Do what you can, with what you have, where you are. -Theodore Roosevelt
I had the great pleasure of spending the last three days with two amazing women who have been teaching and working and going about their lives in the little village of Tieni for two years. They are who I want to be as a volunteer here in Liberia, and the quiet, simple way they live is as inspiring as anything I have seen or read about service here.
| Tieni Mosque |
The daily life of a volunteer in a rural village like this is as follows:
6:30 am- wake up, brush teeth with a cup of water over the cement rail of the front porch, greet various neighbors, start the coal pot (ubiquitous cooking apparatus that is exactly what it sounds like: a shallow pot or tray into which pieces of charcoal are fed, lit and fanned until they are cooking-temperature. All food is cooked in pots or pans placed directly on the coals. It is fairly simple to light on most occasions except the dark, the rain, or when one is in a hurry) and pot of water for coffee or tea, greet more neighbors who are also out on their porches, move chairs/tables out to the porch to take advantage of the morning breeze (if it exists), do any dishes left over from after dark the day before, greet the neighbors out on their porches, breathe.
| "Goo mornin, how de body?" |
8:00 am- relax on the porch with a cup of coffee or tea, any grading or planning required for the day (for example, final exams for the classes scheduled for the day), and a bowl of oatmeal with honey and dried fruit sent from home, greet the children walking past on their way to school and the neighbors going about their mornings, breathe some more.
10:30 am- start thinking about getting ready for afternoon classes, take a bucket bath (with rainwater from the afternoon before, refreshingly brisk), plan the day's outfit, greet some neighbors, organize materials for class, take a deep breath.
12:00pm- bring furniture back inside (anything left on the porch becomes someone else's treasure), back bag/backpack for school, say goodbye to neighbors, start walking up the dirt road to 'The Road' (where red dirt meets coal tar) to have something for lunch (usual choices: hard boiled eggs with bread and mayo and peppe, potato greens soup or cassava leaf soup served over rice, fufu on a good day), greet everyone you encounter.
12:45 pm- walk back down the dirt road to the school, greet everyone you encounter, arrive in time to catch 'devotion' (all the secondary school students, 7th-10th grade, line up and sing at the flagpole before class is supposed to start), greet the principal and whichever of the other teachers have shown up that day.
1:15 pm- since this particular day happens to be a final exam, head to the classroom assigned to the appropriate grade, appeal to the Dean of Discipline on behalf of any students who come late or in spoilt uniforms so that they can take their exams, organize the unruly groups of students milling around outside their rooms, gather them together and give the essential admonition against 'spying' on other students, pass out exam papers and write the five to ten questions of the exam on the board, patrol up and down the aisles looking for cheating or spying, toss out any perpetrators, collect papers at the end of class and make way for the next teacher.
| 9th and 10th graders waiting to begin their exams |
| Two 10th grade students outside their classroom |
| Students lingering on the edge of campus |
| an Oma's house on the road home from school |
| Kickball game across the road |
| Ma Fanta and the across-the-road neighbors |
9:00 pm- take a bucket bath before bed and go to sleep content with a day well lived.
I've missed your voice Maureen. Thanks for sharing this, and I look forward to living vicariously as you go through this incredible journey.
ReplyDelete