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Global Youth Service Day

While on exchange there are many ways in which we can give back to the community. Global Youth Service Day is an international event where young people from around the world participate in helping and improving their respective communities. For this year’s service day I have chosen to write a blog about my volunteer work at the SOS Enfants orphanage in Dakar. For the past several months, on Tuesday evenings, I have volunteered to teach English to the kids at the orphanage. The children are between the ages of 12 and 13 and I am happy to be able to teach them early so that by the time they are ready to graduate they will have proficient English skills. As a native English speaker I can expose them to how English is colloquially spoken and really help their conversation skills. They can learn English grammar in any book but I can give them an essential addition to their education. When I teach I like to get the children engaged by playing games or listening to songs rather than d...
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Thiès

During the last week of March, my female cohorts and I stayed with a traditional family in Thiès (pronounced like “chess”) which is one of Senegal’s larger cities located about an hour east of Dakar. Our house was a large compound which was home to four related families. Over the course of the week we had the opportunity to improve our Wolof as many of the family members did not speak either French or English. The first night we hung out in the “girls room” and met our sisters and aunts, some of which had babies. Afterwards we settled into our room that had only one large bed that the three of us shared. There was a very uncomfortable dent in the far right of the bed so we rotated each night as to who had to sleep in the dent. The three of us ate dinner separately with different families each night and then after dinner we reconvened with our program guide, Ibrahim, who took us on a walk around Thiès. Every morning we ate bread with mayonnaise and sometimes eggs, and washed them do...

Political Editorial on Senegal's 2019 Presidential Elections

Disclaimer (Explicit language): This is a personal editorial of my observations of the presidential elections in Senegal and do not reflect the official opinion of the United States. Sensitive political topics and issues will be discussed in this editorial but by no means do I intend for this discussion to be viewed as a criticism of Senegal, its people or its politics. I have very much enjoyed my time here, I do not feel unsafe, and I look forward to my last three months here. In the 2019 presidential elections occurring on February 24th, front runner Macky Sall, won his second term with 58% of the vote, beating the four other candidates: Idrissa Seck, Ousmane Sonko, Madickee Niang, and Issa Sall. Although he won a large majority of the vote, his ostensible popularity is likely due to undercover corruption. In 2017, the former mayor of Dakar, Khalifa Sall (no relation the president), was sentenced to 5 years in jail after being convicted of corruption and the embezzlement of $3....

Art and Nostalgia

Art is everywhere in Dakar, from art vendors selling wooden sculptures on the side of the road to the ubiquitous graffiti/street art found randomly adorning city structures. I’m planning on doing my Capstone Project on street art in Dakar and will paint a mural at SABS for my final product. I want my subject matter to be representative of me and my experience in Senegal, but I haven’t decided the actual subject yet. Through the universal language of art (unlike math that I have found to be not so universal) I will be able to connect with my host community. Living in Senegal has offered me so many experiences, some less wonderful than others, and opportunities to connect with people and discover things I otherwise never would be able to. The needy children you see on TV commercials, I’ve met them here on the streets of Dakar. At times I’ve given them bags of peanuts, bottles of water, and sometimes even leftover crepes from home. However, I still miss home more and more with every p...

Weekend in Kayar

For our December monthly excursion the SeneGALS (including Devin) and I went on a three day trip to Kayar, a small coastal fishing village about an hour north of Dakar. We were accompanied by our chaperone, Ibrahim, who is the best, and always spoils us with snacks courtesy of American Councils. Our chauffeur dropped us at the village and we loaded our luggage and selves onto the back of two horse pulled wagons until we arrived at our respective houses in Kayar.     When I first met my host family they warmly greeted me and my host mom introduced me to the other family members as “her daughter”. She is the mother of five with the oldest being twenty and the youngest about two. For lunch they fed me salad made with locally caught sardines and vinaigrette. The main dish was mafé which is rice and lamb with a peanut sauce. I enjoyed the conversations with my parents and my uncle because we talked about Trump and how there is a growing perception that his new foreign poli...

November

November was filled with ups and downs making it the toughest and the most rewarding month so far. Through the challenges I faced this month I feel they have grown me as a person and taught me important lessons in perseverance. Without difficulties exchange wouldn’t be as enriching as it is. Although I often only share the fun moments I feel it’s important to be honest and show the not so fun side of exchange. This month began with being robbed. On Halloween night while walking home with my fellow cohort, Devin, a motorcyclist came from behind me and stole my purse containing two cell phones, ID, debit card, and about 10,000 cfa (equal to twenty dollars). Everything happened so quickly that I only remember fragments; My purse being tugged, falling to the ground while my bag snapped, and getting up panicked with no purse in sight. At first I didn’t understand what was happening but once I realized I had been robbed the motorcyclist had already sped off around the corner.   ...