Monday, December 5, 2011

R.I.P. Terrance

It’s another morning in East Africa. One of my best friends and favorite people here just got on a bus. She’s going to Kenya, then Uganda, then the good old U.S.A. I don’t know when or where or, for that matter, if we will see each other again. Another reminder, as if I needed one, that time is slipping quickly, and inexorably, into the past. Before too too long I myself will be getting on a bus. And I’m not ready. The only problem with that is that 8 months from now, I will still not be ready. It’s worth mentioning that some people have asked me what I’m planning to do after this. Even more of you might have thought of asking of me. The answer is, I don’t know. I have a million ideas, and not a single answer. Which is both horrifying and exciting. But, since there’s naught to be done, I have more fun stories to relate.

Thanksgiving happened! It was such a great day! I had spent the preceding week tracking down a turkey (in the business sense, not like I was in the woods actually tracking anything). I found one. I went to pick him up the day before Thanksgiving with 2 other volunteers. We chose a nice fat one. We named him Terrance. Tom seemed too predictable. We then put him in a box, put the box in the back of a taxi, and drove 45 miles over a horrible road with the turkey in the back, and 7 people up front (in a car about the size of a Honda Civic). Halfway there, I wanted to be with Terrance in the back. But we got there (there is the beautiful Mufindi Highlands. It’s like the Sound of Music hills, but prettier). And we let Terrance graze for a while (his legs were tied up). We also started calling him Tayshaun, T-Money, and T-Pain, as if by giving him lots of names we could lessen the inevitable shock when we...you know...ate him.

But before you could say “apocalopalypse” we were putting him on the scale, sharpening the knife, and boiling the water (for plucking). He weighed in at 5.5 kilos (not large, but everybody got plenty of meat, so who cares?). And he was calm, almost accepting. We took him off to a grass knoll, and we had a basin. The Tanzanian with us was ready to do the slaughter. But no. I asked for the knife, telling the Tanzanian “nilimfahamu bora” (“I knew him best”). Geneva held the legs. I held the neck. I reassured Terrance that all would be well. And then I cut his head off.

For those playing the home game, I have now chopped down a Christmas tree with a machete and slaughtered the Thanksgiving turkey with a dull knife (it took a bit of doing). I’m thinking of marketing Dan’s Hands-On Holidays. We could make our own gunpowder for July 4 fireworks, and dress up a hen as a rabbit for Easter. Any other ideas?

The holiday itself was nothing short of marvelous. It felt like Thanksgiving, which is, in and of itself, a monumental achievement. There were 16 people, American, Canadian, German, and British. There was turkey, there was stuffing, there was green bean casserole (made by me and Glenn and Meredith), there was pasta salad (made by me), quiche, pumpkin pie, mashed potatoes, rhubarb tort, scalloped potatoes, cheesecake, and more. We played football and frisbee. We played Celebrity and Mafia. When we finished eating, we passed out like a bunch of wolf cubs on the lawn. I was the Toast Master for the entire 3-day party (my favorite toast was when we actually had toast for breakfast. We toasted toast). And I got to stand in front of some of my dearest friends, some of my newest friends, all of whom I like more than I would have thought possible, and raise a glass to friends, family, and home, wherever they might be found. Then we got back to work.

Work, in this case, was a 4-day boys empowerment conference, called Mabadiliko Yanawezekana (Changes are Possible), put together by my fellow volunteers and I. There were 41 boys from 8 villages, and we taught them about goal-setting, business planning, reproductive health, gender equality, AIDS/HIV, and many other subjects. Highlights: there was a condom demonstration at a nearby soccer field. We had a wooden penis (actually several). But some of the boys, bless their hearts, were worried that the condoms might be too small. So what did we do? My good friend Geneva took one for the team, stepped up, and allowed another volunteer to properly pull a condom down her entire forearm. The picture is visual poetry, the boys were stunned to silence, and I may make t-shirts. There was a talent night, where I got up and led the volunteers in a camp song that I have been using since 1997. The boys loved it and got up to do the second verse with us. I also got to lead my favorite session, the Q and A. We put a box out at the beginning of the seminar, and let them write all sorts of anonymous questions. Then we answer them, or if possible, throw it back to the boys and let them answer themselves. A lot of it was fairly in-depth sexual stuff, as they get very little education in these things. We did our best to answer them. But there was one question that gave us pause: “what are the dangers of having sex with animals?”

...

We were flummoxed, unprepared, bamboozled. We were thrown off our game, so we threw it to the crowd. One kid, who is about 5’ and maybe weighs 90 pounds soaking wet, stood up, and said, in a bold, clear voice,

“utaumizwa”

“You will get hurt”

At which point we went to lunch.

After the conference was over I went to a World AIDS Day celebration in a nearby town (it was organized by one of my fellow volunteers). It was a hell of a party. The guys running it worked the crowd beautifully. They had a speed-eating contest (rice and beans followed by a soda), tongue twisters (Asha Osha Uso (Asha clean your face)), and lots of crowd interviews about AIDS. There was one fairly heinous moment, when the master of ceremonies had 3 little girls stand up in front of the crowd. He started asking each one about their parents. All their parents are dead. He asked them where they live now. At this point the one answering questions started crying. But under no circumstances are we going to allow a child in misery to disrupt the narrative, so he just kept asking questions. How do you feel about your parents being gone? How the hell do you think she feels? I hated it. It nearly made me physically ill. I suppose, to his credit, I should mention that they then raised money for the girls school supplies and uniforms. But there are better ways of doing that. These are humans, and they’re young, and they’re scared. They are not textbook examples of suffering, they are actual examples of suffering. There’s a difference, and one demands empathy, not exploitation. Lord save us from well-intentioned people.

Anyway, the real reason I was there is that my AIDS group was performing a couple of songs. And they knocked it out of the freaking park. I was sitting there, and I was near tears. Not because the songs were sad. They weren’t. Because I had lived in this village for 3 days when I went to the second meeting that this group had ever had. I wrote about it in my blog, I remember. There was an air of finality, of morbid acceptance, that pervaded that room. I know I wrote about looking at one mama, with her face in her hands, and me thinking of Dorothea Lange and writing “life doesn’t work out for everybody, does it?” But here’s the thing: that woman’s name is Mama Dennis. And she’s pretty damn awesome.

I’m not sure what happened, but somewhere along the way these people, who had been brought together by a terrible epidemic, started really enjoying being together. And watching them sing and dance, remembering how they never used to speak above a whisper...I’ve never been so proud of anybody in my entire life. My best friend in the group told me the other day that she wanted to live until she was 50. I laughed at her, because she’s about 35. Until I remembered that she is living with HIV, and 50 is a hell of a goal. I hope, I pray, that she gets there. But she isn’t going to live forever, and neither am I. Yet until then, she is singing, with a clear and beautiful voice, about a disease that has found her but not stopped her, in the hope that others might be free of it forever. I love her. I love all of them. For them, and you, and the opportunity to live this life, I am thankful.

2 comments:

  1. Happy Belated Thanksgiving from Australia. I also had a United Nations Thanksgiving. I will send you the picture of me cutting the turkey (not really - just posed for effect). I did cut up carrots that morning - talk about living on the edge - me cutting up carrots with no one around to eat popcicles to make a splint. Glad you enjoyed. Love, Aunt Jeanne

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  2. Way to go on Terrance! So glad you let him graze for a while.

    Reread one of your first blogs - I think while you were shadowing and the couple was saying good-bye to their church and ..yeah. Some days last forever and months go by in a heartbeat. You make it all count and - personally I could understand if you decided to not move back here ever. Maybe we could retire there!

    Are we now calling the boys' conference the "Geneva Convention" ?

    Great post - a little of everything and all your style. Love you!

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