, we’re probably going about 50 mph (couldn’t tell you exactly because naturally the speedometer is non-functioning) and we come within centimeters of flattening a dog.  Carly lets
out a very loud “OH MY GOOOOOODDDDDD!”, waking up Shawn and everyone else in the car, further fueling the hate fire burning in their hearts.
                  Despite the fact that I had only gotten about three hours of sleep the night before and we’d been traveling all day, I know sleep is not an option for me.  Unlike everyone else in the car, I do not have full faith, or any faith for that matter, that we aren’t going to die.  Carly and Shawn however do manage to pass out, their little heads ping-ponging from the window to my shoulder and back as we drive up, down, in, out and around crater-sized holes far bigger than my hut.  It's pretty impressive.

Hours 16-20: Arrived, kinda sorta

                  We all pass out in the car at the car park.  We don’t even ask the driver if it's cool, we just post up.

Hour 21: GOODMORNING GUINEA!!!!

                  Momodou Alieu drives us to another car park where we have to change cars and carry on.  Despite what you may be thinking, we’ve actually had great luck thus far.  It was probably because Carly brought her travel fairy along and Shawn brought her travel jujus as well.  And by probably, I mean definitely.  It is also at this car park where we become cash money millionaires.  You see, $1 is the equivalent of 7,021 Guinean Franc.  Easy enough, right?   Our new car, one we think is going straight to where we need to go, thus allowing us to skip one leg of the journey, fills immediately.  The morning air is crisp and clean.  We may have only slept a hand full of hours in the last two days, but we’re feeling great!

Hours 22-25: Vous allez ou?

                  We arrive to where we think we should be only to find out no one has any idea where we’re trying to go.  Now this confusion could be due to the fact that none of the three of us speak Fula or French, but in reality it’s because we’re in the wrong place.  We’re lost.  We make some calls and get in touch with a Guinea volunteer who coincidentally is where we are and going to where we need to be.  Alright travel jujus!  She tells us to go to a cafĂ© and wait and then we can catch a free ride with her back towards where we came from to rectify our mistake.

Hour 26: Wait, rinse, repeat

                  We do a crossword, drink some coffee, play some rummy and just wait.  We’re doing just fine.

Hours 27-29: Repeat

                  Apparently one hour in Guinea means the same as one hour in the Gambia.  Five, it means five.

Hour 30: Thumbs up

                  We’re still having a great time, but we’re beginning to feel uncomfortable asking to use the bathroom at the police station next door.  They were nice about it until like the 30th time and then they start to ask what we can only assume is “what’s your deal?”
                  We decide we can’t wait any longer, because we’ve spent $5 to save $7.  So, we hitch a ride, which takes about 30 seconds.  The day wasn’t a complete waste though, we did finish that crossword.  Oh, and we saved $2.

Hour 31: Back-Tracking

                  Back to where we were supposed to go to catch the last car to our final destination.  Everyone descends upon us at the car park, speaking so many languages we don’t speak.  I don’t know where we are, I can’t tell people where we’re going, everyone’s yelling and I’m so tired!  Shawn senses my frustration and just starts yelling “Who speaks wollof, who speaks wollof?”  Alas our knight in shining armor steps forward in the form of a 12 year old boy from the Gambia.  He helps us find a car AND the world’s most disgusting latrine.  (Side note: it’s a cultural practice here for people to not walk in front of their elders, which is very awkward when the person showing you the way is walking behind you.  There’s a lot of stopping and pointing and “which way…oh…um…here?”)  I will never again think any restroom is gross, ever.  Ever...ever, ever.

Hours 32-35:  Slap-Happy

                  We’re almost there!  Only three more hours on another dirt road!  The sun begins to set, our second sunset in a car and we begin to climb up into the mountains.  There might be baby cockroaches infesting the seat upon which we sit, but who cares, we’re almost there!

Hour 36: Hassan’s House

                  We finally arrive.  After a 2 km walk, a delicious hot meal, and the coldest bucket bath I’ve ever taken, we lay our heads down and sleep like we’ve never slept before.
                  In the morning we awaken and begin our first day of hiking through heaven on earth.  I can’t put into words how incredible this place is, so I won’t even try.  I will say Carly was such an amazing guest.  She slipped right into the skin of a PC Volunteer.  It seems only hours after she arrived, she began having unexplainably weird bug bites, a red-dirt tan, and noxious gas.  We may have had to travel through hell to spend a week in Eden, but she didn’t complain once and it was totally worth it.