Sunday, January 29, 2012

Ete-sen! (Hello, how are you?)

First off, I would like to thank ClarkU Study Abroad for hosting my blog - I am grateful that they have decided to share my experiences on the website!

I left off my last post with a snapshot into my life with my amazing host family, the Kumordzi's (pronounced Coo-mode-gee). I have been so happy living with this family, which consists of Mommy Veronica, Edmond, my two host brothers Lesley and Oliver (both around my age), and my host sister Pearl, who is married to Robert with a 6 week old baby, and has been staying in the house so Mommy can help her with the baby. The food is amazing and I love having so many people in the house.

I had a very interesting cultural experience last night: watching the Ghana v. Mali soccer game. I know that Ghanaians love soccer, but honestly, I never really understood why. I still don't really get it, but I'm starting to see the addicting qualities to watching the game. Most of the game consists of intense concentration and exclamations when there is a foul or a close goal - typical stuff. Now, when Ghana scores, all hell breaks loose: everyone leaps up and screams, jumping up and down, hugging everyone in sight! One guy even took his shirt off and started dancing on the bar. Now comes my favorite part! The celebratory "Azonto" dance. With every goal follows five minutes of Azonto, a music and dance that is comprised of two-stepping to the beat and making various work related gestures such as washing, boxing, ironing or driving. (video below)
At the song's end the bartender will promptly turn off the music and everyone will sit back down and continue watching the game like nothing happened - kind of like living in a Ghanaian musical. Now I don't know what happens when the other team scores (Ghana won 2-0!), but I would like to remain in the dark if it is anywhere near as emotional as when Ghana scores. Go Black Stars!

I have been loving my time in Ghana - the CIEE Legon program has been absolutely amazing. I have felt very secure throughout my time here, and the program does a great job of having activities, educational events and setting us up with opportunities such as internships and volunteering. However, with such a great support it has been easy to forget that I am living in a country where many people are living in very poor conditions and do not have access to the luxuries that I have as a foreigner. At my home-stay and on University of Ghana (UG) campus, I am surrounded by others of privilege and I have access to everything I need to thrive. I am hoping that through my internship and my classes, I can connect myself to the realities of this country that could be so easy to shy away from. I would like to expose myself more to the Ghana that I would never have to see. In researching Ghana, I stumbled across this striking image, which was taken about 20km away from where I enjoy my Ghanaian life as an international student.


A Global Graveyard for Dead Computers in Ghana
"In Agbogbloshie, a slum in Accra, the capital of Ghana, adults and children tear away at computers from abroad to get at the precious metals inside. Left, David, Akore, 18, and other foragers."
Credit Pieter Hugo for the New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2010/08/04/magazine/20100815-dump.html


I don't mean to end on a low note, but I want to emphasis the stark coexistence between human despair and human joy in the same space - from football games to toxic waste, Ghana is beautiful, but there is also poor human condition that is unacceptable, and often times the negative byproduct of capitalist superpowers such as the United States. I hope to learn more about both sides of Ghana as I continue my cultural and academic study over the next four months. 

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Life in Legon

Sorry I haven't posted yet - that means I have been fully immersing myself in Ghanaian life and now have lots and lots of updates to share.. right? Right! It has been quite the long and adventurous week (I can't believe it has only been a week!) Ghana, in a few words, is hot, cheap, gorgeous and chaotic. First off, let me give you the timeline of the last couple of days. After a full day of terminals and on-flight food, which was surprisingly delicious, I finally landed at the Kotoka Airport Wednesday night, where we were picked up by our program and brought to the Ange Hil Hotel, the site of our orientation for the next 3 days. After hours upon hours of lectures, which were boring but obviously necessary, and hanging out by the pool, we finally emerged from the hotel bubble to embark on our West Africa adventure.

From the hotel I was driven by my host dad in the oldest stick shift car I've ever seen. Once we arrived at the house, which is beautiful, I rushed to get dressed and was swept off to a family party outside of Legon. I spent the next 40 minutes in slow moving traffic observing street vendors selling steering wheels and bootleg DVDs, and trying to get my baby host cousin to play with me (he warmed up to me eventually). Upon arrival, I was first  offered a seat on a plastic lawn chair placed in a circle in the driveway, followed by a plastic cup of brandy, then malt soda, then fresh grilled Tilapia, head and all. This was my first taste of Ghanaian transportation, hospitality and conversation, most of which was in Twi-glish: the sentence starting in English and trailing off into Twi, the most commonly spoken tribal language.
Since then has been a blur of unpacking, lectures, meandering around University of Ghana campus and hanging out with my host family and fellow international students. I could not possibly write the details of everything in one post, so I will leave you with these tantalizing FUN FACTS that I have acquired during my time in Ghana so far, and continue later...

1. Because of the immense heat, people generally start their day at 5:30 or 6am.
2. It is only safe to drink "Pure Water," which is cheaply sold in plastic bags about the size of my hand - just too big to fit in a standard glass, but not enough to fill a water bottle
3. Phone service and Internet broadband are pay-as-you-go
4. Internet browsers in Ghana do not like to open Clark Email
5. This may just be my family, but we have a watch dog, not a pet dog, that is let out of his dog house at night to guard the house. His name is Boss.
6. This may also just be my family, but we toast our bread in a waffle iron
7. Food etiquette: Families generally don't eat together, you eat with your RIGHT hand, and always "invite" those around you to share in your food.
8. All activity comes to a screeching halt when the Ghana soccer game is on.

9. Everybody wants change and nobody has any.

10. There are open gutters everywhere. Ghanaians never fall in them.

And what's coming next? Specifics I am not clear on since, in classic Ghanaian style, nothing is ever fully planned ahead or timely. However, I do know that I will finally be starting classes and visiting my internship site (a public hospital!) at the beginning of next week. Photos to come!

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Countdown: 6 days until Ghana!

  Thanks for taking a look at my Study Abroad blog! For the next 4 months I will be living, studying and working in the southern coast of Ghana. I will be taking classes at the University of Ghana in Legon, which is right outside of the capital, Accra. While in Ghana I will be living with a host family, taking classes at the University of Ghana and interning at a health-oriented organization.

   First off, a little introduction on how I got here. My name is Emma Craig and I am in my junior year at Clark University in Worcester, MA. I am majoring in International Development & Social Change with a minor in Innovation and Entrepreneurship. While I am on campus I participate in a bunch of different activities, from activism and volunteering to performing arts. My most active involvements are STAND, a national genocide-prevention coalition, and Variant Dance Troupe, one of a handful of dance groups on campus. I love ClarkU, and although I am beyond excited for Ghana, I am going to miss my friends and community at Clark.
   Last summer I worked at Primeros Pasos, a non-profit health clinic outside of Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. At Primeros Pasos I was a volunteer teaching basic health and social-health to children in the surrounding public schools. It was out of this experience that I found my passion for public health, which I plan to pursue through a degree as a Nurse Practitioner. Until then, I am trying to get as much experience as I can through internships, both abroad and in Worcester. I am hoping that my internship in Ghana will give me some good insight into public health in a different cultural, political and economic context from that I experienced in Guatemala.

  With only 6 days until my departure, I figure I should be freaking out and getting cold feet, which is how I felt before leaving for Guatemala. However I am surprisingly calm. I have been attributing my tranquility to experience. For my trip to Guatemala I did almost all of the planning and researching, from my internship, to my home stay and Spanish school. I was also traveling alone, which can be terrifying. But this time the program I am on, CIEE, does everything - all I have to do is get on and off the plane! Perhaps knowing that has eased my initial worries. However, don't be surprised if my panic sets in on my ride to the airport. But I'll let you know how that goes next time I post!
   Thank you again for showing interest in my blog. I promise to do my best to inform and entertain you as I lead you along on my adventures. If you would like to see the Study Abroad blogs of my fellow Clark travelers, feel free to check out ClarkU Study Abroad Bloggers!
- Emma