Thursday, May 31, 2012

Catching up... [Part 5]

WAIST Photo Contest


For the past few years now, Peace Corps has held a photo contest on the first night of the big West Africa Invitational Softball Tournament (WAIST).  Below are the photos I submitted for the contest this past January (2012), each one with its theme and a brief explanation.


Architecture/Monuments:  This is of the grand mosque in Dakar and was taken out of the window of a taxi when my parents and sister were visiting me in Senegal.


Food:  The bowls are full of a traditional dish made from millet and typically served at baptisms and other events; this photo was taken during the baptism for my counterpart's second wife's son.


Group Portrait:  These students are helping weed the vegetable nursery in the garden at the elementary school in Kayemor; some are clearly more excited about it than others.


Hilarity-Hilariousness-Hilariousity:  This young boy was not quite sure what to make of my (real) father all dressed up in my (host) father's best white outfit; the next photo I took of the 2 of them shows the boy smiling, so he quickly decided my father was on ok guy to be around.


Individual Portrait:  This young girl, Baby Sey(nabou), is quite the precocious little girl; she was scared of me for several months when she was younger and used to run into her mother's arms crying whenever she saw me, but she quickly grew out of that phase and now struts around Kayemor as if she owns the place.


Integration:  This photo was taken when my parents, sister and I hosted a party for Kayemor when they were visiting me; I'm dancing here with my host aunt (in purple) and my host mom (in green) - everyone always enjoys seeing me make a fool of myself when I try to dance Senegalese-style.


Local Flavor:  You couldn't go a day in Senegal without seeing the components in this photo: a bowl (of rice), a tea pot and 2 tea glasses; this photo was taken in the garden that several talibe of Serigne Djim Ndiaye started in Kayemor; one talibe, Gallo, is in the distance watering on this beautiful evening.


Nature:  This photo was also taken in this garden; one talibe, Ali, strung up these bitter tomatoes to dry, which provided a nice window to the setting sun.


On the Job:  This photo was taken when we were measuring out the garden beds for one of the 4 different school gardens I helped start during my service; the teachers and I were demonstrating the process of measuring out and marking garden beds before digging, while the students looked on with intently. 


Transportation:  When my parents and sister were visiting me, we took a 3 hour boat ride from Palmarin to Toubacouta in the boat pictured here.  


Where's Waldo?:  These are 6 of the 8 girls who received a scholarship through Peace Corps Senegal's Michele Sylvester Scholarship program for the 2011-2012 school year; if I were a few inches shorter I would probably blend in a bit more.  :)

Catching up... [Part 4]

Gamou Gi 2011

Gamou Gi is the big annual celebration that the marabou in Kayemor, Serigne Djim Ndiaye, hosts.  Here is the blog post I wrote about it for 2010.

The 2012 Gamou Gi happened already (May 19), so I'll have to get a post up about that soon, but I don't have nearly as many pictures or video from that event.  

I made a folder in my picasa page with photos and a few videos from the event: https://picasaweb.google.com/116102942817396013841/GamouGi2011?authkey=Gv1sRgCIvd3979ybr8Hw

Here are more videos from the event that I uploaded to YouTube:

















Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Catching up... [Part 3]

Still going strong with these posts where I'm catching up from activities last year.

Trouvez votre inspiration! 

The PCVs in the Kaolack region hosted our second annual girls camp last summer - and the overall theme was "Trouvez votre inspiration" (Find your inspiration).  About 12 PCVs (including me) selected 2-4 girls from their communities to attend the week-long camp.  Each day involved a different theme from health to environment to careers.  We had local female teachers there all week to act as small group leaders and assist with discussions and other activities.  There were more serious/educational sessions, such as ones on how to start a tree nursery, career options for women in Senegal, sexual health, and eating healthy, as well as more fun sessions, such as daily yoga, various sporting games (ex., kickball, softball and swimming), spa night, movie night, skits and a game show the last night.  Everyone (girls, PCVs and teachers) learned a lot and had a great time - plans are already in place for another camp this year!


Korite!

Last year marked my third Korite in Senegal.  Unlike the other Muslim holidays that I had celebrated in Kayemor, I didn't have my host mom buy fabric and get my outfit made - I bought my outfit myself.  In good Senegalese fashion, I also had my hair braided by my namesake's daughter and had my right hand and feet decorated by my friend Yassay.


Yassay showing off her Korite outfit.
My host mom, Soukaye, looking very fancy in her new clothes!
Two girls in my family who also wanted to show off their new clothes - and their modeling skills! - for the camera.  :)



Other kids in my family all dressed up!



Yassay even wrote my Senegalese name, "Ndeye Diaw", down the ring toe on my right foot.


Puddles!

Whenever there is a big rain, the area between my hut and the rest of my family's compound floods, which provides a fun traipsing ground for the kids in my family.





Sine Saloum 96.4 FM Radio Communautaire


Starting about 8 months into my service through the end of my time in Kayemor, I made a radio show for the first Monday of every month for the local community radio station in Kaolack, 96.4 FM.  I always pre-recorded the show since that allowed me to interview agricultural technicians, farmers, development workers or other people involved in work related to agriculture and/or development in my area.  These interviews were much more effective than me talking for a whole hour because the people I interviewed were always native Wolof speakers.  Even though I worked really hard (and still work hard!) to perfect my Wolof, I am still far from sounding like a native speaker, especially on the radio.  Peace Corps Senegal bought some digital audio recorders for all the PCVs who make radi shows, so I used one of those to record my interviews and then edited them with Audacity, free audio editing software, throwing in some fun American music in the pauses in the interviews.  Then I would convert the show to an MP4 file, which the radio station would play during my radio show hour.


These photos were taken one day when I went to drop off my radio show for the next week. These are just a handful of the many people who volunteer at the radio station - either working the controls or hosting weekly shows.












Volunteer Visit:


Last September, as my 2 years in Kayemor were coming to an end, I hosted my replacement (who was still just a Trainee then) and another Trainee for a few days in Kayemor.  Many PCVs, when their 2 year service is over, leave their village or town just as another PCV is arriving, with the goal that the projects that the leaving PCV started will be continued by the just-arriving PCV.  So, just as I replaced another PCV, someone else replaced me in Kayemor.  During those 3 days in Kayemor, I gave Tom (my replacement) and Amanda (who is stationed in a village just 6km away from Kayemor - a new site for a PCV) a tour of Kayemor and the surrounding area.  We met tons of people and had fun wandering around seeing the sites of Kayemor: goats climbing on the broken school wall, the marabou's mosque, millet silhouetted by the setting sun, baobob fruit on the tree, rice, a donkey, goats playing soccer, my backyard, the road and river between Tom and Amanda's villages, a fisherman, and the "bridge of death".  It was a whirlwind tour, but I think it helped give them a better idea of what Volunteer life and work in the village is like.