| First Letter to Linda 
                            Becker's 1998-99 class at Mast Way School in Lee, 
                            New Hampshire September 28, 1998
 
 Hello to all! I'm a Peace Corps volunteer 
                            in Guinea, West Africa, and I'll be writing to you 
                            this year. I hope to get a lot of letters from you, 
                            too, since life in the village gets pretty lonely. 
                           I'm a Public Health/Community Development 
                            volunteers, which means I can take on a variety of 
                            roles. I give health talks in the Health Center on 
                            diarrhea, family planning, AIDS, etc., and train local 
                            people to do health education. According to the needs 
                            of the community, I can arrange midwife trainings, 
                            latrine building, school building, educational events, 
                            and other numerous possibilities. 
                           Most of those possibilities never come 
                            to pass, however, since there is a lack of motivated 
                            people who want to begin projects with me. This is 
                            a problem all over Africa, but especially in Guinea. 
                            People here want all of the things we have in the 
                            U.S., but wait languidly for their government to do 
                            something rather than taking it in hand to do themselves. 
                           But I really came into the Peace Corps 
                            to see what life was like, on the ground, in Africa. 
                            I also wanted to help people, but I set off more in 
                            the spirit of cultural exchange. 
                           And what is life like here? Well, I 
                            live in a small village with no running water or electricity. 
                            The next big town, which is fairly developed, is 11 
                            miles away but the road is so rocky it takes 1-1/4 
                            hours to reach it by bush taxi. I'm lucky, because 
                            about 3-5 taxis come in and out of my village each 
                            day. The taxi leaves when enough passengers show up 
                            to fill it (4 in the backseat, 3 in the front). Many 
                            villages only have taxis once a week, on market day. 
                           When I look out my door I see our dusty 
                            market with a few corrugated-iron roofed shacks selling 
                            bread and tomato paste, plus other essentials like 
                            pens and gum. Beyond it rise green and relatively 
                            unpopulated hills. The lowlands are dotted with palm 
                            trees. 
                           I live in a corrugated-iron roofed 
                            concrete block house. I live in one of three adjoining 
                            2-room apartments. Next door is a similar building. 
                            This is the "fonctionnaire" housing - for government 
                            officials. I'm a fairly important figure in the town. 
                            I can never forget the privilege of my background 
                            or the color of my skin here. There is a word for 
                            foreigner (or, more specifically, "white person") 
                            in each local language. I've managed to get most of 
                            the kids here to stop calling at me: "Porto! Porto!", 
                            and to call me by my village name - Aicha. But whenever 
                            I leave Wawaya, even grown men call after me, "Porto!". 
                            It is a source of deep irritation and hurt. 
                           The official language here is French. 
                            There are several local languages, which people break 
                            into immediately when conversing among themselves. 
                            Only educated people speak French. I speak French, 
                            some Pulaar/Fulani, and a tiny bit of Susu. It has 
                            really helped me to get closer to people here, to 
                            speak a few words of their language. 
                           Well, that's all for now. I'm too hot 
                            (it's about 95 degrees) to keep writing. Take care!
 Stephanie 
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