Monday, October 24, 2011

Two weeks have passed, lots of things have happened

One of the cute lizards outside our apartment.
We had (or have...?) one in the kitchen also :-)

Already I've been here for more than two weeks! And I'm really enjoying each day! Now I've been so lucky that I've tasted something called "banje" or "makkala", in the local language fulani. "Makkala" are small rolls that are sold all over here, and it's really, really good. Once you start eating it, you can't stop.

I also have to mention all the great insects here! Outside (and sometimes inside...) there are lot of lizards, but they are nice and don't bother us. The grasshoppers are worse. They are outside (and always also inside!), today I even found one climbing in my net against mosquitoes...Now when the rain season are ending, there will be some weeks with lots of the grasshoppers. They are big, and really good jumpers I can assure you! It happens that I kill them by stamping on them (even though it's not my intension...). That's because they jump (around one metre) and land under my foot just before I finish my step. For once I think it's okay to say that: "It's not my fault...!" :-)

An ugly grasshopper


 On Fridays we have used to join a Sport Club for the children on the Mission Station, because there are also many Cameroonians living in the Mission Station. The Sport Club is run by a Cameroonian boy and the "NMS one-year-volunteers", but it's fun to join.

The seller and me in the fabric store.  


Last Saturday I finally got to do something I've really wanted to do. I bought fabric to a Cameroonian dress! There were so many different fabrics to choose between, but finally I manage to pick out one with a really nice pattern. Someone is going to sew the dress for me, and I'm really looking forward to it's finished and I can wear it. The seller in the store asked me if I had a husband. When I answered: "No," he was quick to make this photo of us together...Funny!

It seems like everything lasts for a long time here in Ngaoundéré. When we join the choir "The Gospel Singers" on Tuesdays, we always end up standing, singing and dancing for nearly three hours without any breaks. (There's also practise on Sundays, but then it only use to last for one hour!)When we went to the Millennium church for the first time last Sunday, it also lasted for three hours, and when we attended the volleyball training Monday, it lasted for two hours. Anyway the choir and the volleyball training are really fun, and there are a lot of nice people there! The service in the church wasn't that fun because I didn't understand much of the French. All I understood was that the service was about "la vie éternel", eternal life. But then who actually decides what's long time? Maybe things rather last for a short time in Norway...Anyway I think I will train my patience during my stay here, and that's good.

Our French teacher in our classroom
We haven't started to work yet, because these two first weeks, we have attended a French course from 8-12 o'clock every day. On Tuesday we visited the hospital and the high school Collège Protestant. Both of them are just outside the Norwegian Mission Station (where we live), and they are run by the church, l'Eglise Evangélique Lutheriénne au Cameroun (or EELC).

Visiting the hospital and the high school was part of the French class, and it was very interesting. Of course I've heard before that in other countries the classes are really big, and that that makes it difficult to learn at school. But now I think I understood this better. I saw the big classes, with around 70 students in each class. The teacher had written something on the board, but for those who sat behind it was very difficult, almost impossible to read. At the same time the sun was shining on the blackboard through the windows, and making it even more difficult to read. That's because they don't have curtains in the classroom.

Collège Protestant
When I saw this, I thought that I should really be more grateful for the material standard of the schools in Norway. It's too easy to find something to complain about, even though we have so much to thank for. While many students in Norway use their time at school playing games or being on Facebook on their computers, here in Ngaoundéré people are very grateful when they can afford to go to school. I think that is because it is really expensive going to school here, so people don't take the school for granted. But they are happy that they can go to school, even though they risk ending up behind in the classroom, not seeing what's written on the blackboard. This is something I think us Norwegians can learn a lot from!

We get more and more friends here. Last Sunday we were invited home to a really nice girl here. There we were served fish grilled with skin, and it was really good :) And we had a really great time, as well as with taking a lot of pictures of the family, together with all her little sisters and little brothers. They really enjoyed being taken pictures of, so that was really fun!

The main road, where we use to go to the shops. The traffic consists

 of some taxis (cars), but mainly of motorcycles.


"Injam" sold along the road, the green, long roots in both sides of the photo
Thursday we went to the marked in town for the first time! That's part of the French course, because we were trying to speak French while we were on the marked, and after the trip we talked about what we have seen and experienced. It's really interesting! There were so many people in the marked in the middle of the day, selling all kinds of things. They sold a lot of different kinds of nuts, fruits and vegetables, for example a root called "injam", which we have tasted in several visits. They also sold used (and some new) clothes and shoes.


Prepared "injam", ready for eating

I have also payed attention to that everybody greets each other here when they pass one another. Often they also stop and ask "Ca va?", which means "How are you?" I like that! People live very close to each other, and I think that it's why everybody knows each other here . The Cameroonians are glad people, and I really like that they laugh a lot. Many people want to get to know us, and that's really nice! And they are really trying to understand our French, which I appreciate.

Now the two weeks of intensive French course are finished, and we will start with some of the work this week. But luckily we will continue having eight hours with French course per week for a while. I'm looking forward to start to work here, and to find out what will be our new routine! Tomorrow we have pratice with the choir again in the evening, and I have just found out that the choir is going to have a consert this Saturday...

Anyway, as you may have understood, I'm really enjoying my stay here so far! (For further information of what Johanne and me have done these two weeks, also look at Johannes blogg).

À plus tard!

10 comments:

  1. Det høres helt fantastisk ut!! Vi har så mye å lære av den afrikanske kulturen. Være glade, ta seg tid til hverandre og ikke stresse etter materialisme. Kos deg masse videre! Om under to uker er vi på samme kontinent <3

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nice sara! Juste bon courage pour tes jours au KMER.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Tusen takk, Veronica! Veldig hyggelig at du skriver kommentarer ;) Er nok en del jag etter materialisme her også, er bare vanskeligere å faktisk realisere det...Samtidig er det mye livsglede her, ja!

    Sophie: Merci beaucoup!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Herlig å lese bloggen din igjen:) Hyggelig å høre at du har det så bra og opplever mye positivt. Glade mennesker er alltid tiltrekkende:) God klem

    ReplyDelete
  5. Gøy å lese! Når kjolen er ferdig må du legge ut bilder!;)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hei, Sara Jeanette, fint å lese bloggen din. Beskrivelsene gjorde det lett å leve seg inn i opplevelsene dine, det var nesten så jeg kunne høre gresshoppen knase under føttene... Spesielt festet jeg meg ved den rullen som man ikke kan stoppe å spise når man først har begynt. Kan du ta med en slik hjem? Forresten, én holder ikke, det må jo være veldig mange...

    ReplyDelete
  7. Veldig hyggelig med alle kommentarer!

    Else Mari: Ja, nå fikk jeg akkurat kjolen (eller egentlig skjørt og overdel), så skal snart legge ut bilde :)

    Onkel Trond: Hehe...! Ja, Makkala er utrolig godt! Jeg skal sørge for å få med oppskriften, så jeg kan lage masse hjemme også :)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Det er kjempelett å lage makkala! Jeg lærte det av Ina før jeg reiste hjem Får jeg være med?? :-) GJett om vi skal spise masse makkala når Julie og jeg kommer også ;-)

    ReplyDelete
  9. Så bra, Pernille! Da er det klart vi skal ha "Makkala"-party når jeg kommer tilbake til Norge! Men skal først sørge for at det blir mye av det når dere kommer hit også ;) Å, det blir så koselig at dere kommer!!! :D

    ReplyDelete
  10. Hei Sara-jeanette! Jeg vil gjerne se den nye skjolen din. Det ser ut som du har veldig gode opplevelser! Jeg gleder meg til å høre mere av deg :)

    ReplyDelete