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Thursday, June 28, 2012

The Trip to Berberville

Okay, time to recount the tale of the trip to Berberville that I went to a few weeks ago.

Here goes:
My counterpart invited me to go on an overnight trip to a small village in the area. He said we would pass out clothes and do activities for the kids. I said sure. I liked the idea, so I showed up at the youth center at 
1:30pm, and of course, transport didn't come until 4pm, and then we literally went 2 hours out into the small small villages where I had never been, in a transit, with a guy playing the drum constantly in the back, and me shoved up in the front between the driver and my friend. The road that took us to the village where we were going was possibly one of the most scary roads I have ever been on. I (generally fearless when it comes to crazy roads) was actually scared, and couldn't stop murmuring under my breath for the driver to keep watching the road, because he was, of course, yelling into his cell phone, while we're all sitting in this transit, on the side of a mountain, on a road that's about a horse cart wide.

So that was, whatever.

Eventually, the transit stops at the end of the road, on the side of a mountain and we got out and then I look down the mountain, and my friends are like, pointing out the donkeys and mules that the town is sending up to us from way down there. It took me about 5 minutes to find where the animals were, they were so small. Anywho, it took us an hour to descend the face of the mountain and when we got to the village, this was where the real fun starts happening.

Somewhat like a weird dream, we're greeted by about 20 children running up the path from the village to greet us, and they're so...awestruck (this village is isolated/there be dragons) that the kids are just staring at us, until my friends start taking candy out of their sacks (stranger danger doesn't work here) and then the women and men come out to greet us as we enter into the village and immediately my hand gets taken and held for the next 3 hours by this woman, who looked like she could have been out of a storybook. This woman looked like a character out of a storybook. She was covered in black cloth that was bordered with neon colored thread, draped in traditional Berber jewelry, and underneath her head covering, she put a sprig of basil.

I'm looking around this village, and i'm wondering to myself if they have running water or electricity. Check one and check two, except  electricity was run by solar pannels.

That evening, we put on a little movie for the kids on a projector screen (since people in this village try to conserve energy, I don't think they watch too much tv) and then we had an aHawaiyj moment, where we did all sorts of traditional dances and hung out together

I feel like i've also been practicing how to be quiet. This weekend, everyone spoke Tashlhiyt, a language I don't know well. I was delighted to find that a few women spoke Darija and so did some of the boys, (Because Arabic, and especially Moroccan Arabic, a street dialect, are languages learned in the bigger city streets and at school).

Anyways, the second day, we got up, did more games and activities with the kids, and then handed out tons of clothes to the village. We separated the clothes out into batches, and after doing this for about an hour and a half (my sense of time is a little funky because I turned off my cell phone due to no reception and I don't wear a watch)I sat down on a pile of blankets and passed out hard.

I mean, the temp in the mountains isn't as severe as it is in T-town but, it was warm, and I was dehydrated, which is ridiculous because I had drunk about 6 liters of water that day and still felt like I could have drunk more.

And then we ate lunch, and while we're all hanging out after lunch, the man of the household comes and tells us to take what he's handing to us, which is roasted liver wrapped in fat, which actually I don't mind because I think I crave the iron that it has. and then we wandered around the village, hung out at the river, dipped our toes in the nice cool water, and I watched the tadpoles swim around. It was kind of great not doing anything and I could feel my mind blanking out. And then we went walking through the fields, which is where I grazed/fell on a cactus and got a million prickles in my shirt and into my skin. This was directly before my counterpart asked me if I wanted to go to another douar (small village), to which I firmly said, 'no.' And I felt ok saying no, I wasn't prepared to do another night out, especially without more stuff from my med kit, aka tweezers and pepto, haha.
and with our goodbyes said, we headed back up the mountain. I'm happy to say that it only took us around an hour and a half to two hours to get up the mountain, in which we got back in the same transit, with the same kids playing on the drums, and the guy on the cellphone and managed not to die.

Sorry, I left my photos on my external drive. I'll get them to you in September. Inchallah.

For now, I'm in a really swanky beach town called Safi and it's been marvelous, minus the 110 degree weather. We've all been sweaty messes. Blagh. But, it is nice to be around the beach. Huzzah!