Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Well, tomorrow is the day... I am finally moving out to site. Internet access will be scarce, but CELL PHONE RECEPTION IS AMAZING. If you need my digits, call my folks or my siblings, someone should be able to get it to you. I think facebook is also sporting the digits. I am going to be lonely... so call me! My closest volunteer is at least 60 km away. So hopefully, I'm crossing my fingers, that Nyamina hosts as many awesome people as Kabe did.

Things have been a little... thought provoking here to say the least. I'm going to be honest. I have just realized how hard these next 3.5 months could really be. But it's all about attitude. Unfortunately, these past couple days I have been feeling a little down. SOOOO if calling is not your style, send me a letter. I will have plenty of time to write back. In addition to the fact that I will in the future have a post office box in Nyamina hopefully.

So I guess basically this is just a goodbye message. Keep the emails coming, I just won't be responding too quickly. I can get internet in my banking town... but it just depends when I go there. Which, if things go as well as I hope... I won't be there too often.

So, here it goes.... Wish me luck, keep me in your thoughts, it's time to get to work!

A vid vid

This is just to show you what a numu ( smith) family does in Kabe. Though really, it just shows what their kids do and how bad of a camera operator I am....wahh wahhh waaaaaaaaaaah

Friday, September 12, 2008

Swearing....it's not just curse words anymore

8 long weeks of being emersed in language and culture and hot weather and MOSQUITOS. We have come to the day. THe day we have all been waiting for. We have committed all of the cultural faux pas's... struggled with the language... struggled more with the food... and here we are. Today we officially commit ourselves to two years of probably the most exciting experience ever. I am so ready. I have never been so set to do something as I am now. Next week I will be in Nyamina until January researching and researching the town. Studying its problems... questioning it's needs. After this time I can really explain what I want to do. It is a new village, so no PC projects are in existance there. I am so ready. I am so excited.

So after today you can erase PCT (Peace Corps TRAINEE) from my Job Description and change it to Audrey Respet PCV (Peace Corps Volunteer)! Inshallah


One of the trainers here was laughing at me the other day and told me I was most likely to extend a third year. The funny thing is I have already thought about it. Kabe is looking for a volunteer... Maybe I can return to those roots.


hope all is well back in the states!

Monday, September 8, 2008

Its the Final COUNTDOWN

How to sum up the last twenty days?

Well first off I must start with a petite histoire. When my roommate Kevin found out that I was going to go to Mali West Africa for the Peace Corps, he would daily serenade me with Toto's “Africa” as he belted out “I BLESS THE RAINS DOWN IN AFRICA!!!!!!!” at good ol 204. He reminded me everyday that each day I wake up in my mud hut… I would need to sing that song. He had promised to try to get me a CD with the song on it, but time flew by too fast before I was swept away by the Peace Corps. I had almost forgotten about the song, until one day when nyenafin be n na (nostalgia was on me) and my friend Kelly said, “Audge, you gotta listen to this song, it will make you feel better”. Right as the song began I started laughing. We both had an ear bud in and danced and belted out the song. At that moment, I don’t think I could have felt happier. Maybe it is possible, but truly, homesickness was gone. I had completed one of my small… small goals. Also, Kevin can be glad I took his advice.

So a weird way to start off an entry maybe, but I needed to get that out there. So the past twenty days were spent in beautiful Kabe learning Bamanakan gua koro (under a hangar). Eating bread and tea in the mornings, macaroni at lunch, and rice and na(sauce) for dinner. The past twenty days have been very very warm with every few days a downpour to cool us down. Plus, the rain helps put me to sleep as it pit pats (or slam bams) my toli (tin) roof.

My language teacher was intense and fantastic. He pushed us four trainees real hard, and I don’t think my language would be anywhere near to how good it is right now if it wasn’t for his work. I tested at intermed. Mid at the mid stage test which is the requirement to pass training, so I have exceeded that by now (at least I would hope so). I have gotten compliments from my homestay family and other villagers because I can finally understand them and they can understand me.

Now when I say “N t’a don” (I don’t know) I actually mean that I don’t know and I assure them that I understand by saying “N y’a famu, nga n t’a don” I understand, but I don’t know. I find it funny though when some of my Malian friends in town would talk to me in French and I would answer in Bambara, because that would be the first language that would come to me. It is really exciting to see how much a difference being emerged really makes in the language learning process. I feel blessed with being placed in the village I was in. I was very lucky to be placed with a very open and enthusiastic, helpful community. I was very sad to leave them Yesterday, but this only means my real service is going to start.

I will be swearing in this Friday at the embassy! How exciting! Then a few days after I will be on my way to Nyamina! Working with the women’s garden there. I am also working with my APCD to work with Soulyemane Cisse on organizing the film festival in Nyamina! So many many exciting things.

I am feeling sad though lately. I loved my homestay village, probably most than other trainees. I made a lot of great friendships, so it just means I will have to visit a lot! There was a little rumor that my host dad and a friend might come visit me after Ramadan, but Malians like to joke, and are just about as sarcastic as I am, so it may just be a cruel cruel joke.

But that is another thing I love about Mali. Everyone is funny. I am pretty sure I have mentioned this a hundred times, but I think this is what has helped me learn the language as fast as I have. I joke. I try to learn new jokes or new funny sayings such as I am going to marry 15 men and have 25 children (the women get a kick out of this). I also like to tell the men that propose to me that they will have to cook and clean if they want to marry me, and can’t be upset when I marry a new husband. It is also funny when they ask me what I am going to be doing in Africa for two years, I tell them that I am searching for a husband and they laugh and they say seriously what are you going to be doing. I continue to say well I might garden but my priority is to find a husband. They usually ask if I will be going back to America after the two years and I said that I will probably just stay in Mali for another hundred, and that I will never go back to America. That one also gets a lot of laughs.

The nature is also amazing out here. I would describe Kabe as a savannah esque type area, though it is really hard to know for sure because most places are fields. There are some trees, lots of bushes and grasses. There were some very pretty flowers out in the kungola (forestish area) that I had wanted to get a picture of but decided that if I didn’t take the picture I would have to go back. The birds are also amazing here. Some just look like simple finches while others are just amazingly different than what I am used to. The kids are afraid of frogs and anything amphibian or reptile, so of course I pick them up and display them for the kids to see that really the creatures are fine.


I was constantly having a great time in village and unfortunately it had to end. I’m sure Nyamina will be awesome, but a piece of my heart is always going to be in Kabe.

Monday, August 18, 2008

QUICK QUICK UPDATE

My new site is amazing. It is right on the Niger River! There are two very large gardens and Eaux et Poissons department (I'm going to see if I can work with the man that works there...He was pretty nice). My homologue was amazing. She speaks French and Bambara. I was so nervous the whole week that I spoke Franbara. It was still great. Nyaminakaw (the people of Nyamina) are very funny and diverse. I am going to have a great time there. As a welcoming/come back here later present they presented me with 4 live guinea fowl and dozens of eggs. A group of friends and I got to have them killed and we plucked them and made the best chicken salad Mali has ever seen!

Sorry this is short.

I'm headed back to Kabe in a few days for twenty more days so there won't be any updates there.

Hope all is well back home. Ive been able to keep up with the olympics a tiny tiny bit.

Love you miss you!

Sunday, August 10, 2008

More photos!

Try this link

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2531019&l=c899f&id=13900547

it is supposed to be a public link to my facebook album so you can check out more pics

Edit: Yes it works, you do not need to be a facebook member to check out these photos.

I have been going through the pictures a bunch because I miss those kids already! It is really funny.

a video

Here is a video I took with the Camera of a storm coming through. I have a funny story about the guy behind the wall. One night him and his friend came to my concession while I was hanging out with the kids and he was asking me why I wasn't making tea and told me he hadn't eaten dinner yet. I kept telling him N ye imuso ye. Well after saying that a million times and he kept laughing and just nodding his head I realized that I forgot to negate the sentence, so I kept saying I was his wife (in really bad bambara) so I shrieked and negated the sentence and he just laughed. The next day I was walking to school and I passed him at the butigi. I just laughed/ blushed send my greetings and booked it out of there. He really is a nice kid though.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

SARA ASKED FOR PICS

Here is some friends and family right outside my host dad's door!
















These are the boys on the negeso (iron horse=bicycle) Brama and Fa















This picture is from right before a storm hit. I thought the sky looked amazing! Plus my family and friends were just hanging out on the bench, PHOTO OP!

















This is a picture of my Host dad Seke and his second wife Ya. He has three wives, but this is the one that takes care of me the most. Plus she is so CUTE!










The two boys on the outside are my brothers Brama and Yaya. The boy in the middle is my friend Madou. They are sitting on the wagon.













This picture is taken right outside of my concession. In the background the orange yellow beige building is the mosque. On the right hand side of the background is the market which is open Thursdays but is empty since it is rainy season and everyone is in the fields

Thursday, August 7, 2008

SOME NEWS

So it has been awhile!

Computers at Tubani So are HOT and I hate to use too much time. So like I have said before I am living in a small village of Kabe pop. 800. My host family is amazing. My host dad (Seke) sings in a xylophone band and is of the numu caste (he is a blacksmith). He has three wives (Oumu, Ya, Batoma-Batoma means name of mother) and I think five children who are my best friends (Brama, Yaya, Boi, Draman, Yi) 4 boys and 1 girl. For breakfast I usually have Kafe (lipton tea with lots of powdered milk and sugar) and bread. Lunch and dinner varies. Sometimes I have rice with peanut sauce (sometimes the peanut sauce has dried fish, fresh fish… I definitely prefer the fresh fish) or Macaroni with a red oil sauce or one of my favorites Yams/sweet potatoes with potatoes onions and bouillon cubes for flavor. Seke’s older sister always gives me fried woso (yams).

I take my bucket baths in an open air Nyegen and it is really cool to see the sky while I bathe!

At 715 pm I sometimes head to a different concession to watch the Brazillian soap Opera “Coeur du Peche” which maybe the funniest show I have seen, or everyone’s reactions to it!

I eat dinner at about 8pm followed by lantern conversations with my host brothers and their friends. Most of the kids are about 15 and really funny. One boy named Aloo had 1000 fcfa and he knows some French, and in French 1000 is mille. WELL, these kids occasionally whip out some English for me (they come up to me and say HEY NANA! Good Morning Sir! And I just laugh) and one day Aloo came up to me in a suitjacket and just shouted the word MILLIONAIRE!! I couldn’t stop laughing! He told me that night he was going to make me chicken and I would get a leg. I teased him all day the next day asking for my chicken. The following day he offered me the liver (which was actually delicious) and after class that day my host mom Ya told me Aloo had left me a present. It was definitely the Chicken leg and it was definitely delicious!

SO the kids are great. One guy Adaman tries to get me to marry him all the time, even offered me his lilac motor scooter. I tell him I don’t want a husband that has a wife already. I also showed him and his friends a picture of Nic and they ask me all of the time about my big boyfriend. It is funny. My host moms think he’s cute and are always like THIS IS YOUR BOYFRIEND… WHAT??

So that is pretty humorous

The language is coming along. I do get to speak a little bit of French with some older kids, but other people say HEY SPEAK BAMBARA! So I then try…. Very hard!

Mali had its Arbor day equivalent and it was a blast! I planted a bunch of Baobab trees!


I go to my future site on Sunday to check it out for a week. I am pretty excited!

Sorry this is short, gotta let someone else use the computer. I have tons and tons of pictures so hopefully soon.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Last day before Homestay

Homestay begins tomorrow. We head out at 8 am. That means tonight I hope my clothes are dry and I can pack them up. Today was a little more crazy than usual because there was a lot of buzz about our sectors and our homestays (the places we will be at for the next 8 weeks... to practice our Bambara). My host representitive plays xylophone, which I'm pretty excited about. He only speaks Bambara, so I better learn QUICK. My LCF (language and culture facilitator) is very nice and has a great sense of humor. Everyone has a great sense of humor. We were told today that people that do PC Africa learn to laugh. I think I have that down pat.

I got my typhoid and rabies shots today. Took 'em like a champ. I wore my taafe today... like a champ. I was able to keep it up, no buttons/zippers etc. Its all about the rolling.

I got to try the whole sit and eat with my right hand thing (Malians believe left hands are dirty and really shouldn't be used for eating or greeting.... I agree) I was doing ok. My host rep made fun of me because I was taking small bites.

At our sector session we got to learn about our projects/goals, planted some trees, and sowed some corn (Dad thanks for teaching me that. I got it down.) We also learned about different trees in Mali and how to identify them. I'm not too good at that yet. Maybe later! Thanks to Sara at the wetlands office though for teaching me transects because I'll get to do those at site when I get there in September! I'm also excited about the chance to write Natural Resource Management reports.

I'll be at my homestay with three other really great people! I'm excited. We will all live in different homes, but in the same village. The village is called Kabe and it's south of Bamako.


Played some soccer today. Pretty funny to have bushes in the middle of the field, in addition to termite mounds. The cold shower afterwards definitely felt good.


Sorry, this entry is a little scattered. I've been writig a little in my journal to gather my thoughts. But not as often as I wanted. I'm so exhausted from all of the learning by the end of the day. I still love it though. I am really excited about starting my garden!


Ok that's it for me tonight. Details really coming soon. Or wait a few weeks and I can finally send some letters.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Training

Tubani so is AWESOME!

I'm learning so much already and having a great time. Temperature is in the 90s... though right now its only 79 because it rained last night. All the volunteers and staff are great. We just started learning Bamanankan.

Another short post but I need to find some stuff I left.


Anyway!

I leave for Homestay on Tuesday and I will have a cell phone real soon. Skype is supposed to be pretty cheap to call cell phones (incoming calls are free) Let me know and I can get you my number. Also.. if you are into texting ask your provider if you can receive texts from africa. I'm five hours ahead of you Minnesotans. Just so you know!


Miss you love you

Thursday, July 10, 2008

short and sweet

Just wanted to write a quick message

Stage was awesome Everyone is so funny and great to be around.  I feel like I know everyone already!  we leave for paris soon and should be in Bamako tomorrow night!

Miss you all

Thinking about you

Monday, July 7, 2008

It's about that time!

I am finally all packed up! I hopefully shouldn't be missing anything because I have only packed, unpacked, repacked a dozen of times. Plus there is no turning back as soon as I head out.

I'm really excited to meet all of the other volunteers. Everyone that I have met through facebook seems really enthusiastic, which only makes things more exciting and I cannot wait!

I just want to throw out a quick thank you to everyone that made my last few months in MN really exciting. I had a great time and I'm going to miss you all.

Letters will be slow to come... but don't worry I will have time after training to really get them rolling.

Post is a little short, but I really should go to bed soon so I can make it to the airport by 5:15 am....ahhh :)


Here's to you MN! Thanks for everything!

And if you feel like writing me

Audrey Respet, PCV
Corps de la Paix
B.P. 85
Bamako, Mali

Thursday, June 12, 2008

It finally Feels OFFICIAL!

I just arranged for my flight to staging in Philly, so it finally feels official.

My schedule will look a little like this:

July 7
6:10 am flight leaves Duluth Int'l airport
9:05 am arrive in Detroit
10:10 am depart for PHILLY
11:49 am arrive in PHILLY

Staging- Learn about PC get shots etc

July 9
10:50 pm Leave NY
11:50 am arrive in PARIS!
4:40 pm Leave Paris
8:20 pm arrive in Bamako


I still have a lot to do.... like pack perhaps? But I'm not quite ready to do that. I have started a list of ideas of what I should bring. Working on it... you know :).