Wednesday, January 7, 2015

The Finale

It still hasn’t hit me that I’m not going back.  I have moments of shocking realization but the rest of the time I still feel like I am on a vacation.  I wonder how long it will last.  

Saying goodbye was hard and weird.  In their culture they don’t cry, so I tried my best to do the same.  I gave it a good run but buckled toward the end saying goodbye to my closest friends.  In Burkina they do EVERYTHING with their right hand.  However, one of their traditions is that when someone is leaving, they give a handshake with their left hand.  They consider it an “incorrect handshake” meaning you will need to come back soon to do a proper one.  

Dabre had a party for me on my last night in village.  She spent three days making the local alcohol, dolo, and it was ready around 3pm.  She also borrowed a cd player and some speakers so we drank and danced and people stopped by to say goodbye.  In the evening, I paused from the party to go have dinner with the clinic staff.  We ordered chicken and they gave me some presents.  Later on, I went back to Dabre's and stayed up really late teaching them the Macarena and other dances.  

Dabre Making Dolo 
In the morning, another friend came and picked me up in his car (the one villager I know who has a car) and drove me to the capital.  Leaving my village and watching everyone stare at the car going down the dusty dirt road was an image I will never forget.  Right before I left the boundaries of Komtoega I took this picture.  

I spent the next few days in Ouaga finalizing paperwork and saying goodbye to other volunteers.  On the last day, we had a pinning ceremony for the volunteers that were leaving at the same time as me.  Dabre and the head nurse came to Ouaga for the ceremony and to say goodbye.  We went out for lunch afterwards and then I went to the airport and headed for Cameroon.  
The Pinning Ceremony


The Airport Crew 
I travelled for one month after I left Burkina.  I went to Cameroon to visit a college friend who was doing Peace Corps there, then to Morocco, and then Spain.  It was an awesome trip.  I got to travel with my family in Morocco and a high school friend in Spain.  The rest of the trip I spent traveling with some of my closest volunteer friends.  Cameroon was really cool because I could compare Peace Corps experiences.  Cameroon was way prettier and more developed then Burkina.  Although both countries have their challenges, the West African friendliness was evident all around.  Below are some photos of my month long trip. 
Sevilla, Spain
Limbe, Cameroon 
Marrakech, Morocco 
While I was in Spain I received  great news from a Burkinabe friend.  I’m not sure if you remember a blog post about Ismael.  Ismael was a guest speaker at one of the conferences I organized.  He is a quadriplegic and lost his arms and legs in a train accident at the age of two. Miraculously he lived and is now a university student in the capital, studying human rights.  He is an amazing man who is extremely motivated to change the lives of disabled people in Burkina.  He works hard to make the universities and other public facilities handicap accessible.  (To this day no cabs or buses can accommodate him.)  When I met him I could hear in his voice how passionate he is about making a difference.   Later, I had the opportunity to talk to the ambassador of the USA in Burkina and he mentioned a USA program designed to teach about the Disabilities Awareness Act and other programs and activities we have for the disabled population.  I helped Ismael apply and write a resume.  While in Spain he told me he got the position!  He will be coming here in July for a few weeks and I couldn’t be happier!  

Me and Ismael on My Last Day in Burkina Faso 

It seems crazy but this will be my last blog post for this chapter in my life.  I want to thank everyone who read my blog, called me, sent me cards, care-packages, or emails.  It was so nice to talk to my mom on the phone and hear her say she ran into someone in Alexandria who said they have been following my experience.  Having and blog and friends to share my experience with made it so much more fun and enjoyable.  I am forever grateful.  Many people have been asking if I will ever go back to Burkinabe and I always say absolutely!  I can’t wait to go visit. 

Below is a link to a video I made of my time in Burkina.  Enjoy. 



N

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Seeing the World Through Their Eyes

This photo recently won 1st place in Peace Corps' Viewfinder Contest, Defining Moments.  The photo will be used in a new nationwide advertising campaign and is featured in their new public service announcement.  Here is the link to the video: Defining Moments

The story has been covered on the Midwest Peace Corps Volunteer blog: https://midwestpcvs.wordpress.com/category/country-of-service/africa-and-middle-east/burkina-faso/


It was also featured on the University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Letters and Science News: http://news.ls.wisc.edu/announcements/ls-alums-photo-featured-in-peace-corps-psa/  


Here is the link to the competition and the other winners: ‪Photo Contest

On Christmas Day, I was inside a church celebrating the holiday with the local Catholic population when I saw this young Muslim girl looking through the wall of the church. Having just arrived in a Muslim-majority village a few days earlier, I was amazed at how peacefully the different religious groups coexist.

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Here Comes the Sun

Hello Everyone,

Only two weeks left in Komtoega, Burkina Faso.  It simply doesn't seem real.  

I am planning on writing one last final blog post and will probably share it sometime in December.  However, I wanted to show you something I have been working on for the past couple of months. 

I have always been very interested in the experiences of other Peace Corps Volunteers.  Who do they work with? What does their village look like?  I decided to try to get several volunteers from all over the world together to sing one song, showcasing the awesome people we work with and to prove that one song can bring us all together!  The video is below.  Enjoy, and please share! 


Sunday, September 14, 2014

23 Months Down, 2 To Go!

I absolutely can’t believe that two months from today I will beattending my pinning ceremony in the capital and boarding a plane. (Destination to be determined but I am going to travel a bit before coming home.) I remember when I first got to site and was worried about how much down-time there was, all the older volunteers told me that the second year flies by. I remember thinking, but how is that even possible? I now get what they mean.

I spent the last weeks of July at home with family and friends, including the newest addition to my family, MILOU! I brought my Burkina dog home. She is already gaining weight and gets along with Leo. Being home was awesome, as usual. I went to a concert and a baseball game, ate great food, saw friends and family, and we even squeezed in time at the beach!

When I got back I attended our Close of Service Conference, which prepares us for life after Peace Corps. We learned how to talk about the Peace Corps during an interview, worked on our resumes and interview questions, saw examples of the Description of Service document we are required to write, and talked about how to say goodbye. The conference was helpful and a total wake up call that I am actually leaving Burkina and about done with the Peace Corps. It is totally bittersweet and full of mixed emotions. I am excited for the next chapter in my life, ready to have air conditioning, electricity and running water, but unbelievably sad and upset about having to leave my village, which has been my home for the last 2 years. I am totally dreading the day I have to say goodbye to all my friends.

After the COS conference, my college friend Karla came to visit. Karla and I traveled before when I was living in Colombia and I was excited we would get to explore another country together. She has also lived in Africa before, so she noticed some similarities between Burkina and where she has been. It was so nice to have a friend come visit. When my family came we rented a car, but with Karla, we lived exactly how I live, bush taxis and all. We spent a week in village, where we made tofu, taught kids how to do cat’s cradle, visited baby weightings, attended a baptism, and much more. Then we went to the main tourist spot in Burkina, which I hadn’t been too yet, Banfora! It is the southwest part of the country. We spent 2 days in Bobo first, and then continued about an hour and a half further to Banfora.



Bobo is home to the largest mosque and oldest neighborhood in Burkina. We did a walking tour of the old city, which was established long ago as a neutral ground for trade. We hired a guide who pointed out the areas of the city where the Muslims, animists, Catholics, musicians and welders lived. He also pointed out the areas for animal sacrifices, where they make the local beer, dolo, and where artists do their fabric paintings. After, we went across the street, to the mosque. It was really cool that we were allowed inside. We saw the area for men to pray, and the outside area for women. We also went on the rooftop of the mosque. The building itself is a cool old white colored building with wooden sticks poking out. The sticks where used as a ladder to build the building in 1893.


Then we traveled to Banfora where we stayed at an awesome hotel that gave us a Peace Corps discount. We did a day excursion hiking around beautiful domes and the Banfora waterfall. We made it back in the car right before the rain. At night we ate at a cute restaurant called MacDonald.



After Karla left, I returned to village for a few days, only to leave again for a youth development meeting and a monitoring and evaluating workshop. Youth development meetings are held every 3 months, which meant that this was my last meeting.

The Monitoring and Evaluating Workshop was put on by two, third-year volunteers, and the Health Office of the Peace Corps. I was selected to attend and present on the Healthy Schools Award Ceremony, and how I monitored and evaluated its success. My head nurse was also invited to attend and present with me. We had a great time at the conference and everyone was extremely interested in my project. We lectured to about 30 people, including people in the Ministry of Health, several development organizations, and other volunteers. During the conference we also presented on the family planning and reproductive health camp, Camp A.C.E that I helped create and implement in over 4 villages across Burkina. My Peace Corps friend Katie made this video below.




After the workshop I hurried home to prepare for Bike Tour, which was arriving at my site the next day. Bike Tour, is an event organized by the Gender and Development Committee in Peace Corps to raise money for gender and development projects. 8 volunteers had been biking around the Center-East region of the country and arrived at my site the morning of the 11th. In order to host Bike Tour you have to do a small talk in your village about gender, and include a training, on
the topic of your choice.



I had one of the nurses, Zongo, help me with this and also had Dabre translate for us. We started off the discussion using a picture of a man and a woman and asking who should do the following jobs. We said things like farmer, chief of a village, baker, teacher, etc. It was interesting because nobody thought a chief should be a female, however, in one city in Burkina, the chief is a female. We pointed that out so they could think more about gender roles and norms.

Later we talked about hygiene and how many of the restaurants don’t have hand washing stations. We talked about how this could be affecting their business because customers might be getting sick, and blaming it on their food when really it is that their hands were’t clean. After the talk, the volunteers split up into groups and helped install 4 hand washing stations in my market. I thought the day went really well and I was happy to see that the next day, most of the restaurants had bought soap for their hand washing stations!



So what’s next on the agenda for the following two months? I have to finish up my Flags for the Future project. I will be going back through the neighborhoods where we already did the Education Campaign and see if the statistics have changed. I’ll give out new flags to the families who now have all their children in school, and close out this project by submitting the final report with the grant. I have also been working on a world map in a satellite village. I’ve been doing it on the wall of Yagance School, which was the winner of my Healthy Schools Award Competition. It has not been easy to do, especially with the rain, so I am eager and ready to get this done with! I have also been trying to pile all the work I’ve done into easy manuals so if future volunteers want to do the same, they will know how.


I have a bunch of other things I want to do but I have a feeling time is going to catch up with me and before I know it I’ll be in Ouaga, leaving. In about a month I have my medical appointments and after that, I’m basically done. Some of my friends have already left, and the rest of us will be gone between now and December. My current plan is going to either Ghana or Cameroon, then Morocco, then Spain and then home for Christmas. I’ll try to squeeze in one more blog post before I head out! Thanks to everyone who has been reading my blog and encouraging me along the way. I couldn’t have lasted here without your thoughtful comments, emails, packages and phone calls!

XOXO,
N

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Summertime and the Livin’ is Busy

June has been a crazy month. Between work, a sick dog, summer camps and visitors I can finally “complain” about being too busy! Summer is now in full swing in Burkina, which means all the schools are out and everyone is in the fields full time. For the last two weeks I’ve been preparing and implementing Camp A.C.E around the center-east region of Burkina. Camp A.C.E, which means Apprendons Nos Corps Ensemble (Learning our Bodies Together) was a family planning and reproductive health camp for 6th and 7th grade Burkinabe youth. The camp was held for 3 days in Boudry, 3 days in Komtoega and 3 days in Linoghin. Three Peace Corps Volunteers, who collaborated with local NGOs like Social Action and Marie Stopes, local village clinics, Burkinabe doctors and nurses, and Peace Corps Staff members, organized the camp. Sessions covered puberty, the risks of early pregnancy, HIV/AIDS, violence, gender norms, the importance of family planning, and the different types of family planning methods.



My camp had 22 participants, both boys and girls, all middle school age. The nurses at the clinic helped me lead sessions, as did two amazing Peace Corps Burkina staff members. We ended the camp with certificates and a group photo. The head nurse also talked about the importance of this camp and encouraged the students to go home and show their families the manuals and certificates A few days later I ran into one of the boutique owners in my village. I was with two other volunteers who had helped me with camp. We were entering the bar to get a beer. As we entered he was calling my name and yelling, “Thank you, thank you, Natalie.” I thought he was being sarcastic and saying that because I didn’t come over to introduce my friends to him. So, we went over and I asked why he was saying thank you. Turns out his daughter was part of the camp and he wanted to thank me for the certificate and for inviting his daughter to camp. He also told me that he stopped by the camp one of the days to make sure she was participating. I was so happy to see such a proud father supporting his daughter! Later in the week the same thing happened with another dad who was on his bike and started peddling and chasing after me to say thanks. He said he saw the pretty certificate and wanted to tell me thank you in person.



The camp is hopefully going to be implemented all over the country in the coming years. Already a newer volunteer is going to use our manuals, camp logo, and lesson plans and implement the camp in his village later this summer! I’ve been trying to quickly finish the Flags for the Future project, since schools are ending and everyone is in the fields. The first part of the project is done and we will start back up again in October with the second part. However, I was asked to write a success story about this project for the last reporting period Peace Corps document. I thought I would share with you what I wrote:
It has been hard for people in my village to realize the value of education and all that it can provide. The school board director of my village and I would spend hours talking about this problem and ways to get my village to care! We came up with a project called “Flags for the Future.” It involves two huge door-to-door campaigns to teach families about the importance of education and why both boys and girls should be in school. The project began by training members of the APE (Fathers of Students Association) on how to do a campaign and why the issue of education is important for the development of a village. The plan was to go door-to-door and talk about this issue, ask how many children were school age, and then how many of the students were currently enrolled. All the information would be recorded and we would track this information to see if any changes happen while the project is being carried out. If the families did have all their children in school, we gave them a flag. The flags were made for free by local tailors. Each had an image of a girl and a boy walking to school, with the words "Our Future" on top. Then we planned to go around to all the families again, at the start of the next school year, ask the same questions, and see if any of the numbers have changed. We trained several members and explained that we would start the campaign in the coming weeks. During the last part of the training we asked the fathers if they had all their children in school. Unfortunately one of the fathers, Hamadou, said no, one of his kids guards cattle. The Inspector quickly gave him suggestions, like building a fence for the cattle, or creating a rotating schedule were all members of the family could help out with this task. He seemed half interested and I began to worry about the outcome of my project. I realized I should have asked this question before picking the fathers to work with me. It would have been better to choose fathers who already had all their kids in school. Anyway, there was nothing I could do now, so we ended the session and picked a date to start the campaign. The campaign has now been implemented in two villages, and the results definitely show that there was a need for these talks on education. Most of the door-to-door visits were completed with both me and one of the trained facilitators. However, a few times I gave them the materials and had them go out on their own to conduct the campaign and record numbers. Recently, I rode my bike to Hamadou's house so that we could continue with the campaign. I arrived at his house and saw a flag hanging outside his door. I was puzzled because I knew one of his kids was not in school. I assumed he thought the flag was pretty and wanted one up regardless of the fact that he didn't meet the criteria to get one. I decided to ask him about the flag and he said, “Oh yeah, I put one up.” I reminded him of the fact that he can't have a flag because of his child who guards cattle instead of being in school. Quickly Hamadou said, “Oh, no, after the formation and our talk I realized it was better to put him in school. Since I am part of the parents association I went directly to the principal and asked if my son could go back to school.” Apparently she said yes! Even if this project only changes one families' thinking, I can now successfully say I have done just that!


At the end of June I also had the Healthy Schools Award ceremony. This was a project I started at the beginning of the school year with 7 elementary schools in village. I trained one teacher and one community health worker from each school on how to teach kids about health and how to implement fun health activities in classrooms. Then I gave each school a health activities resource book and the competition began in October. Each month schools submitted monthly reports and the school board president and I would calculate the points based on a 3 point scale. We would visit each of the schools to check-in, make sure they were actually doing the activities that they were reporting, and encourage and congratulate them on their progress. The competition ended in May and we announced the winners at the end of June. I was happy that my boss came for the closing ceremony. Schools showcased activities that they did throughout the year, such as songs about malaria or HIV/AIDS, demonstrations on how to properly wash your hands, and theater skits on family planning! The end results of the competition were amazing. The schools managed to do 203 health activities over the course of the school year! These activities fell into five categories: malaria, hygiene, HIV/AIDS, family planning and STIs, and nutrition. The winner of the competition got a Tippy Tap hand washing station donated by WA-WASH (USAID program), a world map mural and one soccer ball and one handball (donated by the school board.) The second place winners received some soap donated by the board of directors at the clinic and two tee shirts donated by Peace Corps. Third place got moringa seeds, a plant that has a ton of nutritional value and grows quickly. All schools got a certificate and a Peace Corps calendar. I was really proud of the event and happy that my boss got to see everything! She sent me a text after that said, “ Hi Natalie. Thank you again for inviting me to the closing of this great activity. I was so impressed. I knew that it was an outstanding activity but I was just over the moon watching your students presenting their health activities. From this, I got a lot of inspiration for the health program and how we can guide volunteers to implement health projects through cross-sectorial collaboration and in the schools. We feel so lucky to have in you in the health sector.”

Now it is the middle of July and I swear it just started. I celebrated July 4th with some friends in a village close to mine and then we had Emma’s birthday party (for the second year in a row) in my village. We grilled four chickens, played badminton, made a cake and watched the World Cup.



Now I’m counting down the days till I go on vacation. My family bought me a ticket home so I am crazy excited to spend some days in Alexandria visiting with friends and family, eating corn on the cob, salads, ribs, bbq, and all the other good stuff America has to offer in summertime! N

Saturday, June 21, 2014

The Future Leaders of Burkina

Hello,
Just wanted to share this video which summarizes the Youth Leadership and Active Citizenship Conference that I organized in March 2014 in Garango, Burkina Faso.  Click here to enjoy the video!  N

     

Friday, June 6, 2014

LET IT RAIN, LET IT RAIN!

Time is really starting to fly by and even the villagers seem to be counting and noticing that I don’t have many months left.  (About 5 to be exact)  They keep coming up and asking if I have to leave or how much longer they have with me.  Dabre has started to ask, “What will I do once you leave?”  I know when the day does arrive I will be really sad to say goodbye.  I definitely want to come back to visit as often as I can and I also want to find a way for Dabre to come visit me.  (Anyone want to donate to the Dabre visiting USA fund?)

On April 25th I had a huge event in my village for World Malaria Day.  Malaria is the most common sickness in my village and it is an extremely deadly disease across Africa.  I worked with one of the primary schools, the clinic and the high school to put on the event.  The primary school children learned a song called “Luttre Contre Le Palu” which means fight against malaria.  They sang the song in front of around 100 people who came to the event.  After the song, the high school students put on a play about the dangers of malaria and how to protect yourself.  I also had a role in the play, the mosquito, which my village is still talking about.  They keep coming up to me laughing and making a buzzing noise like I did in the play.   Apparently, me as a mosquito is extremely funny.  The play in general went well and everyone really liked it. After the play, the head nurse came and talked about malaria in Komtoega, and which groups are most at risk of dying.  (FYI it’s children 0-5 years old, pregnant women and elders).

In May I was lucky enough to get more visitors!  My aunt Kathy and my cousin Cameron came to see me for a week. We had a blast!  We spent 2 nights in Ouagadougou and 3 nights in my village.  In village, we visited the two primary schools, played with balloons at the preschool, helped an English class at the high school write letters, visited the church, tried the local dish of tô, had a nice picnic lunch under a tree by my house, and had some beers with my friends.  The weather, after much worry, was actually okay, and we were able to sleep inside!  The village was so impressed that more of my family came to visit.  Cameron got several village proposals but we explained that she had to go back to finish school.  Aunt Kathy was able to speak some French with the women and really enjoyed visiting the schools and just walking around the market.  When we got to Ouaga we treated ourselves to a nice lunch (in air conditioning) and went shopping at an artisan village.  Aunt Kathy also took a bunch of my friends out for drinks and dinner to one of our favorite places.  It is a bar that has burgers and kabobs and is situated on a rooftop in the “downtown” area of Ouaga.  It was really nice for her to meet my friends and even nicer for her to take us out!  THANKS AGAIN AUNT KATHY!

After my family left, I went with another volunteer, Kara, and her visitor friends, to a village called Sabou.  It has a sacred lake with crocodiles.  The crocodiles have been there for thousands of years and the village is very proud of them.  They do not harm the villagers and the villagers don’t touch them.  It is a place to visit and learn about the history of the village and take a photo with the crocodiles.  To get them out of the water villagers attached a live chicken to a string and flapped it around until the crocodiles came out to eat it. After they ate,  we were ready to take a photo with the happy crocodile that just had a delightful feast.  I could barely watch the chicken being killed and was extremely nervous about the photo.  I basically ran over yelled to my friend to hurry and snap that photo and then ran away.

Later in the week I celebrated Kara’s birthday in the capital.   During the day, Kara and I and some friends went go-carting.  It was really expensive but a fun change of scenery!  At night we found a wine bar where we had some wine and cheese and then went out dancing
.
Rainy season is starting so, if it is not market day, everyone is in the fields.  The villagers really want me to have my own field and grow vegetables but manual labor is really not my thing.   I do go to the fields and play with the kids while the parents plant corn, rice, or beans.  I usually try to help for a while but I get blisters on my hands and they all laugh.  Rainy season is so important here because most of the villagers are subsistence farmers.  This means that what they plant and harvest they use as their own food.  So if the rain doesn’t come, there is no food for them to eat.  After every rainstorm here, when the sun comes out, they say a saying in Bissa that means "God gave us rain!"  A small majority of the villagers also plant to sell their product, so even for them, if it doesn’t rain, they won’t make money.  It is really interesting to watch my whole village turn from a dusty mess to a some-what pretty green, grassy farmland.  Let’s hope the rain keeps up!

At site, I have been busy wrapping up my "Healthy Schools Award Program", continuing with the "Flags for Development" distribution, and helping 5th graders prepare for their closing exam.  In 5th grade, students take a test called the CEP.  It is an extremely hard exam and necessary for students to pass on to 6th grade.  I have been working with one school in particular to implement a Jeopardy revision game.  A former volunteer made the game a few years ago and it really helps the students review.  Last year, out of about 80 students, only 18 passed the exam.  This year, they did a practice CEP test and the number of students was only a little bit higher.  The test requires that students get at least a 50%.  If students pass, they get the CEP certificate, which allows them to be eligible for certain jobs in the country later on.  However, this doesn’t immediately make them eligible for 6th grade.  Now, to continue on, they have two options.   One is to pay money to be able to go to 6th grade and the second is to re-do 5th grade to get a higher score.  However, once they reach 16, they can no longer take the test.  It is incredibly sad and frustrating to watch these kids study and take the test and either not pass or pass and not have the money to continue their education. The learning environment for these students is full of difficulties. I am sure if I were their age, in their shoes, I never would have passed! This particular classroom has 76 students.  Students sit five to a bench and there is one teacher.  I’ve been trying to teach them ways to study.  I show them how to make flashcards,  fold their sheets of paper in half to make  study guides and encourage them to quiz each other. Hopefully, some of these tricks will help.

I have also been working with some other volunteers to plan for Camp A.C.E. (an acronym that in French means "learning our bodies together.")  This is a family planning and reproductive health camp for 6th graders. The camp is for three days and there will be about 20 students participating.  I'll let you know how it goes!   N
























Tuesday, April 15, 2014

A Brighter Future

Hello Everyone!  It has been an eventful couple of months and I am excited to finally get a blog post written.  I’m currently writing this in my village, around 10 a.m. and it is already 90 degrees outside.  So yes, if you are wondering, hot season is in full swing!

Last month I celebrated International Women’s Day in my village.  On March 8th, every year, countries around the world celebrate women.  Even though the holiday is not a big deal in the United States, here, schools are cancelled, events are planned, and men and women buy matching cloth and get clothes made with it.  Each year, the event has a theme related to women’s rights, women’s equality and gender development.  This year’s theme was economic development and income generating activities.  Emma came to celebrate in my village, bringing along her best friend and her daughter.  Komtoega celebrated with speeches from the mayor, free drinks for the women, and lots of dancing.  At one point, I was even called up to dance in front of 200 people.  During that particular dance, two women danced around in a circle, and at one point, one stomped her feet and then they bumped butts.  The goal is to bump the hardest.  If this happens everyone laughs and another lady comes into the circle to “compete”.  Of course my village thought it would be hilarious if I participated during this dance. So, I went up for all of 20 seconds, lost (obviously), and then sat down.   They thought it was very entertaining.     Later in the afternoon, I got a man to walk around in a traditional pagne (which is something only women wear). He also put a baby on his back, to show that both men and women can help out with children.  Here only women carry babies around.

After the ceremony, Emma, Alima (Emma’s friend) and I got invited to have lunch with the mayor.  We had chicken soup and bread and it was delicious.  In the afternoon, the Komtoega Women’s Association organized a women’s soccer match.  Although Komtoega does have a few girls’ soccer teams, there is still a huge divide between the boys and girls.  Boys’ teams get cool jerseys, nets on their goal posts, and a huge crowd to watch the matches.  Girls’ teams get none of the above.  However, on this day, a huge crowd showed up to watch, and we had a ref!  I also played in the match and it was so fun.  My team won 1-0, although we stopped early because our ball popped.  All in all it was a great day!

Me, Emma and Alima at the March 8 Women's Day Celebration.
The fabric we are wearing was specific fabric to celebrate the day!

At the end of the March was the Youth Leadership and Active Citizenship Conference that I have been organizing and planning for a few months.  35 youth from around the country participated in the event.  17 Peace Corps Volunteers each brought 1 or 2 youth counterparts that they identified as leaders in their communities.  Both volunteers and Burkinabe led sessions on leadership, gender norms, health talks, project planning, and goal setting.  The conference also had a disability rights component.  We had 5 deaf students, 2 physically handicap students, and 1 student with epilepsy, who also participated in the event.  The deaf students had a sign language trainer, who also taught the other participants how to sign hello, good morning, and other easy phrases.  The last day of the conference was the project-planning day.  Youth counterparts and volunteers worked together to organize a project that they will implement upon returning to village.  Project ideas included things like summer reading camps, malaria health talks or school gardens.  The deaf students wanted to organize a project on HIV/AIDS.  They said that the HIV/AIDS session during the conference was the first time anyone had given them a health talk on this topic.  They said the deaf community usually doesn’t get health talks, and that for their project, they want to do HIV/AIDS health talks with the deaf community!    
The other cool part of the conference was the guest speakers.  We had two physically handicapped speakers come and talk to the youth.  One speaker has devoted his life to making Fada, a city out East, more handicap accessible.  The other, Ismael, is a paraplegic since age 2, who now studies at the University of Ouagadougou, where he takes notes with his mouth!  The students were really interested in these amazing men, asked tons of questions, and wanted photos with them after. (More info on Isamel below!)

Ismael showing students how he writes with his mouth.

After the conference I was able to compare some pre and post-test scores and calculate that 79.4% of the students scored higher on the post-test than pre-test.  I was excited to see they all learned something and am even more excited to see what projects they complete in their villages.  One of the Peace Corps staff members came and helped out with one of the sessions and  said it was the best youth conference he has been a part of!

Participants of Youth Leadership and Active Citizenship Conference

I continue  working on the "Flags for the Future" project.  I am almost done with one of the neighborhoods, and then will work on implementing the project in another.  One of the hardest things about the project is when families tell me why their children aren’t in school.  For many, it is money problems, or that their kids have specials needs and dropped out because they weren't doing well. Sometimes families said that their children were sick during the start of school and weren’t allowed to sign up late.  For most of these, I can come up with an answer or help them figure out a plan to get the kids in school.  The other day, however, one of the families explained that the father is blind and to make any money, the son and father travel around begging.  They travel to places where transportation stops and ask travelers for money.  They said that if the boy goes to school, who will walk around with the father, and how will they get any money?  I tried to think of solutions but wound up leaving with no real answer.

In April I attended the Women’s Health and Leadership Conference with Dabre, my best friend in village.  Dabre is not only the hardest working lady I know, she is also the most caring person I have ever met.  She lives with her husband, Christopher,  and together they are the mother and father to the whole village.  They unfortunately couldn’t have any children of their own, however their house is always filled with neighborhood kids studying or playing games.  Her house is known as sort of a safe-haven and many people come to Dabre to ask for advice, financial help, or health questions.  She has told me numerous stories about helping children in abusive families, providing family planning advice, offering free liquid soap, at her expense, to poor families, paying education fees for high school students, and the list goes on!  We traveled together to Leo (the city where I spent the first two months training) for the 4-day conference.  12 other women from around the country also participated in the event.  The sessions covered health topics like hygiene, nutrition,  the reproductive system, gender topics like female circumcision and violence, and leadership sessions.   For many of the women, it was the first time they heard the word menstruation.  Dabre, who is 41, told me she had never been taught reproductive health and that she wants to teach younger girls about this stuff when we get back to village.  I can’t wait!

Dabre and I at the Women's Health and Leadership Conference

After the conference I visited the host family where I spent my first two months in country.  I love going back to see them and truly think of those months as some of the best times of my life.  Upon arriving to the village I heard people shout, “Natalie!   It’s Natalie!  She has come back!”  They are always so surprised and all the kids run over to greet me.  This time, going back, it was more shocking than the last.  My host dad had married a new wife - making the count 4 wives in all, the first wife had a 7-month-old baby, and the oldest girl, who is in 8/9th grade, was pregnant.  After catching up they cooked me lunch and brought out the old photo album that I gave to them over a year ago on the day I left.  They complimented me on my French skills (they have come along way since the first couple months!) and also asked if Burkina was very hard because I have lost a lot of weight.  After lunch my host dad and I biked back into the bigger city for me to catch a bus back to Ouagadougou.

A couple of weeks ago I got to spend the day with the new Ambassador of the United States in Burkina.  He is originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo, and met his wife there while she was a Peace Corps Volunteer! First we went to Garango, a bigger village about 12km from my house.  There is currently a third-year volunteer there and it was also the site of the Youth Development Conference that I talked about earlier.  After Garango, we traveled together to Gando, a smaller village by Tenkdogo.  We were going to check out a school built by a famous Burkinabe architect.  Upon arrival, it just so happened that the architect, Mr. Kere, was there!  Kere has won several awards for his architectural innovations in Burkina and abroad.  He was unbelievably inspiring and remarkable.  He was originally born in the village of Gando, which is why he built the school there.  The school is an outdoor school, however if it rains, everything remains protected.  Many of the ceilings are arched.  There is a library, reading center, basketball court, food kitchen, and clay floors in the classrooms.  The classrooms have natural ventilation because of the design, which makes it cool and breezy.  The school is a public school, with all Burkinabe teachers.  Kere has also built an opera center and several other schools like this all over the country. He is still fundraising for money to continue building schools in Burkina.

Ambassador and Mr. Kere
The Gando School

After Gando, the ambassador, his wife, 4 volunteers and some embassy workers had lunch together in Tenkodogo.  All day I had wanted to bring up a story of one of the motivational speakers present at my youth conference.  I was waiting for the perfect moment.  Finally, at lunch, I was able to tell his story!

Ismael, as mentioned above, is from Bobo, a city in the southwest of the country, where there is a train that runs from Burkina to the Ivory Coast.  At the age of 2 he was in a train accident and lost both his arms and legs.  The doctors told his mother to give up hope and let him die but she refused.  He was in the hospital for over 3 months and miraculously survived the accident.  His mother used to send him to school with a bag of candy so that kids would be nice to him.  He managed to study hard and is now a university student in Ouagadougou.  He also was the President of the first Handicap Students Association in Burkina.  He currently moves around with an electronic wheelchair.  He has been able to travel outside of Burkina a few times, including an eye-opening trip to the Ivory Coast.  During this visit he saw that the Ivory Coast had handicap accessible buses.  He was not aware that countries near Burkina have them.  It made him wonder why his country wasn’t providing accessibility options for handicap people.  Upon his return, he wrote a news article asking the Burkinabe government why they haven’t implemented handicap accessible buses.  He said he never got a response but others told him it was a money issue.  He expressed his desire to go to the United States to learn more about the rights of people with disabilities and how they live in the USA.  Then he can come back and continued to petition the Burkinabe government.  I told him I would do my best to come up with a way for him to visit America which is why I wanted to talk to the Ambassador and his staff.  When I brought the story up, they were very enthusiastic about the idea. They mentioned a program that sounds perfect for Isamel and told me to send them his contact information.  The program is focused on Disability Issues in the United States and is a two-week program in July 2015.  The project focuses on American efforts to enable the disabled to participate more fully in daily life and economic opportunity.  It will include activities aimed at improving the lives of people with disabilities and participants will learn about the Americans with Disability Act and how it has enhanced accessibility to education, employment, transportation systems, and buildings.  The deadline had already passed but they made an exception for Isamel and together we submitted his application on Friday.  They told him he was the first handicapped candidate in over 4 years!  Everyone cross your fingers that he gets picked!  He truly deserves the opportunity. When I asked the embassy staff how his interview went on Saturday, they said, “I don’t think I’ll have any trouble winning over the panel with his story.” They also mentioned that in his interview he said that he wants to run for president of Burkina Faso in 2020 just to raise awareness of handicapped people.  Anything is possible!

N

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Guest Post-Say it Ain't To(toe) *


 Mom covered the important stuff in the last blog post but here are few musings on my end… 


      For me, the image that will endure long after the events of the trip have blurred together, is arriving in Komtoega. Nat’s village sort of appears out of nowhere. After driving through a stretch of nothing but dust clouds, we began to see the outlines of buildings and animals. As we got closer and rolled our windows down, the children came running alongside our car, barefoot, grinning and chanting “Nat-a-lee,” “Nat-a-lee;” her dogs, Puppy and Milu at their heels. Before we had even gotten out of the vehicle they were bowing their heads with their arms crossed, a sign of respect. A group of the children went straight to the trunk and began placing our (relatively heavy) suitcases on their heads and carrying them inside. The rest of them stood with their hands out, waiting for us to shake and speaking to us in Bisa. Their enthusiasm never waned— even after they recognized that we could not speak their language. They followed us around all three days, every time we left Nat’s home, across the clinic grounds or through the market.

Dabre making to!


     The adults were no less enthused by our arrival. Natalie’s close friends Dabre and Mariatu  both prepared to (toe) for us to eat. To put it politely, I’m not really a fan. However, I recognized how extremely rude it is to deny food which takes such time and work to prepare. I did my best to eat when the chefs were watching. Apparently I wasn’t hiding it as well as I thought—Natalie thought it was hilarious to spoon out heaping bites and hand them to me to eat. Every time someone in Natalie’s village dropped by the house to offer us gifts, I silently pleaded that it wouldn’t be a communal bowl of to.

     Staying in village was harder than I expected and I think we all painfully realized how much we rely on the material comforts of air conditioning, a microwave, a toilet… I felt frustrated that I couldn’t charge my phone and then ashamed for not being able to last three days without it. In the end, leaving Komtoega was surprisingly bittersweet. Everyone had been so welcoming and gracious and they seemed genuinely upset to say goodbye. I have to be honest, visiting was unbelievably remarkable but I know I wouldn’t be able to do two years in the village. I remain truly in awe of Natalie’s gumption. She’s got tougher skin (and a tougher stomach) than I do. I remain unconvinced that the two of us are related...       





* Title Provided by John Moore

Monday, March 10, 2014

Guest Post - The Moores Go To Burkina



     Where to begin?  This was a trip unlike any past or probably future journey.  The many pictures Natalie sent didn't adequately prepare us for Burkina Faso.  Added to the landscapes of her photos were the sounds, smells, incredible heat and overwhelming enthusiasm of her villagers to meet and greet us.  Our arrival was a big event.
     We spent three chock-full days in Natalie's village, Komtoega.  We were welcomed by groups of  children and adults wanting to say hello and shake our hands.  It was evident that the arrival of Natalie's family was very exciting.  There was a steady stream of people coming to her small cinder-block home, many bearing gifts.  While there we received many home-cooked meals (including To with sauce and grilled goat meat), jewelry, two live chickens, pagne cloths for skirts and head wraps, baskets of onions, peanuts, a beautiful straw hat and more.  The mayor of the village took us to the local bar as did some of the other village officials. There we shared Burkina beer and platters of grilled meat.  Everywhere we went people were scurrying to get us chairs.  It was a bit overwhelming but we were humbled by the generosity of these people who are living under such extreme circumstances.
     First sight of the "marche" was unforgettable.  It is very large and busy and walking through it was amazing. Natalie seems well-liked in this village. It took us a very long time to get from one end of the market to the other.  Kids were following us and everyone was calling to Nat and wanted to be introduced.  Greetings were fairly formal and each one took several minutes. There was an amazing display of goods - tables full of produce, meat, cooked food, hardware supplies, cloth, etc.  We passed one table of goat heads!  It was evident that Natalie knew many people here and walked through the paths with confidence and enthusiasm talking with many people on a personal level.  (She learned that while she was away in Ouagoudougou picking us up, two babies were born and two people died - one the mother of the mayor and the other a teenage boy whose family couldn't afford the dialysis he needed.  When we visited the mayor's home the next day, his mother's body was there in the courtyard under a mound of stones.) We meandered through the village to the tailor's hut to pick up 3 dresses and a shirt that Nat had him make for us.  They're beautiful!
     The first night we spent in Nat's home I was wondering if we could really do this for 2 more nights.  It was very hot and we were so out of our comfort zone - no running water, no toilets, no showers, undrinkable water, etc.   We had to rely on Natalie to tell us everything and she had been translating for us all day long.  I told her that now she knew what it is like to have little kids around her all the time - exhausting.  Her home is fixed up with photos of family and friends and has a nice warm (literally and figuratively) feel to it.  It is also shared with many lizards who scurry around on the walls and a sweet, though neurotic, little dog she has adopted.  The evenings were spent in the dusty courtyard of Nat's friend, Dabre, along with many children.  They come to see Natalie and pass the time.
     Komtoega appears to be a peaceful village.  There are many Muslims, Catholics, Protestants, and animists who live and work together. Natalie has many acquaintances and knew the proper greetings and etiquette when introducing us.  We attended a Catholic mass where we were announced to the congregation - though I only realized it when everyone turned to smile at us and Natalie filled me in on what was going on.
     We  left her village on the third day to go to Dedougou where a mask festival was being held.  It was amazing and well worth the few hours it took to get there.
Many of the Peace Corps workers from around that city were there and we got to meet many of  Nat's coworkers - an amazing group of people who seem to be thriving in the incredibly challenging environment of Burkina Faso.  I have renewed respect for them and what they are accomplishing. We got to hear about their current and upcoming projects.  While in Nat's village we saw evidence of her Flags 4 Future endeavor and her Healthy Schools project. She took us to visit several schools and we were introduced to the teachers and classes.  I don't think I could have lasted as a teacher in BF.  The classrooms were kind of dark and hot and there were so many children in each room!  But, there was evidence of teaching and learning.  Natalie encouraged the kids to ask us questions and say a few words in English.  Our French to them was greeted with laughter.  We could not visit the high school because the students were on strike.  They were demanding cleaner pump water and working computers.
      Well, I could go on but I'm getting carried away.  It was an amazing and unforgettable trip.  It was perfect because Natalie planned for us, translated for us, communicated for us, watched over what we ate, etc.  THANKS, NAT!  You're amazing!  Love, Mom
                                       
   
   

Saturday, February 15, 2014

FLAGS FOR THE FUTURE (F4F)


It’s hard to believe, but I’ve been back in Burkina for over a month now.  I’ve been keeping busy and preparing for the arrival of my family!  We had our mid-service conference a few weeks ago where we had sessions on food security, a US-AID program called WASH that works with water, sanitation and hygiene, sharing our successes, learning from our failures, and project planning for the next ten months.  We also had check-up doctors appointments and sit-down interviews with our bosses. 
Back at site I have been busy with my Flags 4 the Future project as well as preparing for the Youth Leadership and Development Conference.  Emma came back to site with me after the mid-service conference, and we got right to work making the flags for the project.  Using the grant money I received from the Gender and Development Committee here, I bought the paint and flag materials.  A stencil, which says Notre Avenir (Our Future), was used as well to make the flags.  The stencil was donated by my mom's friend, Helen Brandshaft.  The local tailors stitched the flags while we were busy painting.  By the end of the day we had made about 20, a good start!

With the flag making underway I was ready to have the first training of trainers.  I wanted to start off small to see if the project will work, to have it be more personable, and also to help manage the number of flags I need to make.  We had 3 trainers come to the formation, one from the primary school Yelboulga and 2 from the primary school Langago.  All three of the participants were members of the parents association at these schools.  With the help of a School Director and the School Board President, we led the 2 hour training on the Flags 4 the Future project.  We discussed the importance of education and how it relates to the development of a village, about the importance of educating girls and boys, where Burkina stands comparatively to the rest of the world (183 out of 186 on the poverty scale), the reasons youth do drop out of school (work in the mines, to get married, pregnancy, money problems, etc.) and prevention methods.  We then talked about how to do a door-to-door campaign, what information to cover and how to gather the data. 


The following week the door-to-door campaigns started.  These will continue weekly for the next month, or until all houses in the area have been visited.  The trained members go out in their communities, share the information they learned during the training, gather data on how many school aged children are in the family vs how many are actually enrolled and go to school, and then those families who have all their school-aged children in school receive a flag! 

The project is off to a good start.  Those families who don’t have all their children in school (the majority of the families) listened carefully and asked questions during the campaign.  One mother said she didn’t have enough money to send her child to school last year and I was able to help her plan and save money.  If she saves 300 CFA (less than 1 dollar) a month, she can enroll her daughter in October.  She then informed us that she had never thought about it like that before.  Later, a father told us a story about his twins.  He has two twin girls and only one of them goes to school.  He said the other didn’t want to go and that he tried and tried but she always refused to go.  We asked why this was and he said that on the first day of school, the teacher was calling out the names of students to come up and sign in.  The daughter, whose name is Oussanatou, thought she heard her name being called so she went up in front of the class.  The teacher, who had apparently called Oussana, not Oussanatou, hit the child for getting up without her name being called.  Oussanatou felt embarrassed and scared of the teacher and has refused ever since to go to school.  With the help of the School Board President we came up with a solution.  This October Oussanatou will be enrolled in a different school also close to their house.   Although it doesn’t solve the bigger problem, violence in school, it does help Oussanatou go to school and get the education she deserves. 

Another mother, as we were walking away, yelled across the field, did my neighbor get a flag?  She hadn’t received a flag and I think was surprised to see that her neighbor did.  Part of the goal of this project is to encourage neighbors to talk about the importance of education and together come up with ways that they can send their children to school.   Money, and the need for a child to watch the family’s cattle are two big reasons that children are not in school, but the parent’s knowledge about the importance of educating children is also missing.  I hope this project can help, even if it’s just one family!  Stay tuned for more updates, as I hope to do this project in all the neighborhoods in my village.  

N

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Back in Burkina


November and December were busy months, which was nice, since it kept my mind off  the anticipation of returning home.  I had the Dance Marathon right before Thanksgiving in a city called Sapouy.  About 12 volunteers and over 70 middle school students came together for a night of dancing, cross-cultural exchange, motivational speeches, and workshops.  We had two adults give motivational talks about youth, their future, how to achieve their dreams, how to avoid trouble, how to be leaders, etc.  We also had workshops on HIV/AIDS, critical thinking and problem solving.   There were two dance competitions and we taught the youth how to do the electric slide, the wobble, the YMCA, and other fun American dance songs.   The event raised over 4,000 dollars and that money is now put in the youth development fund for volunteers to use if they are doing a youth development project at their site.   
In December, after a year of service, I got to return home for the holidays to see friends and family.  It was an amazing two weeks, filled with lots of food, drinks, family time, friends, parties, and travel.   I was relieved to see how easy it was to snap back into life in America and, although I had tons of catching up to do with friends, after a couple hours it felt like I had never been gone!  It really made me appreciate my friends and how lucky I am to have them!  

It also wasn’t as hard to return to Burkina as I had imagined.  The transition was pretty easy and everyone in my village was really excited to have me back.  They loved looking at the pictures from home, and it was fun to give them some of the small gifts that I had brought back for them.  Luckily it is still cold season, so the weather is still nice and I have been staying busy. One question most people kept asking me while I was home was what is a normal day like for me in Burkina Faso.   While this question is pretty hard to answer and can vary so much depending on the month, the weather, what types of projects I’m busy with, if I’m in the middle of a good book, etc, I decided I’d try to write up an example. 

Most mornings I wake up around 8 (unless it is hot season, and then I wake up around 5) and eat breakfast.  This can include village bread with local peanut butter, oatmeal or cereal, which I buy in a bigger city and bring back to my village, or I can go into town and eat an omelet.  After breakfast I either go to the high school to help with English classes, go to the clinic to help with baby weightings, go to the preschool and help teach a lesson or play games with the kids, or I go to a scheduled meeting with the mayor, the school board director, the head nurse, etc. 

Around 12, lunch rolls around and I can either eat in the market or cook at my house.  If I eat at the market I can find salad (if it’s the season), beans, rice, or mutton meat, if I want to splurge.  If I cook at home I can use a gas propane tank to cook with (since there is no electricity!) and I can make pasta.  If I have tuna I can also make a tuna sandwich.  After lunch, depending on what I did in the morning, I usually work on implementing projects or monitoring or evaluating the projects I am working on.  For example, I have an internship program going on twice a week where high school students either help work on reading skills with 4th and 5th graders who are behind, or help out at the clinic learning how to give health talks, take people’s heart rate, etc.  I also created a competition called the Healthy Schools Award Competition between 7 elementary schools, encouraging them to increase health education activities.  The Komtoega School Board and I then go around to the different schools to check in and see how they are doing.  Other than those projects I also am Vice President of the Youth Development Committee and am currently planning a Youth Leadership Conference in March. 

If I’m not busy with work I am usually hanging out in the market with friends, coloring with kids, practicing the local language of Bissa, meeting up with volunteers for a beer in the nearest big village, traveling to Ouaga for a small break, a real shower, and some decent food, or I’m a hermit and don’t leave the house due to an awesome book or a great new TV show (that I can watch on my computer)! 
At night I usually go to my friend Dabre’s house, put on a Disney movie and eat dinner with her and her family.  Dinner almost always consists of the local dish called to (pronounced toe), with different leafy sauces.  Unlike most volunteers, I’ve grown to LOVE to.  I usually read a bit with my solar charging light and then go to bed around 9:30.   

And there you have it, my “typical day.”  It’s taken a while for me to get a somewhat set schedule, and now that I have it I am much more happy and content.  One of the harder parts of my service has been setting a routine, being motivated to go out and look for work to do, and finding local counterparts that are willing to help.  Finally, after about a year in, I can say I have somewhat managed to do this! 
Anyway, you might be wondering what is on tap of the coming months.  Besides the leadership conference I mentioned above, and a Flags for the Future project that I will talk more about in the next blog, my family is coming to Burkina!!!  They will be here at the end of February for about 8 days.  I am beyond excited to show them around and everyone in my village is equally thrilled and anticipating their arrival.  We will probably do about 4 days in the capital, 3 days in my village, and 2 days at a mask festival in Dedegou that happens to be going on at the same time.  I’ll be sure to take lots of pictures and put up a blog post afterwards!
That’s all for now, I’ll write again soon.

N