Sunday, June 6, 2010

My blog is now a little too public

It would seem that not only family and friends are reading my blog so in the interest of protecting reputations and certain interests I will from now on not mention names of ONGs I may come in contact with – but since this is also a means for me to document my experience and indeed keep family and friends current I will however continue to write what I think and feel as I pursue my journey.


Here are a few things I learnt this week:

You can actually die from haemorrhoids – the accountant of an ONG was suffering from haemorrhoids, had a hard time walking and was visibly in a lot of pain so he took a few days off. I learnt this week that he passed away last Sunday as it would seem he had a surgical intervention that went terribly wrong – he was barely 30.

Issouf sometimes is Doctor Issouf – his daughter of 22 months was suffering from stomach aches, fever and losing weight. The Dr Issouf diagnostic was that her mother (his wife to be) stopped breast feeding too early – at 21 months instead of 24 months – and this was the reason why his daughter was feeling ill so no need to get any medical advice, which would have cost 200F CFA ($0.40). However, as this was unfolding, Issouf had a soar on his foot and had no problems spending 3 000F CFA on ointment and antibiotics for himself. As you can well imagine I gave him a little piece of my mind – calling him Dr Issouf and stating that he seems to want to play with fire not even consulting a real medical expert just because he, the man of the house, decided he knew better. The worse of it is that his wife nagged him about the kid seeing a doctor as she was worried – and she could nothing about it because he had refused. He admitted his wife was angry with him for taking that decision but as far as he was concerned she should have been more tactful, more diplomatic. I told him he had acted in a dumb way and actually irresponsible – you can’t expect diplomacy and tact when your only concern is the health and wellbeing of your kid, a kid of 22 months in a country were infantile deaths are high. He says he acknowledges his error – but his attitude is so ingrain and cultural that one has to doubt if he really understands – and he is actually intelligent and a good person.

Issouf is getting married on July 11th – a simple wedding but a double wedding with his brother Abdu in order to share expenses and thus cut overall costs. It would seem that a woman is not allowed to get married without the permission of her father, and in the absence of a father then permission has to come from a paternal uncle (le petit papa). The fact that the mother is still around has no value, she has nothing to say about the union. The husband to be has to hire the services of an intermediary/mediator (porte-parole) to discuss the possible upcoming wedding with the father in law – the future son in law cannot have this discussion directly – and the mediation part come to play when the future son in law is not in great terms with his future father in law. Things get quite complicated fairly easily here.

Electricity problems in the capital city Ouagadougou have been going on for 2 YEARS. It would seem that Burkina Faso paid a hefty sum (billions of F CFA) to have their electricity needs supplied through the Ivory Coast – but 2 dams have been damaged in the Ivory Coast who now are having themselves problems in supplying their own needs in electricity – so Burkina Faso has a huge problem in getting electricity because even if they can get it in Ghana they don’t have the money for the required infrastructure. A capital city of a country that shuts down productivity during at least 4 hours in various parts of the city DAILY for the past 2 years has some serious problems. But the same government can find money for roads and interchanges that lead to the presidential village- go figure.

What’s for dinner? Well there is couscous or rice or pasta with a “sauce arachide” (peanut butter sauce), or “sauce tomate” – you can have the sauce on the side or mixed with the starch of your choice in which case it is called “gras” as in “riz gras” would be rice and sauce mixed together. There is also TÔ with all sorts of sauces (gumbo, oseilles, etc,) but I really do not like tô so cannot really talk about it except that after 3 bites you feel totally bloated. There is the odd chicken recipe such as “poulet couscous” or grilled chicken (but you have to watch out because it may have been grilled for days and really tough – a whole chicken accounts for approx. 3 ounces of meat) or “poulet télévisé” (which is their version of St-Hubert BBQ) and called “télévisé” because the chickens on the skewers are in a glass casing which shows their cooking as in “televised” (again you do not know how many days it has been turning), and chicken Yassa for onion lovers because it probably has as many onions in the recipes as it does chicken – but the best is definitely “Pintade à l’ail” (guinea fowl with garlic) since it is the meatiest and most tender fowl. You also can make yourself a hamburger or beef brochette on a small charcoal fed BBQ (you can use the hot charcoal after eating to put into the iron when it is ironing night). And if you are in the mood for lamb you can get a whole leg for less the $4 and it is delicious. Fish is also found very easily and actually quite good but fish is also one of the reasons why the Burkinabè do not talk while they eat because there are sooooo many fish bones – and a delicacy seems to be the fish head which I never fight for. Vegetables: tomatoes, onions, carrots, cabbage, avocado, green peppers, lettuce, cucumbers, potatoes, garlic. So every sauce you make or fish stuffing or salad or whatever you make will usually find the same ingredients in it – just add salt and oil. A litre of cooking oil will usually last me 6 months in Quebec – here 1litre lasts approx 3 weeks. Fruits: bananas, mangos, papaya, plantains, pineapples, apples, lemons.

Not sure what will be available at the market once the rainy season really sets in – I have a feeling whatever it is it will be slim pickings and expensive.

Another week has gone by with its usual frustrations and I hope to get used to them fast – I will need to accept the unacceptable.

That’s it for now folk. Hope all is well with everyone.

1 comment:

  1. L'affaire Issouf ça m'inquiète. C'est pas normal qu'un père refuse de faire soigner son enfant. Moi à ta place je lui donnerais un ultimatum: il fait soigner le petit, ou il met fin à son emploi. J'ai peine à croire qu'un père tolère de voir son enfant souffrire. C'est complètement ridicule. Et moi je ne serais pas capable de rester là à le regarder faire.

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