Saturday, February 4, 2012

Village of Painted Houses

If you want to know the names of those mystery birds in the last blog, check it out again.  I received lots of suggestions and I think they are now all properly labeled.

 
Tiebele

One of the tourist sites I was able to visit while I was traveling with my friend from John Carroll, Elizabeth Swenson, was a village that is famous for the way folks there paint their houses. Everywhere else in the country traditional houses are made of mud brick, like this one that is currently under construction in my village.

 After it is finished, the people will cover the walls with clay to form a protective coating so the mud does not wash away in the rainy season, so it looks like this.


Sometimes people mix concrete with the mud and for concrete blocks, like this. 


Either kind of construction can then be covered with mud and concrete mixed together for a longer lasting covering. In either case, the walls as usually left the color of the material with which it was constructed. What makes Tiebele different is the designs the women paint on the houses. The place that is the official tourist site is the compound of the village chief. I have no idea how many people live here, but I would guess over 100. Here is the entry to the compound.


When you walk through the compound you can see that there really are people who live here and it is not just to show to tourists.  Actually there are probably not enough tourists who find their way to this town to keep up a place just for show.

Many of the houses are round, like these.
This is the one house that is set up to show tourists.  This low rounded door is a defensive measure.  Through it you can see another low wall.  To get into the house you have to duck down crawl in. Then you have to crawl over the little wall.  That would make it hard to surprise people in the house.  Someone would be able to club you on the head before you could get in and do any damage to the residents. 


In the house we were allowed to visit there were three round rooms.  In this one you could cook in the rainy season or when the wind was too strong to cook outside.  The gourds hanging on the wall above the place to build a fire would act as cups and bowls to eat out of.

The doors to get from room to room were similar to the one to enter the house, except there was not the extra barrier to crawl over.

Here is the door to another round house. Notice the column by the door with the white stuff on top. That is a fetish, a place where people can make sacrifices if they are asking the powers in the traditional religion to do something, like make it rain, or assure the harvest is good.

No all the houses are round, as you can see in this picture.  Notice the snake made of clay that is part of the decoration on the one straight ahead here.

One of the women was making local beer from sorghum. The beer in my village is yellow, but this beer would be red, because of the kind of grain that was used to make it.

The decoration of the walls is a job for the women. They use the feathers of the pentards to do the painting.

All of the designs have some meaning, which our guide explained to us.  Some stand for  particular animals, and he told us that the mark that looks a bit like a wagon wheel is a beauty mark that you might find as a scar on the cheek of a village woman. Traditionally people here cut babies faces with particular scar patterns which helped identify the ethnic group to which a person belonged.  For example, if I see a man with three small lines by his eyes, as with my friend Prosper, I know that that man is a Mossi and will understand Moore. 

As our guide said, facial scaring was a kind of identity card in the traditional culture.  This kind of scarification is not practiced as much these days as it was in the past. You do sometimes see marks on babies’ faces, but usually it is a simply X on a cheek.  A Peace Corps volunteer friend told me that many people believe that if the baby is flawless, the spirits may want the baby and it will die.  Putting a scar on the face assures that the baby has a flaw and that may protect it.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Birds, Birds, Birds!


BIRDS!!!
 
While we were at Ranch Nazinga we saw lots of birds. We saw them at many other places as well. Most of these pictures were taken by my grandson, Jesse, who has a great eye for nature and a pretty good camera. I suspect some of you bird watchers will have an idea of what these birds are. I found a couple of them in a bird book and put their names in the captions, but I could be wrong and am open to suggestions. Others are, for the moment, nameless. I will update the names as folks tell me what they really are.

First, here is one of my favorites, because of the bright colors. People reading this blog and responding to my request for help naming the birds agree that this is a red throated bee-eater,

Red throated bee-eater
It was fun to watch it swoop down off the branch, grabbed a bug, and returned to the same perch.


Red throated bee-eater in flight
They were quite common at the ranch, as you can see from the tree, below, that is covered with them.  Yes, those are birds, not leaves on the branches! 

A tree full of red throated bee-eater
 They have nests in a clay bank, kind of like swallows in the states.

Red throated bee-eater homes
 This is some kind of hornbill. Even though the bill looks yellow to be, I think it is a red-billed one.




Here are a couple of African red-billed hornbills hanging out together.



This is an African jacana.

African jacana

This amazing bird is a pied kingfisher.  We saw it hang in the air above the lake, almost the way a humming bird can stay in the same place above a flower. Then it suddenly dived straight down into the water and flew off with a fish.

Pied Kingfisher

I think these are cattle egrets. They follow the cows and eat the bugs they stir up.

Cattle egrets

 I think this is a Goliath heron or maybe a purple heron It is all a question of size, and this guy was quite far away from us and up in a tree so it is hard to judge how big it really was.

Goliath heron
This is a female Abyssinian roller and the male is below

female Abyssinian roller

male Abyssinian roller
They call this bird a pentard. We call them guinea fowl.  I think they have about the ugliest face of any bird I have seen, but they sure are good to eat. You know that this one is domesticated, because of the knob on top of its head. The wild ones look just like it except for the knob.



As everywhere in the world, there is a need for carrion eaters, like the vultures. These were at the ranch, but I have also seen them on the road, disposing of road kill.

Vultures
vulture in flight
You may have noticed this big pile of straw in the branches of this tree in the middle of the lake in the elephant pictures. It is actually a bird nest.  If you look carefully near the bottom of the nest you can see a hole through which the birds enter the nest.  We saw a couple of them go in and out. The bird is called a hammerkop.

Hammerkop



Here are the other birds I did not know before, but they are now named, thanks to the bird watchers who looked at this blog.
Black-crowned night heron

Spur-winged lapwing
Male long-tailed glossy starling

Thanks again to all how helped identify the mystery birds.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

More Animals at the Ranch and Elsewhere

In a previous post I told you about the elephants at Ranch Nazinga  There were lots of other animals there and here are a few pictures of them.  While we were out riding around we stopped by one of the dams and saw this crocodile lounging on a sand bar. 


Crocodile at Ranch Nazinga
We did not get up close and personal with this guy like we did with the sacred crocodiles of Sabou, which we visited later in our trip.

Dawn's family and one of the sacred crocodiles of Sabou
From the observatory by the lake we saw a troop of baboons that came down to get a drink and play in the water.
Baboons

More baboons
 We also saw these wild boars (AKA wort hogs).

Wort Hogs
There were a number of different kinds of antelope.  I only have good pictures of two kinds

Bush buck
Bush buck baby

Water buck

Water buck
There were also monkeys. There were some that hung out in the trees.

Monkey in tree

Monkey jumping

There were others that came right up to the dining room windows, looking for a hand out, I suppose.

Monkey at the dining room
Not all the animals were big.  Here is a kind of lizard I had never seen before, with a blue tail.

Blue tailed lizard

Our final big animal adventure was in the southwest, near Banfora, where we saw hippopotami. At first they just looked like rocks sticking out of the water.
Rocks?
 Then we could see their eyes, noses, and ears.
Eyes, ears and nose.
 Finally one yawned and it was easy to see that it really was a hippo!
 What can make a hippopotamus yawn?
We went out to see them in these little flat bottomed boats.  There were five people in this boat. We had eight people in our boat, including the man who did the paddling.  I guess we must have been sitting pretty low in the water.
Hippo boat
As  you can see below, I am well looked after by folks here.  I call it playing the white hair card. It is one of the fringe benefits of having lived a long time! 

A little help for an old lady
Last, but not least, Camels! 

Five wise men?
Not wild animals, but they seem to belong with this blog. Reminding me to say a belated Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all!

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Christmas in Burkina Faso

As I have told you, my daughter Dawn, her husband Jay, and their two children, Annie and Jesse were with me for Christmas this year.  After we left Ranch Nazinga, where we saw all the animals, we went to my village to prepare for the holiday.  Things are done a bit differently here than in the US, as you might expect.

Burkina Christmas Customs
 
While you may see plastic Christmas trees in the big cities where there are lots of foreigners, in the village the only kind of Christmas decoration you find is a crèche that Christian families may build by the gate to their courtyard. These are usually built by the children. Here is an example of one. It probably does not look like a crèche to you, but if you looked inside you would find clay figures of Mary, Joseph, and baby Jesus.

Crèche
Gift giving at Christmas time is not a usual thing.  You probably try to have your children have new clothes for Christmas.  If you have money to spare, you might buy one gift for each child, but none of the kind of over abundance of presents that you find in many American homes. There is not an exchange of gifts between adults or with friends.

Probably less than half the people in the country are Christian. Most of the others are Muslim, although there are many who follow the traditional religion to a greater or lesser extent, sometimes along with Islam or Christianity.  One nice thing about Burkina Faso is the religious tolerance.  Actually, acceptance of people regardless of their religion might be a better way to put it. Many families have some people who are Catholic, some who are Protestant and some who are Muslim. Most people celebrate all the holidays of both Christianity and Islam. On the Muslim holidays, the Muslim families prepare a great feast and they are visited by all their friends and neighbors, regardless of religion.  In the same way, the Christians prepare a big feast for Christmas and Easter and the Muslims come to share the feast with them. I described Tebaski in a blog last year, when I went with an important Burkinabè man to the feast at his house as well as at the home of his secretary and later at the home of the cabinet minister for who he works. Last year on Christmas day Janet and her family were busy painting my living room and I was not prepared for all the visitors who showed up. 

My Christmas

This year I decided to be prepared.  On December 24 Dawn and I fired up my Dutch oven and we baked several batches of brownies. In Ouaga we had purchased a number of jars of prepared American style spaghetti sauce and lots of spaghetti. We made Koolaid Pink Lemonade and had some candy Dawn had brought, too.

Christmas Eve

On Christmas Eve we went to the Catholic Church for the Midnight Mass. The church is quite a large one, probably seating about 2000 (with people crowded next to each other on the benches, as they do here). The church was only about half full, but there was still a good crowd.  In the processional the priest carried a baby doll to represent Jesus, and placed it in the crèche in front of the alter. As he did so, many of the women let out that yell that is called ululating.  There was lots of singing by the two choirs, one that sang in Moore and one that sang in French.  This is the choir that sang in Moore.



There were a couple of hymns Dawn recognized, but the only one I knew was the processional, Silent Night.  With all the ululating, it was definitely NOT silent in the church! Of course we did not understand a thing that was said, but you didn’t need to understand the language to understand the feeling of celebration. The congregation and the choir moved to the music, dancing in place.

Christmas Baptism

Christmas morning Mass was a time for some babies to be baptized, among them, Prosper and Martine’s baby, Jean Crystosome. Dawn took Jesse’s good camera and we sat up front to get good pictures of the event.   Moms and babies were seated in the front row, with dads behind them.


As with weddings, it is the custom for people with cameras to crowd around the principals and take lots of pictures of them. At first Dawn wasn’t sure it would be OK, but when she saw what others were doing, she got in there and got some good pictures.  There were about 20 babies being baptized.  These were the ones who were not able to be present when most of the new babies for the year were baptized back in November.



Prosper and Martine’s baby was not to happy to have water poured over his head!



There  were five people who were celebrating the 25th anniversary of their baptism At the end of the mass they were recognized and lead a dance around the church.



Dawn is the pastor of a small church in Nelson, New Hampshire.  The New Hampshire Association of the United Church of Christ (UCC) gave her a clerical stole to present to a church in Burkina Faso. There are not UCC churches here, and we attended the Catholic mass, so it seemed appropriate to give the gift to the church. We told one of my friends she would like to see the priest after the service to give him a gift to the church from some churches in America.  Imagine our surprise when, at the end of the mass the reader announced that there was to be a presentation from a church in America. I managed to mumble a few words in French trying to explain, and the priest said, “Thank You!” in English. He seemed to be pleased with the gift and put it on over the other robs he was wearing. Maybe you can make out the word "Holy" that is embroidered on the stole.



After the service the thing to do is to take pictures of your kids by the crèche. Here is Jean Crystosome and his mom and dad. (Notice baby Jesus lying in the traditional woven African material.)

 
Christmas Visitors 

When we returned to the house we prepared for visits from neighbors.  We had quite a few people stop by, but not as many as we might have had.  They arrived in twos and threes and we were able to serve them on the porch with the few dishes I own.
 


 And that was my Christmas.  Hope yours was a good one!

Friday, January 13, 2012

Want to Help?


When I left Cleveland, many of you asked what you could do to help me with my work in Peace Corps. Here is a chance for you to do something for some Burkinabè young people. Peace Corps volunteers and Burkinabè men and women are going to be running week long summer camps for girls and for boys in four locations around the country.  These camps are based on a model that has been used in other Peace Corps countries to develop leadership among girls.  It was originally called Camp GLOW (Girls Leading Our World). The name has been change here in Burkina Faso to Camp G2low (Girls and Guys Leading Our World). That is, there will be sessions for guys as well as for girls. It is important to educate boys as well as girls about gender equality, good decision making, and leadership in a patriarchal society such as Burkina’s.

These week long camps will be for boys and for girls in the equivalent of 7th and 8th grade.  There will be 4 girls from each of 15 communities attending each of the girls’ camps, and 4 boys from each of those communities attending each of the boys’ camps. That means there will be 60 boys and 60 girls in the camps at each of the four locations, for a total of 480 students attending in all. The communities that send students to the camps will help in selecting the students who will come, will send adult leaders to be part of the adult leadership teams, and will pay for the transportation to and from the camp.  The communities where the camps will be held will be donating space and other support for the camps.  We hope to raise about $6400 (about $50 per student) in donations for each camp so students can come at no cost to their families.

You can read more about the goals of the camp at http://pcburkina.org/camp-glow. If you are moved to make a donation, or an organization you belong to would like to contribute, go to that web address and click on the bottom picture on the left hand column, for the Leo camp. That is the one where I will be working.  (If that camp has already received full funding, feel free to select one of the other camps.  I have been told this is unlikely to happen, but one can hope!) The donations can be made by credit card.  Your contribution will be sent through Peace Corps directly to the financial officer for the camp, who has to turn in recipes for all expenditures.  I hope some of you will be interested in assisting with this project.