Sunday, August 12, 2007

C'est L'Afrique

Hello! Bonjour! An ni sogoma! I’m finally getting around to starting this long ago promised blog. I was caught up in the romance of writing actual letters on actual paper for a while but the threat of carpel tunnel and a very short attention span are nudging me back on the information superhighway. Don’t quite know where to start so maybe with the facts. I started in the Peace Corps in early June 2006 and if all continues to go well I will stay here in till August 2008. That’s a long time to be living in a shack in the middle of nowhere (e.g Burkina Faso, West Africa). Not a long ways off from Timbuktu. If you google it you won’t find much. Surprisingly (or not surprisingly) the most comprehensive resource for this sort of info is the CIA (https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/uv.html). Wikipedia also has a nice Burkina page (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burkina_Faso).

These are the facts that will best help you paint a picture in your head:
1) GEOGRAPHY: landlocked, sandwiched between Mali and Niger to the east, north, and east. The Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo and Benin are to the south. A gold star to anyone who has heard of all those countries (unless you’re a soccer fan).
2) SIZE: a bit bigger than Colorado.
3) POPULATION: 14.3 million (as compared to the New York metropolitan are which is 18.8 million).
4) ECONOMICS: According to a UN Index, Burkina is the 3rd poorest country in the world.
5) LIFE EXPECTANCY: It’s not surprising that the life expectancy is 47 years. That always freaks me out a little. If I were Burkinabé, I’d already be in the final third of my life.

Suffice it to say that they last year has been character building. So easy in some ways and so hard in others. No commute, no real boss, more free time than I know what to do with, no bills. The Peace Corps gives us about 8 bucks a day and this is more than enough because there is not a whole lot to buy around here. On the flip side of the coin, my list of complaints is so long and so tedious that I’m embarrassed to share it. It’s not a glamorous life. I have no running water or electricity. At first, this was charming like camping. Now that the honeymoon is over, I fluctuate between not noticing and wondering how a country runs this way. Running water and electricity bring hygiene, which brings health, which brings pretty much everything else.


Life for many people is difficult to a degree that would have been unimaginable to me a year ago. They live with the daily uncertainty of poverty and disease. I've been to at least 5 funerals in the last year. Before that I had been to one. The great irony is the ease with which they play the hand they're dealt. They complain endlessly, but in a sporting way that doesn't seem to weigh on them. I'm no psychologist, but my gut feeling is that Burkinabe are MUCH happier than Americans. What does that say about the relationship between wealth, longevity, and security and quality of life? Maybe affluence comes at the expense of emotional balance. How can you know happiness if there is never sadness to contrast it with? I think there is something to be said for the occasional feeling of living on the edge. I think stuff like adventure sports and substance abuse might be a way of re-creating this feeling. I'm learning some kind of lesson here but I'm still not sure what it is. Or maybe that's all just a load of crap.

Anyways, that was heavier than intended for a first post. My goal with this blog is to stay connected to all you people. In a nutshell, I'm happy and healthy. Despite my ramblings I realize now more than ever that America is a wonderful place. Everyone I love is there and I keep get tidbits of happy news. Babies are being born (congrats P & M, K & JH), people are getting married (congrats C & E, A & A), getting jobs, getting on with their lives. Keep me informed. Let me know what you want to know about what's going on here. I hope to hear from you soon!


8 comments:

Paige said...

Radhika, I am SO happy that you have a blog up! I have so many questions that I want to ask. First, have you gotten any of the mail I have sent (including pics of Ozzy)? Second, what are you teaching and to whom? Third, do you have computer access in your village, or do you have to go to a city? Fourth, what's the name of the village where you're posted and what language do they speak? OK, I guess I'll stop there for now.

I miss you so much! I feel so much has happened in both our lives since I saw you a year ago. I know that this is a great experience for you, and I can tell from your first post and the letters you've sent (got the one you wrote in March BTW; posted via your sis?) that this is has been life-altering. In a good way! I just can't wait to talk to you again! Would you email me your phone number, if you still have a cell phone?
With much love, Paige

Richard W. Cho said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Richard W. Cho said...

Radhika!! Great to hear from you. I'm happy to hear that you're healthy and happy. Would love to hear more about your "day job."

kebmodee said...

hello radhika! nice blog! glad to hear things are going well. niamh says hello ("coo"). thanks so much for the dress for her. it's very nice. hope you got our reply letter but it may have been sent to an older address for you. all the best. kevin, jee hae and niamh.

Unknown said...

Hey Radhika,this blog is a fantastic idea! If possible, post more pictures, including some of yourself!

Happy to hear all is well.

Ciao,
Matteo

Unknown said...

Radhika, It is amazing to have news from you. I think about you all the time, but especially in the months after you left. I can't believe it is more than a year that you're gone. I should manage to write you sometimes but life here seems to mundane in comparison to what you are in the midst of these days.

xoxox
monique

NicStrick said...

Radhika,
I'm so happy you started this blog! I haven't been sure if you got the coupla things I sent and became a bit worried when I received an empty envelope from your sis (the seal opened en route so, sadly, whatever was inside fell out). From Paige's post, I suspect it was something from Africa...
I, too, am excited to hear how things are going (more on your daily activities and the emotional impact of this experience would be great) and would love to see more pictures. Is that your hut above?
I'll send a letter and some gatorade soon.
xxooo, Nicole

linnaea said...

Radhika, this is a great idea! I hope we'll get more stories and details over time; you must feel so distant from all of us and our standard American lives. It gives me warm fuzzies to know that you're having such a powerful experience. much love, linnaea