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Letters from
a return trip to Guinea
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Stephanie Chasteen served as a Peace Corps Volunteer
in Guinea, West Africa, from 1997-1999, in the village
of Wawaya. She helped run the Friends
of Guinea group. In Summer 2004, she returned
to her village in Guinea, West Africa. Here are the
letters that she wrote home about the experience.
July 10. Ruminations from Guinea
July 26, To the Village and Back
Again
August 10, Dazed and Confused
July 10.
Ruminations from Guinea
Hello everyone,
I’m in Guinea! The short story is – we
arrived exhausted, but there were no problems. It
looks
likely that we won’t have email access again
until July 28th. The place feels so oddly familiar,
like returning to a childhood home. Even though you
forgot the color of the house, you remember
the curve of the stairs, the hiding place in the eaves,
or this vague impression of light in the
living room. Guinea feels familiar. It’s certainly
not home to all of me, but it is home to an
important part of me.
For the longer story, read on…
I spent the first night in New York City seeing my
friends Alex and Andy (& his wife Maureen and
charming kid Aidan). I met Mom at JFK and we found
the Air Maroc check-in desk. This is when the
steady transformation began. Even before we left New
York, we gradually left western culture.
The Air Maroc desk was at the far end of the airport,
a small row of check-in counters hidden by a
long line of Africans – women in their colorful
robes, men in the little cupcake-shaped hats,
young men with slick t-shirts and jeans. The line
was permeated with the earthy smell of African
body odor (a distinctive smell unlike no other peoples
I’ve met), and piled high with immense
pieces of luggage and taped boxes. I thought my luggage
was huge, but it was dwarfed by those
huge suitcases full of gifts and goods from the US.
The lady behind the Air Maroc counter was
disdainful in that polite way that I’ve encountered
several times. I get the sense that they’re
thinking that just because I’m white, they figure
that I think that I’m better than them, and
they’re prepared to take me down a peg. There’s
a certain superciliousness in the air. She
smiled sweetly at us and, as we found to our dismay
a few hours later, gave us some of the worst
seats on the plane.
The next step along the transition towards African-ness
(and away from Western-ness) was at the
gate. We heard no announcement, but about a half-hour
after we were supposed to board there was a
sudden rush to stand in line. Almost as an afterthought,
as we started to board, they announced
that boarding was to begin. And on this huge transatlantic
liner, 3 times as long and twice as
wide as a domestic jet, they just called “all
seats, all rows.” Welcome to the madhouse.
On the plane, I heard people greeting in Pulaar,
women in elaborate robes brushed by us
self-importantly on their way down the aisle, and
everyone stood too close to me in line. I never
got over the different conceptions of personal space
even in the 2 years that I was here.
Take one more step down into Africa. Waiting to go
through security in Casablanca, a group of self-important
women in colorful robes walked past the entire line,
and pushed right in front of me and Mom. The
gate at the airport in Casablanca had just one or
two working toilets, and one had no pipe
connecting the sink drain to the plumbing. So every
time that someone used the sink, water flowed
directly onto the floor creating a widening puddle
the crept down the hall. And again, there was
no boarding announcement, just a sudden mass movement
for the door, where we stood for a
half-hour. Inexplicably, a few people would be let
through the door at a time, and then no more.
The same self-important women brushed by us in line,
pushing us aside to stand directly in front
of us. We had the feeling that no matter where we
had been standing in line, they would have come
and stood in front of us, just to prove something
(but what?). We just smiled and stepped aside. We
finally began boarding at about the time we were scheduled
to depart. When we got to our seat, there was a woman
sitting in my
seat. This was a different type of Guinean woman than
the ones who had pushed us by – this is the
educated, French-speaking woman from Conakry (the
capital) who also holds some grudge against us
because of the color of our skin, or perhaps simply
enjoys getting some status hold over anybody.
She pretended to think that 19C was the window, not
aisle seat, but I prevailed and she moved over
one seat to sit between mom and I, where she purposefully
spilled over both sides of the seat so
that both mom and I were squeezed to the edges of
our own seats. Oh well, at least I got the
window so that I could see the Sahara below.
We first flew over a series of brown hills, and between
the peaks I could see the glint of water
and small mud-colored villages clustered around small
areas of green. Roads snaked along the
ridges of the hills, probably taking a day to travel
from one village to the next. Some villages
looked as small as 20 houses. Those hills gave away
to a brown desert with surprising variety in
the land. Knifelike ridges extended for miles, and
fractal-like fingers extended like veins from
flat swaths of brown that must have once held rivers
but were long dead and dry. Odd little dark
plateaus stood out, like flat islands in the middle
of a sandy sea. And from time to time the
variety gave way to an unbroken, blinding beige sea
of sand. Here, there is no sign of water, or
life. After some time, the variety gave way completely
to unbroken sand, like a huge beach.
After a half-hour of haze, I fell asleep. When I woke
up, there were dark clouds below us, and
the lush green of Guinea.
I bribed a customs official $5 to bring us through
customs, so that there was no chance of items
being stolen from our bag, and paid a guy $3 to wheel
me and my bags to a waiting taxi, where I
bargained for 5 minutes for a $4 ride to the Conakry
Peace Corps house. I changed money while I
was there, too, and was amazed at the exchange rate.
The official exchange is 1800 Guinean Francs
to the dollar. He offered me 2700 GF to the dollar.
I hear that you can get up to 2900 GF to the
dollar. When I first arrived in Guinea 7 years ago,
the rate was one-third of that: 1000 GF to
the dollar. The currency fluctuation, and inflation,
has been killing the local economy. The
price of rice is rising, and the government is printing
tons of new money to make up the
difference. One Peace Corps volunteer told of the
complaints of one of her villagers, who waved
Guinean bills in her face and said “this is
worthless! This is paper! What you have is real
money.” He didn’t, of course, throw that
'worthless paper' on the ground!
We went out for our first tastes of Guinean food
this afternoon. We left the Peace Corps compound and
dodged puddles on the narrow road filled with potholes.
We leaped into the mud on the side to avoid the taxis
careening wildly around the corners, stuffed full
of people. We passed old men with the little muslim
hats, young girls carrying plates of bananas on their
heads, little storefronts selling tomato paste and
small plastic bags of sugar, and kids running around.
I only heard "Fote na ra" a few times --
"there's a white person" -- because the
Peace Corps house is so close by, they're sort of
used to us. We went to a Senegalese rice bar and got
some riz gras (salty rice with tid-bits of meat, sour
spinach-type stuff, and funny little squashes) and
yassa poulet (chicken with onion sauce) -- yum! The
two plates together cost us $1. We are *so* not going
to need all the money we brought with us.
We had the good fortune to see my friends Brad and
Estel Willits, two missionaries who lived in Fria
(the next town over) when I was in Wawaya. They were
very good to me while I was here, and we spent an
hour chatting and catching up. They tell me that the
road is now paved all the way to Fria, and that the
road to Wawaya has been graded. I'm excited to see
it. We also met the new Peace Corps director, Lisa
Ellis, who was charming and very helpful. We talked
about the situation of Peace Corps over the years,
and how much easier Peace Corps service is for current
volunteers than for either her (she served in the
Gambia in the 80s) or for me. There is now a mail
run that leaves every month, driving directly to each
PCV's village! We used to get mail about once every
3 months, when someone happened to be coming through,
or if we went to the regional house. I saw Mohammed
Fofana, the APCD for Education. It's amazing to me
how he remembered my face, my name, the village where
I served, even with all the volunteers who have passed
through the country in the 5 years since I left.
The Peace Corps house has been moved since I was
here and it is in a beautiful house and a good location,
just down the street from the Marine House and from
a fancy restaurant (the Riviera). However, the more
things change, the more they stay the same –
the sink fills with dirty dishes, PCVs gather around
the TV, the bunk beds seem to be the same as the ones
that were there when I was a volunteer (rickety but
solid), and the place has a familiar musty smell of
damp Conakry. The PCVs are the same, too – the
people change, but there is something similar. I recognize
some of the people I served with in their mannerisms,
their reactions to Guinea (casually happy, bitter
and jaded, MacGyver party boy, responsible and quiet).
A couple just returned from their first 3 months at
site and one of the first things he asked me was,
“why did you come back?” I said it was
to find the part of myself that fit here.
And there is a part of myself that fits here. Going
down the road to the boutique, I see the
familiar products – the Nescafe, little packets
of soap, bottled water, powdered milk – and
I feel
happy. “Bonjour, tanti” (hello Auntie)
I say to the woman behind the counter. Her old husband
looks respectfully at the floor as he greets us. And
then down the dirt road to the brick oven to
buy a warm baguette. It all feels so familiar in its
strangeness. I hear snatches of Pulaar and
Sousou as I walk down the road, and the rhythms feel
soothing. My Pulaar is coming back, and I feel comfortable
speaking it. I am so very, very glad to be here.
July 26, To the Village and
Back Again
Well, folks, we just arrived back in Conakry
after 2 weeks "en brousse" (in the bush)
and I'm
exhausted. It was a day of bad choices & bad
luck. The wrong taxi, missed phone connections, the
wrong choice of eating establishments, wrong
choice not to bring an umbrella, trying email a
half-hour too late. But it's ended well, and I
just washed my hair for the first time in 10 days
and am sitting groggily typing this note. The
next two days will be a whirlwind so, tired though
I
am, I might as well take a moment to write a
little.
We spent a week in my village, left for 4 days,
and came back for 4 days. It was just the right
amount of time "au village" - it was enough
time
to relax into the rhythm, to cultivate that
vacant stare as you sit in the heat next to your
friends, watching the chickens and chatting to
pass the time. Relatively little actual
information passes in these conversations, even after
5
years. I asked what grade their kids were in,
whether they'd had any more kids, and that was
about the sum total of the news. I got a few
more tidbits of news, but that took some time to
tease out. After that, it was hanging out,
chatting, drinking tea with my young men friends at
the bakery (a thatched open air hut with a mud
brick oven inside and a few sweating hunks pounding
flour into submission), throwing a few words of
Pulaar around the market to delighted shrieks from
the people there, translating the goings-on to my
mom, and suckering a few kids into carrying 20
gallon jugs of water on their heads for me in
exchange for a few matchbox cars. We grooved into
a
daily routine - wake to the roosters at 6:00, go
back to sleep until 8:00 when the screaming kids
woke us for good. Throw some water on our faces
& dress in the half-light of closed windows.
When we felt ready to face the world, we'd open
the door and windows to let in light, and shout
some greetings to the neighbors. Breakfast was
baguettes of bread or rice porridge or mashed
manioc with onion and oil and eggs, plus some
precious Earl Grey tea we brought along. One day we
went on an excursion to the local river, with
fishing poles made of fishing line tied to branches,
with corks for bobbers and some sad little worms
the kids dug out of the river banks. Another day
we brought some cloth to the tailors in town and
explained how we wanted our dresses,
handkerchiefs, and pillow covers done. Another
day I sat still for 2 1/2 hours and a local lady
braided my hair until her hands and my back
ached. It was so comfortable to have the tiny braids
sitting right against my scalp, very cool and low
maintenance. We visited people at their homes,
sat, and spent a lot of time at the
aforementioned bakery with the aforementioned bakers.
I
enjoyed hanging out with them - it was relaxed
and we'd joke around. They were my "guards-corps"
(bodyguards) and wouldn't let anybody touch me.
We got fresh bread and good strong tea, and I gave
them little gifts. One was my close friend when I
was here before, and it was good to be around
him again. In the evenings, someone would
usually send us some rice and sauce in two little
enamel bowls - a generous offering of food, and I
was surprised at how much I enjoyed eating rice
and sauce again. I got tired of it by a week
into our stay, though, and it's certainly no Atkins'
diet. Dancers be warned - I won't be wearing any
tight dresses anytime soon!
I was surprised by how much it has developed.
The road is now paved all the way to Fria (the last
hour was graded dirt before, and I used to arrive
in Conakry with a fine layer of red dust coating
my skin and nasal passages), and the road to
Wawaya is greatly improved. I have no idea how they
got out all those horrible rocks. It now takes
40 minutes instead of an hour. They've also
improved much of the road all the way to Telemele
- a town in the middle of Guinea that used to be
virtually unreachable from where I was. There
were several new buildings in my village and the
previous volunteer built a middle school, so
there are now more kids in the village and more
teachers, which improves the intellectual air a
lot. They also got a grant to build an improved
market structure, which is amazing, and they
finished a youth center in town. The officials who
were there when I was there are mostly gone, and
the new ones seem motivated (at least the
Sous-Prefet, or mayor, was), and get along well
with the traditional leaders. What a difference!
We visited the town where I built the health post
and that was nice. It was a smaller village
than Wawaya, and the huts were pretty and
well-kept. The elders made some nice speeches, and
I
met the first girl to be born in the hospital.
They called her Kadiatou Stephanie Diallo. I gave
her a necklace. We walked around the village,
and took some pictures of huts, of women pounding
rice in a pestle, of the imam teaching the Koran
to some young boys at the mosque.
After that first week we left to go to Boke, a
city about 3-4 hours from my village. The market
there was quite a bit more extensive than in my
village or Fria (the closest big city) and we
bought far too much fabric. Some woodworkers
were carving touristy items out of wood in a open
air hut next to the only museum I've ever seen in
Guinea, and we special ordered a few items from
them. We stayed in the "maison de passage"
(Peace Corps hostel) there, which had exciting things
like electricity and a TV and VCR. We watched
Sweet Home Alabama, Sense & Sensibility, and Benny
&
Joon. Hooray. We needed to vegetate a bit after
all that "on" time in the village - always
talking, always the center of attention, trying
to pay attention to every little thing to soak up
the details for later. While we were in Boke we
got a taxi to take us to Bel Aire - a fancy
ex-pat hotel and beach. It was a weekday so we
were the only people in this fabulous
establishment. I haven't seen the likes of it
before in Guinea - 3 stories high, with a nice pool
and lots of shiny glass and tile. We spent
almost as much on our meal there ($25) as on the taxi
ride there. We've generally been eating rice and
sauce for about 20 cents a plate. It rained
most of the day at Bel Aire unfortunately, but
the sun came out for a bit and we swam and it was
wonderful. It's been raining a LOT while we've
been here - it's the start of the rainy season in
earnest, and it rains almost every day. When it
doesn't rain, you wish it would because the air
becomes pregnant and hot and moist. I got a cold
while I was in Boke, so the third day (which was
torrential downpours anyway) we stayed in while I
dealt with my sniffles. I also got a blister
beetle burn - a blister beetle lets out some sort
of liquid that burns the skin, and you get a raw
patch of skin that looks like someone splashed
you with some mildly strong acid. It's still
healing, and doesn't look too pretty, but never
really hurt or anything. So far, that's the most
serious illness we've faced. We were pretty
worried about getting very sick but so far (knock
on
wood) it's been fine.
We came back to Wawaya for those last 4 days and
hung out. I'm not even sure what all we did. We
found the metalworker and watched him heat metal
red-hot using coals in a small depression in the
ground (fired hot with a bellows), and then pound
it into shapes on an anvil embedded in the
ground. We bought some rough-hewn hoes for about
50 cents. It continually amazed me how little
everything was worth after the currency
conversion. It cost about a dollar to have a tailor
spend
most of the day making a dress. The bakers
earned $2-3 a day for 8 hours of backbreaking labor
-
chopping wood, feeding the oven, kneading the
flour in a huge basin, shaping the loaves, taking
them off hot pieces of corrugated iron.
I really love Guinea, and it was wonderful to be
back in that part of myself that fits here. It
was difficult to leave again. Mom found a quote
in a book to the effect of "It's difficult to
leave a place because you will never again be the
person you are now, in this place, with these
people." It's true. In Wawaya, I am Aicha Diallo
-- popular, relaxed, joking, and a
self-consciuos. The village brings out certain
core elements of myself -- that I worry about what
others think about me and so I worry about
whether I'm doing the right thing all the time. It
brings out my sense of humor and that I like to
play jokes. I'm more comfortable, somehow, joking
and teasing in the village. In Wawaya, I'm the
popular girl -- I talk much more than I do at
home, where I fade away (verbally) into a crowd.
We're excited for Morocco, where we go next, to
spend a week in Marrakech. It was beautiful when
I visited Fez, like something out of the Arabian
Nights. The streets twisted through a maze of
markets, and the public baths had stone floors
heated from below, with vats of steaming water in
every corner. There were loaves of nugat larger
than my head. Here's to Morocco!
Love to all,
Stephanie
August 10,
Dazed and Confused
Hello friends,
This will probably be the last missive about my trip
(do I hear some sighs of relief?), though I may forward
some other writings that I do about it at some point
in the future.
I'm in New York City as I write this, enjoying a
fast internet connection at my friend Alex's (who
has graciously given me run of his room while I wait
for my flight to San Jose tonight). It's 9am, but
feels like sometime in the afternoon, and coffee is
my friend. I walked down the street this morning looking
for that friendly coffee, and the first coffee shop
I found was full of men. I couldn't shake the feeling
that it was inappropriate for me, a single white woman,
to sit in a coffee shop full of men, so I left. I
also can't shake the feeling that everyone's looking
at me as I walk down the street, though they're probably
not. I'm definitely a bit culture-shocked. New York
City feels like another foreign country anyhow --
sprinkled with mexican eateries, all I hear around
me is Spanish, and the graffiti tags on the iron storefronts
remind me that I'm in a place with just as many mysterious
cultural clues and meanings as Guinea. I feel lost.
I yearn for Santa Cruz with its beaches and redwoods.
I ache for my familiar folk music & dance scene.
Mom and I spent the last week of our trip in Morocco,
and it was hard. We had hoped for a relaxing Arabian
Nights-style vacation in this well-developed country,
but it ended up being very difficult to figure things
out. For one, I had the unnerving experience of having
difficulty communicating in French. For example, they
were using a different vocabulary set than Guineans.
In Guinea, there is a set stock of phrases, like "she's
managing well" or "is that it?" which
I can draw on and the meaning (both literally and
culturally) is immediately understood. Those phrases
often drew blank stares in Morocco. Plus, things that
they said to me somehow didn't make sense, like they
were translating poorly from Arabic. It reminded me
of an Iranian professor I had in college -- all the
words he used made sense, but not when strung together
into a sentence.
It was also difficult to decide how to relate to
men in Morocco. I had been told not to make eye contact
with men. So, how was I supposed to bargain for merchandise?
I tried looking at the floor, but that seemed SO rude.
I finally noticed that when I spoke to older men (who
would not be inappropriately forward, as the younger
men might be), they looked at my face, but their eyes
were focussed slightly to the side, as if they were
examining my earring. So, that solved that problem.
I continued to dress fairly modestly, in long skirts
and usually covering my shoulders. I noticed that
many tourists didn't, wearing tank tops and shorts.
Bargaining was another difficulty. In Guinea, if
someone asked for $30 for something, you could expect
to pay $20-25. In Morocco, if someone asked for $30,
you could expect to pay $10-15. This was a whole different
way to bargain -- a long-winded and wide-sweeping
pendulum arc on either side of the "real"
price, instead of a quick little oscillation with
a few jokes and a handshake. I was uncomfortable offering
someone $5 for something they asked $30 for, and so
I always started too high and probably paid too much.
It was frustrating, and I didn't buy much.
The first night, we arrived in Casablanca and stayed
in a hot little room in the hotel there. It was fine.
We took a train to Marrakech the next day but the
A/C started to get overloaded about halfway there
and we arrived sweaty and tired. A man in our passenger
car offered Mom his Koran as we all left the train,
and was disappointed when (flustered) she refused.
"Don't you want to learn about our religion?"
he asked. (The book looked to be in Arabic, so it
might not have been particularly informative). Mom
and I stayed in Marrakech in a lovely renovated guesthouse
with intricately and colorful painted doors, sinks
and showers that looked as if they'd been lovingly
moulded out of soapstone, and a cold water jacuzzi
in the courtyard. That jacuzzi was wonderfully refreshing
in the heat of the day -- it was about 100 degrees
on the hottest day. We first went to the main square
in Marrakech -- Jemma al-Fna -- a mad circus of performers,
snake charmers, henna artists, storytellers, piles
of oranges being squeezed into juice, colorful cascades
of dried apricots, dates, and nuts, and food stalls
dishing up kebabs & snails & sheeps heads
from steaming vats. We were assaulted by smells of
diesel from the generators, and the pounding sound
of drums, and retreated to a safe tourist restaurant
overlooking the fray.
The next day we explored the Souks -- or marketplaces.
They were situated in a maze of twisting high-walled
alleys covered with woven slats. The leather souk
was full of the smell of turpentine, and a kindly
shopkeeper showed how they were pounding leather into
pretty (but probably uncomfortable) slippers with
pointed toes and sequins, and I almost caught my skirt
on fire on their gas burner. We wandered through piles
of pretty painted bowls, elaborate hookahs for smoking
tobacco, lovely tooled leather bags, and embroidered
dresses and robes. We enjoyed the mint tea in Morocco
-- not as strong as the dark tea prepared by my baker
friends in the village in Guinea, but sweet and minty
and served steaming in charming little shot glasses
from a silver filligree teapot.
The food in Morocco was also amazing. After a hot
day wandering around the city trying to make travel
arrangements to go to the desert, we found a nice
upscale restaurant and decided to treat ourselves.
We ordered the "various salads" and a chicken
tangine with onions. The "various salads"
came in about 20 little bite-sized bowls -- vinaigered
beets, tangy and spicy olives, cucumbers, cooked spiced
carrots, tasty lentils... so many little treats. A
"tangine" is a traditional moroccan dish
-- some vegetables and meat in a sauce, cooked inside
a covered clay dish. They're always good, and this
particular tangine was so tasty we were talking about
it for days. The sauce was rich and sweet, and we
sopped it up with thick pita-like rounds of bread.
We wanted to go for an outing to the Atlas Mountains
and the Sahara, and had finally found a group outing
which would take us for a one-night visit. We knew
it was 4 hours through the mountains to Ouarzazate,
and the travel agent said that it was then another
1 hour to Zagorat, where we would spent the night
in a Berber tent, and then have a sunrise camel ride.
We weren't too thrilled about the camel ride, but
figured we could skip it if we had to. We packed up
a big bag, and climbed aboard the bus ride... the
bus ride... to HELL! <ba-duh-ba-duh-BA-DUM!>
1. The bus had no air conditioning
2. We were with 6 Spaniards. We don't speak Spanish.
I speak more Pulaar than they spoke English.
3. It was 5 hours (not 1) from Ourzazarte to Zagorat,
making for a 9 hour bus ride each day.
4. There was a 2 hour camel ride on Day 1 *and* Day
2
5. We couldn't skip the camel ride because that was
how we were to reach our accomodation for the night
6. We couldn't bring our big bag of stuff -- only
a day pack per person for overnight (quick, repack!)
7. It gets cold at night in the desert
8. The wind picks up at night in the desert
9. There's a lot of sand in the desert
10. Sand is easily picked up by wind
I was pretty tired and grumpy by the evening because
of all the above (plus another unfortunate event,
described below). I was talking with an Australian
traveler who was in another group staying at the tent,
and we didn't quite see eye to eye. He was one of
those intrepid optimist adventure travelers to whom
everything is always great & amazing, and you
have to make the best of every situation. I wasn't
feeling particularly upbeat, and didn't feel like
trying to feel upbeat, so our conversation slowly
and subtly deteriorated. The next day, he was riding
his camel shirtless through the Saharan sun, sunglasses
on, satisfied smile on his face. If anyone knows this
type of young adventure-for-the-sake-of-adventure
traveler, maybe you can relate to my annoyance.
But, complaining aside, it was quite an experience
to be in the Sahara at night, to see the curve of
the moon rising over the dunes and illuminating the
camel caravan as our Berber hosts beat softly on drums.
We could still see the car lights from the highway,
so we weren't exactly in the middle of nowhere, but
it was the actual honest-to-goodness SAHARA. A sign
in the next town pointed south and said "57 days
to Timbouctou" (by camel caravan, that is!).
I can't imagine 57 days on a camel. We were pretty
saddlesore after a few hours, and chose to walk next
to our camels for a good part of the way.
But the trip had already been ruined for me because
of something that happened on the first day. We had
stopped at Kasbah Ait Ben Haddou, the largest walled-city
in Morocco. It's been used for such films as Gladiator
and the Last Temptation of Christ, so it's a popular
tourist mecca. I was curious to see it, but was immediately
turned off when we reached the river to the city and
we were mobbed by a crowd of local boys offering to
take us across on donkeys and horses for 50 cents
each. It turned out we could have waded across it,
but I didn't know that at the time, and Mom and I
climbed aboard a horse. I didn't understand why the
young man didn't wade through the water and lead the
horse, like many of the young boys seemed to be doing,
but he climbed aboard in front of me. Poor horse,
carrying 3 people! On the other side, he helped mom
down first, and then helped me. I had my hand on his
shoulder, and other hand on the saddle of the horse
to support myself, and he took advantage of my helplessness
to put his hand somewhere where (to put it mildly)
that he shouldn't have. I was OUTRAGED. My first instinct
was to slap him as soon as I had my feet under me,
but something stopped me. What might he have done?
I didn't know the culture. In the US, it would have
been appropriate to slap him. I just stared at him,
open mouthed, and said something weak in French and
English to the effect that he shouldn't have done
that, that he knows what he did. He just looked at
me, not smiling, not glowering, not innocent. Just
nothing. And the worst part was, I had to PAY him
for taking me across the river. I *knew* some real
trouble would break out if I didn't pay. So I had
to hand money to this man, who had just violated my
dignity and person. I turned away as I let the money
drop into his hand. Mom says that, as I did, he called
me a slut.
What should I have done? Slapped him? I wish I'd
spit on the coin and thrown it in the mud for him
to retrieve. But what if some theatrical show of disrespect
got me into some real trouble? It probably wouldn't
have -- there were 4 Spanish men with us who, even
if they didn't know what was going on, would have
rescued me if something had happened. I felt humiliated,
dirty, and claustrophobic as we wandered the kasbah,
with children tagging along and asking us for money.
Had I had my wits about me, I think the best thing
would have been to find out who he was -- his name,
and his father's name, and then seek out the immam
(muslim priest) in the village and try to explain
to him. But I didn't. Whenever someone insults you,
it's always in the days afterwards that you're able
to think of all the things you *should* have said,
the perfect comebacks. It's your psyche trying to
repair the damage that's been done to it, building
up little walls and barbs, shooting retaliatory arrows
into the night and knowing that there's no longer
any chance of hurting the person who hurt you.
We returned to Marrakech tired and dirty, and the
bathwater turned brown when we bathed. It's almost
worth being so dirty and tired, because then rest
and water feels so goddamned GOOD. The next day, we
made arranagements to go to a hammam -- traditional
bathhouse -- and get scrubbed and rubbed with hot
water. In a series of three rooms, each getting progressively
hot and steamier, clutches of naked women and children
bathed themselves with buckets of hot and cool water
drawn from taps in the stone. We lay down on the smooth
flagstone floor, which was heated by fire ovens from
below, and a strong wiry woman took a pair of abrasive
gloves and scrubbed and rubbed our bodies -- discussing
things animatedly in Arabic with another woman who
ran the bathhouse. We washed our hair, and she combed
the conditioner vigorously through it, and dumped
hot water all over us. It was just grand, and cost
about $5 each. We left feeling refreshed and clean,
and the aches from the previous days' travails had
almost disappeared.
And that was Morocco. When I left Guinea 5 years
ago, I had stopped through Fez and was enchanted by
the winding cobblestone streets in the old town and
the intricately mosaics on the fountains and mosques.
I wasn't enchanted this time, but maybe I was just
tired of travel. Maybe I was missing Guinea, and not
dealing with my sorrow as I left the village. Maybe
it would have been better for us to go to a less touristy
destination. But oh well, it's done, and I'm almost
home, and that makes me happy.
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Epilogue:
I'm now back in Santa Cruz, and not entirely conscious.
I'm awake, and jet-lag is almost gone, but I'm still
not entirely clear on what I feel. Yesterday was a
peach of a Santa Cruz day, and I enjoyed the lovely
weather and a waffle with fresh strawberries. I felt
guilty as I ate my breakfast -- a few feeling in relation
to Guinea. Guilt. I always knew that no matter how
hard I tried to be one of the villagers, I differed
from them in one key aspect: I have a Choice. I enjoyed
village life, and loved the people, but I was there
by *choice*, and they were not. And here in Santa
Cruz, eating my food -- food for taste's sake instead
of necessity's sake -- I felt guilty that I'm able
to enjoy this easy life. This is a surprisingly simplistic
emotion for me to be feeling. That can't be all.
I feel some regret. The time went so quickly in the
village, and there are so many conversations that
I didn't have. I waited for people to tell me what
was going on in their life, and they never did. I
told them only the barest skeleton of my life. I feel
that we connected, that we shared many experiences
together, but didn't share much information.
I suppose that what I feel is the sort of post-partum
depression that comes with the completion of any important
pilgrimage. I returned to my village, and I am joyful
that I was able to return, and that my visit was received
with such enthusiasm. It will probably take me the
next five years to figure out what it meant to me.
And then, perhaps, it will be time to go back again.
Thanks for listening,
Stephanie
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