Monday, September 7, 2009

African Adventure 19

First week of March 2009

Transport to Ouaga on a Sunday is tentative. In the hour we waited by the road, a full taxi sailed by followed later by two others that stopped and I boarded one for the journey to town. Although Chris and Connie left USA March 1, they weren't due until the next evening. It is thousands of miles from home. Fespaco, the film festival is on this week in Ouaga and the town is packed. So the PC helped me find a place to stay when my family arrived. I went out to the Village Artisanal to get a few things to send home. The same taxi driver returned that evening at 7:30 for a run to the airport to greet my family.

It was hard to wait outside for them, but security doesn't allow non-travelers inside the airport. However we were already texting each other as they went through the customs line and finally at 10:30pm came out for a big hug. The cabbie helped load all the luggage and we rode back to Peace Corps Bureau, and walked down the road to the Blue Marlin for steak, fries and haricot verte (sauteed string beans) and of course a brew. We visited and just enjoyed time together so much.


We got up early the next morning to get to the bus station for our trip north to Mali and Dogon Country. First I introduced them to the PC staff and they were pleased to meet each other. The 9am bus we were planning on riding, was filled rapidly with people who had waited longer than we had. We hung out buying street food and a cup of coffee in a little corner shop in the terminal. We caught the noon bus to OHG which was a 3 hr ride. Once there, we got help packing our stuff 10 blocks to the bush taxi going to Mali. They were loading to go and it wasn't long before we were on the road to the border and three ID check points. Each time the taxi had to be pushed to start and the riders clapped when it started. At Koro our guide for the next two days, Omar met us near dusk. We then boarded another car for the ride to Tely. Omar phoned ahead so our chicken, rice and sauce dinner was ready when we arrived. Omar is this amazing guide who speaks five languages, knows the local history, smiles a lot and says “Gooot it” to everything you can think of. He also aided my mountain ascent and descent very much. That night we slept on a rooftop under the stars next to the mountain we would walk up the next day.



In the morning our welcome shower came out of an overhead wooden barrel. Omar brought up breakfast. We three and 6-8 others were still on the roof. We looked down as the villagers went about their tasks, getting water from the well, milling grain, opening their shops. Midmorning we started our climb to the escarpment. The Tellium people were here from the seventh to the thirteenth century and built the houses up on the cliff. They shared their space with the Dogon people who came then, until the 20th century when the Dogons took over the place. We saw grainery, meeting places, small huts, all carved out of the mountainside. There were paintings on the walls and reliefs of animals and hunters on the sides of dwellings. We also looked at the ropes that hoisted things up the mountain. The place was spectacular, as was the view from up there. (See photos.)




After lunch and repose we rode an donkey cart to the next village where we got to see women dying indigo pagnes in beautiful designs. We looked on as young boys were painting cloths in traditional designs with natural paints in colors of red, black, and yellow. Chris found a goat hide shoulder pack and Connie found a carved whistle to take home. We could see father teaching son the crafts as we wandered through that village. Back home that night the winds kicked up and we had to stay inside for protection from the sands from the Sahel.






The wind had left evidence in the courtyard, sand and dust in drifts and overturning things here and there. After our continental breakfast, mangoes and coffee, dough balls with honey, Omar walked us up to meet his family in Ende—aged parents and several grandchildren. Back at Koro, he proudly showed us pictures of his son, Assi, who was off with his mother. Omar connected us with transport back to BF. We interlaced our knees to fit in an already full taxi, and headed back, stopping only for a flat tire and three inspection checks at the border. At OHG we discovered the Staf bus only runs at 13h everyday, so we walked over to the Sodibus gare for our return to Ouaga. There we found an ATM and taxi back to Zone de Bois. We packed up everything for the ride to village the next afternoon, and all the neighbors in my compound came out to greet us. We had lots of help getting our gear up the hill. Friends brought over food and we visited over village repast and drink.

Second week of March

The village chef and two family chefs came in the morning to greet my family. The regulars came by for coffee too. It was a busy time, and we walked to the CSPS to tour the health center, meet the staff and Major. The 3 nuns and 2 French visitors from Sabou CREN came for a visit and joined our tour also. Sr. Mary and the Major were into health care conversation quickly, sharing info and experiences. We lunched together talking American politics regarding the new president, etc. When they left, I gave Sr. Mary a dozen Moringa seedlings from my veranda to plant at her health clinic in Sabou.

I took Chris and Connie to the marche' in Thyou, where vendors sell all sorts of things under little hangars and produce laid out on mats on the ground in the marketplace.. My friend Achille came in the late afternoon to visit from KDG. He brought the t-shirts he had lettered for the Major's son, who coaches a soccer team in a nearby village. A couple more of the Major's sons came to pick up the team shirts and soccer ball. Two had been over in the morning for their soccer shoes my family brought from America. Soccer is the sport of passion in Africa!

Sunday morning we three pedaled to St. Irene's Catholic Church in the temporary hangar at Thyou.. At the end of the service the catechist welcomed my visitors and I said a few lines in French, after which the congregation clapped warmly too. Lots of visiting and handshaking afterwards. Laurentine showed us big freshly caught fish she would prepare to sell at the marche' later. Achille, Chris and I went to a soccer game in the afternoon to watch the close competition match in Thyou 1-0. I was pleased with the yellow team shirts on the Bagre youth. At intermission dozens of kids swarmed around to view the American visitors. PCV teacher Garrett sat with us too. We got to greet all the players afterwards before going to celebrate at the marche. Laurentine had sold all her fish, except the last three I bought, which we added to our dinner later.



One day Chris measured space for shelving, and he and Abdoulaye went to Thyou to buy wood for the project. They came back like Africans with lumber piled high on Abdoulaye's bike. (I don't think the shopkeeper thought an American could manage the transport.) There were many kids on the porch watching and amazed as Chris and Abdoul put this plan into action.. While they were doing all that Connie French-braided my hair and gave me a Bowen (massage) treatment on my back and legs. Several villagers wanted a treatment, including Hamadou, my compound chef.


In the afternoon I made spaghetti sauce for a bunch of us, the families next to me and Garrett came to dinner as well. We sat on the veranda, the kids on a new bench Chris put together from the scraps. It was a fun evening. My family gave gifts of lights, wraps, and jewelry to the village chef and both the, compound chefs, my neighbor lady, etc. I wanted to show them Sala's big barrage, so we went there and Chris took a swim there. We toured the gardens and watched kids pump water there.

Wednesday I planned a hygiene talk with the students at Sala on teeth brushing. We had three groups of students covering two classes in each, so the whole school received the information. Volunteers from each class brushed their teeth properly with Nim or toothbrushes, and the kids tried out the toothpaste and sodium powder. There was laughter when that got on their faces. The kids sang the last chant from the hand washing talk, and had fun with that. We left some school supplies that my friends at home sent for school students.


Later in the day a storm came up and blew the tent off my porch into the yard of a neighbor behind my house. The rain went on all evening. Yvette and Laurentine arrived on a moto with dinner, rice, fish and wonderful spicy tomato and onion sauce. Afterwards we heard someone else coming, the major's sons brought over a dish of to' and goat meat. What generous people and they all want to share with the visitors from America.

Our village center has a boutique, a Celltell shop, a couple places to eat (usually benga or rice and sauce with meat), a buvette (pub) a mechanic and that's it. There is an office for the forestry person and one for the road permit person. There is a partially finished mosque and the school and health clinic. Compared to Thyou it is a small village.



A church group in Eugene donated a Dell laptop for Georges' brother Maxime who in seminary here in Burkina Faso. I had left it in Ouaga because Rob and James helped convert it to French language and computer programs. Chris had brought it from America. Connie and Chris left lots of gifts and things here, so when they packed their bags to head back to Ouaga, they had room for arts and crafts made by Burkinabe' to take to the USA. Along the route to the capitol we were delayed a half hour because President Blaise Compare's motorcade was due to pass by on the way to Bobo.


We spent the night at Karite' Bleu, a wonderful Bed and Breakfast near the Peace Corps Bureau. We also stopped in the office to meet Dr. Claude and chat with the director, We made two trips to the Village Artisanal before they flew back. What a great visit from home!


THIRD WEEK OF MARCH

I stayed in town a couple days to work on my quarterly report on the computer, which was due. Congo, the security/safety officer for PC showed me on his computer some booty pictures of the criminals who stole my fannypack. We are hoping the police catch the ringleader soon.

I was able also to schedule an appointment for Sali, my neighbor girl for an eye exam. She has one badly crossed eye. Dr. Cole from Vancouver offered to pay for exam and make her glasses for the problem. Her father, Issaka, is diabetic and I gave him Splendid (diabetic sugar) for his coffee. One lunchtime Becky and I were at ISO athletic club for a swim and lunch, which was a nice break. I also got my blog up onto the internet before leaving town.

By midweek I was back in village and to my delight one day the staff was gathered under a tree by the clinic talking with Gansonre. He called out “Landis” and I greeted him. He invited us to come for a visit soon. Thursday morning I met Albertina at the maternity office and we weighed 25 babies all morning. There were a few people on drip medication at the clinic, some were children. So I went home to find some toys and toothbrushes to give them. Dicko, teacher from Sala, came one afternoon for a soccer ball for his class. It is the biggest and nearly the only sport played in Burkina Faso.

I finished “Beloved” this week. What a powerful book that is. Toni Morrison is a gifted writer.

FOURTH WEEK OF MARCH
Sunday was Pelerinage at the Thyou barrage. Five priests officiated at Mass and the congregation made the pilgrimage from our church 2K away and arrived through the trees just like last year. What an impressive sight! Zanabou and I had packed a small bench to sit on for the event. It was a hot day and one woman passed out from the heat. She was put in a car and transported back to Sabou for treatment. We went to the marche' where everyone was celebrating the day with food and drink. I was able to give some photos I had taken to some of my friends.

I visited the patients in the CSPS clinic Monday morning and those waiting for Pre Natal Visits in the maternite', where one woman was in labor. It was still hot. I returned home and got ready to run errands in Thyou. I made several stops and realized I had forgotten to bring my water bottle. I asked for water along the way and was gone a couple hours when I pedaled back home. I wanted to get out of the sun and drink more water. I text the duty officer that I felt dehydrated and Dr. Luc called me right away and said to mix ORS in my med kit and drink it. I had tried to text Angie, but had trouble concentrating. Later she told me it was all in gibberish. I drank one bottle of ORS and sat down on my lipicot and then apparently passed out.

When I woke up at midnight I was in the hospital in Ouaga with Dr. Luc there. He said my neighbor kid found me and called the Major over, who told Dr. Luc I had a high temperature and needed to come to Ouaga as soon as possible. Peace Corps sent a car for me. Country Director sent Jonathan, PCV along with the two drivers to get me. A large number of my neighbors and my language teacher were here concerned about my health. Turns out that I had bronchitis (thus the 105 temp) plus heat stroke, so I spent the next three days in the hospital and the following week in the infirmary at the PCB. I promised the medical staff I would carry water everywhere I go and drink minimum of 4 liters a day, stay inside between 11am and 3pm when the sun is the hottest, and ride on moto for work in satellite villages. I thank God I survived! A special thanks went to Abdoulaye, who found me, the major, who insisted the Peace Corps come after me that evening, and Dr. Luc, who stayed the first night assuring I had emergency care if needed.

RECYCLING

In Burkina Faso all “things” have a number of lives. One can find strips of cloth used for wrapping wounds, or around a bike tire stem to prevent leaking when the innertube is pumped with air. Pagnes (loinclothe) are worn like skirts on women. They are also used as covers at night, or wraps during the long walk to market. Later that pagne may be tailored into a shirt or used to strain liquids used in cooking. Pagnes are curtains, slings for transporting babies, or spread on the path to a religious ceremony much like a red carpet.

Long strips of rubber from big innertubes are a must for attaching anything for transport on bikes and vehicles. Branches off trees may be used for toothbrushes or donkey switches. Arranged in a line on the road, branches are a signal of a stalled vehicle, often a huge camion (truck). Burkinabe' know their trees and leaves well and use them medicinally and in sauces over their main starch, toe or rice.

Medium sized rocks brace vehicles under repair or are used for sitting on in a group meeting. Small rocks fill in potholes or strengthen a worn path. Soil is the main ingredient, along with water and sand for brick making. Sometimes dry straw is added. Long poles are seen in construction of tall buildings as support while cement dries. Poles are used for building fences.

Water is recycled from food preparation, laundering, bathing to moisten compost piles. Any vegetable or animal matter is added to the compost pile. After grains are separated from their stocks, animals get the scraps. Fires are built from previous embers, which easily relight, or small twigs that are fanned into flames. Then small tree/bush branches increase the heat before larger, longer tree limbs, that are continually being adjusted and pushed deeper into the burning fire. (Infinitesimal heat) Flaming sticks are carried by villagers, young and old, to start their fire elsewhere. One sees straw used in same way. Embers fill old fashioned irons to press clothes in Burkina.

While barefoot is common so are flip-flops (some with well worn holes), some with holes repaired with staples or stitching materials. Hats are protection from the sun and rain. Foulards wrap women's hair, but also tightly curled up are a buffer for the myriad things Burkinabe' carry on their heads. Anything with a round shape, children use as wheels on toys they put together to drag, pull and push. They spend hours racing and folling bike tires around.

In this culture where poverty abounds, leftover food is always in demand by someone. Because people walk, there's alsways a need to get things transported in anyway possible. Bush taxi drivers deliver personal communication or money to individuals in villages along their route. As well as chickens, goats, all sorts of cargo. Bikes and motos are regular cargo. Sacks of grain and ground maise, millet, sorghum are ususal as well as cannisters for propane and larger batteries.

After offices discard typing paper, one may get their roadside fried snack wrapped in a page from some document. Newspapers that make it to village are read over by numerous people, then maybe used again to wrap something else in. Cardboard boxes are used many times over, patched together, and finally used a fire fuel at the end of its life. Necessity is the mother of invention when it comes to recycling in Burkina. Now...how to transport this philosophy home.....


First two weeks of April 2009

When I was driven back to village by PC driver Michelle, the whole compound came out to meet me, including the two family chefs, Salame and Hamadou. Minata and Aminata, my closest neighbors hugged me, as did many others. The 50 plus kids of our quartier were also there celebrating my return. Garrett came right over after his pkg and to say welcome back, as did Georges, my language teacher. Georges brought food, a meal Laurentine had prepared: fish, tomatoes, cabbage with bread and mangoes for dessert. That evening I slept on my porch on my cot and the neighbor girls all came over to sleep there with me on their mats. Sleeping under the stars and moon is healing too.

Zanabou and I pedaled to church, where the congregation was gathering on the bluff for palms to process to the church hangar for Palm Sunday service. As we neared our path home afterwards, a 4x4 was stopped near the Sala barrage. The people in the vehicle were from NGO working with Ghana and Burkina Faso on projects regarding bodies of water. Interesting!

That Monday I went to the CSPS clinic and spoke to everyone there, they were happy to see me. I thanked them all for their help two weeks earlier when I took ill. I greeted the new accoucheuse and went by the two eateries to greet my friends, Awa and Fati. That week the kids carried my water home and watered the Moringa trees for me on my porch. The girls pampered me by doing my dishes and sweeping out my house.

During my language lessons, I translated American student letters into French to give the Burkina students. It is good practice and rather tedious.

When I returned home from Ouaga I brought another roll of fencing, so when Karim came to visit, I talked with him about securing the fence so that we can replant the Moringa trees next to the maternite'. He agreed to get new taller posts for the fence, which will be twice as high now.

That Thursday when I was at the clinic weighing babies, the Country Director, Doug came to pay a visit. He was happy to see I was doing better. He called my place “homey” and esp liked the shelves Chris had built me. After stopping at Garrett's, his circuit took him next to KDG to visit 4 PCVs there.

One evening I had a simple tea party with my neighbor girls. This occasion was enhanced with the Girl Scout cookies, Connie left me. I shared with the kids that we have tea parties at my house in America for all the young relatives. They could get into that I believe.

Saturday Abdoulaye and I had all the women in the quartier try on lovely tee-shirts Nancy had kindly sent for them. There were still a few children who had not gotten their shirts so we did them too. The women were so excited they lined up on the veranda waiting their turn to come in and try on their shirt. Everyone went home happy!

My friend Achille came from KDG for a visit after my stroke, and to make sure my health had returned. That night happened to be Easter vigil at church, which we attended that evening. The service and baptism were taking place by the big bonfire near catechist's house. We proceeded to the hangar thereafter for a three hour lovely service. {See photos.)

It was mid-April when the wind came up and the temperature dropped 15 degrees within an hour before it began raining. Finally a break from all the 100 degree days.

The major drove us 8K to Basmnore' his natal village to do a sensibilisation on hand washing with the 150 students of the school there. The director Nebie' Julien greeted us along with the PTA president and two other officials of the group. They were all there to see the sensibilisation too. Mr. Nebie' brought all three classes together in the largest schoolroom and we set up our causerie. Four volunteers participated in demonstrating proper hand washing to their peers. We encouraged the students to talk with their families about the lesson learned today. The students like the chant and were led through it alternately by Georges and by the school director. I passed out balls of soap for each classroom. We had a photo session outside with all the students, and I can have it blown up like a school photo for them. The PTA group and the major's birth family relatives gave us a chicken as a gift. We also enjoyed benga and mui (beans and rice) there.



Last weeks of April 2009

I needed to go to Ouaga to get my Visa for Ghana and all the trip plans organized. I took the bus from Sabou. I also went to see Manoj, travel agent, who booked my Ghana flight. My charge card did not work for it as I had not informed the company that I would be gone to Africa and so my attempt to charge the trip met with security block. But soon thereafter Angela spoke to the credit card people, who cleared my card for use in Africa.

Back in village I helped weigh babies and then observed a nurse change the dressing on Sita's thumb. Her thumb got pierced in the field, and was infected and swollen badly. I also learned that there was a Tetanus Campaign going on this week, as directed by the Minister of Health. That meant I would need to reschedule a sensibilisation at Zao School for the students until the following Wednesday.

That evening I received a visit from Georges and his brother, Maxime, who came from the city of Bobo. I was happy to give Maxime the laptop computer donated by the church group in Eugene, Oregon for his use in his seminary work. I explained to him that my PCV friends took the laptop to a store in Ouaga, the capitol, for changing the English keyboard into French. Then my friends (all computer whizzes) installed the French computer programs for him. The seminarians have to write out their personal history and Maxime told me that all the candidates, but him, have computers they use. His joy was a pleasure to witness.



First week of March 2009

On Friday the school was having a theater group perform a skit on health issues. The district in Bougnounou had set it up. We went to watch, and see if it dovetailed our sensibilisations, which it did. The PTA group was there with many elders from the quartiers, as was the village chef. The local student actors did a fine job with the hygiene theme. The focus was on hand washing and cleaning the dishes before preparing and eating meals. The “father” didn't want the children changing his behavior, so was resistant to the information. But as one after another of his children got ill, he went into action. First buying medication from street vendors, later taking them to the clinic for appropriate help. The kids imitating the adults was hilarious. Everyone enjoyed the performance. (See photos.) The district education official spoke to the parents at length afterwards.

This week I gave Abdoulaye, my 15 yr old neighbor boy, an apple. His first ever! He loved it. Fati, 11 wrote Connie a letter, thanking her for coming to Africa and asking for a backpack, flip flops and skirt and blouse, all for school. I took Zanabou to church one Sunday, as she enjoys the service. En route we stopped down the hill where the neighbors and some paid laborers are building Issaka's new house. (See photos.) Several nights the sky lit up with thunder and lightening. I would sit outside an hour in the evenings to observe the beautiful show!

That week we did two school sensibilisations, one at Salo and one at Zao. Georges borrowed a moto from a friend, Koala Jean for the first trip to Salo (8K), and we took the teachers each a Moringa seedling. They were so glad we came. We talked with the younger students (87) first and there were four volunteers for demonstrating proper teeth brushing to their comrades. Then the older ones (100) were all together and we had eight volunteers. Both groups loudly sang the chant from our last talk with them. They obviously enjoyed learning it. I left student letters from Harmony School in Vancouver for them to write to pen pals. I encouraged the teachers who wanted to write to the teachers at Harmony as well.

The next day we again borrowed a moto from CSPS to travel to Zao School (15K). We filled it with gas and oil, and text the director of the delay. He gave a French answer “Pas de Probleme!” that one hears daily in Burkina. Once we arrived we did two presentations, one for the younger grades and one for the older. After we put up our demo posters, the director had us remain in that classroom and he changed the students. Thus we didn't move. There were also two preschoolers underfoot and a newborn goat in the classroom, which proved interesting.

We talked with the students about proper nutrition, teeth brushing, and had examples of hard things that break teeth, i.e. metal, bone, glass, rock, etc. They agreed they all have some family or neighbors with missing or broken teeth, and we expressed our hope that with daily care they make it to old age with all their teeth healthy. When we got to the chant, Kuba, the director thought up lyrics for this causerie: “Si tu veux la bonne sante', broussez-toi les dents; A patte dentrifriche, broussez-toi les dents” (to “Michael row your boat ashore”).

I gave the student letters with drawings attached, addressed to the Zao students to the director and the other teachers from Harmony Elementary. Several teachers complimented us on the presentation and were happy we came there. Kuba invited us to his house next to the school for lunch of to' and sauce with green leaves and rabbit in it. He cut up fresh mangoes for dessert. I was content to be able to visit these small villages for student sensibilisations before going to Ghana next week.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

African Adventure 18

BON ANNEE! 2009

I biked with Henry Kiemtore' to church for Mass at the wee hour of 6am. Father Casmir was officiating, Georges was leading the choral group. Morning Mass was good, in the freshness of the day.

This evening Sister Mary hosted a surprise dinner party for Sr. Amy's birthday. The priests from St. Luc's and some workers at the CREN and I were all invited. In the evening when I arrived the young nuns were playing with Tiiga, their cat and a new puppy. Right now the cat has size advantage, but won't for long. Sister Mary had prepared a wonderful spread, commencing with soup, a broth of herbs and tiny carrot pieces, then onto baked tomato stuffed with rice. The main dish was quiche with meat pieces nested on top, and chicken both fried and baked. We had tossed green salad and local French bread accompanied by wine and bissap. Dessert was chocolate cake! Paul, the accountant, opened champagne and we all toasted Sr. Amy. It was a jolly meal.

After dinner was the entertainment. We sat in a semicircle at the large open area in the dining room and watched a skit the sisters prepared. Paul was the voice of God (coming from the next room) and Sr. Amy was the one who heard the voice while praying. The other two nuns snuck into prayer and Voila! also heard the voice of God. It ended in laughter.


Then the music portion of the fun evening started. Drums, guitar, and singing in several languages. Father Rene' from Bobo, a Camilian friar and a seminarian from Ouaga made up the group. It was such fun. They recalled holiday songs from their youth and all chimed in.

The next morning Sr. Amy gave me a tour of the CREN. She is now the director of the facility, while Sr. Mary is overall manager of the order and their work. She is also the doctor for the CREN. Sr. Mary told me her nephew Arnold is coming from France and they want to come to my village for a visit. I left there for the Grotto next to the parish of St. Luc, and met a woman there praying, who has been the midwife in Thyou for 9 years. She is a warm, friendly person. I teased with her about sitting close enough to her, that a little of her grace would flow to me.

I took in the marche' at Sabou before heading back to Sala. I ordered a woven flat top for my canary. I also loaded up on produce Thyou does not have.

03 January 09

Today is the marche' in Thyou, and I realized that my left leg can't handle a lot of walking. I was nearly in tears walking the several blocks to pick out vegetables and fruits and condiments. So I will delegate that to someone else until the pain goes down. It has been a +3 and 4 this whole week.

05 January 09

I visited my neighbor Sita and her baby at the clinic this morning. The one year old had her third treatment for malaria and was sleeping peacefully during my visit. The major told me the baby has Palu (malaria) Grave, with convulsions. She will go to hospital in Koudougou if not better rapidly.

I shared information on the CREN with the major and explained the expansion they plan: adult section opens in February and the Emergency Room to add to the laboratory and pharmacy which are open now along with the malnutrition center where mothers and babies stay a month until improved.

It was 5pm when Syrille came on moto with George for dinner. Syrille is a special friend and we are pleased he agreed to come. They greeted Hamadou, the chef of my compound, then Minata, my neighbor and landlady. I showed him my bulletin board full of pictures of my family in America and here. We drank dolo and played Uno for a time before eating. We had big salad, bread, rice with peanut sauce. They were in awe of my can opener and peeler from America. The neighbors came over to enjoy the visitor as well.

06 January 09

Mid morning a man I recognize as a neighbor was visiting with another man outside and held a paper so close to his eyes that his nose touched what he was looking at. I remembered that I had 2 extra pair of glasses in my trunk, so I got the ones with slight correction and offered them to him. He was so grateful, he thanked me in two languages. Later that day I saw him wearing the glasses, and gave him a cleaning tissue for them and case. All those bins/baskets in USA for donating glasses go exactly to this kind of person. Giving only works when there is someone in need to give to!

When I went to clinic today I talked with the major about my desire to have talks and demonstrations with the school children in nearby Thyou as well. Sala, my village and Thyou are sister villages and the communities are very interwoven. He agreed to this plan, as it is not in the same Health District and needs his blessing. I gave him my written COGES (health board) report to which he said “C'est bon!”

On the way home from the market today we went to the north end of Thyou to talk with the school staff about my desire to sensibilize their students about health issues. We agreed on tomorrow. Then we stopped by L'ecole Centre in Thyou for the same request. I had my language lesson in Moore' afterwards.

The next day we arrived at Yaoghin School near Thyou by 9am and discovered that Abdoulaye, my major's son is the first grade teacher there. We met with the director Claude and also noted that the parents group was meeting outside under a tree. The staff organized the two youngest classes, CP1 and CP2 on a huge ancient rock outside for the talk. They responded very well to the hygiene lesson of washing the hands, and especially like the song we taught them. It turned out we talked with three large groups there with a total of 350 students. (See photos.)
We proceeded to Yargo School north of Thyou and repeated the whole process with another three large groups, but held indoors. It ran into their lunch break, but they seemed ok with it. Here there were 400 students. They want the soap balls I offered to bring back for each classroom to use at school. Soap balls are available at the marche' six for 500 francs.


08 January 09

When I went to the maternite' this morning for baby weighing, the women started coming in large numbers with their infants. The assistant nurse and I worked all morning weighing 50 babies and recording the information in both the main book and on the individual cards. Things were going so fast and this got tricky for me because I recorded in the wrong booklet for one family and that took some time to undo. I resorted to writing the weights on a scratch pad asap. The main nurse came to do prenatal checks on several pregnant women. He also was trying to clip the tongue of a 2 yr old, that the mother held in her lap. It was a struggle, so I held his head still for the quick procedure. It was a busy morning!

The next day at my language lesson I began the 3rd year French reader and then we went over our causerie on dental hygiene by practicing with a Nim branch. One peels back about an inch of bark and sucks on the end until it is wet and stringy, then it is ready to scrub the teeth up and down with the natural bristles that makes. It takes practice! But is indigenous to the African culture.

The next day I packed up the peanuts Minata was sending to Dr. Claude, and my bags to go to Ouaga for my mid-service conference, physical exam & work on my quarterly report for Peace Corps. For my physical I had to get an EKG due to my being over 50 they said. Whew! the ticker is fine! Next I had a scheduled Physical Therapy appt. Mr. Forogo placed the sensors differently, to see if there was a solution to why my left leg hurts so much. He applied hot packs too. He tested my legs after all that, rotating them and said it was sciatic nerve problem. He then said I need to stay in Ouaga for daily treatment for a week to reduce problem. Eventually the PT assistants showed me a new exercise pushing my left knee across my body while my left ankle rested on my right knee.

16 January 09

I had another appt with PC doctor for general check up and discuss my leg pain. He ordered a CAT scan. He gave me a lower back exercise booklet and said not to lift over 20 lbs. By Thursday that week things had improved a little. I went again to Dr. Luc Friday morning for his review of the medicine he switched me to and the extra rest and exercise routine. He also checked degree of mobility and said it is mild sciatic nerve problem. Doing treatment now will prevent it from becoming moderate.

I left the PC Bureau to bike back to the Transit House where I stay in Ouaga. En route I wanted to get lunch so I biked to Chez Carlos, a schwarma stand in the neighborhood about 1pm. Two young men on a moto came up behind me, the driver caught my eye as he went by. Then I realized he slowed so the second guy got off and unsnapped my fanny pack in back. When I felt that I screamed loud, which scared them and they both took off, the driver on the moto and the snatcher on foot with my bag in his hand. I kept screaming like I had learned in “Women's Strength”class that the voice is a weapon to be used in these circumstances. The whole neighborhood came outside, people on foot and bike stopped and all wanted to help. I was shaking like a leaf, but most everyone was so helpful.

Around the corner and down two blocks the neighbors pinned the snatcher down until the police came for him. He had thrown my bag in the bushes by then and hiked over a fence into a parking lot and hid under a vehicle. The neighbors told me that they are sick and tired of the theft and robbery taking place in their middle class neighborhood and want it to stop. They sure demonstrated it today. They sent word to me that they recovered my fanny pack with camera, cellphone, money, ID, flash drives etc. and soon delivered it to me. Nothing was missing.

I called the PCB and they came right there (6 blocks) and we reviewed the crime scene. They talked to two house guards who had witnessed the whole thing due to my yelling I think. Congo and I went down to the police station to identify the snatcher. There were about a dozen guys sitting on the floor there waiting to get booked in. We went to an officer's room so he could take a report of the incident. The snatcher revealed the name of his cohort and the police said they have been looking for him for a long time. What a day!

That Saturday I took a bike path around the National Park spotting alligators, peacocks and a reserve of small animals. Some turtles there were over 100 years old. (See photos.)

20 January 09 Inauguration Day in America

I had an early appointment with Dr. Luc and Sylvie, the PC medical team in Burkina Faso to discuss my sciatic nerve problem and how to care for it in village. They will bundle up my new prescriptions and a box of hot packs for use when I am released tomorrow to return to my village. Of course I am to continue with my lower back exercises. Dr. Luc checked my throat which really hurts, but found nothing. When I left there I took a taxi to the Bureau de Sante' to find charts for teeth brushing demo I want to do next in the schools. The health dept sent me to the hospital next door which has a dental section, and they referred me to WHO (World Health Organization). I was given posters and booklets for the school director by the head person there. Visual aids are very useful with the students.

I was near the American Embassy then, where all the volunteers were spending the next few hours watching the swear in of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States. The number of people there in DC to witness the event in person was overwhelming, all waving flags. Obama was measured, serious, grateful and spoke without notes. Yoyo Maw and Isaac Stern and pianist played. A poem was written and recited by the president of Yale. Spectacular!

Becky and I were reliving it over a brew around the corner from TH, and an African named Dennis came over to us to tell us how proud he was that Obama appealed to all people watching. Dennis says now he is inspired to visit America. In his zeal he bought a round.

Lots of people came over to my house to welcome me back to village on January 21. That Thursday I weighed 41 babies, but needed help keep the health booklets straight, so the women came to my aid. There were 3 women from my quartier there too. The nurse came to do the necessary vaccinations.

26 January 09

We three, Saidou, Karim and I biked to Gannsin quartier, 5K from Sala for sensibilisation on malaria this morning. It was an hour later when enough people (60) had gathered to begin. Meanwhile we met with the family chef, Ouedraogo Boukari. The talk regarding the disease went smoothly. The comments from the villagers were that they don't have enough money for mosquito nets and they get bit in the fields too, not just at night. Heather is sending me more nets from IKEA. We three visited a while at my house after returning from causerie.

Thursday I worked with the new nurse on baby weighing day, she gave shots and Gilbert recorded the information. Only ten women with infants showed up, but I weighed them all. I did notice that the maternite' was cleaned up and the new books for 2009 were there to write in.

Friday I visited the several patients on drip IVs at the clinic and talked with the major too. Another young nurse is here today named Emilie, having just finished school in KDG.

I worked on translating stories in my 3rd reader and also a bible story regarding Isaac. During my lesson we worked on dialogs which was fun. Then we spent the afternoon at the big market day in Thyou.

31 January 09

Georges had scheduled our sensibilisation on hand washing at the Central School in Thyou this Saturday morning. We met there at 9am and the headmaster organized one big group of CM1 and CM2, who understood my French. Voila! It went well but we couldn't do the other 4 classes because the students were practicing the national anthem to sing at the inauguration of the new police station in Thyou at noon. We attended and got very good seats near the front for the ceremony. Six or eight car loads of dignitaries came from Ouaga then the ceremony began. There was singing, dancing and speeches during the fete. The very popular mayor had the longest speech. He had greeted me earlier and said we would talk further. He seemed pleased with the progress of his village to have a new security agent. Thyou celebrated the rest of the day, as did we.

First week of February 09

When I pedaled home one evening and found Minata sitting under the hangar out front of our duplex, I asked her about the fires in the fields set at dusk oftentimes. She described that the ashes are used for a brine to make potash used in cooking beans. It reduces the gas. I told her I want to learn how to make it, because I love the beans and rice they make here..



The family chef Hamadou rode with me to the CSPS next morning. He brought his X-rays taken in KDG to show the major. We went in together to consult about his lower back pain. The major said take the prescription he already had and it will get better.

The major told me the goats ate all the leaves on the Moringa trees. Ooh la, la! My neighbor Sita told me mites were in the new trees on my veranda, so I sprayed them with Rambo insecticide, hoping to resolve that problem. My counterpart Karim told me he would have some villagers repair the fence to keep the goats out.

Sala villagers are discouraged that a wealthy man in Thyou is running water from their barrage to his personal garden. Our village chef Adama is traveling to KDG tomorrow for a meeting about the issue. Locally there have been a number of meetings to resolve it, now it will get attention at the next level.

During my language lesson at the Thyou barrage I photographed a shepherd with many beef. They were drinking water there. Everything living shares the water.

Thursday Gilbert and I weighed 37 babies, including the twins from Bolo born June 24. They are very tiny still, Albertine is 4.7K and Albert is 4.2K. I photographed them and told the parents, Ally and Bapan, I would find them in Bolo and give them pictures when I come there next.

While at the maternite' we shortened the Moringa tree to 6' in the solarium, so it is reachable for harvesting the leaves.

At Ouaga our Food Security core members met for planning of our big meeting on the weekend. We did this over dinner at La Jardineire. It was good and reasonable.

I prepared our lunch for the meeting, making a tossed green salad, toasted French bread and spaghetti, with a sauce containing dried Moringa leaves full of vitamins and minerals. (See photo.) As we were having six new interested members join our food security group, we four each gave a brief slide presentation on Moringa and our work in village on this project. We also discussed with them the positions open on the committee. This bigger new group is a welcome change with a lot of ideas and energy!

Saturday evening Angie skyped me with a surprise group of my friends and relatives to talk together. They were enjoying lunch together and I got to see and talk to each one of them. I love this new technology, which brings family and friends together instantly
Second week of February 09

While in Ouaga I priced with a tailor the cost of having my Easter dress made—17 mille, very expensive. I managed two more physical therapy appointments while there too. On Tuesday while returning south on the highway towards Bobo, the driver Bouba stopped for a man on a stretcher, who had a seriously injured leg and was going to Sabou. Transport in BF is any and everything. Difficult! When my taxi brousse dropped me at Thyou, I went home and got Adama to help me get my boxes home. We each tied a couple on our bikes to get there.

Wednesday I visited with the major at the clinic to tell him of my Moringa meeting in Ouaga. There were several patients on drip feeds. The major mentioned his natal village and wants us to do sensibilisation for the students at the school there, where the teacher Nebie' Julien is director. We talked about the VIH sensibilisation this Friday and the sensibilisation at Central School in Thyou on Saturday. I also met with the new accoucheuse Albertina. She is tall, pretty and very friendly.

At market I inquired from Marie who she and her daughters use for a tailor and one of the children showed me the place. I ordered my Easter dress there, 4 mille. He had trouble understanding my French, but we managed the transaction.

Thursday we weighed the 8 babies that came in and sent 3 more home because they were too young to be weighed. The accoucheuse recorded the information and she has added measuring height to the program, which pleases me. We can then use a grid for weight and height to determine whether the child is malnourished. I visited with the two new nurses, Bibata and Emilie.

At my language lesson, we studied a Moore' reader and did 5 simple lessons. Then I read one from the French reader.

Friday was the main quartier sensibilisation in Sala-Weeg Yiri. Karim and Saidou were to my house early so we could gather our things and meet Garrett for the VIH-SIDA (HIV-AIDS) talk. By 10 we were at the bottom of my hill close to the big tree down there. The chef had the mechanic clear out his hangar for the talk. People started coming and within 30 minutes we had enough people (60) to begin. Garrett and I spoke in French which Saidou translated into Moore' for the villagers. We talked about the disease, how it is contracted, prevention and education. When we got to the condom demo there were a few snickers, but at the end no questions.

We went to my house to debrief, and it was an enlightening discussion. Karim wanted to know where the virus began and we said Africa. He had heard that it began when a monkey slept with a woman and gave her the illness. Garrett, who understands their French, responded that has been disproven a long time ago. Karim said a second theory he heard is that it began in the Congo when someone didn't cook monkey meat well enough. Karim also wanted to know if there is a vaccinations for AIDS. We answered him “No”.

On Saturday I scurried to get everything ready to meet Georges at Ecole Centre in Thyou for sensibilisation on hand washing. The teachers were all sitting under a big tree before the school bell rang. We began with CE classes, which went well and the teacher helped too. The students loved the song, and Georges practiced with them until they had the chant down.
Then we had an older group, CM and they picked it up very fast. The CP classes were out of school early this day, but had lingered long enough that we met with them outside under a couple trees and went over the causerie quickly. When the volunteers came to do their demo for their comrades, one boy nearly put his hands down in the dirty water, but caught himself. The teacher stood outside with us and shooed the big kids away so we could meet with the youngsters. I left a ball of soap for each classroom.

Third week of February 09

Aminata was building a new house. She was already making mud in the morning and hauling it to the mason, where workers, 4 men and 4 teens were lining up the bricks for her one room hut. Some children were also helping. When one builds anything here the neighbors volunteer their time too. It took most of the day to get all the bricks laid, then the mud mortar dried in the sun.
(See photos.) Later that day I photographed Karim, Sofi and their mother and baby near the construction site. Zanabou had come from Cote d'Ivoire to visit them.



I conversed with the major about the water chart he said he had for our upcoming talk with Sune' villagers. I also asked when the pump next to CSPS will be unlocked. Seems the water table is low and the clinic pump needs to be reserved for its use. He is sending the people over to the next pump for water. He does open the pump for several hours each morning tho.

He was talking with the accoucheuse when I found him, and I excused myself to pedal to church. She asked where St. Irene's Catholic Church is and soon followed me on her moto. As I returned home afterwards I saw quite a large crowd gathered at the mosque in Thyou, unusual for a Sunday and learned that a funeral service was happening. (See photo.)

In the afternoon I hear women singing and approaching our quartier. Dozens of women were coming to congratulate Alizeta on her graduation from the Koran school. The fun of it drew me closer. When I got to the other side of our compound I found Minata and Yondougma chanting and dancing, so I joined them. The women greeted the family chef Salam as they arrived. It was a merry time and I captured some of that in the photos.




When my sister Connie called that evening to tell me she and Chris have tickets to come here I was overjoyed!

I had the major review my talk on teeth brushing, which he said looked fine. He and Emilie are going to Sune' for vaccinations. I also spoke to his son, Oussmane who says he's still watering the Moringa trees next to the maternite'. We want to encouraged them to sprout from the root system. I practiced my presentation one more time that day, when Georges came with 20 Nim sticks. He also had a couple props we will use in demo, glass and bones. I prepared a sack of school supplies and things to take to Sune'.

It rained during the night, but Georges said the first rain does not make mud, so we can go ahead to Sune' 24K away. We left for the causerie at 8:40am, but on the way we had a flat tire on the moto. Luckily the hut nearby was that of a mechanic, who had us on our way in 20 minutes. When we arrived at Sune' School the directeur Dieudonne, gathered all his 95 students into one group for the sensibilisation. We taped our dental posters from WHO to the blackboard and most students understood French but Georges translated into Moore' for the younger ones. We showed them sodium powder, ground salt and toothpaste as options to use. We asked if they knew anyone with missing or broken teeth or obvious cavities in their families or friends. We stressed brushing teeth after every meal. We showed them the things that can damage teeth when put in the mouth: glass, bones, metal, rocks, and very hard candies. After we demonstrated proper teeth brushing with Nim and brushes, we asked for and got 6 volunteers for them to show their comrades how to do it.
For our first talk on this,it went relatively smoothly. At the conclusion I asked the students if they remembered the song we taught them last time regarding hand washing They immediately sang it for us. They were very excited about the school donations.

Next we motoed further into Sune' and met the villagers for a follow up talk on diseases caused by bad water. We found the major and Emilie there finishing up the vaccinations. By 1pm we had enough villagers to begin our talk with them. We had a flip chart provided by the major to discuss how to keep the area around water clean. I gave the ASC a bottle of bleach to share with others. 8 drops per 10 liters of water kills microbes/bacteria. The villagers had two questions in the discussion phase; how to get a second well in village, and how to get help with disease of the eyes, which they relate to this problem. We stressed boil drinking water, add bleach and write a letter to the Bureau de Sante' with request for second well. They thanked us for coming as they are so remote, they get few visitors.

Thursday there were 3-4 women waiting to have infants weighed and vaccinated. The accoucheuse said I should start. I found the right card before I weighed each baby so I wouldn't get mixed up again. I wrote the info right away too. None of the babies this morning cried when we worked together on this, and some even smiled at me. I relayed the baby's weight to each mother in Moore' numbers of kilo and grams. I checked their vaccination record and piled up the ones who were in need, and Bibita came later and vaccinated that handful.

Friday I had a PC site visit by Congo Harouna, security manager and Jean Luc, physician. The driver Oussmane checked over my bike, while the rest of us discussed safety of my house and some general integration and health question. They also talked with the major, who spoke favorably about my work and outreach into the communities. Congo said he went to school with the mayor of Thyou. He also plans to stop at the new police office and introduce self as two of us volunteers live close by.

At the marche' that day we spoke to Ky Simplice, director of Salo School. He needs a soccer ball soon. I told him when my box gets here from America it will be in it. He invited me to come to the game the next morning between Salo and Bolo, held in our own village of Sala. He wants me to kick the ball in. What an honor! But there were some chuckles and jokes when two adult sized kids showed up to play in the game. I greeted the line of players, before I kicked the ball in. It was a fun game to watch.

I took transport to Rob's village Bawiga. He met me at dusk and we biked to his village, 7K on beautiful paved highway, and 4K into bush. We almost got home before I fell in a rut and gashed my foot,which I bandaged when we got home. Along the way we stopped to greet his major at home. Then the theater group was hanging out at Rob's for the HIV-AIDS skit they had planned for this weekend. A teacher and conseillor were there too and they all had dinner ready-Riz Gras. We turned in after a long day.

Fourth week of February 09

Rob loves to cook and made Roots of Antioch porridge for breakfast that was quite good. The young men's theater group were meeting with the functionairres from village to discuss the performance this weekend. They decided to postpone it for a month because a prominent person in village had 13 beef stolen, which put a damper on the village spirit. Rob gave me the tour of the clinic, pharmacy, his Moringa forest project, etc. The Bawiga marche' is literally out his front door. We looked that over too and sat for dolo with some of his village friends. Then we found a hangar run by Poule women, who made us fresh zoomkoom, with sugar and ginger. It was a relaxing day.

On Monday we were biking to transport when we saw a camilian, and took many photos of it.
It changed colors while we were watching. Taxi brousse didn't go to Sabou today, so I caught a bus to Leo. When I got there I got a room at Auberge Natou with Casey's help because the next taxi brousse there leaves at 6am Tues morning. Leo is known for having ignames (big root plant like potato) grown in Cote d'Ivoire 3 for 750F. I found a salad place and the guy made an amazing green salad with lettuce, red onions, tomatoes, cukes and avocado with dressing and bread—300F.

I rose early Tuesday to be in good time for the taxi. As I arrived at the gare at 5:10am, it was pulling out! It stopped for me to get on. Time is relative in Burkina Faso. More passengers boarded along the route, until it was a packed car. By 9:30 we had drove the 100K to Sala. The mechanic's sons helped me up the hill to my house. I checked in with the major to tell him of my visit with Rob. The major called the director of Bansmnore' School and we set a date for sensibilisation with the students there.

The marche' in Thyou has dolo flowing today-Fat Tuesday because tomorrow Lent starts and there will be no beer. After that I went to visit Garrett and talk about the trip to Rob's. Garrett made rice and tomato sauce with lots of veggies and we ate dinner together. Wednesday I pedaled to church for the traditional ashes on my forehead.

Thursday was baby weighing and Albertina the new accoucheuse had made a measuring area on the corner of the two cement benches in the waiting room. That day we took the height of all the babies weighed. That made me so happy as we could then graff the malnourished child by chart and supplement the diet with a protein pack, plus coach the mother. We weighed 23 babies that morning. Albertina gave one particularly tall baby being raised by his aunt, a supplement because he was orphaned, which contributed to no weight gain..

In the afternoon Issaka came over to tell me he is going back to Cote d'Ivoire for a month. He told the school teacher that I have permission to take Sali to Ouaga for an eye exam soon. Dr Cole in Vancouver offered to pay for exam and make a pair of glasses for her. I took a picture of Sali I will forward to Dr. Cole showing her cross eyed.

Friday was the beginning of the polio campaign, when medical staff go door to door in the villages to vaccinated all the young children for polio. The accoucheuse, Gilbert, and I walked all over central Sala, even to my compound. It was so interesting to visit people in their own environment. I got to mark the pinky on the children, while Gilbert marked on the outside wall of the compounds how many children were vaccinated out of the potential number of children fitting the criteria.



I asked the major to take a bundle of yellow t-shirts to KDG to give to my friend, Achille to write numbers on them for the soccer team from Bengre'. The major's son is the team coach. Competition is coming up soon.

Saturday the polio campaign continued. I was later getting to the clinic and my team had left, so I asked the major which route they took. He said go right, past the school and into the bush. I did that and finally asked some kids where they went and they were kind enough to lead me one kilometer to find them. When we found them, they were on moto, so no wonder it took me a while. We went past the barrage to Paul and Odeille's home and I got to see Ingrid again. She had been at the CSPS with malaria a couple months ago. At the next house women were slicing tomatoes to dry.

Tomorrow I go to Ouagadougou to meet Chris and Connie on the plane from America! Yeah!

Monday, June 22, 2009

African Adventure 17

RELIGION

In December in Burkina Faso several religious holidays are observed by Muslims and Christians respectively. Advent and Noel (Christmas) are closely regarded spiritual observances by Christians, whereas Tabaski and a Pilgrimage to Mecca (in the twelfth lunar month) are revered by Muslims. I have seen indications of worship as an intricate part of everyday life in Burkina Faso. Muslims make time for the five prayers times during their day no matter where they are. Christians bless themselves before drinking water, beer, soda, etc. and they nearly always pray before meals. These practices and others give God/Allah a significant presence in the daily lives of the Burkinabe'.

It is clear to me people recognize a personal God/Allah as well as group and public worship of God/Allah in the traditional liturgical practice in BF. Within everyday Moore' conversation there is frequent reference to God: when rain comes “Wend na kita ni”- May God bring rain; when someone travels “Wend na siki/lebg laafi”- May God be with you going/returning in travel; when New Year's comes “Wend na ko veere”- May God give you another year; when illness comes “Wend na ko laafi”- May God heal you.

The self discipline for religious practices in all faiths is obvious. For Islam, my awareness increased dramatically during my three months in training at the town of Ouahigouya, I would awaken near 4am each morning to the beautiful chant of a Muslim voicing the pre-dawn prayer. For Christians, I notice as I bike 3K to my church in the next village, dozens, sometimes hundreds of villagers walking the same dirt road to the church hangar for service. Some members come from their homes much farther than that. Another outward sign of devotion is the singing, both in volume and in near total participation by the congregations of the Assembly of God and Catholic churches.

It appears with life and death matters for Burkinabe' underlies a deep faith and acceptance of the majesty and power of God/Allah. What impresses me most is how religion permeates daily life here, where citizens can practice Animism, Islam and Christianity side by side with visible respect and tolerance for individual beliefs.


01 December 09 Monday

Today the week long campaign for Yellow Fever vaccinations begins. When I arrived at the CSPS clinic at 8 am there were already long lines of students with teachers patrolling (branches in hand in case they needed to get a student's attention). The ASC was there doing crowd control as well. (See photos.)

The Major and his wife from KDG, Adja, plus his daughter, Rasmata, and the Concierge, Mamounata were all preparing for the big campaign. My counterpart, Karim was there too. I folded boxes for used syringes, while letting the Major know that I could mix the with the vaccine. The district administrator from the Bouyounou also came for oversight. We worked all morning vaccinating students and villagers as they came. By noon we were exhausted and welcomed the break. Later in the afternoon Gilbert and the Major tallied the people recorded as vaccinated, which turned out to be 1250.

That afternoon I visited the marche' to get the staples and food I needed for the next few days. We greeted the people, in particular Koala Jean, who took us to his family's hangar where his wife and daughter were serving milange. He teased me about coming to America as my comrade. We found pork for sandwiches and the soup for dipping our sandwiches in. Yummy!

Tuesday began equally early for vaccinations. However on this day four men from Sapouy came for oversight, then two green Sante' pickups came with two men each. They observed the process and made sure the vaccine was mixed and applied properly. I gave the Major my quarterly reports for the district doctor at Sapouy, which he in turn gave to the staff from there to deliver. At 12:30 pm we finished and took the afternoon repose and lunch break.

It was nearly 5pm when my tutor came for my lesson. We practiced the Malaria presentation, and discovered a third flip on moustiquaire, which we practiced too. When he left later I asked him to get biscuits for the people and petrol for the moto for the next day.

On Wednesday I had scheduled the sensibilisation on Malaria for the village of Bouyou, and by 9am we were on our way there. We packed up 5 Moringa trees to take along. When we passed Bolo they were setting up there for the marche' that day. We continued on to near the school at Bouyou where Philippe, the nurse was set up under a tree, doing the Yellow Fever vaccinations for the village. I could see he needed help so I offered assistance. There were many persons waiting and three or four village reps helping by writing on the vaccination cards and managing the crowd.

Amidou said after vaccinations we would have causerie, but in fact people were leaving for home and the marche', so at 11:30 he said we should begin the sensibilisation with the 100 people gathered there (half were children). We did the presentation with the flip charts to demonstrate to the villagers the main themes explaining the symptoms and benefits of early medical care for victims. One man, who answered most of the questions I posed to the people, was thrilled when I gave him a moustiquaire for his efforts. When we passed out the biscuits we ended up breaking them into four pieces each so that we could spread the treat among so many people. The questions from the crowd included one on where to get the mosquito nets.

We greeted the teacher and his wife who was preparing salad and haricot verte (green beans) for lunch. They insisted we partake, and we were happy to do so. One of the visitors at lunch had been to KDG and seen Blondy as we had. So we enjoyed reliving that whole event.

04 December 09 Thursday

The little group of regulars showed up for coffee this morning. After that I went to CSPS early, but the vaccinations didn't start until 9am and it was considerably slower, maybe 50 people all together that morning. I chatted with the Major's family at his home that day, and in the afternoon I went to the Thyou marche'. First I stopped by the cellular phone place and conveyed that I had trouble with people hearing me when I speak on the phone. They called Augustine over and he brought his diagnostic devise and determined the microphone in my phone wasn't functioning, so he replaced it for 3 mille. I was happy to have it fixed, as will be the people who call me from home and can't hear me.

We went to sit by the Thyou barrage for my lesson today. I practiced my VIH talk and we studied my French-Moore' reader.

05 December 09

Today is the VIH-AIDS presentation at Salo which I had scheduled in French with Garrett as co-presenter. Of course my tutor came for translation into Moore'. We pedaled to Salo but the crowd had not gathered, so we went to visit Zika Yaoungo's quartier. I had a photo for him and gave him a Moringa tree. He acts like a leader of the community and is respected like a chef. He talked to Garrett about 8 of his children who attend the CEG at Thyou where Garrett teaches, and then some of his children came into the room and Garrett in fact knew one of them and said he is very smart. Zika is a proud parent!

We returned to the village marche' and under the tree where our sensibilisation would be. Oussmane took the bullhorn and went about announcing the sensibilisation is about to begin. By 1:30 in the afternoon we had 20 men, 6 women and 50 children gathered and began the talk. By the time we got to the condom demo we could hear snickers from the group, as Garrett put the condom on the pepper bottle I held for him. The talk sparked questions about a female condom, and also the need to wash hands after removing a condom. It was an interesting causerie, after which Garrett left for benga.

We stayed and visited in the hangars, I took several villager's pictures, and we had chance to causerie. It was good. (See photos.)

On Saturday I stayed home for the most part. Karim and his brother came by to charge his phone battery. They looked through magazines and played cards. During the day I worked on my blog. By late afternoon I started preparing spaghetti dinner for my neighbors. At 5pm the 8 of the children came over for dinner. Minata was not home and their big brother, Essauf came later. They gobbled it down.

On Sunday I prepared pilau in the morning to take to Kiemtore's for potluck dinner. I pedaled against the wind to Mass at the church hangar, so that made me 20 minutes late. There were two groups of singers there today, one young people's group singing in French and the regular church choir in Moore'. George was the reader and played the drums today, a change from his role as choral director. After the service was completed we all went to the catechist's house next to the church, and witnessed the women bring in baskets of harvest they were donating for the seminarians. It filled their storage area.
Little Claude showed me the soccer ball I had given to him, which was really unrecognizable in just 3 weeks. Marie gave me a sack of peanuts. We have much to be thankful about!



08 December 08 TABASKI

This is the joyous Muslim Holiday to celebrate the harvest and mark 90 days since Ramadan. Gradually all the villagers gathered in the soccer field for the service at 9am. Everyone was wearing new outfits, colorful robes and bou-bous, matching pants and tops. Often groups of friends or family wore the same fabric in pleasant repetition. Women and children had new hairdos, intricate braids or a new clip. The voices of the gathered crowd resonated with laughter and excitement, as more and more people filled the ball field. Prayer service naturally facing East was led by a group of 8-10 men, some of whom had been to Mecca. This gathering was much larger than that of Ramadan. The long lines of men, then women and children on mats were assembled for 30 minutes of prayer service. Collection was made close to the end of service. Afterwards people visited together happily admiring each other's costume for the occasion. (See photos.)

As soon as we returned to our compound all the women set about preparing the food for the great feast. I was served Zoomkoom while I watched my neighbors prepare sauce and began processing three huge containers of millet for to'. I managed to visit all the huts in my two compounds: Sonata, Sampoko, Sita, Alizetta, and Mariam among others. I found Lizetta, Mariam #2, Salimata and the premiere femme at home. Each man, Salam and Hamadou, greeted me in their respective compounds. “Wend na Ko Veere'”. Bon Fete! I ate at four places. A nap “repose” followed.

Tradition is that one visits neighbors and friends also on this feast. I went to the Major's home, awaiting his return, and enjoyed Zoomkoom with Rasmata, and some of the children. Then I was served Riz Gras with delicious meat. When the major arrived with Aja from KDG, we all visited. I learned their daughter is getting married December 20 in KDG, and they invited me to the event. Soon Georges arrived with a gift for the Major, who in turn gave me a Pintarde. Wow! (See photo.)

There was another round of visiting that we did at the school teacher's home. They served up spaghetti with sauce, and rice and sauce along with more Zoomkoom. We ended the day at my place listening to music with neighbors who came over.

09 December 08

After the morning round of people had been to my place for coffee or tea, the children came in for a fun time with ball and jacks. Then I got ready to go to the clinic in the morning. The Major was talking intensely with a grandmother and a child's father as I approached. I learned there was a 7-8 yr old boy with grave malaria at home needing a transfusion. The father was tearful as they left on a bike for Thyou, their village.

The CSPS was not busy this day due to everyone's celebration of Ramadan still lingering in the air. Soon the family returned now with two men crying. Child died? Life and death are so common yet difficult in Burkina Faso.

In the afternoon I studied two lessons in the “French book for learning in 20 lesson” and enjoyed the sentence composition exercises to practice my word placement. While we ate dinner, the Major's son came with a written invitation to the family wedding later in the month. Seeing a traditional Muslim wedding will be a huge experience.

The next day when I arrived at the clinic there weren't many patients. The major said the people are at the Grand Marche' following Tabaski today. It's a good idea to go early. I decided it would be a good time to visit my friend, Silvie, at her hangar. When I got there she served me her dolo and said she had gotten the two shirts I left on a hook by her front door for her. Then I went to lunch with Koala Jean, Chirille, and Georges at the catechist's pork stand. I also visited with his sons, Claude and Barnard and his helper Irene'. Our friend, Prosper was there. The teachers from Salo were there talking about school issues together with their director, Ky. It was all very social. About that time Lorraine called and I was happy to hear the news from home talking to my best friend.

11 December 08

I wanted to arrive at maternite' by 8am when it was time to weigh babies. The clinic was full. Presently Gilbert came there and showed me how to record the weight in the big book and also on the individual health cards the families brought along. He asked me to stack the cards of the ones who need to wait for vaccination that day, and he would be back to do that. And he did return two different times to vaccinate children. I recorded each of those in the vaccination book for the particular village. For two hours I weighed babies alone. When the Major came by once I asked for pronunciation of one of the new baby names, but also the women there made it easy for me to succeed by explaining to each other what some of them could tell I needed. Burkinabe' are exceedingly patient people. My friends, Salimata, Awa, and Sita from my compound came. Both the Major and Gilbert thanked me several times for helping out when they were short handed this day.

This afternoon a truckload of priests (4) came from Sabou 15K away to offer Reconciliation to the parishioners before Noel. I was encouraged by one young woman to go back where Father Thomas was, because he speaks French, whereas the others were hearing and speaking in Moore'. It seemed he understood me and I understood most of what he said. I asked Georges later for translation of the words Father used: “Il dit la pardon a Dieu de se les uns les autres. Dieu nous guarde nos activite's religieuse pour l'attende de naissance de Jesus. Prie la chapelet.”

I talked with Claude and Barnard the catechist's boys, while I waited for Georges to finish loading the harvest bags for the priests from last Sunday. They were taking them home to St. Luc's Parrouise in Thyou. In the late afternoon we finally got to work on my Moore' lesson.

12 December 08

This morning was to be VIH-AIDS sensabilisation with the Weeg Yiri quartier in Sala, but due to miscommunication it was not to be. I had company to fill my morning. In the afternoon when it was time for my language lesson, Georges brought over the pintarde I received from the Major. It was ready to cut up and cook. I wanted to fry it in pesto seasoning. So I put that on while we had our lesson. Since Georges was in Sabou that morning he picked up makings for a salad, lettuce, onions, tomatoes, cucumber, etc. which I topped with an Italian dressing. It was a rewarding meal.

Saturday morning we headed to Dana by 9am. I stopped by CSPS to check on the phone number for the ASC at Dana because I never heard back from the AA. I text the new found number and let Garrett know too as he will arrive at 11am for the talk as planned. In the meantime when Georges and I got to Dana with Moringa trees for the chef and two AAs, we found the chef at the hangar. He treated us to a calabasse of dolo and invited us to his house in his compound. That was very interesting. In there he had a quiver of arrows and a bow, two rifles (used mostly in ceremonies), lots of maise drying overhead, red millet, horns etc. He posed for some pictures. (See photos.) He then gave me a beautiful chicken of variegated brown colors.

All of a sudden his premiere femme chased him around the courtyard with a stick in jest for having another woman in his house. Everyone was laughing by then.

We returned to the marche' where Bitiou, Babou, and Zita were collecting people for the causerie on VIH. After noon shortly there were a couple dozen people, so we started the sensibilisation with Garrett taking the lead. The talk went ok and there were some giggles as we got to the condom demonstration. Another man got up and left when the condom demo started. I think it offended his religion. A serious question posed by one man with passion, was “Where are all the people? This is important information that the whole village needs to hear.”

A vendor, Blandine, at the Dana marche' asked for a tank top, which I will leave next Thursday when we come for school sensibilisation. She has befriended me more than once. We were able to stop by the Thyou marche' as well that day as I needed some things One friend of Georges cornered him for a conversation about another friend who had talked his way into George's home, while he was not there and convinced his daughters that he could have 3500 cfa of their father's cash stash. Needless to say, Georges was extremely upset when he confirmed this story with his girls.

14 December 08

I packed for Ouaga in the morning and waited by the roadside for a taxi brousse, as my regular one doesn't transport on Sundays. Within 10 minutes a blue taxi from Leo stopped and we were on our way. The day was pretty much spent at the internet, email and facebook. By 5pm my eyes were computer fatigued, so Becky and I went to the Blue Marlin restaurant and ordered dinner, green beans with garlic in light tomato and onion sauce. Also a steak sandwich. Both very good. When I got back to Transit House, I plugged in my Skype and talked with Ang, Cliff and the kids for over an hour. The call kept getting dropped as we gained experience on using Skype with the camera on. Luke played his baritone at Tub Xmas at Pioneer Square yesterday (his birthday) and then a newsman from ABC interviewed him for a spot on the evening news, too. What a way to highlight becoming a teenager!

On Monday I visited the bank twice before I was able to get a draw on my funds. The power was off while they were working on a huge remodel there. I worked on the computer at the Peace Corps Bureau most of the day. Cyr arranged for Abraham to drive me to buy a “Mousse Speciale produced by Erimetal” (firm medical mattress) in the afternoon. I hope this will be easier for my tired back and leg bones. The foam mattress has a big divot in the middle which is impossible to eliminate. The retail store had one single display model and had to go to the warehouse to get one, which Abraham will pick up tomorrow on our way to catch the taxi brousse for home. I paid the 25 mille and got my receipt.

When we finished shopping I returned to the Transit House, where a frenzy was going on with PCVs going home for the holidays concluding their packing to be ready when the airport taxi came. Other volunteers were helping out as they could. I made Becky and me a salad with French bread to eat. That calmed her somewhat.

When Chris and I talked on Skype later we discovered that the camera on caused our call to drop often, so we turned that off. Plus there is 12 million people on Skype tonight. We also chatted for an hour.

16 December 08

I posted my blog before packing to return to village via the taxi brousse today. Idrisse the driver came early to pick me, my bike, my boxes from home, and my luggage plus my new mattress. Wow! What a load! We unloaded at the station, then I hitched a ride from Idrisse to the bookstore a couple blocks away. I bought two French readers for my lessons. The taxi got home in the usual three hours and I asked Bouba if he could drop me off at end of my path to house, another K down the road. When we got there all the neighbor kids came down and helped me get everything up the hill. Abdoulaye carried the mattress on his head. Garrett came for his boxes right away. Georges paid a visit too. We discussed our causerie tomorrow in Salou, and our trip to KDG Friday for the wedding. It was a good welcome home evening.

After the first night on my new mattress,I will take some adjusting as it is sooo firm. On Wednesday we went to Salou for causeries with the school children about hygiene of handwashing. The school staff did not get the message that we were coming, but they took us right in and we did three sensibilisations in a row, starting with the youngest students. The children liked the demonstration and we easily had volunteers to participate in the handwashing. We left a ball of soap in each classroom for their use. They all liked learning the song. When the upper grades finished their test they came for their causerie. We gave teacher Daniel the school supplies donated by my American friends at home. They asked about the letters from the American school, and we assured them that they were coming.

We aired up my tire in the Salou marche', after lunch On the way home we stopped and took Aminata's bag of millet from her to transport on the bike. She was pleased about that. We got back home content with our work.

18 December 08 Thursday

When I got to the maternite' by 8:30 I discovered that the Major and Philippe were both gone. Gilbert said I could weigh the babies, so I did 21 babies, recording all the written information and setting aside 6-8 cards for those that needed vaccinations. It went smoothly. Soon the Major returned from Sapouy and thanked us for our work.

Karim came in the afternoon for a visit. We visited. He discussed the plans for the Sala barrage and the debate about who will benefit from the new canal that is being put in by a firm from Bobo. Then it was time for my language lesson and I read three stories in my third level reader.

Friday morning we biked to Sabou to catch the taxi brousse to Koudougou. It was very late but finally another one came from Fara. There were 20 people and all our stuff in it when we left. I rode beside the driver, who had a difficult time with the road conditions. The last 5K he drove in the bush, because his papers were not in order for the checkpoint we heard. That stretch was an amazing trip from my vantage point. I could smell the brakes, and the car had to be rolled to start each time. Wow!

At the KDG market I shopped for several things, but in particular a veil I wanted to wear for the wedding and a wedding card. While we shopped, we parked our bikes with Joseph, Georges friend where he is staying tonight. Then I found lodging at the Notre Dame seminary for 3 mille a night, after convincing the new nun that they always gave volunteers a discount in the past. I wanted to rest up for the next days activities.

20 December 08

Most of the morning was spent running errands, working on the internet and preparing for the wedding. We agreed to meet Achille at the cybercafe in the afternoon, so we could go together to the wedding. We rode to secteur 6, home of the parents of the groom. There were lots of people there; men outside under the trees, children running and playing, women gathered in back rooms; women preparing food and women on the porch—it was very exciting. The bride and her attendants were together in a bedroom excitedly waiting.

Outside we greeted Semde Madi and asked after the Major. He told us he was on his way. We sat and waited, while being served zoomkoom. When the Major arrived all the men knelt on prayer rugs for the afternoon prayer. (See photo.) Once they finished everyone went to the mosque. We were allowed to sit on the peripheri of the area outside the mosque near the fence entrance. Several hundred men were on mats at the east end of the structure. They had a lengthy prayer service there, which was for the purpose of blessing the union of the two getting married and sanctioned by the Moslem churchmen. The bride and groom were not present at the ceremony. The groom, Issa, was waiting by the gate with his attendants. A pickup truck had the bridesmaids and bride in the canopy in back and they drove to the nearby intersection but no one got out. Soon the pickup left. When the service was over, it appeared the marriage was approved. This was an eyeopener for me from the western culture

Everyone there went back to the home of the groom's parents, where a meal was served. We saw Gansonre there, and he left with the Major to visit at the home of the Major and Asseta in secteur 5 in KDG. We followed and gave him the wedding card with money for the bride and groom. We were served popcorn and zoomkoom. After dark we pedaled back to our accommodations delighted to have been invited to observe a Muslim wedding.

Sunday morning we caught our ride to Sabou. It was complicated to get everything lined up, but we were on the taxi brousse at 9:45 and arrived by 11am. We visited at the marche' in Sabou for the afternoon before riding home. Midway the major stopped and gave us a ride there. He thanked us for verifying his son Oussmane at the checkpoint, without enough papers along on his moto.

22 December 08

When I went to CSPS only a few people were there. The nurse Philippe was seeing many women waiting for Pre Natal Visits averaging around 10-15 minutes apiece. In the afternoon I went to the marche' at Thyou and visited with my church friends. Laurentine was on her way to choir practice for Noel. I asked Georges to pick out two roosters for my own Christmas feast with 5 mille, as many people were coming to visit that day, which means lots of food. I stocked up on fruits and vegetables too. Of course we some holiday cheer to serve as well.

The next day we motoed to Dana and Zao to do sensibilisation for the students regarding the hygiene of washing their hands. I brought along school supplies and some Moringa trees to give the village chefs. Dana elementary had a new director and so the text message I sent to the former director of course wasn't received. They did not know we were coming, but graciously accommodated us. They put all three classes together so we presented to one large group. Afterwards I inquired about the boy with the handicapped leg, and the director said he would get the father to come there when we returned in the afternoon.

Next we arrived at Zao school, Kuba was anticipating us and presently he put 6 classes together for our presentation and we had an even larger group. Georges translated into Moore' so the younger ones could understand. We had 12 student volunteers for the handwashing exercise, which made it long. The sensibilisation was well received by the students, they especially liked the song at the end. Kuba's preschool son, Goumou, hangs out in his classroom most days and was there today. As we gathered our things to go, we asked Kuba where the village chef lives and he led us there. At the nearby Baobob tree, the mother of the twins who had delivered last summer was pounding millet. We admired the twins, one small but both looked healthy. I gave her the birth photos I had taken some time ago. She was very excited and showed the other women there. We visited with the chef and gave him two Moringa trees. He took all four and will deliver the other two to the ASCs from Zao.

We followed Kuba back home, where his wife Batrine, had lunch ready for us. We sat under a big Mango tree and enjoyed rice and sauce with lapine (rabbit). It was good. Kuba set about making tea, which is quite a process and fun to watch, as he cascades it from one vessel to another. During this time we had a lively discussion about language learning and America. French has its idiosyncrasies! Kuba poured the tea in a long stream between two teapots, as he leaned back in his wicker chair. This cools very hot tea. He went easy on the sugar and I really enjoyed the taste from the tea leaves. Another question he brought up was “Will Georges visit you in America?” He pointed out this would be natural in his role as your collaborator.

When we got to Dana on our way home, the director had the father of the crippled boy there and a community person to help with the conversation. I copied down the information I had gotten from the International Handicapped Foundation next to the Peace Corps bureau in Ouagadougou. I suggested the father take his son there after the holidays are over, as many offices are closed before then. They seemed open to this idea.

Back home I visited Sampoko in the early evening. Salam, the chef of that quartier showed me where Mariam's roof caved in and he needs corrugated metal to replace it. His sister was visiting and asked me for a tank top. She had heard about the new tops for everyone. That evening after dinner, I found a VOA radio station playing Christmas music. Reading my book and listening to holiday music was good for my soul.

24 December 08

I set about cleaning my house in preparation for lots of company on Noel, as I will be cooking most of tomorrow. Later that day Georges brought over the two cocks and some vegetables, part of the Christmas menu I had asked for. Connie called to chat about her February trip to visit me, and said Michael can't come due to his new job. She said the Pacific North West has been covered in snow for over two weeks now. It is a pretty unusual change of weather.

After 9pm I went with the Kiemtore' family to our church, arriving early for the midnight services. It was already full of people. Florescent lights were strung up and most people had a flashlight in hand too. The drumming was very nice as was the singing. My favorite chant was “Noel, Noel” at the very end of the service.

CHRISTMAS DAY IN VILLAGE

Zanabou and I pedaled 3K to church and this time it was not packed. Within a half hour it was filling up though. The choir had all matching attire, all the singers and even the drummers. It added to the spirit of the festivities. During the final song, one elder started dancing up towards the altar, and soon was joined by a whole line of other happy followers, singing, clapping and dancing. Holidays are social and exciting for Africans. (See photos.)

Back home the neighbor kids helped me cut up vegetables, tomatoes, green pepper, onions and garlic for tomato sauce. Abdoulaye cut up the roosters for me to fry. Next I prepared a big pasta casserole with salmon and cheese sauce. Peas and tomatoes gave Christmas colors to the dish. By then I had company, four young men from Sala: Karim, my Moringa counterpart, Issaka, president of the soccer team, Saidou, translator, and Ali. I gave them Planter peanuts as an hors d'oeuvre. Soon enough food was ready to feed the first group of visitors. Aminata and Abdoulaye ate then too, with Aminata taking her big dish of food outside to feed all the neighbor youngsters. Minata brought over the three Kilos of rice she cooked for me to serve the tomato sauce over.

Other groups of people came for dolo and food. Koumhou came from the chef's compound. Then the chef came himself to partake. It was very pleasant. Others came all afternoon, and Minata brought some people in she had gathered. I took a picture of each group as we all laughed with glee. Finally Georges' family came to the gathering, which was very fun. When Angie called I had her talk with Georges and she understood him. I talked to everyone at the Hayes home for most of an hour. It capped Noel for me. By 11pm everyone was gone and I went to bed thinking it was such a beautiful day sans gifts, purely religious and social. I liked it.

27 December 08

The previous day Karim, Saidou and I practiced our sensibilisation for malaria, set for 8am under the big tree downhill by the road from me. In about an hour enough people had gathered that we were encouraged to begin our talk with 30 women, 20 men and 25 children. We talked about the signs of malaria and the urgency one needs to respond to those signs, as it can become grave quickly. We talked about prevention, especially using moustiquaire. The chefs, Adama and Hamadou fielded some of the questions. One woman, , the wife of Karim's older brother, responded to our questions too. I gave her a moustiquaire for her participation. See photo. (Unfortunately within a week she died of stomach malady.) We finished the presentation talking about the benefits of our Moringa project, and gave two trees to the village chef. Saidou and Karim hung out a while at my house.

Then a group of people who hadn't come on Christmas arrived for visiting over food and drink. Deacon Maxime, George's brother and Georges also brought Koala Jean for the holiday meal. I made a green salad, heated up the rice and sauce, along with the chicken, and that wrapped up the Xmas meal. We also polished off the remainder of the 5 Kilos of milange. Minata and Sampoko joined us, as Koala Jean is brother to Sampoko. It was a good time!

Midafternoon I tried to nap, but soon had more visitors, the Major's sons Abdoulaye and Zacharias, also my friend Issa, came to chat. Then some villagers came to buy Moringa trees that we had discussed at the sensibilisation that morning. Then the chicken I had tied to my porch escaped a couple times, adding excitement to a busy day.

The next day my highlights came via the phone. Heather phoned me. It was Glory's birthday too. Then Sr. Mary called me from the CREN and invited me to surprise birthday party for Sister Aimie on January 1. She also asked to speak to Georges and asked him to come for a meeting for a security job at the CREN the next day.

30 December 08

This morning is the malaria sensibilisation at the Ipala quartier. On the way there, we stopped at Karim's house to greet his brother the Doctor from Ouagadougou, who had been to the US for 10 days in mid-December visiting NIH for grant money to fight malaria. He thanked me profusely for coming here and said he knows how much I gave up to come here. His sense is that it is very important to share information and exchange cultures.

When we got to the big tree at Ipala quartier for the causerie, no one was there. The chef of Ipala quartier pedaled up on his bicycle and it was obvious he had cut a gash in his foot on his pedal. He waited for water to clean it with and some traditional medicine to apply for healing it. “Na-manegb Zanga” looked like black tiny poppy seeds. He covered the wound with that and a bandage. I could tell it hurt.

By an hour later sufficient people had come, to begin with 26 women, 8 men and 8 children. The questions today centered around the number available and the cost of moustiquaires for all the villagers. I gave one out for a woman who seemed to answer a lot of questions. I also passed out two balls of soap, which pleased those women too. We gave the Ipala chef 2 Moringa trees and sold two more to villagers there.

I had Georges review my COGES report for proper French and we went to see if there would be a group meeting today, but the Major was the only person there. After an hour we left and Georges suggested we go visit Koala Jean at his place. We had a good visit. He had been a counselor to the last chef of Thyou, and enjoyed that work. He wants to run for office in the near future. He is well regarded in village.

31 December 08 NEW YEAR'S EVE

This is another big celebration for Burkinabe'. When we went to the market to Yvette's hangar she invited me to come tonight to her place for dancing and singing on this New Year's Eve. I told her that we had a family event at Georges parents home planned. Laurentine was shopping for condiments for the evenings meals, and I wanted pasteque (watermelon) which was in the produce section of market. My left leg was hurting so I asked others to do my shopping. I went home to pack a bag for staying the night at the elder Kiemtores tonight so that I don't risk riding home in the dark. I sat in the evening moonlight and watched Laurentine prepare Riz Gras in a big marmite (kettle) over an open fire. Meanwhile about 8 of us played a long game of Uno, and then at 10:30pm dinner was served on big trays with rice and chicken and sauce. Henry led a long grace thanking God for last year and the ones to come. After the meal the children wanted to dance. Georges put on his tapes in his big stereo radio combo. He and his girls and Claude were dancing and soon it was midnight and 2009.

Laurentine prepared another chicken and marinated the cucumbers and..... Voila! We ate again, the traditional after midnight meal. It was New Year's under the stars in Africa and a very fun time with friends!