Wednesday, August 1, 2012

A year later

One year ago we were about to launch what has been an interesting journey to the other side of the world.  It’s hard to believe, the time has gone so fast.  We’ve picked up some French, learned how to get around and get things done Cameroon-style, and, we hope, started to have an impact with the skills and knowledge we’ve shared with our host organizations.  It seems like it really does take a year to find your stride in a place so different from home.  We’ve just recently started exploring Ntarinkon market, rather than going to Bamenda Main Market, and found a really good place for soya just a short walk from our house, and started hiking the surrounding foothills.  There’s some sense of regret that we missed out on these things while we were figuring out how to buy furniture and bed sheets, and arguing with our landlord, and trying to sort out just what exactly it is we’re supposed to be doing here!  But at the same time, we know we’ve just reached a different stage in our cross-cultural adjustment.

We really wanted a nice classy restaurant to celebrate our anniversary, we found we are both still pretty healthy at our mid-service check-ups, we hosted site visit for one of the incoming trainees, Kiyomi was hit and moderately (not quite so bad as “seriously,” right?) injured in a traffic accident, and our laundry was stolen. It’s been an eventful few months. But a year in also seems like the right time to do the whole reflective retrospective bit.

Some themes that have emerged:

While we like some things in Cameroon and some people in Cameroon, we don’t really like living in Cameroon. After growing up as military children, we figured we had this living in new places for two years thing down. But military family members aren’t sent to the third world. We’ve learned, we’ve adapted, we’ve found our stride (and lost it again… and found it again! And…darn thing is slippery and small and hides…), but we really don’t like living in the third world. Maybe that seems obvious – developing nations are developing exactly because nobody wants to live in an undeveloped nation – but it was a revelation. We have found things and places and people we like, we have been moderately happy (or at least maintained no more than, as Freud is wonderfully misquoted, an ordinary level of unhappiness). But the idea that we can be really happy anywhere, because we’re flexible and open-minded and adventurous, and also, by the way, we’re trying to do the deeply rewarding work of making our world a better place…yeah, not so much.

One of the reasons we don’t like living in Cameroon is that it’s hard to work here. The process goes something like this: While chatting with a colleague a Great Idea emerges, you are really excited about it and so is your colleague, you begin planning to Implement the Great Idea, and find at your next meeting that your colleague (who shows up late) has not done any of his/her share of the work, excuses ensue or it is strongly implied that actually you were the one who was supposed to take care of X things. You agree to split the remaining duties, calls to your colleague confirm that (in slightly annoyed tones), yes, everything is taken care of, and at your next meeting you discover that, in fact, nothing has been done. Your colleague helpfully suggests ways you can continue to do the work on your own. The Day of the Great Idea arrives and anything still left to your colleague has not been done, no one actually shows up, or those in attendance complain that they’ve come to take part in the Great Idea (the one you’ve busted your hump to Implement to bring Benefit and Improvement to their community), and you haven’t even provided them with food and beer and “gadgets” (pens, notepads, T-shirts, key-chains; what we would call “chachkies” or “give-aways”) and laptops or money, so why are you wasting their time?

We’ve discovered that it’s a real challenge to provide all the motivation not only for yourself, but for everyone involved, by yourself. And it’s even more challenging after being hit/seeing your spouse hit by a motorcycle, and then having laundry stolen off your front porch, to stay motivated.

Not all poverty is created equal. Cameroon is a country rich in natural resources, a population filled with apathy, and a government sitting on considerable wealth. People are hungry because there are no roads to get abundant food from one part of the country to another. People are poorly educated because teachers are government employees and can go months, or even years, without collecting a paycheck. We know people who are forced to ask family to support them, or subsidize themselves by selling market goods or doing other side work in order to feed themselves while they wait for their actual paychecks to eventually arrive – with no promise of when that might actually be. It puts into perspective the continual problem of teachers not showing up for classes. But in general, people here (at least where we have traveled) are not hungry, and are poor only when compared to the West, where cost of living is also considerably higher. There’s a great priority placed on accumulation of material goods as well. Like in America, people may have a new car and large television and host elaborate parties at the expense of being able to pay their bills, but the level of consumerism here hasn’t yet experienced the backlash and resurgence of simple living going on the States.

Things are way better back home than we knew. Being on hold for forty minutes with the cable company is small potatoes – once you get that appointment for someone to come out between 8AM and 7PM, you’re pretty well guaranteed someone will be showing up that day. If you take a taxi, you get that whole taxi to yourself; in other means of public transportation, you always get your own seat, and for long trips, usually with a seatbelt! If you have to wait in line somewhere, at least there is a line to wait in, and not an oppressive crush of humanity on every side of you, pressing toward the front with no order or civility. In a restaurant you’re guaranteed (except in very rare cases) that everything on the menu is available for your order. You won’t wait thirty minutes for someone to take your order, you won’t wait an hour or more for it to come out, you won’t find your waitress asleep when you want the bill. And if she’s surly at any point, you may be able to get something comped if you call the manager, instead of that being standard demeanor. Plus, there’s pizza, and ice cream, and Mexican food, and turkey sandwiches, and sausage, and…

A smile and kind word (without a marriage proposal or request to be brought to “your country,” without even knowing what country that is) can change the tenor of an entire day. It’s sad but true to say that sometimes whether our morning taxi driver is in a friendly mood sets the tone for our whole day. On the other hand, after about six incidents of “hell-lo-ooo,” “whitemanwhiteman,” or “hey, baby,” paired with lots of hissing and lip smacking, that also sets a certain tone for the day, and we dream about walking down the street and being invisible again. But it does remind us to try to smile and say hello to the non-derangey people, and maybe make their day better too.

On expectations, we really didn’t think we had any. But, of course, it’s impossible not to. We expected:

To learn about an awesome and very different culture

To make great host country national (HCN) friends who would share their rich heritage and traditions with us while being interested in learning about ours

To bike to work on a sparsely populated dirt road every day

To work with organizations that had some idea of what they wanted collaboration on work-wise

To glimpse large African fauna now and again and debate how close they were and relative risks of an encounter

To be too busy attending cultural events and learning to make indigenous dishes to possibly have time for movies or computer games from home

To actually speak French

To have a favorite coffee/tea/local hot beverage place to hang out with our HCN friends

To live in a family compound with people who would become like a second family to us

To live in something strongly resembling a mud brick house

Things we didn’t expect:

Trash everywhere, also human waste everywhere with people routinely dropping off on the side of the road even in a city to urinate and/or defecate

People constantly asking us for money, our belongings, marriage, free passage to anywhere but here, etc. while being dressed better than we are

Strange assertions about the US, such as: there is no poverty, our president is from Africa, Rhianna and Jessica Simpson are sisters, there are no black people, everyone has servants, there are no trees – everything is paved, anyone can bring anyone they want to into the country – the only reason we won’t take someone to our country is obviously due to some grave personality flaw, etc.

Level of general drunkenness

General lack of motivation to do any work – another volunteer was decried as a horrible task master for insisting on at least four hour workdays

Napping in the workplace and surliness if interrupted

So many volunteers close by

So much traffic and pollution

Being told with surprising regularity what women don’t know about or can’t do (often things Kiyomi is well informed about and does)

The Big Man culture that prioritizes so much that we detest in our own culture: toady-ism, favoritism, consumerism, chauvinism, insert most any other unpleasant “-ism” here

Constant verbal harassment when walking down the street

“Corruption at every level” really is just that

Pretty consistent water and electricity with constant drips and power surges

Access to cheese and peanut butter but at extraordinary cost

Obsession with all things “Western,” while also adhering to “our culture” (a phrase most often brought out around topics such as women’s equality, girls’ education, homosexuality, and why these things are bad)

The number of men unwittingly wearing women’s clothing

A level of “Christian-speak” sans Christian activity that makes American Christian hypocrisy look like a small problem

To be fair, it isn’t everyone or all the time that we find frustrating or discouraging. We frequently meet kind and generous people who are eager to help us on our way and want us to have a good experience of their country. We’ll never forget the older gentleman who, seeing us looking a bit lost after coming into Yaounde a bit late and through a different agence than usual, said, “My children, where are you going?” We told him, and he told us exactly what to say to the francophone taxi drivers, and how much we should pay. He had us repeat it back to him to be sure we wouldn’t send ourselves to some different part of town than we intended. Then there were the farmers who saw us across a ravine, well off the path we meant to hike, who yelled to the herdsmen grazing their cattle nearby, who came and found us and took us to the trail we wanted, and walked it with us until we were past all the forks that might lead us astray. Recently nearly everyone has been apologetic on behalf of the motorcycle taxi that hit Kiyomi, almost as though it was a reflection on them personally that this happened, and very forgiving of her very rude use of the left hand! One mami gave Kiyomi a package of cookies along with her well-wishes when we passed by her boutique.

So, is there a wrap-up thought?  We don’t really know at this point – we have another year though to figure it out.  For now we’re just looking forward to an impending family visit and, really, when you live in the developing world, family is a very good thing indeed!

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Social Media Activism

Malawi: Social Media Activism Takes Root

Interesting article on how social media is shaping change in Africa.

http://allafrica.com/stories/201204130303.html

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Our tailor

Claudia* is our age, early to mid thirties.  She is strikingly pretty, petite and slender with a ready smile and a sparkle in her dark eyes.  She lives in and works from two rooms in a neat little duplex in a shared compound, off a dirt road on a hill and down a dirt path between planted crops.  The compound shares water.  She puts her stove under a table during work hours, and puts her work under the table when she cooks for her small family.  She has two little girls, Joyful and Grace, 4 and 18 months.  Joyful is exactly as her name would imply, seeming to find utter delight in every breath she takes, constantly laughing and making her sister laugh too.  Grace toddles around, sharing her discoveries of the world with her sister and her mother.  Claudia does not send Joyful, with Grace tied on her little back, to run errands, or send the girls away until their needed for work.  She’s attentive and loving, and they thrive in the utter confidence of her care.  Joyful goes to nursery school, and Claudia always says customers can come by at any time, except when she goes to pick Joyful up from school.  They are delightfully under foot and ready to share their fascination and enjoyment and games with customers who come to drop off or pick up orders.  Claudia sews beautifully, creating unique, made-to-order clothing from the fabrics we bring her.  We try things on in the bedroom, sometimes asking for the fit to be adjusted here or there.  Some volunteers say she is a little expensive.  The little girls love each other and are growing up as sisters, but they don’t have the same parents.  Joyful is Claudia’s granddaughter.  Joyful’s mother is in Claudia’s village, going to school.  Her father acknowledges that she is his child, but he’s young too, and his family does not recognize his daughter.  And children - feeding, clothing, housing, schooling – are the sole responsibility of the mother in this culture.  Fathers give gifts, and it’s nice when they do, but not required.  Now we’ve seen many men carrying babies, holding the hands of small children, in complete adoration of their children, but it’s accepted and even expected here that men will have different families in different villages, and they can just as easily say that those children are not their responsibility.  Claudia makes sure her oldest daughter and her granddaughter go to school.  Claudia is our age.

*Names changed.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

The Updated Recommended Packing List

A year later, here’s what we brought and wish we’d brought, with a few things taken off the list that we didn’t need.  Happy packing to the new volunteers!


3 tank tops
3 T-shirts
7 shirts
1 sweater
3 skirts
4 pants (1 capri)
bathing suit and rash guard (diving shirt)
jacket/sweatshirt
belt
assorted underthings and socks
hat
sunglasses
umbrella
headlamp
travel towel
hammock
camp mirror
iPod
insect repellent
Benadryl gel
toothbrush and paste
shampoo
soap
deodorant
moisturizer
Japanese washcloth
razor and replacement blades
mask and snorkel
shoe polish kit
dress shoes
flip flops
Vibram five fingers
neti pot
Gatorade powder
kitchen knife
pour over coffee basket and filter
assorted spices
vitamins and prescriptions for three months
sandwich size Ziplock bags
journal
mini travel sized bible
laptop
flash drive
external hard drive
Peace Corps Volunteer paperwork and handbooks
chapstick
bobby pins and hair ties
measuring cup
measuring spoons
travel Scrabble, Uno, and a deck of cards
underwater camera housing
camera
sunscreen
extra soap, shampoo, sunscreen, toothbrushes and make-up (3 months worth)
passport/money belt
can opener
hair cutting scissors
speakers
duct tape
straight razor and strop
shaving brush and cup
combination padlock
hand sanitizer
wash cloths
travel sewing kit
favorite junk food
tea/hot chocolate
calendar
crossword/sudoku books
ear plugs
hashi (also known as chopsticks)
sleep mask

Friday, April 27, 2012

Fifty Years of Service

 

At our swearing-in, our Country Director asked the question, then as we celebrated Peace Corps’ fiftieth anniversary, and this year move into the fiftieth year of Peace Corps presence in Cameroon, have we succeeded?
This is an important question to consider.  In any organization, any action plan must include measurable outcomes; how will we know when we’ve reached our goal?
She said that during celebrations worldwide, there were reports of people saying how much Peace Corps Volunteers of the past had affected their lives for the better.  She went on to describe the three goals of Peace Corps: to provide technical training to host country nationals at the invitation of their government; to share American culture with host country nationals; and to share host country culture with Americans.
There are common jokes here that “it’s all about goals two and three,” and that drinking a 33, a popular beer here, constitutes 33% of our job.
She then wished us all well on our journeys to our posts.

Did you notice what was missing there?

We’ve read descriptions of Cameroon from explorers of the past, from sixty years ago, one hundred and twenty years ago, and we recognize the descriptions, because if we hadn’t known what years these accounts had been written in, we’d have though they were describing circumstances here today.  What does it say that after fifty years of Peace Corps presence, not to mention the numerous other development workers sent in from around the world annually, descriptions of Cameroon are exactly the same as they were one hundred years ago?  Have we succeeded?
Missionaries have, after a fashion.  Everywhere you turn in the Anglophone region you hear a variety of God-talk, and find strange snippets of misspelled misquotes from the Bible on the back of most taxis.  The Francophone region is slightly more secular, but still most everyone attends one church or another, or a mosque, and you find the same snippets of biblical sounding phrases in French.
The country still has one of the highest HIV infection rates in the world, and has been rated the most corrupt nation in the world.  Single motherhood and thirty-something grandmothers are common enough to not bear mention.  Mistreatment of women and girls is frequent.  Alcoholism is rampant.  Officials often require financial “motivation” to do their jobs or assure that paperwork doesn’t go missing.  Even in picking up a package from the post office, one may be required to give a “gift” of money or something from the package to the postmaster in order to have the package released (we are very grateful for the arrangements made by our regional office manager to avoid this).  And that’s just the social ills.
Have we succeeded?
That doesn’t even get into cholera outbreaks and routine illness due to such simple things as a failure to wash hands; constant threat of malaria; starvation in the north because the roads haven’t been paved or maintained; drought; lack of nutrition; limited access to health resources; lack of education across the board.

Have we succeeded?

Have we?

During a National Peace Corps Association event before coming into Peace Corps service, we were told that Sargent Shriver said in an essay about Peace Corps that the ideal situation would be for Peace Corps Volunteers to be in and out of a developing nation within one decade.  That our objective, as with any kind of development or aid work, should be to work ourselves out of a job.  Granted, ideals are about what would happen in a perfect world, which none of us live in.  And after living and working in Cameroon with Peace Corps, we’ve learned that any timeline must be the “worst case scenario” timeline, then doubled.  But isn’t five times longer than anticipated a bit excessive?  Is staying in Cameroon for another decade, two, five, really going to make the difference, when after one hundred years descriptions of the place remain unchanged?  Is that the best use of tax-payer dollars?  Of the time, effort, resources, skills of the volunteers who have believed in the mission and vision of Peace Corps, and left our homes, families and lives behind to follow it?  Are we making a difference?  Have we succeeded? 

We still believe in Peace Corps, the vision of world peace through understanding.  The mission of sharing knowledge to equip people to find their own solutions to the problems they face.  We still believe in the ability of a few passionate, motivated individuals to change the world.  But perhaps Cameroon is simply not ready to receive the training and skills that Peace Corps is prepared to offer, when motivation and commitment to make change is so sorely lacking.  Is it perhaps time to start thinking about an exit strategy?  And come back when the most common request is not for money and resources, but for the training to achieve things for Cameroon, by Cameroonians, without the need to rely on continual support from the West.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Peace Corps Oscars

 

Best movies to watch about Peace Corps that aren’t about Peace Corps.

 

1. Beauty and the Beast – Belle is a PCV, and we don’t know what medieval France was like, but we do know that the opening sequence was set in Cameroon.

2. Run Fatboy Run – because it’s not just about you, it’s about telling that guy who is cooler than you could ever hope to be, who starts sentences with things like, “Back when I was a Navy Seal…” and “When I was a professional paragliding instructor to Bono…” or “I’m considering a couple offers for the movie rights,” that, “Well, you know, back when I lived in Africa… no big deal…” (we kid!)  Actually, that wall he hits is a real thing, and it comes up often, and you’ve just gotta push through.  And anything starring Simon Pegg (Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz) is a real treat!

3. Batman – the new ones, not that cartoony mess certain directors made of our favorite superhero – fighting corruption, injustice, and evil in it’s many forms…  You can see the parallels, right?

4. The Quiet Gardener or Blood Diamond – because instead of sitting at home feeling riddled with guilt, you can sit at home and feel not so bad, because, well, you’re trying to do something. (But make sure to follow this up with Run Fatboy Run, or Beauty and the Beast, because they’re still depressing…)

5. Zombie Movies – Just think of your Peace Corps experience as preparation for the zombie apocalypse.  Going out after dark is risky.  Bars on the windows and a metal door are good things – again, bolt the door after dark.  Running water and electricity are luxuries.  Machetes (cutlass in NW Cameroon) are ubiquitous gardening tools that double as security/beheading devices. Attend wounds immediately – any open wound is a avenue for infection. Know where your water comes from – dysentery will slow you down.  Remember that nearly everything you learn in Peace Corps, even the hard lessons, will aid you in the inevitable trials to come…

6. The Men Who Stare at Goats – other than the fact that PCVs have Jedi Powers, it’s a raucous ride through foreign climes wherein one is expected to use abilities one may or may not actually have.  And it sort of captures the absurdity of it all.  AND you can enjoy that slight feeling of superiority every time Ewan McGregor calls Mahmoud, “Mohammed,” because you can tell the difference with your PCV powers of integration.

7. The Family Stone, Darjeeling Limited, The Royal Tenenbaums – don’t feel bad about running away to the other side of the world!  There are families way more dysfunctional than yours… And anything that makes you laugh when you are feeling homesick is a good thing.

8. The Adventures of Tin Tin – racing around the world, setting wrongs right, holding up your drunkest and dearest friends…. like you do.  Plus, the voice of Simon Pegg again.

9. The Chronicles of Narnia – because, really, it isn’t all about you.  It’s the opportunity to bring grace into a stranger’s life, to be their answered prayer, to hold to what you believe you’re meant to be doing with your life, even against all odds.  And when isn’t it a good time for Liam Neeson’s fatherly rumble to set all things right?

10. Jurassic Park – whether you still see this film as an action/adventure, or you’ve seen it so many times that it’s become comedy, no matter where you find yourself in the world, you can rest assured that you are safe from velociraptor attack, even if your computer system goes down and you live in an area bearing a striking resemblance to Isla Nublar.  And, come on – it’s Jurassic Park – one of the most quotable movies of all time (see Jack for examples)! And PCVs love movie quotes!

 

What Not to Watch – okay, so some of these are a little unavoidable but view at your own risk.

World War II movies – nothing, no matter how much you think it sucks, will ever make anything clad in a Nazi uniform the bearer of a warm and fuzzy.

No Reservations, Chocolat, other films about Beautiful Food – why torment yourself with things you have approximately one year, five months, nine days and seventeen hours (but who’s counting?) before you can even think about tasting again?

Black Swan or Dorian Gray – you’re already going to have days when you think you might be going crazy… So… just don’t.

Hotel Rwanda – I know you’re in Africa, or someplace equally exotic, and Rwanda is in Africa and/or equally exotic too, but this one goes with the WWII movies, not the African message movies.  Watch Madagascar instead.