As we touched down in Zambezi, we looked out the small windows of the four-person plane, curious about this new world we were about to enter. As we looked around at each other, our faces were filled with joy and eagerness to step off the plane into the sea of children, who were joyously singing and dancing and ready to welcome us into their community. I was embracing all the little hands latching onto me and couldn’t help but smile, listening to these beautiful children screaming, “HI HOW ARE YOU?” with so much excitement. This feeling of love and sense of community have filled our days here thus far. I feel blessed to be able to experience people in this way, but what comes with this feeling of great welcoming to this community; we are also challenged to find our place in this community.
Something I have found myself struggling with is trying to make sense of my past international experiences over the years, including this being my second time on the African continent. What makes this experience in Zambezi different from the rest of my travels is I am being immersed into this community in a way I have never been before. Because we are here for 4 weeks, we are able to make relationships that really can build over time. We are also able to have a first hand experience in the education system, as we are teaching classes during the days. Finding my place here is really a great opportunity I get, to walk the fine line between being an outsider and walking with the community. I am feeling culture shock in a way that is different than before. The culture shock is less about the environment here, and more about the relationship between my culture in the states and the culture of Zambezi in a more transparent way.
Before our flight from Lusaka to Zambezi, the last group to leave was able to spend time at the Flying Missions guesthouse and got to talk with one of the pilots, Andy, for quite awhile. Our talk with Andy was the first time I felt uncomfortable this trip, but was also the first time I was truly challenged to question my place in Zambia. Andy is an expat who was born in Switzerland and then lived in Afghanistan for several years before moving to Lusaka, Zambia. This being said, he is a very well traveled man who was able to share his thoughts on this country from an outside perspective. Andy talked about foreign aid and the downfall of it, if it is not executed correctly. Two things can go wrong: we help when they don’t need it, and we don’t help when they do need it. An example would be the amount of clothes that are donated from the western world to African countries, in order to clothe people who are seen as not having enough to wear. The problem with this system is it puts the clothing industries in Africa in a hard place because they will go out of business if they are no longer needed to make clothing for their community. Another problem with this idea of clothing scarcity is it is a misconception. In my time here so far, I have become fond of a young boy named Motondo, who I have seen everyday wearing different clothes and two outfits on Sunday for mass. I’m not sure where this conception that African’s need to be clothed comes from, but I have also seen it with food. There is plenty of food in Zambezi, which I have seen in the strong traditions that surround meal making. These rituals carry on because of the food that continues to surround this land. It may not be as readily available as what we are used to, but we can’t compare our abundant grocery stores to their town markets. The flip side of this theme is figuring out where we are not helping when they do need help. This is not an easy solution and I certainly don’t have the answers for a town so foreign to me, but that is the lesson that we must share our knowledge, but not attempt to westernize a community. We must make solutions that are sustainable for this community, rather than fixing the problems our way. The message Andy left us with is we need to be immersed in a culture to truly understand the needs of the community.
This paradox of walking with and being an outsider is very representative of my experience in Zambezi so far. My goal on this journey is to find where I fit into this, and who I am in this community. We are all very excited and anxious to be starting classes tomorrow and beginning this incredible journey together.
Taylor – as we begin to prepare for our first computer class, we think of you and miss you. I am filled with happiness knowing that you will soon experience this amazing place.
Dakota Peterson
Class of 2018