hellooooo from Burkina Faso!!!
there are so many things for me to say, yet i don't have much time at this cyber cafe and the French-style keyboard is not facilitating speedy typing!
first of all, it is soooo hot here. i knew that before i came, but only until you really experience it do you fully comprehend what 95F degrees means at 10pm. on the plus side, i get to sleep outside under a beautiful, starry sky and my mosquito net catches every breeze.
training takes up the first three months of the Peace Corps. we are in villages near Ouahigouya, which is a small city in the north. my village is very very small. it isn't even on the map! it is an hour's bike ride from Ouahigouya. the bike ride is definitely whooping my butt, but i just focus on how fit i'll be when i get back to NY. I live with a very large family: 4 wives and 30 children in a compound arrangement. i have not figured out everyone in the family and i only know a handful of names. i have my own living space, which is really great.
Living in villages is part of our language and cultural immersion. i am learning Moore and Fulfulde - in French! So, technically, i am learning three languages because my French is operatinal (at best). Moore is the language of the Mossi people, who are the dominant group of Burkina Faso. Fulfulde is spoken by the Fulani (or Puel) people, who are a nomadic group of the northern and eastern parts of Burkina. Fulfulde is more widely spoken in West Africa than Moore. The two are not at all related and have nothing in common with French or English.
My village is made of both Moore and Fulani people. Apparently, i look like the Peul people because they are tall and thin and seem to have high cheekbones, so people ask me if i am Peul. Honestly, I see no similarities, but, when i can speak more fulfulde, I'll work the resemblance if I can!
we also have technical training for the Girls Education and Empowerment program. So far, we went to observe class at the local school and also had a discussion with a few teachers about the obstacles girls face in school and in their communities. Mostly, it seems that pressures outside of school are what keeps girls from continuing their education, such as poverty, early pregnancy and forced marriage. Our program director is amazing. She is focused and intelligent and is really excited about this program. the downside of the GEE program is that it is very vague and new. we are only the second group of volunteers to work on this project. in contrast, the secondary education volunteers know that they will be standing in front of a classroom teaching. we have to figure out the needs of the community and what are the resources. still, it's exciting!
this post is probably really scattered, but it is my first report of Peace Corps in Burkina Faso. hopefully, i'll get better with practice. keep writing me emails!!!!
2 comments:
Aha! Proof that you're alive! Excellent. Methinks you should start posting photos soon!
I'm supposed to leave for the Ukraine in September. I'm so excited to leave but it seems like forever until I leave! So, I'm excited to read about your exciting adventures! Oh, I found your blog through some peace corps thing. I wanted to go to Africa but since I'm better at Russian then French; the choice was taken from me...
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