Saturday, August 4, 2007
2 days left!
Here I am...counting down till my departure...2 more days...
I have to say that i am all of the sudden finding myself at a strange point in life. The past two weeks have been fairly exciting with the presence of a team from Rhode Island who was staying in the guest house along with most (and eventually all) of the Cail family. The cails were missionaries in Sebba, a town in the north-east of Burkina. They have been back in the U.S. for various reasons for now 4 years and all said it was great to be back...
So as most of you might know...I'm an extrovert...and I get my energy from being around people....so i've been quite energized!!..
I've also managed to see Christina Holley (a Canadian STA whom I knew from training week) twice!!...(and I thought I'd never see her again when I dropped her off in Yako!...heh)...The team left early this morning (2:30am was when their plane was leaving...) and the Cails took off to go visit Sebba for a week since it's been so long. They left at about noon...and so from then, I was all alone!
So I packed!! heh... I yet have to weigh my bags and figure out how I'm doing in that domaine...but so far so good..everything fits...and I have lots and lots of stuff to bring back....so hopefully I wont' have weight problems...
Last night was a really fun night. I went out with 8 other people (4 missionaries from here and 4 visitors of Jane's) and we went to a fancy restaurant near SIM called Gondwana. WOW!!...the decor alone would make it worth going...but the food just made my day! I wil bragg and admit that I had the very best steak I've EVER had in my life! (and I like my steak and have had some pretty good ones with my mom and grandma as cooks my whole life! so it's not little for me to say this...) I also had some scalopped potatoes...YUMM....and to top it off, a caramel flanc!! I thought I was close to death from too much good food!! a meal of kings is what we had I tell you!...as appetizers, we had 4 differnt kinds of dips to pass around the table and they were also woonderful, a tapenade (green olive dip...made my day!! hehe), a chick pea hummus!!, a mangoe salad dip!!, and a cheese/leak/shrimp dip...now that one made me melt!!!!!....ok...so other than food...well...it was just a really nice evening! and I got to see the team off as they left for the airport...
Tonight is ISO dinner with the Dartnells and Dave Kubiak who I met twice. we hung out during the prayer weekend...I never got a picture of him...so maybe tonight will be a good time for that!
I'm really excited to get home and see everybody!
See you soon!!
Monday, July 30, 2007
1 week left!!
Well...it is the Monday before the Monday I leave on!...That means I have 1 WEEK LEFT!!
I must admit, it is a tad freaky!!...and I have all kinds of mixed feelings.
I have thoroughly enjoyed my time here and I will miss it all (and everyone) tromendously!!!
Yet I am SO excited to get home and see everyone again...To be able to tell them all about things here and about how great of an experience it has been!
Well...for now I have found that focussing on the moment is best and that I need to realize that I still have some experiences ahead of me!!
This past weekend, I was lucky enough to join a team that had been here for a week already in going to Fada N'Gourma (an other town about 3 hours drive away from Ouaga). Although we didn't see much while we were there, it was quite nice to just be somewhere else! I got to spend some time with Jen and Marcu Beader and I must say that it was FABULOUS!! they're both great cooks and a wonderful couple.
All was well until I managed to pick up AN OTHER stomach bug!!! that's 3 in 3 months!! how great is that!...luckily, they go away pretty quick...and they're a great weight loss tool!!
Now I am doing some translation for people and taking life easy until it's go time.
Thank you all for your prayers and support during my time here.
See you all soon!!
Monday, July 16, 2007
Please forgive me for how late this is!!
ok...so it not only has been OVER a month since I have written, but it is also now very close to my leaving Burkina (3 weeks almost exactly to be precise...)
So since I left you completely empty handed for so long, I will give you a brief over view of everything....and then I would ask that you comment with questions or any needs for further information and I'll then answer those comments in my next blog (which I promise won't be in a month!!)
Uploading pictures on here is also very time consuming and I'd rather tell you all that happened rather than wait on pictures to show up. I have online albums for each event, and I would love for you all to see them. I have comments beside each picture to explain what they are.
Since June 6th (it seems like forever!)...The preschool ended. We had our ceremony as planned (well...the third time around ended up being the right one...) and the kids showed their parents what they had learned. They then got some popcorn, candy and Bissap (a juice that is made from hibiscus flowers...) and they had a blast while their parents were stil inside being told about what the plan was for next year and all the boring parent stuff!...heh...Because I want to make sure I cover everything, I won't put pictures of the final event because you've seen the kids in other posts. I will allow our attention to turn to all the other things God's blessed me with doing in the past month and almost a half...
Right after the preschool work, I joined Stephane and Myriam Gigandet in working and PanBila2. The organization was first started by a Belgian couple who wanted to help the street boys of Ouagadougou. They then extended to PanBila2 to service young women in difficult situations. The girls are all pregnant or have recently had a child, and they are either stepping off the streets for reasons tired to prostitution, familial rejection, a bad marriage...name it...they've probably had a girl from that situation come through. It was a very big learning experience for me because I could interact with the girls and ask them questions. I learned incredible amounts about the culture, but also about how the law works here when it comes to who a child belongs to. In Burkina, the child belongs to the father. There were a few hard pills to swallow when I hear about how things were done and how poorly treated the mother was in the whole equation, and it spoke a lot to my "social-work student brain". There were times where I wondered why all the Burkinabe women just didn't revolt...but I guess that's not really an option. The Gigandets also taught me a lot because they've been in contact with the legal and health issues around PanBila2 for about 9 months now. I really enjoyed my 2 weeks there. However...in the middle of those 2 weeks, I was so fortunate as to go to a picnic organized together all the organizations servicing the young women who are on the Ouaga streets. The food was just a little more than my untrained body could handle and I got to get amoebas. They're just a stomach parasite really...microscopic...but they had my in bed with a fever and the runs for a whole day after the picnic and then pretty much out of commission the day after that. I have never been so thankful for the invention of antibiotics! Cipro made me all better...heh. So I could only attend the last 2 days of my second week at PanBila2 but I had a blast with the girls...
If you'd like to see pictures, please copy and paste the following link in your browser's address line and it will lead you to an online photo album of all the photos I have from PanBila.
http://redeemeron.facebook.com/album.php?aid=37026&l=96b56&id=509130270
So a short break in time, I went horseback riding with some friends I've made here one day after being just done at PanBila. Here are some pictures for you to look at if you would like (it's very hard to take pictures on horseback!!) I learned 2 things however. I don't like to ride French sattle...and i need to get more leg muscles so I can go along with the horse's trot! Enjoy the pictures :)
http://redeemeron.facebook.com/album.php?aid=37046&l=ea518&id=509130270
Ok. Next, there was an other 2 weeks time where I left Ouaga and had little access to internet (which also explains why I then got so pushed back...for here until now, I spent about 3 days maximum in Ouaga before moving to the next thing...it was quite exciting!) Yako was the name of the town I went to. There is an orphanage there that was just a whole amazing experience. God spoke to me in ways I had never realized he could speak to me before...and I enjoyed playing with the kids and the babies, but my interaction with the missionaries was also a huge blessing. Rebekah ended up leaving after our first week there because her time here was over and it was hard for me because it left a void...I had been with her almost every day...for every activity for the past 6 weeks. But before she left, she gave a lot of wisdom bits that I still cherish preciously. God taught me how to appreciate me quiet time with Him in the morning and I hope to be able to make is a solid habit to spend time reading my Bible and praying in the morning. The other girls who were there and the lady who founded the orphanage were also very wise and I learned a lot from them as well. Age does make a difference on you maturity...and life experience is something that once cannot replace by mere knowledge. It makes me excited about growing older! In Yako, I participated in a distribution of goods to sponsored widows, in bringing two boys (7 and 8 years old) to villages where they would either be with a parent or a member of their extended family who could take care of them for the summer vacation to see how they integrated, and I also helped out at a distribution for sponsored orphans. I was amazed by all the things that God is doing in the 46 children from ages 0 to 20 who are there and how well things are going considering the orphanage is only seven years old. I also went to great church services. The second one was a special service that actually lasted 6 and a half hours!! we left after 5!!....it was REALLY hard to sit there for that long...and although the worship was lovely even in its length, and that the "short" message before communion was meaningful, the pastor kind of lots me after he had been talking for an hour. Once he was done, I thought..."oh...ok it wasn't that bad...i can't complain...4 hours..." and then a prayer marathon began, where the leader used the microphone even though I thought he had a strong enough voice to project to the end of the sanctuary and back to the podium...it didn't help that the speakers were all somehow pointed in our directions and that we were sitting in the front row as special guests...but...It was a new experience, and I would trade it for nothing!
Yako pictures can be found at the following link:
http://redeemeron.facebook.com/album.php?aid=37033&l=b0a4b&id=509130270
I came back to Ouaga for a night, and headed out to Yimdi (an area also known as the village of hope) for the SIM prayer retreat. Amazing! I loved spending so much time talking to God and communicating concerns and requests as a whole missionary family. Those 2 days seemed very long, but it was a good long. I got to meet some people whose names I had heard but whose face were unfamiliar...and I also could spend some time with those I had already met from different parts of Burkina, and had clicked with. The pictures from that weekend are not the greatest because I was very focussed on the whole theme of the retreat....but enjoy anyway...
http://redeemeron.facebook.com/album.php?aid=37048&l=30b27&id=509130270
SOOOOO....we're getting a little closer to the present...A few days after we came back from the weekend, I was now heading out on a four day trip to Mali! a few things to point out...(I encourage you to see the pictures from this bit if none of the others because they have much detail attached to them and some are simply beautiful!!) It's a completely different climate!!, we dropped off a father/son team who went off to camp in the Dogon cliffs for a couple nights (the killed a snake and caught a scorpion just to show us....), The whole drive up is just full of beautiful landscapes and I’d have so many more pictures had I not been in a car going 100 km/h...We went to see Djenne, town with the world's largest mud mosque (and I must say it was quite impressively large...), we visited Mopti, famous for being the place were the Bani and Niger convolve (but the waters don't mix...it's the weirdest thing!...one of the pictures shows it well...), I got sick...AGAIN! but it was nothing big this time...a little virus that everybody I was with ended up getting. I was just the unlucky one to have in the day we were driving the 13 hours back in the car on the bumpy African roads!...but I should not say it like that because I am counting my blessings that it was nothing big...I was fearing amoebas again or worst...malaria...so...I’m all good now...Enjoy the pictures
http://redeemeron.facebook.com/album.php?aid=37131&l=96ca2&id=509130270
SO That's a very brief overview. Now I am in Ouaga for most of the time until I leave in 3 weeks (only!!) and I will make sure to keep up a little more. In a little over a week, I’ll be working out a VBS type program for a week which is exciting...and in the mean time...I’m trying to settle things out in my brain...trying to figure out what God's taught me....what I need to take home....in terms of both knowledge and luggage...(I’ve got a lot of African stuff I’m bringing back!!...heh...first time in Africa!...what can I say!)
Thank you all for you prayers and for all you support even when I fail at giving you any news.
God bless you all and I'll catch you later!!!
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
It's been a month!!
Blogs are much harder to keep up with than I thought. However, I am glad to announce that I have officially been here for a full month! How exciting! Some days, it feels like forever, and others it feels like I just got here. Well lets see what new things happened since the last time i updated...
So an other week went by at the pre-school, and it was supposed to be the last, but i have officially learned that when people say that one must be flexible when coming to Africa, they are not joking, because the final date of the school year was extended to ths Tuesday, June 5th, and has now been pushed back until next Saturday, June 9th! I am learning that I THOUGHT I was flexible, but that was to Western standards! :)
The highlight of the past week and a half is most definitely my trip to Djibo! If you look at the map that is a few posts back, you'll see that Djibo is in the North of the country. Saturday morning, I took off with Malcolm and Jenny Watts and their 2 girls and Lawrie who is an STA who had just come in and who is shadowing Dr. Ken Elliott in a hospital up there for 2 weeks. It took us about 4 hours to drive from Ouaga to it. About 1/2 of the road is fairly nice and paved and has loads of cattle crossing it. The rest of the road would qualify as horrible in most people's words....I'm slowly getting used to the Burkinabe roads, and thus I call it bumpy...it was a Red Drit Road (anybody know the song??...heh) and it was indeed in need of some major leveling...but we figured out that if you drive fast, you can manage to skip some of the bumps from getting air off of the first few...it was quite something to drive on there...and I am very glad I didn't have to drive, because it would require more concentration than any driving I've ever done. Avoiding big holes, cows, sheep, goats, pigs, donkeys, dogs and monkeys....it's a lot of work!
Once we got in Djibo, we had lunch with Dr. Elliott and his wife and then we went on a tour of the great city and met some people. We then had dinner with the Gibson family. The one thing I noticed is that my english was sounding a little weird by the end of the weekend because the Watts and the Elliotts are Australian and the Gibsons are British....so if I come home with a mixed up accent, times like that would be the reason why! We had a very nice evening and went to bed early because there is simply not much to do in Djibo....it's getting pretty close to the Sahara so you can imagine! Sunday, we went to a Fulani church (the Fulanis are an originally nomadic people group. They are also majoritarily Muslim, but small churches like this one are slowly emerging which I think is amazing.) The service was all in Fufulde which is the Fulani language. I have learned a few greetings in that language for the sake of the weekend. Good morning is said Jam Bali, good evening is Jam Miali, and the answer to all other questions or comments is to be Jam Tam or Bessifuale (which both mean something along the lines of "it's all good"...) After church, I got back to the Gibsons' since we were set to have lunch there. When i walked in, there was a cake and a "Happy Birthday" banner waiting for me. :) After lunch, we hung out with the Gibsons, and then headed to a Touareg (Tamachik to be politically correct) camp. There, we got to RIDE CAMELS!!!!!! I was so excited...I'll let pictures speak for how the experience was, all there is to say is that 1) they are huge and you sit really high up, 2) they get you at an incredibly steep angle when they get up and kneel down, 3) they are most definitely not all too comfortable! 4) They have 8 knees in total!!...go figure...they're such weird animals! 5) They are very LOUD!! heh
After our camel ride, I went back to the Elliotts' with Lawrie. We were both staying in an appartment that is attached to their house and she will remain there until the end of her 2 weeks there. After dinner, Mrs Elliott brought out a carrot cake!!...that's right...I got 2 cakes...my 2 favourites at that (chocolate and carrot!) I was so blessed and I had an amazing time. I will never forget my 20th...
Once I got back, I managed to talk to my family on Skype and they all wished me a happy birthday (Thanks guys!) and then I went to bed because I was so tired from the trip and the excitement! I am looking forward to meeting some of the parents of the kids that I take care of at the pre-school on Saturday and also looking forward to taking on my next project, Pan-Bila!! But you'll all have to wait until next time to hear about this one!
Ciao!!
~Ariane
Friday, May 25, 2007
Oh my...it's been a while...
I am glad to say that I have not fallen off the face of the earth, but that I have simply been busy! It's a good thing only because it makes time fly and it allows for amazing experiences to happen. So since 9 days ago, when I wrote my last blog, there are LOADS of things that I got to do and that are worth telling of. I will do my best to break things up and to make it interesting, cutting the details down to what is important and to use pictures seeing as an image is worth 1000 words. Some of you might know that doing all is VERY hard for me, so hold on tight....here we go!!
A new STA come in for the next 6 weeks. Rebekah Daniel is studying linguistics and is here to study and analyse Maure, which is great because I can learn a bit from what she is learning...and teaching it helps her remember it!I also got to talk to Dan on Skype and, although his microphone wasn't working for most of the conversation, it totally made my day to hear his voice for even a short while.
ESL was also very interesting since the discussions went on for a really long time and seemed to have everyone's interest! I am really enjoying the members of my class. They make it much easier to teach!! :)
Today was pretty similar to yesterday at the school, and I (obviously) have been catching up with things I put aside during the week! Tonight, the plan is to go see the play/musical Oliver at the ISO because the kids are putting it on and it's bound to be really cute! Hopefully, I will also get to talk to Dan on Skype (and his microphone will hopefully work...)
I therefore bid you all farewell, and I hope that you enjoyed reading this edition of my adventures in Burkina Faso!
Catch you on the flip side!
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
Some more news...
well, it's only been a couple of days...but I thought that maybe I could be more concise if I wrote more often.
So...a few things have happened since Monday. I got to talk to quite a few people online, including my parents through Skype (what a wonderful idea it was to download it!! Thanks Mark & Leanne!), and Mel and Dan (even though the time difference is of 6 hours and it has been very hard to make our schedules match up). I can't say that I wasn't extatic to talk to them all!!
Yesterday was bordering awful at the pre-school. We had 3 things prepared for the kids to work on, but because they took longer than expected on the first two, there was too little time left to do the third, but loads of time still that had nothing planned. I figured out tonight however, that that's how African schooling works. I'm very used to my "ultra-structured, go by the exact plan for the whole year" kind of schooling and so to see a full hour go by where both kids and teachers just sit around was especially hard for me. To add to the equation...it was actually quite warm yesterday, and the kids, when not given anything to do, decided they wanted to sit on my lap and climb in my arms and on my back. I'm usually fine with all that, except when I am covered in sweat and would rather not move for fear of sweating more. (You can all imagine that at that particular moment, I had no will to have 10-15 kids sworm around me to cuddle or play...) On the up side however!, I don't really mind the bike ride anymore. I mean, I don't necessarily enjoy it because I never really did like bikes to begin with, but I must say that you learn quite quickly where to ride on the road and how to avoid the bumps, rocks, and dents!
I then spent the afternoon prepping (photocopying, mostly) for ESL and welcoming my new house help person!...it's kind of hard to let someone do all the work that you are used to doing yourself at home!! but I must say, she did a fantastic job and I will be glad to see her again on Friday. I got all my stuff ready for the ESL class, and I would like to thank you all for your prayers because it went quite well!...they are all willing to discuss and chat about all kinds of different topics. I have decided to integrate a Bible study as part of the Biblical outreach section of the ministry, but I think I might have a few Muslims in my class. So I hope not to offend them, and to use the outreach of what it is supposed to do, reach out :) I mainly want to have the class discuss different part of the study questions along with all the other discussions I hope to fit in.
Today was fairly relaxed. The kids behaved alright, or at least in comparisson to yesterday. I wish I spoke Maure (that's how you spell it apparently, not Moré) so I could get them to listen a little more, but I know that they are also only kids and that I need to be gentle and patient with them. I worked on my prep for tomorrow's class, and as I said earlier, talked to Mel and Dan. Both were kind of randomized and definitely not planned (or at least, not on my part...) but I was very very glad to hear from them and what they're up to! I also went to the prayer meeting, and actually had a very good time and a few really nice chats with Jenny and Leanne.
So off I go now, to talk to Dan on MSN some more actually...
Take care everyone!...and I'll catch you on the flip side!
Monday, May 14, 2007
First weekend in Ouaga
So Sunday was the interesting day!...
I went to the International Church of Ouagadougou (ICO) with the Dartnell's and Christina...I was quite something...it reminded me of why I always wanted to go to a Haitian church!!...Bring on the clapping and intense enthusiasm! The message was really good and given in English and translated into French. Next Sunday I might go check out a more local church that is in French and translated into Moré (the local language here in Ouaga!). We had lunch with the Dartnell's and were joined by an elderly couple who is actually one of the attending pastors and his wife. They came with their 7 years old granddaughter who lives with them and their 12 years old youngest son!...it was quite odd to me...but considering they have seven kids...I guess it makes a little bit of sense...