Friday, March 16, 2012

Soccer Tournament A Great Success


TANGALY – Delegates and representatives from all corners of the prefecture, as well as the broader region, were present this Saturday, March 3rd to welcome and observe the first match of the General Ibrahima Baldé Tournament for National Unity and Reconciliation, between the sub-prefectures of Konah and Tangaly.
The opening ceremony got underway a bit before 1300h in the court of the primary school in the center of Tangaly. Onlookers and invitees alike had begun to assemble almost two hours before, those arriving earlier able to seek out the shadiest places from which to observe. A troop of griots, comprised of a flute player, a lead singer with a funny hat, four drummers, and a man who played a calabash half with many-ringed fingers (also wearing a funny hat) entertained the crowd and collected donations while awaiting the arrival of governor of the region and the general himself (Brigadier General Ibrahima Baldé, commander of the mobile squadron and chief of the military justice). After several additional pickup-truck loads of plastic chairs arrived for the men, and subsequent reorganization the seated/standing interface, a drumming prelude announced the arrival of the guests of honor and the start of the ceremony.
The governor, the general, and their delegation took their reserved seats in the middle of the mass, and the crowd of well-attired women pushed inward to see better in a wave of colorful fabric and breastfeeding babies. The PA system was thankfully placed above and a bit away from the crowd on the terrace of the building above, so it didn’t deafen anyone. The governor, the sub-prefect of Tangaly, the local radio host who acted as emcee, and General Baldé each took the microphone in turn and thanked, by name, each of the important people that were present. After this 30-minute process, the sub-prefect described some of the great work that the sub-prefecture of Tangaly had done, such as bridge- and school-building, and announced that, with the help and in honor of General Baldé, soon Tangaly would be home to a local office of the gendarmerie to help maintain the peace. He then explained that this Tournament was to promote national (and regional) unity, and foster reconciliation amongst all Guineans, following the wish of the president, Professor Alpha Condé. The general, who is from Tangaly and is building an impressive and expansive compound not far from the town center, then addressed the group in their local language, Pular, and offered seemingly endless words of thanks, humor, prophesy, and advice. The opening ceremony finished at about an hour and a half after it had started with a benediction by the imam.
The most important of the attendees were invited to the sub-prefectural compound, where a feast was laid before them. Those who arrived first after climbing the rocky road up to the building were able to get both plates and spoons, and helped themselves to riz gras, yassa [peas and onions in oily sauce] with meat and fries, couscous, polenta, fresh yogurt, and salad. Some were even offered warm canned soda. With round bellies and smiling faces, the invitees trickled back down the hill and onto the road, where they slowly made their way to the soccer field. This reporter encountered a Peace Corps Volunteer bumping down the hill on his bike, who was attending the ceremony almost by accident. “I just came to see the principal of the school and take a look at a house that might lodge a future volunteer, I didn’t know I would be listening to traditional drumming and eating some of the best food I’ve had outside of Conakry,” he said. The volunteer added that the house was marvelous, and any future Tangaly volunteer would be quite content with both their lodging and the warm reception and good cooking of the sub-prefect and his wife.
At the soccer field, people had begun to gather, after seeking out shady places to park their motorcycles. Several Landcruiser-loads of people that were too important to walk or lucky enough to snag a place on top, clinging to the luggage rack, arrived, the cars throwing up big clouds of dust as they drove across the dry field to the bamboo-and-tarpaulin awning that had been built for the noteworthy guests. A few men worked to attach nets to the wooden goalposts, and the speakers were wired and the generators (two; one for the announcer his speakers, the other for the DJ and his speakers) fired up. Reporters from the regional radio, national radio, and even the TV station took their places and switched on their camcorders. Finally, at 1605h, the whistle blew.
Tangaly played more energetically than Konah during the first half, making use of lots of passing and careful footwork. They only threatened the Konah keeper occasionally, but, at the nineteenth minute, their fitness and finesse showed and they led the score, 1-0. The announcer and his Pular translator kept the noise level up and the crowd engaged, even as many spectators continued to arrive throughout the first half. Most notable were the young women that had not been present at the opening ceremony, but were now so decked out in colorful garb, intricate hairdos, and heavy makeup that their earlier absence was easily understood. Not even the difficulty of walking in stilettos through a fallow field (as this is what bordered the soccer field) could keep them from showing up to see their team and be seen by all.
Early on in the second half, the sun had already descended enough into the haze on the horizon that it was no longer brilliant, or even difficult to look at. The dust kicked up by the players seemed to linger longer in the slanting light. The announcer drew the crowd’s attention to the Fatako team, present on the sidelines, who would be playing both Konah and Tangaly in the following week as the tournament continued. Konah kept up the defense, but couldn’t find success in any of their multiple attempts on goal. Tangaly’s keeper won many rounds of cheers and applause from the crowd for his impressive saves. After a strong drive across the field, one of Tangaly’s attackers landed a second goal during the eighty-first minute. Finally, just as no more of the sun’s disc was visible in the sky, the final whistle blew: Tangaly two, Konah zero. All players shook hands, and General Baldé and the sub-prefect praised the teams for their sportsmanship and obvious commitment to unity and reconciliation.
Spectators left as slowly as they had come. Motorcycle headlights made impressive shadow figures as they cut between those on foot and the dust that was inevitably raised with so much movement. General Baldé and his squadron of attendant gendarmes left in their official cars, quickly overtaking the motorcyclists. Young children that hadn’t seemed present during the match suddenly appeared and danced in the dark in front of the speakers. The tarps and goalnets were taken down. The half-life-sized framed picture of the president that had sat at the back of the covered seating area was put back in its battered cardboard box. Everyone went home.
Vive la paix! Vive la réconciliation! Vive la Guinée!

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Life and Death and Goats in Africa



I spend at least an hour underneath the melina tree in my front yard every week while doing laundry. When I arrived in September, the leaves of the melina tree were broad and green, providing ample shade for my hammock hung beneath. In October, the melina tree was frequented by many impressively loud and large bees, seeking the small yellow-red flowers that had begun to show at the bases of some of the leaf clusters. In November, the leaves turned yellow and fell dryly, lazily, to the ground below, where they were chomped up by passing goats. The flowers remained. The line of ants that had daily wound its way into the thinning canopy went away. In December, the flowers also followed the leaves earthward, a fall faster but quieter. One goat in particular, with one horn a bit chipped off, realized this new bounty. I call her Flower because she must have eaten at least 60% of all the tender yellow blooms that tumbled down. In January most of the flowers were gone, replaced by almondlike fruits, green and hard. When these too fell, the goats crunched them. It is now February, and a few tiny leaves have appeared on the bare branches, and are growing bigger. The goats frequent less the space under the tree.

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Last Friday, there was a small dead goat lying in the trampled straw beyond my front yard. A young but mature female was standing over the presumably miscarried carcass, bleating quietly. I entered my house and graded papers and made popcorn. About an hour later sounds of scuttling on my roof announced the inevitable. From my porch I observed two vultures standing around the carcass, one ducking in every few moments to retrieve a morsel, the other waiting impatiently beside. The adult goat still stood vigilantly beside the carcass, still bleating quietly. The carcass was pulled towards the dominant vulture each time it tore off a piece, and the goat slowly followed the procession of bird and food as it moved away from my house, inch by inch. The shoulders of the goat and the shoulders of the vultures are the same height. When I went by an hour later, I couldn’t find any trace of vulture, goat, or meal.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Plateau


Often in the late afternoon or, on days when I don’t teach, in the morning just after sunrise, I walk to the plateau east of the village. The road is rocky and dusty for the first 100 meters, and then the path splits from the road and traverses the dried pasture above the last of the houses and walled gardens. Multiple trails lead to the top, each with its own collection of dried straw, rocks, dried manure, burnt grass, and grasshoppers. After gaining the enough elevation that the ground no longer slopes away out of sight above me (which would indicate the top is approaching), I pick a path that winds south out of the bushes. Here the path is rockier, and my shoes press the round stones together, each footstep sounding like a tiny dump truck emptying a tiny load of gravel onto the pavement in the midst of the otherwise tranquil air. It is too hot up here for people and livestock, the road too bumpy for motorcycles, and the time of day wrong for insects. The only other sound is the singular, unexpected, and inevitable whoosh of a pair of ground-birds suddenly taking flight with all their might, after waiting for me to come as close as possible.

The path emerges from the bushes into what was a meadow three months ago. Now, the entire low wide hilltop is martian; brushfires set in November have razed everything except the skeletons of a few small trees. The ground is black and red with ash and loose round rocks.

It seems odd to feel like an explorer. My small backpack contains a pocket knife, nail trimmers, an issue of The New York Review of Books, a copy of Wuthering Heights, a pen, two mandarin oranges, my cellphone [powered on, there is service up here], and 10000 Guinean Francs [one bill, the largest]. With this kit, my sandals, shorts and white tshirt, I could stay out here for hours! At least until I get thirsty. Or it gets dark.

Have the other people that traversed this Marscape earlier today, or last year, or three hundred years ago also wondered how all the small round rocks got to be scattered about on top of a high flat plateau?  Did they stop and sit on this rock, right here, which seems smoother, shinier, more comfortable than its neighbors, and read, write, pray, or ponder? Did they get sunburnt? Or am I the first?

At about 1600 the moon is higher in the sky than the sun. Unlike earlier, the breeze that occasionally blows is slightly cooler than the stationary air it displaces. I sit on a pile of gravel that someone has made, and burrow my heels into the loose side. I read about Heathcliff and Jonathan Raban. I eat a mandarin and spit out the seeds with skill but not relish. Maybe I receive a text message. Earlier this week I was also here, although sitting somewhere else, and reading Plato’s account of the death of Socrates, 2413 years ago. I can’t decide which seemed less real.

In Memory


On the way home from school, stop and ask anyone standing around if bread is being made today. Head home, have a cup of water, change, and go back to the baker’s hut and wait while he takes fresh loaves out of the oven. Buy two, even if he gives you a third for free. Carry them home in the bag that your mosquito net came in. Eat the end of one on the way home because you can. Don’t bring the loaves inside when you get home; instead leave them on a chair on the porch in the sunshine so they stay warm while you make sauce.

Add to a large wooden mortar four to six small dried red chilies, picking out any grubs stems etc., a small handful of those round dried things that look like chilies but might be cherry tomatoes or just some bitter berry, approximately two teaspoons whole coriander, and a teaspoon black cumin seeds. Pound one minute; until dusty. Peel and mince one large-for-Africa onion and two thirds of a head of garlic. Quickly wash and mince the small sweet potato left alone at the bottom of the vegetable bowl. Add the minced ingredients and a resolute pour of olive oil to your only pot. Cook as fast as possible, only burning a little. Add the crumblier spices and the last two bay leaves, and a sprig of thyme. Cook a bit more. Add three handfuls of mostly-ripe cherry tomatoes, and cook until they start to pop. Add one 70g package of tomato paste, and a second if you’ve got it. Stir around, and add a liter of water. Crumble in a bouillon cube and bring to a boil. Add a pinch of black pepper, two dashes of ground cumin, a generous portion of dried oregano, and a tablespoon of honey. Reduce until thick. Crush any cherry tomatoes that have remained intact.

Split a still-hot-from-the-oven-and-the-sun loaf of bread down the middle with your fingers. Spread margarine on one side and pour honey on the other, then press the loaf back together.

Fill a low, wide bowl with the red sauce and sprinkle instant milk powder on top so it looks like parmesan cheese. Dip the hot honey bread in it like an au jus sandwich and enjoy with a large cup of water and a decent book or magazine. Go through two whole baguettes before you realize you are absolutely stuffed.

Dedicated to my grandmother, Helen Haugerud, who loved everything delicious. 

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Fall Readling/Listening List


Adiga, Aravind The White Tiger
Chekov, Anton Great Stories
Dewey, John How We Think [in progress]
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor The Brothers Karamazov
Duncan, David James The Brothers K
Hawking, Stephen A Brief History of Time
Henrik, Ibsen Four Great Plays [in progress]
Jacobsen, Howard The Finkler Question
Levy, David Skywatching
Nabokov, Vladimir Ada
Newton, Jack; Teece, Phillip The Guide to Amateur Astronomy
Thoreau, Henry David Walden and other essays [in progress]
Tolstoy, Leo Anna Karenina
33 magazines, including issues of The Atlantic, Harper’s, Muse, The New Yorker, New Scientist, Science News, Technology Review, and Wired
38 Episodes of This American Life

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Gombo et Aubergine


Ingredients:

4-6 medium eggplant, firm with no insect holes
10-12 medium okra, the more ridges the better
½ kg ground beef or mutton*
1/3 cup peanut oil
Half a head of garlic
Two thumbs of ginger
10-15 small dried chilies
1 teaspoon anise, or 3 stars of star anise (better)
Two small onions
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon bean paste
1 tablespoon water
Chives
Handful of shelled, roasted peanuts

*only use meat if the animal was slaughtered that day, so the meat is fresh, if you have a meat grinder, because meat isn’t sold ground, and if you’re extraordinarily wealthy, because meat is expensive. If you’re worried about protein, just add more peanuts.

Preparation:

Peel and mince garlic and ginger (a spoon works well for peeling the latter). Peel and slice onion into wide strips. Trim and wash eggplant and okra. Slice eggplant into any shape, keeping the volume under 10 cubic centimeters. Slice okra laterally, at an angle, into sticky flowers.
Add some of the oil and the dried chilies to a large, high-walled, heavy-bottomed pan. Heat until the oil runs like water, and add the garlic, ginger, onion, and anise. If using meat, add it shortly after, and cook until grey. Add the eggplant and okra, and almost all the rest of the oil. Stir-fry over high heat, minding that the bottom doesn’t burn. Mix together the honey, soy sauce, bean paste, water and the rest of the oil in a cup. When the eggplant is getting soft, pour the mixture onto the vegetables and allow to boil for a couple minutes. Remove from heat, and garnish with peanuts and plenty of chopped chives. Serve with plain white rice and Sino-Afro slaw (recipe to follow). You can eat the chilies if you're brave or lazy.

Serves 4, or one hungry Peace Corps Volunteer two and a half times. 

Labé


Labé is the second-largest city in Guinea (60,000+ inhabitants), the capital of the Fouta, a veritable metropolis compared to the villages and towns that dot my map. I always arrive from the east, just before dusk, covered in dust. One of the corporals at the checkpoint knows me, and so never lets me pass without first chatting for a bit. On days he isn’t there, just remember: greet people with guns, the bigger the gun, the bigger the greeting.

Just like any other big city, the roads are worse within the municipality than outside it. Heavy truck and motorcycle traffic chokes the narrow bridges, alleys, and everyone’s lungs. Trucks that aren’t going somewhere with a full load of things and extra people on top are parked along the sides of the road, receiving long-neglected and now critical repairs. Dogs and sheep lay in their shade.

Unlike towns en brousse, buildings in Labé have signs, lightbulbs (not illuminated, of course), and customers. Unlike in the village, bottled water, onions, and diesel are cheaper, and taxi rides and plates of rice and sauce are more expensive. There are more choices, more refrigerators, more foreigners (few compared to none), more schoolchildren, and more metalworkers’ shops. You need to watch where you’re going.

The most striking aspect of Labé is the people. Because the Peuls of the Fouta are part of the much larger Fula group, and because it is a commercial and administrative center, there are more different looking people here than anywhere except Conakry.

Light and dark skin, all sorts of facial features in all combinations, all heights, and every possible definition of clothing are well represented. Students wear uniforms: red, blue or green gingham for primary school, khaki for middle school, and white on top with blue or green bottoms for high school. Hair and shoes: anything goes, and does. Wigs are more common than long colorful extensions woven into the braids, and dreadlocks are discouraged. Workers wear dirty jumpsuits, businessmen wear suit jackets or colorful, krinkly boubous, and young men wear impossibly bright and clean button-downs with a heavy coat of perfume. What women do can be inferred from their attire as well: Market ladies wear a simple complet of colorful fabric (or a an old tshirt supporting a forgotten candidate and a wrap skirt, if they sell fish or peanut butter), alarmingly young mothers wear tight dresses and babies, linked by a tight towel, and wealthy women wear expensive looking cheap jeans and glittery tops, or complicated layers of imported Malian fabric. Children wear what’s left: tattered shorts, sports jerseys, and snowsuits.

The combination of massive market, towering (relatively) but crumbling administrative buildings, and just-installed power poles (the future cabling lying on the ground between in tangles or spools) gives Labé the feeling of a real place to live; where things are often changing, but nothing ever really becomes different. The same potholes are there, along with new ones, the same broken trucks are being hammered upon, along with older ones, the same sandals are being sold by a different vendor, four doors down, and the bread is always just beyond fresh.

I like Labé