Hello All!
Thank you for checking out my blog. I have made it to The Gambia! Let me preface this post by saying it is a bit extensive because much has happened in the past week. Our group of 35 volunteers arrived to the Banjul Airport Thursday morning after 28 hours of travel. We are now stationed in the Kombo area, which is an urban center near the capital of Banjul, and have spent the past days attending intense training classes (language, cultural, safety and security) and going over Peace Corps expectations, goals, and service. And, not to mention, receiving many shots. Everything is very exciting, new, and challenging!
It is very surreal being here in Africa. I have read much about the continent and its various countries in school, but the experience is overpowering and ever potent. These are some initial reactions that have yet to be contextualized: The smells when stepping off of the plane were earthy and damp, but the ground is dry and sandy. The heat is very powerful. We feel not only the warmth in the air, but also from the Gambian people who have been extremely friendly and kind. Like in Vietnam, there are people outside: walking alongside the road, at markets, sitting on stools - talking. The goats mingle searching for food; they belong to someone but it is not clear who. Property rules seem to be very different with fewer set limits and demarcated boundaries.
The women are beautiful in their colorful clothing.
The individuals in the group range from ages 22-60 and there are three married couples. Half of the group is in the Health and Community Development sector, while the other half is in Agricultural and Forestry. We have been staying in the Peace Corps transit house and will be leaving today for our training villages where we will live for two months with a family to become introduced to the culture, learn and refine our educational and technical skills, and practice our designated languages. Due to the various ethnic groups in Gambia, our group has been divided into three different language groups. I will be learning and eventually speaking Pulaar fluently.
Our Gambian language and cultural facilitators have been great so far and will be accompanying us to our training villages. Each volunteer will live in a family compound and there will be 2-3 other volunteers in each of the villages. I am very excited to move to the rural part of the country. At the same time, it is a little nerve-racking imagining being in the village, spending much time with the homestay family and having very little in terms of communication skills. But I am sure many laughs and smiles will be shared over my inability to wash clothes in buckets, draw water from the well, and eat from a communal bowl with only my right hand.
If all goes well during training these next few months, we will swear in as official volunteers on January 8th. From there, we will move to our village sites, which are unknown to us right now, and begin our community assesments and projects, which are also unknown to us.
I will hopefully be able to keep you updated on my adventures in The Gambia fairly frequently as I will have internet access probably once a month. However, I will probably not have access to internet during the two months in our training village so I will write next when I am an official Peace Corps Volunteer!
I would love love to hear from you all if you get the chance. You can send me snail mail or an email at fagudabrown@gmail.com. Keep me posted on everything, even mundane things that you may not seem interesting! I love and miss you all.
Also, I almost forgot, for those of you interested in any bumster updates... (Bumsters are young Gambian men who "service" older European women on vacation in the country. Older European women are their specialty, but they will go after any white women. They are a large part of the sex tourism business in country). The area where we are stationed right now is only a 10 minute walk from the coast so we have been going to the beach daily. The bumsters are out in full force. We have been warned many times by Peace Corps staff (Gambians and Americans) about these young men. As a female, if you go to the beach alone, you will be harassed constantly by them. Though annoying and the situation is sad, they are very very funny to watch because they work out all day long on the beach with their dreadlocks bouncing. This includes air boxing, swimming, jumping jacks, running, squats, tae bo, etc. While at the beach this weekend, one bumster positioned himself only a few feet away from our towels and started doing push-ups, which was then followed by wind sprints.
Can't wait to hear from you all!
Friday, October 30, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Fernie, you paint a vivid picture of life there!! Thanks for the Africa map sidebar. It helps us to picture you with your feet actually on the ground in The Gambia.
ReplyDeletexomick and tony
Fern - Jeff was relieved to hear about the bumper training. Life sounds like it will be very interesting and in someways mundane in the months ahead. Good luck with the new language and please know that many, many people are thinking of you and sending you good energy on a regular basis! Linda
ReplyDeleteHello Fern. Glad to hear that your initial contact with those bumsters was an educational experience.......push-ups? Who knew! Sounds like you have a challenging and exciting journey ahead of you. Keep us posted and know (as Linda aptly put)that positive energy continues to flow from The New Hampshire to The Gambia. I'll be looking for updates and news relating to your travels. Take care of yourself. Jeff
ReplyDeleteHello Fernie!I am sure you will have alot of emails to read when you finally get to a computer; so I will keep mine short. Thanks for the blog of your initial reactions. It makes me understand better what it is like to do such a brave thing as you are doing! My thoughts are with you and I send my love, Jan
ReplyDeleteFERNIE!!!! I am so glad I got to see you before you left, though I wish we had kept in touch better. So now I get to make up for it by stalking you :) I can't wait till you come back haha. Anyways, you truely are amazing and I still can't believe you have no toilet paper. You describe it so vividely that I wont ever have to visit...thank god. I would like you to bring me back a goat or a bumster, either will do. I talked to Steph at the bridal shower, she sends her love. We are so proud of you! I can't wait to hear more! I love you try to resist the bumsters- Sophie
ReplyDeleteHello my love! I can't wait to hear about and follow all of your adventures! Sounds like you are crazy busy and engulfed in all the newness of Gambia- I'm so busy! If you find any cool ways that I can have my kids raise money or do a collaboration project with kids over there, definitely let me know.
ReplyDeleteI miss you!
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteFern,
ReplyDeleteAt the moment I am enjoying a delicious turkey club, smothered with pesto accompanied with a side salad that has delectable homemade dressing with cheese, croutons, and cashews scattered on top. And to top it of I am watching an Its Always Sunny episode.
What are you eating...
Fern,
ReplyDeletethat is the best piece of writing that i have ever read from nelson. who knew? we missed you at thanksgiving and thought of the corn meal bread without the worms. how was it?
Wow, I've never seen Nelson articulate quite like that. What was the one that was removed? Haha. Well its great to hear about your adventures, especially as I prepare for my own. Can't wait to hear what happens next!
ReplyDeleteHi again Fern!
ReplyDeleteI wanted to let you know that today we got 10 inches of snow so Dan and I made a snowman with an orange and black scarf (Keene High colors). We put up Christmas decorations this week and the outside lights are beautiful with the new fallen snow. I am sending you a Christmas card but in case it doesn't get to you by Christmas-Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!!!I think of you often and hope all is going well. Love, Jan
Fern,
ReplyDeleteFYI....it is 15 degrees in keene today. looking at below 0 tonight. thinking of you lots and lots.
mom
Hello Fern. Not sure what goes at Christmas in The Gambia, but wanted to wish you a Merry and Happy New Year. Soon you will be an "official volunteer", which is very cool. Can't wait to read about your adventures over there.
ReplyDeleteWe finally moved to Keene and are now your neighbors.......can you say ecstatic! We aren't sure why we didn't do this 10 years ago......who knew!
Please have a fine Gambian Christmas and know that we are thinking of you and the good work you are doing over there. That's what Christmas is all about!
Take care. Jeff
It Sounds like you are crazy busy and engulfed in all the newness of Gambia. I am enjoying a delicious turkey club, smothered with pesto accompanied with a side salad that has delectable homemade dressing with cheese.
ReplyDeletegambia holidays
Hi Fern, It's Annie, from Keene Farm era! What a wonderful place you are in - a functional village and such a sense of family. I love the joking relationships (I love to joke). I can see how it would all start to feel very normal... I'm living in Woodbury where I run a school, Wisdom of the Herbs, and I also put time in with Transition Town Montpelier, creating resilient communities in the face of peak oil, climate change, and all the other changes coming at us. I garden in the summer, and work on my many projects in the winter. I am very very happy, and very happy for you, my dear old friend. I hope we can meet up sometime when you are back. Much love, Annie McCleary
ReplyDelete