Anne
Work &
Play: after Shona’s safe arrival in the middle of yet another
lengthy power cut in the Extreme North of Cameroon, this has been a week of work
mixed with play to some extent. On Monday our trip to a village called Pétté
allowed Hamish the chance to see the hospital there and gave the Dutch students,
Shona and me a shopping opportunity. There is a lively group of women there who
run a bakery, make “Swiss” cheese, yogurt and soft toys. To our relief we also
discovered that the Femmes de Pétté run a fairly basic restaurant serving a
Cameroonian speciality, omelette sandwiches.
Tuesday saw the same group of us plus Godam heading for
the Fondation Bethleem at Mouda with a lovely young girl called Nafeesa (See
photo). We were on our way to order a tricycle wheelchair for Nafeesa. She is
the young woman who has been crawling 5 kms each way to our literacy classes in
Boudoum. When Godam and I tracked her down to her village, she was sitting on
the edge of a well fetching water for the family. She moves with such speed,
grace and dignity that it is hard to believe she is paralysed from the waist
down, due, Hamish thinks, to polio. Thanks to Heather’s curry parties in our
house (we hope the smell has gone by the time we come home!), Nafeesa will get
her chair at the beginning of June. She will then spend a day at Mouda being
trained in its use. In the meantime she has an ordinary wheelchair on loan from
the Fondation Bethleem which will allow her to get to Boudoum with the
assistance of the other girls going from her village. On Tuesday of next week
she will come to the hospital to work with Shona to see if there is some way she
would be able to stand or move about upright for short distances. After that,
Shona, Godam and I are heading out further into the bush to do the same thing
with a 6 year old girl from the beginners’ class at Boudoum.
Meanwhile we are still waiting for word that the
construction of the new classroom at Membeng has started. Patience is a virtue
in this country and not something I am overly blessed with. I can’t wait to
start taking photos. The football tournament is progressing and people are now
making predictions on the winning school. When available our car is used as team
bus. The record so far is 3 adults and 11 big kids! Senior pupils are busy with
a writing competition to be judged by Godam and me. There will be prizes for the
winning girl and boy in each school and overall winners. I look forward to
reading their work as they describe cultural events. The plans for next year are
with my VSO “buddy”, awaiting his opinions. I then have to do the same with his
before we can give them to the Development committees ready for the next school
year and the next volunteer.
Hamish
We gather the traditional festivities were held in the
mountain a week ago (see last blog), but no, the nassaras were not invited. We were, however, invited to the
lamibe’s fête last Saturday. Once a
year, all the chiefs in the area get together for what we suppose you’d call
their AGM. This year it was the
turn of our Lamido in Zidim to be host.
The day started mid afternoon with the arrival of all the chiefs then the
“Prefet” of the district. Various
dance groups performed and expected to be rewarded with money. After that there was time for a rest
before the start of the evening festivities. We returned at the appointed hour, 1900,
and were shown into the Lamidat (chief’s palace) where we sat in what could only
be described as a reception room come garage! It wasn’t clear what the delay was
about, but eventually (1½ hours late) the Prefet arrived and dinner could
start. It turned out that one
Lamido had screwed up the whole proceedings by dying that afternoon. This meant all the dignitaries had had
to go to his village to pay their respects, and that the “cultural evening” had
to be cancelled. The Lamido in
question had been ill for some time and had been unable to attend the fête
anyway. Photos show our Lamido
making his speech to the crowd (sound system as good as and reminiscent of the
good old days with the Donkey Derby!) and a group of traditional dancers
complete with Santa Claus beards.
Last weekend, arrangements had been made for our locum,
Serge, to provide cover. Friday
being International Labour Day was a public holiday in Cameroon, and the plan was Serge would arrive early on the
Friday. Well, there was no sign of
him on Friday evening and on Saturday morning I went to check what was happening
in the hospital. I was told, no, he
had not arrived, so assumed I would be providing emergency cover. Around midday, one of the Dutch students came to the door to say I
was needed in theatre. When I
arrived, I discovered Serge was there
but no-one had thought to let me know.
I had been asked to give guidance to the surgical team dealing with a 14
year old boy who’d fallen onto the mechanism of a grinding machine which had
torn open half his abdomen, removed most of his liver and the right half of his
diaphragm as well as shattering his pelvis and several ribs. I wasn’t sure what they were expecting
from me – I am no surgeon – but it became clear all they wanted was confirmation
that there was no prospect of repairing the damage and that the right decision
was to close the wound and leave the boy to die.
Monday we visited Pétté, a village north of Maroua where
there is a well respected hospital which was set up 40 years ago by a Swiss
doctor, Anne-Marie Schonenberg. She
is still there and very much in charge – quite a formidable character. They have been running a very efficient
programme to follow their AIDS patients and we went to ask if we could see the
system they’re using. She could not
have been more helpful, and gave us a copy of the software system they use. The day of electronic record keeping may
yet arrive in Zidim. This will be a
huge relief to my nursing colleagues; my writing was always infamous and hasn’t
improved. Add to that, a poor
knowledge of written French and you can imagine the difficulties the staff
face.
After taking Nafeesa back to her village, we passed a
couple of our hospital nurses giving Yellow Fever vaccination in a nearby
village - see photo.
We are spending our last break at Maga before the hotel
closes for the wet season. This is
where the hippos are to be found and we learned a couple had been killed this
week. The heads were removed and
brought back to have the teeth removed for the hunters to keep as trophies. The rest of the carcases will be eaten
by the villagers. Attached photo
shows one of the heads being boiled so that the teeth can be
removed.
Meantime, once more I have to say a huge thanks to all
our supporters back in the UK. My appeal
for funds for a blood analyser for the hospital is now at the halfway mark
thanks to really generous donations.
Last Saturday, a group of our friends who meet once a week in a local
pub, raised £465 through a bottle raffle.
Having seen some of the photos of the evening when the raffle was drawn,
we’re really jealous that we couldn’t be there!
Finally, I’m convinced I’ve stumbled across a new cure
for mild malaria. The evening after
Shona’s arrival I developed all the classic symptoms; fever, headache, abdominal
pain and generalised muscle aches.
By the following morning all symptoms had mysteriously disappeared
without any medication. Now as it
happens, Shona had brought a supply of chocolate with her, carefully preserved
in a cool bag in her hand luggage.
I had felt obliged to eat a bar of Fry’s Turkish Delight after the onset
of symptoms, so clearly that was the cure.
Unfortunately I won’t be able to continue with a proper study as Anne ate
the only remaining bar!
Shona
Yet again, another interesting week in
Cameroon! Mum and
Dad have now made the transition to completely mad Nassaras! I think they will struggle to fit in
with the European lifestyle when they get home. Precious evenings off are spent sitting
zapping insects with the Executioner fly catcher or squirting goats in the
garden using a super soaker water pistol!
This has all been part of their development though, as they realise bare
feet are no longer required to kill insects. As I type this Dad is sitting waving the
Executioner above his head!
We have had a pretty packed week visiting the hospital
in Pette and the Fondation Bethleem again. Then on Wednesday morning we
headed back to Waza National
Park in
search of elephants. On arrival, we
were again lucky enough to find ourselves with the head tracker of the park,
gold medal winner Monsieur “Past-it Pisteur”! We believe he earned his medals in
1802! Thankfully we had Halilou
driving us again and he has eyes like a hawk, so we managed to see a lot of
different things, including Baboons for the first time, I think Monsieur is
still looking!!!!!!!!!
When we were unable to find elephants in the park, we
were taken outwith the park on Thursday and Friday to the nearest village where
at various different times, over 2 days we picked up a total of 5 extra people
to help us locate the elephants. At
times this included “Hands-Free off Road Driving”. We were taken through dense
bush to follow elephant droppings, Monsieur “5 seconds behind everyone else”
would then direct us in the opposite direction from the droppings and broken
branches!!!!!!! He was however very confident when directing us to a shaded area
to sit and wait while they “tracked” the elephants. Both days we kept ending up
in the same village. He was taking us round in circles!
On the way home, in usual
Cameroon fashion, nothing went to plan. We stopped to help 3 trucks carrying
wood as one of them had run out of petrol.
Instead of one of the other two going to get some petrol, they waited for
help…………. We then gave one of them a lift to the nearest petrol station. About 15 minutes later, we ran out of
diesel! Halilou thought that the
petrol gauge had been wrong; he was right!
Halilou then pumped the diesel left in the fuel pump into the filter and
that was enough to get us on to a better stretch of road, which we made by about
100m. A group of guys were
repairing the bad road thankfully and they were able to take Halilou off to
collect more diesel, it was all very quick really, no waiting for the AA
here!
We are spending the rest of Saturday and Sunday in Maga
recovering. We have spent a leisurely afternoon by the pool. I am proud to announce that Mum, at the
age of 21+ has just done her first water bomb! The British swimming pool safety
rules don’t apply here.
Next week I think the plan is to spend a wee bit of time
down in the hospital again. I think both Mum and Dad have a couple of projects
lined up for me………………..