November 1, 2003 - Dayton Daily News: Dayton volunteer details machete attack in Niger

Peace Corps Online: Peace Corps News: Special Reports: October 26, 2003: Dayton Daily News reports on Peace Corps Safety and Security: Archive of Stories and Commentary: November 1, 2003 - Dayton Daily News: Dayton volunteer details machete attack in Niger

By Admin1 (admin) (pool-151-196-165-54.balt.east.verizon.net - 151.196.165.54) on Sunday, November 02, 2003 - 7:58 am: Edit Post

Dayton volunteer details machete attack in Niger





Alter High School graduate Carla Casella Hodulik (center) survived an attack by a machete-wielding teenager 15 months into her Peace Corps assignment in Niger. Here she is seen with people from the Kouli Koira village in Niger.


Read and comment on this story from the Dayton Daily News about Carla Casella Hodulik who said her attacker spotted Hodulik and another volunteer in a market in Ziguida, about six miles from her village of Kouli Koira. He followed them down a trail, confronted them and demanded money. As Hodulik reached in her purse, he mistakenly thought she was reaching for a weapon and swung the machete in his right hand toward her.

Quote:

Instinctively, she threw up her left arm to block the blow. "It caught the back of my hand, but the blow was strong enough that it pushed my hand in towards my face," she said. "So it got the back of my hand and it also got me from probably my midcheek back to the middle of my head, about a 2-inch gash right through my left earlobe."


After she recovered, Hodulik later returned to Niger to finish her service. Her attacker's mother felt so bad about what had happened that she made two clay pots, painted them and gave them to Hodulik. "The boy's mother, when I came back, came to apologize," said Hodulik, who now lives near New York City. "I don't think I was a target. It just happened to be wrong place, wrong time." Read the story at:

Dayton volunteer details machete attack*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



Dayton volunteer details machete attack

'Wrong place, wrong time' could have cost her life

By Russell Carollo
rcarollo@DaytonDailyNews.com

Cheering volunteers greeted 23-year-old Carla Casella Hodulik of Dayton as she walked off an airplane in the African country of Niger to begin her Peace Corps service in 1992.

"They're singing songs to welcome you, and they're all cheering you as you get off the plane," recalled Hodulik, an Alter High School graduate who worked at Mayflower Mortgage in Dayton before joining the Peace Corps. "So you're kind of overwhelmed by everything."

Fifteen months later, Hodulik lay alone bleeding in the African bush, begging the teenager who had just cut her with his machete to let her live.

"I was bleeding a lot, and I was worried about that," she recalled. "It (the wound) had severed the muscle in the left side of my neck, so I couldn't hold my head very well. So I fell to the ground."

The attack, one of several on volunteers in Niger, was like other assaults: Statistics don't accurately reflect the trauma to those involved.

Hodulik was one of three Niger volunteers assaulted in September 1993, and one of two cut in the attacks, according to a Dayton Daily News analysis of the Peace Corps Assault Notification and Surveillance System database. Between August 1992 and December 1993, five volunteers in Niger — an average of one every three months — reported being cut during attacks, three of them receiving injuries described as severe.

Hodulik said her attacker, who was about 17, saw an opportunity when he spotted Hodulik and another volunteer in a market in Ziguida, about six miles from her village of Kouli Koira. He followed them down a trail, confronted them and demanded money. As Hodulik reached in her purse, he mistakenly thought she was reaching for a weapon and swung the machete in his right hand toward her.

Instinctively, she threw up her left arm to block the blow.

"It caught the back of my hand, but the blow was strong enough that it pushed my hand in towards my face," she said. "So it got the back of my hand and it also got me from probably my midcheek back to the middle of my head, about a 2-inch gash right through my left earlobe."

She credits an earring with keeping her earlobe attached to her ear.

After she was injured, the other volunteer ran for help, leaving Hodulik alone with her attacker.

"He basically went through my bag and grabbed my money. I'm begging him, ‘Please just take everything and leave.’ I was trying to reason with him."

When he ran away, Hodulik opened her Swiss army knife with her teeth and used it to cut cloth from her T-shirt, which she used to bandage a wound. She pulled off her underwear from beneath her dress to cover another wound.

As she lay in the 100- to 110-degree heat, she tried to figure out why she was in so much pain, unaware that the force of the blow from the machete had broken her jaw in two places.

"I lay there and tried to calm down. . . . I thought I could be dying," she said.

The other volunteer eventually arrived with help. She was taken by donkey cart to a Peace Corps truck, which carried her to a hospital.

Her attacker was found hiding under a tree not far from the road where she was robbed.

A few days later, she flew home to Dayton, where she spent the night at Kettering Medical Center before going to her parents' house.

The Peace Corps paid for everything, including two first-class tickets for her and a doctor, she said.

Hodulik later returned to Niger to finish her service.

Her attacker's mother felt so bad about what had happened that she made two clay pots, painted them and gave them to Hodulik.

"The boy's mother, when I came back, came to apologize," said Hodulik, who now lives near New York City. "I don't think I was a target. It just happened to be wrong place, wrong time."

[From the Dayton Daily News: 11.01.2003]




Click on a link below for more stories on PCOL

Read the series on Safety and Security here



Leave your comments on the series below.

Read comments by RPCVs here, here and here.





Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Safety and Security of Volunteers; Investigative Journalism; COS - Niger

PCOL8390
06

.

By Soumana (69.121.64.6) on Friday, October 15, 2010 - 12:15 am: Edit Post

I just come accross this unfortunate event that took place in my village Kouli-Koira.
I was born and raised in that village. I attended my primary school their.
I would like to seize this opportunity to say sorry to Carla Hodulik on behalf of all habitants of Kouli-Koira.
I know this is an isolated incident but in my heart i know and i believe that people from Koulikoira are nice, warm and welcoming people.
i also want to thank you for loving my country and my village. I live in New York and i really want to meet with you one day .
I don`t know how to make pots but i can cook you a nice Kouli- koira dish for you. i hope to hear from you one day.


Add a Message


This is a public posting area. Enter your username and password if you have an account. Otherwise, enter your full name as your username and leave the password blank. Your e-mail address is optional.
Username:  
Password:
E-mail: