Friday, 24 February 2012

Gadjiwan 20. - 22. January 2012

On the 20th of January we were invited to Gadjiwan to visit Solbjørg. So early in the morning that day the boys, us two girls, the driver and two African women who are from Gadjiwan went on what turned out to be a six hours drive.
As Gadjiwan is a small village way out in the bush west in Cameroon, the road leading to it is quite bad and bumpy.
So squeezed into a car, the eight of us had a really nice time and were even fortunate enough to see some wild monkeys running over the road!
The last 25 km. (which is about 15.5 miles if anybody wondered..) took 2 (!) hours, that says a bit about the condition of the road..
Beautiful African sunset in Gadjiwan

When we arrived in the little village we were shown to a house where we were staying for the weekend. Solbjørg and her visitors are fortunate enough to be able to get electricity from solar panels. So for a certain amount of time each day she has light in her house. The others in the village do not have the technology to have electricity, or even water.
The water is in wells and the light is provided from torches or candles.

After eating a great dinner and a really good cake the youth, Solbjørg and Erik Sandvik who had joined us went on a visit to a neighbouring village to deliver a mattress to one of the pastors there. We sat on the back of a pickup truck and had a blast driving to Mayo Balèo on top of the mattress, however the way back was a bit more painful and bumpy!
Kristian, Runar, me, Andreas and Sara-Jeanette on the back of the pickuptruck

On Saturday morning we went into the village with Solbjørg and visited some of the families that live there. We did not get to speak allot with them as there are very few people there that speak French, so most of the things we managed to say in Fulani/Fulfulde was: good day = sanou,  how are you/ fine = djamna, djam, and thank you = ossoko.
It was very nice seeing how they lived together there. The small houses that were made of dirtbricks and straw roofs looked quite cosy, but it was dark inside most of them. But why stay inside in the dark during the day? People were mostly outside chatting to their neighbours while sitting on their homemade stools and porches leading up to the houses.
Woman making peanut butter from scratch

One of the families we visited had a man who was digging a well right outside their house. He did not know for sure if there was any water to find, so hopefully the hard work was not for nothing.

In the evening we were invited to a neighbouring village. We visited the Muslim leader of the village and an other family. We were served couscous and makkala and sat on the floor while eating the latter.
Erik Sandvik and the village leader
There was another reason for us to be there that evening an this was to show a Christian film for the inhabitants of this village. The film was a Nigerian Catholic made film but as Solbjørg said it is still Christian so it would make do. The film was shown on a TV that was placed on top of the pickup truck with great speakers and an aggregator that made it all possible as there was no electricity. A man sat next to the truck with  a microphone and translated the French into the mother language of the villagers. This meant that the film was paused several times to make sure the most important parts were translated properly. And if there was something funny show it was rewind and played again and again and again. And each time was as funny as the first!!

The TV that was used for the christian film we saw with the village
It was an amazing experience to sit there and watch this little screen together with maybe about 100 other people seated on the ground around us. As they knew that we were not used to sit on the ground for that long we were given plastic chairs to sit on.

On Sunday morning we went to the church in Gadjiwan and experienced a different kind of sermon than what we are used to in Ngaoundéré. With only Fulfulde and Péré as the spoken language, we did not understand so much more than  the bible verses that were read as we had bibles in French and Norwegian with us.
After the sermon Solbjørg served Couscous and some leftovers from the delicious cakes she had served us that weekend.

We were really lucky to be invited to visit her, and we had a great time there! While we weren't visiting Solbjørgs friends or eating her delicious cakes we were playing cards or hunting down the enormous rats that lived in the attic over our house we stayed in.
This was quite an entertaining adventure in it self! The boys took turns in trying to sneak a peak at the great beasts by climbing up on weakly mounted chairs. Kristian threw a makkala up as bate so that the beast would attack something else than him when he lifted himself up there. Andreas managed to take some better pictures up there than what I was able to.. But Runar was not as keen on this risky game we had going as the rest of us were, but he had to take a look as well.
BATE! = Makkala

Kristian taking a careful look up in the attic

No giant rats were seen though... so the knifes the boys got from Solbjørg were not put in use yet... But we could hear them over our heads when we went to bed, probably having a feast over the makkalas that we had thrown up there!

After dinner and church on Sunday we drove home again. This trip was mostly spent on trying to get home to the last minutes of the football game the boys had been talking about all weekend. Which was "unfortunately" not possible as we had a stop in Tignère where we visited a sibling of one of the madams we had with us in the car.



All in all, it was a great trip! And we were given the opportunity to see the life in the small villages of Africa. Without electricity, water, TVs, computers, Internet and even mobile reception they live a completely different life than what we do in Norway!

Johanne Teresie

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