Sunday, March 21, 2010

Dusty day

Yesterday and today it has been so dusty that it seems like we are in a fog that covers everything. Even at noon, the sun seems like a hazy glow and doesn't give the normal scorching heat that i'm used to. Don't get me wrong, it's still way hot, like 100 degrees or more every day, but with the sun obscured, it doesn't all get through. I know the UVs will still get through so i'll still get burned if i sit outside to long.

It has been hot and dusty for a while now. some nights it is really not pleasant at all. Lying in bed all sweaty (not from exertion) and no place is cooler. ok, I could sleep outside, that gets a little cooler, but where i live, i would have to deal with all my students showing up and wanting to clean and fetch water at 5am. That's not the way i usually like to wake up. No lights, no fan so i just sit and pretend i'm in a sauna and i like the hot and really sweaty food.

Air is so hot, even at night and even inside. The other night I was trying to light a candle and the candle bent over while i was holding it. The wax was so pliable that i could bend it into the letter S and it wouldn't break, so i made it stand up and lit it that way. The best is when you are sweating so much that it drips into your food while you're eating, then you don't have to add as much salt as usual. I wish i could say that it is getting to the end or that it is almost over, but i'm pretty sure it is going to be like this all through April. By the end of april, hopefully we will start getting rains and the heat will reduce some. Until then, i deal.

School, we are in final exams for term two. That means i have a week to go, then 200 test papers to mark, and then vacation. After vacay, one more school term and that's it. I'm getting close to the end and i'm excited.

I'm also excited for vacation. Lauren is coming and we are going to hike in Dogon Country with some other PCVs. It is going to be great to see her, and the travel should be super cool, too. I'll take lots of pictures. After that, it's All Volunteer Conference, and that will be a blast as well. It certainly was last year. After that, COS conference. I'm super busy all the month of april so i hope i can fit everything in that i want to do. Robert's wedding is in there too!

Love etc,
-Toby

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Funeral pics

Here's a link to the facebook pictures.
-TK

Funeral Season

So around here, dry season is the time for funerals and Ghanaians celebrate funerals in a bigger way way than almost anything else. Important people that died this year, (and everyone is important to somebody) get celebrated in a three day event that draws huge crowds from far and wide. Sometimes, families wait for quite a while before having a funeral for their relative, even several years. These days, there isn't so much to do, so funerals are all the time. Every weekend there is a funeral somewhere, drumming and dancing and drinking and eating is going on, usually within earshot of my house, almost constantly.

I went to visit my good friend and housemate Robert and attend the funeral of his fiance's mother. Women's funerals and men's funerals are different, mainly in the types of dancing. Men's funerals may have a War Dance, but there wasn't one of those when i went to this funeral. There are plenty of variations, I'll describe the one i went to recently.

Funerals are put on at the family house of the deceased and family and friends from all over the country come to them. Preparations start 3 days before by brewing pito, which takes three days to ferment. On the third day, the funeral starts and everyone arrives. Visitors bring gifts for the family of the deceased, often alcohol or other beverages. They also bring animals like fowls, guinea fowls, goats and sheep. The animals are food, of course. and are usually slaughtered and fed to the masses. You have to give the animal alive, though. Giving someone a dead animal is strange and suspisious.

Groups of drummers and dancers arrive and perform for tips, people eat and drink a lot, hang out and offer condolences. The atmosphere is not normally sorrowful, it's rather like a carnival. People come from the surrounding communities and there are people selling all sorts of things, plenty of snacks and drinks. Let me stress: lots of drinking. There are sad people, of course. The funeral will have people designated as "chief morners" whose job is to be sad while everyone else has a good time and works hard. The dancing and masses of people are exciting. Sometimes there are fireworks too.

At the end of the first day, lots of tired, full, drunk people sleep all over the place and where ever they can find space. The next day, many say goodby and go back to wherever they came from. They get parting gifts of food and drink. The second day is more for family and they spend the time relaxing in the home, preparing food, cleaning up from the night before, and dancing. The woman's family arrives in the evening and there is more dancing and celebration. Since in a traditional Ghanaian marraige, the woman goes and lives with the man's family, the wife's family is separate and not the same as the rest of the family and guests.

On the third day, the woman's family travel back to their place, and they take the spirit of the woman and the funeral back with them. Before they go, they dance and go around to the neighboring houses to say goodbye to them. They carry gifts and a few belongings of the deceased woman. The neighbor houses also give gifts, food and drink mainly. Animals(food) are common gifts.

After the family leaves, the funeral festival is over and people can go back to their regular work. next week, there will be a funeral at someone elses house and you can go have a good time there.

I had fun at Cynthia's mother's funeral and I enjoy going to funerals occasionally in Sirigu, but there are so many that i don't go all the time. I also attract alot of attention and at a big funeral there are lots of people from out of town and they don't know me so they tend to get bothersome or annoying. Drunk strangers want to talk to/harrass white people, especially white women (which i'm not). But it's not so bad and certainly interesting. Next time you come to visit me, I hope we can go to a funeral so you can check it out.

I posted some pictures from the funeral and other pics on facebook

Love,
-Toby