2007.07.28: July 28, 2007: Headlines: COS - Guinea: Blogs - Guinea: Personal Web site: Peace Corps Volunteer Cami writes: Six months after being hurriedly trucked away from our sites, in the midst of what I at times feared would turn into a civil war, I’m once again sitting in the Volunteer house in Conakry
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2007.07.28: July 28, 2007: Headlines: COS - Guinea: Blogs - Guinea: Personal Web site: Peace Corps Volunteer Cami writes: Six months after being hurriedly trucked away from our sites, in the midst of what I at times feared would turn into a civil war, I’m once again sitting in the Volunteer house in Conakry
Peace Corps Volunteer Cami writes: Six months after being hurriedly trucked away from our sites, in the midst of what I at times feared would turn into a civil war, I’m once again sitting in the Volunteer house in Conakry
We’ve only been here about 5 hours at this point. And it’s just now starting to sink in that I’m really back. It’s pouring out. Not that wimpy American rain that leaves you wondering if it will just be too much effort to open an umbrella. It’s an honest to goodness downpour like you only see in Africa in the middle of the rainy season. And the electricity already went out (though of course, being at PC HQ, the generators kicked back in.) But yeah, I’m back. I’ll really believe it tomorrow when I go to the Malinke lady in the morning to buy some eggs that I can mix with tonight’s shawarma to make a delicious shawamelette. And it will sink in some more later in the day when I go to buy some cheke next door. Once I interact a little more with Guineans, pull out my first Susu phrase in six months, venture into the Taoyah market, and wash my clothes by hand again, then I’ll believe I’m really back. Right now, it’s still a little surreal.
Peace Corps Volunteer Cami writes: Six months after being hurriedly trucked away from our sites, in the midst of what I at times feared would turn into a civil war, I’m once again sitting in the Volunteer house in Conakry
Guess who's back. Back again. Guess who's back.
from Lost In Guinea by Cami
Caption: Mural at the Peace Corps headquarters in Guinea Photo: Frank in Guinea Flickr Creative Commons Attribution 2.0
Wow. I’m back in Guinea. Six months after being hurriedly trucked away from our sites, in the midst of what I at times feared would turn into a civil war, I’m once again sitting in the Volunteer house in Conakry. Things have come back to normal here in Guinea, and from what PC staff tell us, the situation is even improving, however slow or marginal the progress might be.
We’ve only been here about 5 hours at this point. And it’s just now starting to sink in that I’m really back. It’s pouring out. Not that wimpy American rain that leaves you wondering if it will just be too much effort to open an umbrella. It’s an honest to goodness downpour like you only see in Africa in the middle of the rainy season. And the electricity already went out (though of course, being at PC HQ, the generators kicked back in.) But yeah, I’m back. I’ll really believe it tomorrow when I go to the Malinke lady in the morning to buy some eggs that I can mix with tonight’s shawarma to make a delicious shawamelette. And it will sink in some more later in the day when I go to buy some cheke next door. Once I interact a little more with Guineans, pull out my first Susu phrase in six months, venture into the Taoyah market, and wash my clothes by hand again, then I’ll believe I’m really back. Right now, it’s still a little surreal.
There are currently a whopping eight of us in country! That’s half of what will be the total number of volunteers in Guinea for 5 months. Everyone else will be trickling in over the next month and a half or so.
But you can definitely tell Peace Corps Guinea was evacuated a few months back, at least when you look at the volunteer house. The walls are freshly painted, the books are all organized, eighteen hundred trunks no longer line every wall of the house. The house is actually clean! And I mean really clean. The refrigerators are spotless. The mountains of clothes, shoes, and random foods and books in all the rooms have disappeared. And I have a room to myself. So it feels a little empty, but before long it will once again be full of volunteers jockeying for a clean bathroom or an empty bed. That being said, we have all decided that we are going to set some sort of precedent to make sure that all future volunteers know that the house is going to stay as close to this clean as possible.
The trip into Conakry went well. All our flights were on time, our luggage made it, and the airport wasn’t any more hectic than usual. Though we did get a great welcoming, as almost all the staff was there to greet us, along with Kim, Lisa, and Bonnie, who had just had their own two day odyssey back from Mali.
Well, I suppose I should get to bed. It is after all, three in the morning here, and I want to be able to get up in time for a morning omelet sandwich, maybe even a fish sauce sandwich if I’m really feeling like getting back into the swing of Guinean things.
Now, I only have to decide which of the eight beds in this room I want to sleep in…
Links to Related Topics (Tags):
Headlines: July, 2007; Peace Corps Guinea; Directory of Guinea RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Guinea RPCVs; Blogs - Guinea; Peace Corps Library; Peace Corps Directory; Peace Corps History; Bulletin Board; Recent Peace Corps News
When this story was posted in July 2007, this was on the front page of PCOL:




Peace Corps Online The Independent News Forum serving Returned Peace Corps Volunteers
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 | Dodd issues call for National Service Standing on the steps of the Nashua City Hall where JFK kicked off his campaign in 1960, Presidential Candidate Chris Dodd issued a call for National Service. "Like thousands of others, I heard President Kennedy's words and a short time later joined the Peace Corps." Dodd said his goal is to see 40 million people volunteering in some form or another by 2020. "We have an appetite for service. We like to be asked to roll up our sleeves and make a contribution," he said. "We haven't been asked in a long time." |
 | Public diplomacy rests on sound public policy When President Kennedy spoke of "a long twilight struggle," and challenged the country to "ask not," he signaled that the Cold War was the challenge and framework defining US foreign policy. The current challenge is not a struggle against a totalitarian foe. It is not a battle against an enemy called "Islamofascism." From these false assumptions flow false choices, including the false choice between law enforcement and war. Instead, law enforcement and military force both must be essential instruments, along with diplomacy, including public diplomacy. But public diplomacy rests on policy, and to begin with, the policy must be sound. Read more. |
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Story Source: Personal Web site
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Guinea; Blogs - Guinea
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