






Who doesn’t love a dance party? Especially if the other participants agree that YOU are the best dancer? But wait… aren’t I in Africa, land of people who dance in their wombs and who couldn’t do anything out of rhythm if they tried? And isn’t this ME, we’re talking about, not someone who, in fact, CAN dance?
In my Thies home stay, I observed many toddlers with better rhythm than most adults I know. Of course, these city households boogied against a background of African and American R&B from radios, TVs, and cell phones. The toddlers got plenty of practice time and were encouraged by all the family members around them who also had nothing else to do.
Sadly, life is very different in the village. We’re still a part of Senegal and West Africa, of course, where dance is deeply ingrained in the culture. But my villagers don’t live the same kind of life as my Thies family. They work and farm all day, exhausted by the end, only able to sit in the dark and talk quietly to each other and the stars, before getting up at dawn to do it again. There are few phones and radios, no TVs, and not even many drums. We dance at weddings and baptisms—briefly.
The day after Tabaski, my women’s club organized time to meet, a radio to borrow, money for batteries, and time to cook the vegetables I brought. We all wore our matching complets. I.e. we had a party.
The complets were actually the reason for the group’s existence. Tired of wishing wistfully every Tabaski that they had a new outfit, the women formed a club that met weekly. Dues were about 10 cents and over the course of the year, amounted to enough for a complet for each member, cut from the same fabric. My sister-mom is president and Mariama is the treasurer who kept the money (since she’s literate).
The women bubbled over with excitement for their NEW clothes. I surprised myself with how happy I was to match everyone. Of course I still stood out, but at least I was the same in One respect! I was less happy when my pagne fell down in the middle of the village, but luckily my village is not exactly hopping and Diardi tied it back up in a flash. (Haha! Flash…)
On actual Tabaski, the women were too busy cooking and running around working to put on their prized clothes until just before dusk. I was mostly busy painting henna on 20 peoples’ hands. When we finally had them on, the only place to go was to a soccer game, a 20 minute hike away. The walk was slightly treacherous and lit only by moonlight. As I picked my way on stepping stones in the river, I found it sadly humorous that this was the party.
The night was just as uneventful. Whereas the national tradition is to get down with yo bad self until the roosters crow (the cows are already home), my people were just tired, cold (COLD SEASON!), and ready for bed. They had the requisite primary school building party, but barely any kids could afford the admission fee of pennies. It was like going to bed at 8:30 on New Year’s Eve.
Back to the day after. This group of women is comprised of women around my age (18-30). All of them are married with multiple children. I’m not going to succumb to the pressure of the Peace Corps experience and gush about the connections of our sister souls, blah, blah. But it is true that these are some excellent women who make me genuinely happy every time I see them. They are sweet, and proud to have me in the group without turning me into some kind of mascot (“look, we’ve got the toubab!”) They are important to me, but I can’t pretend to understand their worlds to the deepest levels of intimacy. If I had been born and raised here, these women would be my very best friends. But for now, just recognizing that is enough.
So we’re all dressed up literally in our best. This already depresses me, in a childish way. I’ve always dreaded that dejection you get from removing your 8th grade dance dress (etc.) at the end of the day. That was it? It’s over? Where’d it go?
To make matters worse, they are all passing around a tiny broken shard of mirror, one tube of lip gloss, and one eyebrow pencil—which doubles as ill-advised lip-liner. They look like they’re playing dress-up. To go where? Under the other mango tree, 15 feet away, to look into the same faces that surround them now. I wanted to run away and cry.
Instead, I cringe at the dance party portion. It would definitely fit the LAME label in the states.I imagined trying to convince my friends at home to do this. They might play along for a minute, straining laughs, and rolling their eyes, but finally suggest we do something ACTUALLY fun. For these women who are my best friends in another life, this is the best part of the Best Day of the Year. THIS. IS. IT.
I fought the urge to run. I didn’t want to dance at first because a bunch of villagers including teenage boys had collected, ready for a break in my RA-like image. But as I felt bad for the sad little spectacle, I knew I had to do my part. Sure, I could ignore it and look forward instead to the comparatively glamorous gatherings in the bars and clubs of my future—that don’t make me want to weep… But I had to do my part here. Despite the usual indifference to my toubab-ness that I usually enjoy from the women, I knew Toubab Dancing would attract everyone’s undivided attention. But I considered my dignity and comfort sacrifices for these lovely women who deserve so so so much more.
The women had been shuffle-dancing, without heart, in a sore, overworked-body way. That is not how a 20-something year old body should be! That was the first difference between my dancing and theirs.
I am not a skilled dancer. My strengths are that I’m not afraid to be a little “out there,” and that I get bored quickly of doing the same small movements most people do. Still, make no mistake, I’m far from talented. On this occasion, I felt a knew sense of abandon in knowing I had no choice but to be the ridiculous center of attention. Encouraged by shouts and claps, I lost myself in thought. I imagined my movements were like the henna I’d been drawing non-stop: repeated circles, stripes, curlicues, embellishments… Once I realized I didn’t even know how long I’d been in the middle of a clapping circle, I couldn’t even attempt to blend in. I kept forgetting myself, because I never realized how inherently sexual mindless American dance moves are. Very different from the tired village woman shuffle! I kept thinking, “Oops!” when I’d lapse and elicit another shout.
Embarrassed at this point, I decided to play it safe by copying exactly what the other women were doing so I wouldn’t be inappropriate anymore. It didn’t seem that hard until a new girl joined and was encouraged to do the very same move I’d been trying to copy: “Dance like Hadiatou!” Haha! Ooops…
While obviously flattering, this attention only broke my heart more. These women are African! Why are they copying me? What’s wrong with this picture? But it makes sense if you compare our lives rather than our genes. Compared to the few occasions I’ve had to dance in the village, I’ve had numerous chances in America. This is the same reason I’m the henna artist here—no one else around had the liberty to waste entire forests of drawing paper in their childhoods.
Once I felt I’d made my support of the party known enough so that I could leave, I thanked everyone and said goodbye. But I wasn’t leaving, I said, until every woman and onlooker got up and danced together. A couple groaned protests, “But I can’t dance! You can, but I can’t!” Once they were up and I danced more ridiculously, they were grinning. They shuffled, clapped, danced the Hadiatou, and smiled smiles worthy of the Best Day of the Year.
When I left them like that, I was smiling too.
My mother’s and aunt’s polite but unfavorable reactions to some high-end food on our part, inspire me to further explain the food situation here. It’s BAD. I’m not kidding. After a while in the village you start thinking it’s better, like, “Hmm, is this cream of spinach tonight?” but no. It’s not. That’s called lying-to-yourself adaptation.
The good thing is that the food is mostly just bland, and not actually offensive. The menu consists of: mashed up corn of sand consistency, water, and either peanut or leaf sauce. Finis! Squash, beans, and okra make their brief appearances once grown. Small bits of onion also count as vegetables, but I suspect those are all from onions I’ve brought in. When I brought carrots with my mom and Cindy, they didn’t even know what they were. Let’s got back to the okra, though.
Dumi. Alexa called it, “Dumi-a-favor-and-get-it-out-of-my-face.” It is okra slime sauce over… what? Oh yes, corn mush. It is so very reminiscent of mucus in texture and color, that it’s hard to tell if it actually also tastes like it, or if that’s another mind-trick. So we eat dumi like everything else, 10ish people crowded around a bowl. After you’ve witnessed everyone’s unsatisfactory hand-washing show (without soap (I give up.)), they dig in. The kids almost all have large globules of snot adorning their faces. You try to keep track of these so they don’t jump ship onto the hand and into the bowl. But it’s dark and there’s some pushing and lots of little hands scooping at booger sauce, right in front of you, even, since there’s no space for your personal clean spot. And of course many globules go missing, but you tell yourself you must have missed the wipe. And you swallow.
Bon apetite!
(Anyone care to review the wish list on the left?)More-Rockin’ Notes
Casablanca:
-Convinced mom to eat brains, but I’m not that nefarious because they were legitimately delicious
-Awesome hotel! Bed like a cloud, bathrobes, rose petals, English movie channel… ahhhh!
-Cindy asked when the pool would be functioning again as it was CLEARLY empty. She kept being told it was fine and she could go swim in it!
-Hassan II Mosque: roof opens like a car’s, heated tile floor, washing fountains are multiplied as if between facing mirrors. Kept thinking about bringing baaba and how he’d just implode if he saw it. But perhaps it’s easier to take the stick mosque seriously without seeing this amazing one
-Very much like Europe. Again am only one in flip-flops, and worst-dressed
Marrakesh:
-My mom and Cindy rode camels in the park of Jardin Menara. The trick was to not give my mom time to think about protesting. Camel-ride?-Yes,-she’s-interested-go-mom-get-on! SO FUNNY! My mom wrapped her legs oddly around the saddle because she was convinced Cindy’s camel wanted to bite her. And when I took her camel’s reigns and said things like, “Mush!” and “Canter!” she did Not find it amusing. I want to make a calendar out of these hysterical photos.
-Epicerie/pharmacy: Mum, Cindy, and Matt all got massages. Once I saw them all take off their shirts in the same public space, I declined and just laughed at them. Awkward and hilarious.
-In a car from Marrakesh to Casablanca with my mom and Cindy, M and I discovered we both had giardia. For those of you unfamiliar, the characteristics of this parasite are for the most part audible and smell-able. So we exhibited those disgusting signs, sulfer burping along the road, and shrugged sheepishly at each other. “Dating is very different these days!” was a line we heard a few times throughout the trip.
-SHINY THINGS! I found myself consumed with the desire for all of them. They sparkled and hypnotized the sense out of me. Personally, I think it’s caused by some unfortunate biological imbalance because I swear I’m usually a rational being. Getting out with just four things I think shows my stoic resolve.
-People dress well. I had a tear at my knee on some Senegalese-print capris and it caused quite the scandel. As we walked around, people everywhere were literally pointing and laughing at me. School girls retraced their steps just to get another peak. Haha!
-Delicious street food, rows of dates and fresh squeezed orange juice stalls, carnies charming snakes and strumming strange instruments… awesome!
Fes:
-Mesmerizing maze of souk streets. The food lanes made me want to immediately move there.
-Got henna from Fatima after arguing forever over the price. She whipped out the, “But I’m so poor!” bit too early by Senegalese bargaining standards, so I was sort of annoyed to get to her nice house and see her DVD player and fat daughter. But the henna was pretty!
-Dar Batha Museum: pretty, but I felt like all its ancient contents could be viewed just as easily out on the streets. The jewelry was the same that I haggled over; the tools were being used still right next door…
-Merenid Tombs: we just wanted to climb up this random hill and get a view and we fell on these cool ruins. Great view that seemed through a time-portal window. Creepy caves (with torn dresses, a doll’s head, and a large bone). We went down the Wrong Way and I was glad my mom and Cindy were not still with us for this part of the trip.
Merzouga:
-Secured room through sketchiest dealings ever. A guy at the bus station with a wrinkled brochure and texts from alleged tourists who “loved it!” spent an hour arguing about the price and camel-riding itinerary. He finally scribbled a “reservation” on a paper and asked for money upfront. We decided it was a scam and didn’t give him anything. But when we got there, shock of all shocks, the ride we agreed on was waiting for us! Humanity beats cynicism for the day! Hoorah!
-DUNES! The Mummy was shot here…
-Camel trek! I headed up the convoy, followed by M and 6 Italian potheads (I’ve never seen anyone smoke up this much. In the dunes under the stars, I get it, but at every public bus stop in a devout Muslim country?). The gypsyish tents were cool, and COLD. I wrapped myself in all the garments I had. Dunes + full moon= quite romantic. Running up the snow-like sand to touch the stars, and it felt like we had our own planet. In the daylight too, the sands glow red like Martian terrain in windswept shapes under the setting sun. When the moon rose HUGE over a dune, it was just begging for a biker silhouette ET-reenactment photo. Next time!
-We ate a kingly pile of meat and vegetable tajine, which was far too much for us to tackle, followed by apples and pomegranates. Among gypsy tents, moonlit dunes, and desert stars, it was beautiful, delicious, but with tinges of absurd unfairness and arrogant extravagance. We were in the DESERT, for god’s sake! Eating better than my village family in the entire past year. I just hoped the camels got spoiled too as they did all the work.
-There were several things in the desert that lead me to conclude that it is both a more hospitable and more industrious environment than Pellel. Such as:
-House cats. Even among dunes in the middle of nowhere. NOT starving, and in fact doing magnitudes better than the one my family tried to raise on lachiri and hut mice (who I believe is now deceased)
-Working wells and forages. *$@*%#*&@@%#$!
-Coldness. The sand dunes felt like snow
-No malaria or snakes. Humph.
Bus ride to Ouarzazate:
-Had to pee unbelievably badly. I held it for as long as possible and M asked the driver to stop. When they did briefly to let someone off, I leapt off too, yelling, “Btlma?!!” When people pointed to a second story while the bus guys shouted at me to get back on, I said, “I’ll just go here!” I thought a slightly shadowy corner of a building would suffice and began to unzip. But I looked up to meet the stares of at least five guys. “Uhh… don’t look? Stop looking! Can you just… I’m just gonna… No, but stop looking!” They did not stop looking, and a few even stepped closer thinking I was asking something. I was going to explode. The bus driver was about to bust his honking apparatus. I looked around wildly, praying I wouldn’t wet myself. I spotted a bush over a wall, jumped it, and peed for a good 100 seconds. I heard kids giggling and suspected the dumbstruck men could still make me out pretty well, but cultural sensitivity and exploding bladders don’t exactly correspond. I ran back to the franticly honking bus amidst laughter and some applause. I embraced it, and jogged through victoriously, waving even, like an Olympic runner. The bus lurched off before I was completely in, only to stop one minute later for an official 10-minute pee-break. Oops! It ended up even being double that when the engine wouldn’t catch… Oh well!
Bus to Marrakesh through High Atlas Mountains:
-Ribbony roads wrapped all around the mountains, sometimes corkscrewing, always with breathtaking views on the open side. Sometimes the views showed terrifying plummets that the bus careened carelessly past… but quite picturesque! Canal systems, beautiful gardens, olive trees everywhere, geod sellers at the most random and uninhabited turns, school girls skipping in headscarves, the very picture of purity, farmers, sheep… I just wanted to hop off and talk to/help/ photograph everyone and maybe live there for a year. Or, indefinitely. The soft boxy towns seemed to be carved out of the mointains themselves. With such fertile gardens and freakin’ unbelievable views in their doorways, I fantasized about a Peace Corps service in one of these pastorally perfect, simple mountain villages. Then I noticed that every single house had a satellite dish on top. Whaaaaat?! Now I’m even more envious—what do they Not have? (Along this vein, the boutiques also have waaaaay better selections, often including things like snickers or Limited-Edition-Dark-Chocolate-TWIX (WHY WOULD THIS BE LIMITED?! OH WHAT A CRUELLY BRIEF GODLY GIFT!), lots of chocolate and chip things… HUMPH, again!)
When I got off the plane in Morocco and faced more hijabs and veiled women than I’d ever seen, I was a little suspect about how I’d feel about the place. The impersonal bustle of Casablanca, and the Disney-like theatrics of Marrakesh (we kept deciding certain scenes had to be staged. See previous poem), also didn’t move me. But the frequent cafes and sidewalks and all the girls with school bags impressed me. Ahh, development! That, and the tastes and beauty, the pride in agriculture and mosaic architecture, the culture of art and literature and haunting arabic melodies—this is what I was looking for. Rockin.