Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Swearing-In Ceremony

The most exciting day of PST was swearing in! Not only because it meant that I would soon be traveling to my permanent site, but also because I had the honor of giving the swearing-in speech for our Silozi class in front of our Country Director, US Ambassador to Namibia, and the Namibian Deputy Minister of Education.


In English, the body of my speech read:

"Today is the culmination of eight weeks of language, technical, safety and cultural training. As we know, it is a long application process, and most of us have been waiting for this day for twelve months or more. During those months, we could never have imagined the warm welcome that was waiting for us in Namibia. When we arrived at the training site, our trainers sang welcome songs to us, and it has been as though everyone we have met has had a welcome song in their hearts.


The six of us going to Zambezi Region come from all over the US and each of us takes a different piece of the US to their host community. We have come to work with promising business ventures and educational counterparts here in Namibia. We have come to prepare a new generation of Namibians for an increasingly interconnect global community in which Namibians will play an important role. We have also come to learn. Over the next two years, we look forward to getting to know our counterparts, learners, and communities. We can only hope to do justice to the hospitality that has been extended to us in the short time we have already been here.

This process has been facilitated by fantastic language trainers. We have been prepared to serve in Zambezi Region by the enthusiastic, kind-hearted and patient Mama Rosa, whose teaching style and sense of humor has been an excellent preparation for, and introduction to, the Zambezi culture and people. We could not be more excited as we prepare for two years serving the people of the Zambezi Region and are excited about the future as we prepare to go to our sites.

Thank you all and god bless."

Peace Corps Language Training

Language assignment is one of the most exciting parts of Peace Corps. Sometimes, the language you're assigned to gives you a hint about where you might go, and where you go isn't revealed until the very end of PST. To make things fun, each volunteer received a card with an image on it - people got lions, monkeys, snakes, elephants, etc. My card had a snake.

To find out what our language was, we had to make the sound of the animal on our card to find our group and our language trainer. I started hissing and walking, and it wasn't long before I found out that Mama Rosa would be my language trainer and I would be learning Silozi

Mama Rosa starts from scratch, teaching the Silozi diphthongs. 

Silozi is a language spoken by a relatively small minority in Namibia and is neither as recognizable to the outside world as the Khoisan (or "click") languages nor as widely spoken as, say, Afrikaans

You find Silozi speakers in the most remote area of Namibia - the Zambezi Region (formerly known as the Caprivi Region/Caprivi Strip). It is spoken as a lingua franca there with local tribal languages including Fwe, KuhaneMbukushu, Totela, and Yeyi, among others. Silozi came to Namibia through the conquest of the area in the past by Lozi kings who came from western Zambia via modern-day Lesotho and nearby areas in Southern Africa. Zambezi is a small extension of Namibia that extends between the borders of Zambia and Botswana, and coming within hundreds of meters of, but not quite reaching the Zimbabwean border. Namibia is the 34th largest country in the world, yet only 2% of the land is arable, and almost all of it is in Zambezi Region. It is one of the last regions to develop in Namibia, partially because of a conflict that affected the area between 1994 and 1999. Unfortunately, the region also suffers from a high rate of HIV infection (37.7%). It has cultural traditions unlike any other part of Namibia, such as bowing and clapping, or kissing the other's palm while greeting. It is also the last region of Namibia in which the tribal kings/chiefs still hold an important influence over the day-to-day lives of the people who live there. It is one of the most beautiful regions of Namibia, with seasonal floods causing the floodplain areas to turn into a series of oxbow lakes and islands. It is also home to the largest number of birds of any region in Namibia. 

Mama Rosa is one of the best, if not the best, language trainers I have ever had. Her technique is to speak as little English as possible, using body language to get her point across. She has 40+ years of experience as a teacher and school principal. When she retired, she became part of a panel of a Silozi radio show, and a Peace Corps language trainer. She is enthusiastic and has a captivating personality, laughing and cutting up while explaining difficult ideas with the ease of a professional carrying years of experience. 

Site Assignment

One of the most closely-kept secrets during training is WHERE we will all end up going. For me, it was less of a mystery, because the language I am learning is only spoken in one region of Namibia. For others, today was more of an unveiling.

Nothing important in PST is simply told to you (not as fun), and today was no different. Our trainers laid out a map of Namibia using string, and we were blindfolded. Each of our sites had an envelope with relevant information about it placed at the relative location of our sites on the string map that had been laid out. To musical accompaniment, we were blindly led to our sites where we waited until everyone had been guided. When I opened my eyes and looked down, I found everything I had been waiting for.