15 May 2008 � No.26
World
Price Increases Hit
The price of a
50 kilogram sack of rice jumped 10% recently to 220,000 Guinean Francs (GF)
in
Peace Corps Director Ron Tschetter
visited
Back to
Annie Mascorro (Kerouane, 2000-2002)
Recently my partner
Smatt and I quit our jobs and sold everything we
owned in preparation for a return to
Almost five and
a half years after having left
Everything did.
The landscape, the taxis, the street sellers.� Everything
was as I had remembered. I was giddy with recognition. This place that had
so captured the imagination of my burgeoning adulthood was, in fact, real.
I found myself exclaiming "I've been down this street before!" more
times than I'd like to admit.
The climax of this exhilaration was the reunion with my host family.� I had imagined the worst - "What's your name again?" Instead, there were running hugs, tears of joy, and a slaughtered chicken. Time had passed: the newborn had somehow become a kid, the children were taller, and my host mother's face revealed the slightest creases of age and fatigue. According to the family, I, too, had changed. What Guinean reunion would be complete without celebratory screams that the newly arrived was now "bigger" - read "fatter" - the ultimate compliment to which I feigned pride and satisfaction?
Much was the same, though. My old hut was still there, and the mango trees, the home-made toy cars the children make, the potato leaf sauce, the curdled milk in calabashes.� Mostly, though, I was relieved and overjoyed to find my host family more or less how I had left them. They seemed to feel the same about me. We slipped easily into the past. I became, once again, a 22-year-old Peace Corps volunteer, my Guinean family's charge, untouched my the loss of innocence that comes with time.
If we had left
soon after this reunion,
To be fair, this has not been an easy visit. The same frustrations that I remember from my time in the Peace Corps are here: long waits at the taxi park, children screaming at me, and the incessant come-ons.� Much more disturbing, though, is witnessing the daily consequences of the current economic crisis. The rising cost of fuel and food is hitting our friends and family here hard. Each day we watch as people struggle in ways they hadn�t before just to get by. Sauces are thinner, lines for gas are longer, and individuals as well as whole communities are now hoarding foodstuffs.� In recent months familiar problems such as the water crisis, the deteriorating national highway, and the shortage of public school teachers and medical supplies have become more acute.
On a much smaller scale we know that we've played our part in the challenges of this trip. Over these past few months we have pushed the limits of hospitality and frustrated everyone with our lack of clear plans, not to mention jobs.
It is clear that this visit has been joyous and messy at once.� My relationships here have grown deeper, but also more complicated.� The juxtaposition of the chaos in the family concession and those peaceful chats with my host mom has taken some getting used to but has also opened up a space for me to begin to find the middle ground in my own life.
I came to
When I walk past my old hut in Kerouane I feel a flash of longing so intense I can almost smell the hut from the inside, that cozy, musty smell that comes after the rain. I'm in there alone, reading by candlelight, my whole life ahead of me.� But I can't go back and my time here has shown me that I wouldn't if I could. I am no longer that young woman. My host family is right: I am truly "bigger," and I can see now that everyone else is too.
It might have been
tempting to remember
-
Annie Mascorro
has her MFA in Creative Writing from The
Communications Report
Dear Friends of Guinea members,
If you haven't already, please check out the FOG blog at:
http://friendsofguinea.blogspot.com/. In it, I regularly
post all kinds of news items relating to
Brian Farenell, FOG Communications Director [email protected]
Culture Crossing Website
Hello Friends of
We are looking for help as we launch www.culturecrossing.net, a community
built guide to cross cultural etiquette and understanding for living, working
and studying in the global community. CultureCrossing.net is an evolving database
of cross-cultural information about every country in the world.� This user-built
guide allows people from all walks of life to share essential tips with each
other about how to navigate our increasingly borderless world with savvy and
sensitivity. It is easy to navigate, free to use, and organized into topics
such as communication styles, eye contact, gestures, taboos, dress, negotiations,
meeting etiquette, school rules, gift giving, and more. If you would like
to help with the
Michael Landers, Director - Culture Crossing
School-to-School International: Making a difference in the lives of elementary school children
Mark Lynd, Founder School-to-School International
[email protected], www.sts-international.org
Artwork from penpals
How can Americans make a difference in the lives of Guineans, who suffer increasingly from rising gas and food prices, deteriorating health and education standards, and a tense political situation with no end in sight? When the price of a sack of rice exceeds the beginning wage of a teacher and protesters are shot with live ammunition, with no trials to bring the perpetrators to justice, how can the world send a signal that Guineans have friends who care, and who are prepared to contribute to the development of their country?
One response is
School-to-School International (STS), a nonprofit organization that has been
working in
Since STS began,
over 4,000 Guinean children, their teachers and parents have benefited from
our support, improving their educational and health status and thereby giving
them the means to stay in school and a reason to hope for a better future.
STS has been able to achieve these gains with help from the Alcoa Foundation,
through grants and contracts for educational services and research, and through
private donations. STS encourages all friends of
School-to-School International
Tel: (650)728-7138
PC Guinea News
A group of 22 teachers are going to
Communities Planning
for the Promotion of Health and Human Rights in the
Cody N. Donahue, Tostan International
Representatives from 70 communities in the N�Z�r�kor� and Gu�kedou prefectures gathered in the village of N�ampara, twenty kilometers north of N�Z�r�kor�, in an inter-village meeting on May 10, 2008. The event, which was organized by the communities themselves with the support of Tostan and UNICEF/Guinea, was a time dedicated to sharing lessons learned during the first year of classes by the Tostan Community Empowerment Program. This sharing of experiences ended with the creation of a common quarterly plan to promote health and human rights�in particular, the abandonment of female genital cutting (FGC), child/forced marriage, child trafficking and gender-based violence�in the Forest Region.
The Prefect of
N�Z�r�kor� closed the meeting with words of encouragement,
supported by representatives from the United Nations in N�Z�r�kor� and
The CMC Coordinators presented their committee�s achievements since joining the Tostan program in 2006. They also presented the representatives from the communities where their group presented awareness-raising activities on topics such as human rights and responsibilities, democratic behavior, problem solving processes, and health and hygiene.
In particular, each CMC cited the concrete community impact they had had, including registering births, �retaining� girls in school, encouraging pregnant mothers to seek pre-natal consultations, cleaning up community spaces, and building improved-wood stoves.
The assembled community representatives revised the action plan established during the last Tostan-sponsored inter-village meeting held in Gu�kedou L�l� in December 2007. This new action plan will promote the abandonment of FGC, child/forced marriage, child trafficking, and gender-based violence.
N�ampara, a community of over 2,000 people, holds special significance for FGC abandonment in the N�Z�r�kor� prefecture: it traditionally gives permission to the neighboring villages to practice FGC. The President of the District, herself a member of the Tostan class, asked that N�ampara no longer authorize girls being cut. The crowd applauded the President�s initiative.
One local man from the Gu�kedou prefecture shared the story of losing his daughter many years ago to complications related to FGC. He felt that the education he received from Tostan only reinforced what he already knew about the negative effects of FGC.
One of the most
unique aspects of this inter-village meeting was including the theme of child
trafficking. In part due to the thousands of refugees from conflicts in
UNICEF Guinea has
funded this project since 2006 in partnership with Tostan and the Government of Guinea. Tostan
has also worked in Lower, Middle, and
Photos from the community meeting in N�ampara.
Welcome New Officers
In March, Friends of
Stephanie Chasteen � Secretary; secretary@...
Stephanie served as a Community Development and Public Health volunteer in Wawaya (outside of Fria) from 1997 to 1999. She has a PhD in physics and currently works as an education researcher in that field.
Claire Lea - Projects Director; projects@...
Claire was a Math
Education volunteer from 2002 to 2004. She lived in the town of
Brian Clappier - Membership Director
membership@...
Brian served as
a physics teacher in Hafia (near
Brian Farenell �-Communications
Director
communications@...
Brian served as a Math Education volunteer from 1995-97 in Beindou Centre, a tiny village less than 10 miles from Kissidougou. He had a great experience there and is pleased to still be in contact with his best friends from Beindou.
Shad Engkilterra - Financial Officer;� finances@...
Shad was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Banko from 1998 to 2000.� Just over a year ago, Shad was promoted to the Southeast District Director position for the American Red Cross of Alaska.
Sharon Buehler - Parent Support
gps@...
Mackenzie Dabo - Newsletter
newsletter@...
Mackenzie was a
math education volunteer in Saramoussaya (between
Mamou and Dabola) from
2000-2002. She spent a third year with Peace Corps in
Rita Gerlach �
Newsletter Distribution Manager;� rita@...
Rita is current PCV mom who has been volunteering to experience new people and places for many years. She also enjoys riding her Harley.
Nathan Shepherd �
Webmaster; ��web@...��
Nathan was an education
volunteer in Dinguiraye from �01 to �03. He is currently
living in
Urska Manners �
Listserv Administrator; listserv@...
Urska was a math teacher in Siguiri from 2000 to 2002. She is currently finishing her PhD.
Le Griot Nous Dit�
�RPCV Aaron Sharghi (Tiro/Kankan, 1998 � 2001)
is marrying Jeanne Fran�oise Faye from Thies on
September 5th and 6th in
�G0 volunteer Emily Ramsur (Koubia �00-�02) and her husband Andrea recently welcomed their first child into the family. Emily writes: �We are so happy to introduce our baby girl, Elena (pronounced in the Italian way, EL-ena, like Ellen with an "ah" on the end). She made her grand entrance at 6 pounds 12 ounces, 20.5 inches. She arrived after 13.5 hours of labor at 4:26pm on 3/17/08.�
Classifieds
If you were in Peace Corps/Guinea, class of 1997, please join http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Guinea1997 to participate in discussions about a possible reunion in 2009, on the occasion of the 10-year anniversary of COS. Membership in the group is open (no invitation necessary). Just go to the address above and click the big �Join this group!� button to sign up.
What COSing volunteers can look forward to -- "Ways RPCV's know they have readjusted: http://friendsofguinea.org/fun/readjust.shtml
Girls Conference is back! Projects Report and How to Donate�
Claire Lea (Banian, 2002-2004) Projects Director
Recent Successful Projects:
�FOG donated about $3,000 to Partage
Quebec-Guin�e in November, 2007, that resulted in
a large shipment of books� delivered to
�Kimberly Mason's water pump project that FOG helped fund has begun. Efforts are currently underway to provide clean, potable water to a remote community in the Haute. Good luck to Kimberly in completing this project, and we look forward to seeing some of the results in the next newsletter!
�URGENT!� 2008 Girls Conference� Funds Needed: $1828
Many of FOG's
members and RPCVs realize what an important project
this is for the youth of