I am interested in people. I am
the type that can be seated in a noisy crowded place but not hear the
noise. Instead, I focus on faces and pick
out personalities and characters. Like a playwright, I create different personas
and try to figure out if they fit the person. Sometimes I wonder about an
individual’s personality, what makes them tick, why they are the way they are.
I guess that is why I got into writing. But my mother always says that I should
probably have done psychology. I don’t know about that but I guess perhaps in
another life…
Anyway, my interest in people is
what makes my work practical. I meet all sorts of characters and their various
personalities give me lots to think and write about. Sometimes though, I meet
people who make my imagination screech to a halt. No wondering or imagining or
conceptualizing imaginary personas – just the person’s true character.
Connecting. Getting to really know them
without having my own preconceived ideas to contend with.
I have met such people over the period that I
have been working in the camp but there is this one particular girl I met a few
months back. I shall call her Sarah to
respect her privacy. Sarah is 12 years old. She is not your regular 12 year old
though.
Sarah is not your regular 12 year old girl. |
I met her by chance. I was
actually working on a different story about a primary school girl who had done
extremely well in her final examination. As I was chatting with the girl, I kept
being distracted by yelps of laughter coming from the next compound. Being the
curious cat I am, I strolled over to see what was going on there.
These kids had a lot of fun, playing with a small ball. |
There were a
bunch of kids jostling on the ground with a small ball. Shrieks of joy would
emanate from the group when the ball would be wrestled from someone. They would
then take turns at throwing the ball around before it disappeared under a cloud
of dust and the jostling would resume.
I was quite tickled by their
game; I almost wished I could join in! They were having the time of their
lives. There was an elderly lady in a wheelchair seated under a tree smiling at
the boisterous bunch. She looked like the owner of the homestead. I smiled at her and she waved, inviting me
into her yard.
As I said my hellos, I noticed a young girl bent over a big
rock, grinding some flour on its flat top with a small stone. I slowly sat down
as I stared at how intensely she went about her chore.
She barely noticed me or the commotion a few
yards away. She was so engrossed in what she was doing; she might as well have
been in a different world altogether. I was completely taken by her dedication;
her slender arms moved back and forth against that rock with such ease; she
went about it like it was the most natural thing in the world. And she was humming some nondescript tune
under her breath which coupled with the swish
swoosh motion of the rock on the grinder made the whole scenario almost
hypnotic. I felt like time had stood still.
Sarah grinds flour on the rock as her siblings watch in the background.
Almost suddenly, she stopped and
looked up into my eyes. That fluid movement was so abrupt, I was completely
taken aback. I smiled at her hesitantly and she gave me a shy little smile.
“Hello.”
She smiled again, this time white
teeth flashing.
“What’s your name?”
“Sarah,” she replied softly.
Her voice was so soft, barely
above a whisper; I had to move closer to hear what she was saying. As I settled
on the sun soaked hard ground beside her, she swipe at some flies that were
buzzing around her face.
It was then that I really got a good look at her. She had
such beautiful, soulful eyes. The kind that bring to life the saying “eyes are
the windows to the soul.” I couldn’t help but smile at her. She was such a
beautiful girl. I could also see wariness in her eyes, like she wasn’t really
sure what I was up to. She watched me as one would watch a stray cat renown for
taking off with food from cooking pots.
I decided to break the ice further.
I introduced myself and showed
her my staff badge so she could see my name. She smiled and this time looked at
me curiously.
“How do you say that?” she asked,
pointing with a flour covered finger at my second name.
I laughed. She was warming up to
me.
As we chatted, I noticed her
initial hesitation thaw. My curiosity was piqued further. I wanted to know more
about her. I was interested in what she was doing though - this grinding
process was all new to me. I have never actually seen it in person; I have only
seen it depicted in African movies and heard women from my rural village talk
about it. My grandmother actually has an old, moss covered grinder somewhere in
her old kitchen – it is apparently older than me.
This is no task for the
fainthearted - it is tedious work. By the time the grain has been ground into
flour so fine that it feels like silk between the fingers, you can barely feel your
palms. I was both amazed and disheartened. Amazed because she did it with such
ease and yet, disheartened because she was in a corner by herself, grinding
away while her peers and siblings played the afternoon away. She would
occasionally throw cursory glances at them and I wondered at that point what
was going through her mind.
At one point, she paused to wipe
some beads of sweat off her furrowed brow then continued grinding away. I watched her until my curiosity (as always)
couldn’t let me stay quiet any longer. So I asked her to tell me her story.
Sarah is an Unaccompanied Minor
(UAM). A UAM is a child who has been separated from her family and is by
him/herself in the camp. The separation causes untold trauma to the child as
one can only imagine. Most UAMS are lucky to be reunited with a relative and
are then classified as a Separated Child. UAMs and Separated children (UASC) are
considered vulnerable persons of concern and require immediate assistance to safeguard
their well-being. Those who are not reunited are placed in either foster care
arrangements or child headed households. The child headed households are linked
to a family or families that assist in monitoring their progress in the
community.
Sarah is one such child; she came
to the camp at the height of the South Sudan influx. She didn’t have any family
member with her. She was part of a group of other children that were clustered
together by aid workers in South Sudan and put in a bus that was transporting
asylum seekers to the camp. Months later, she was reunited with her two younger
brothers. She and her brothers are now staying with a foster mother. She does
not know where her parents are or whether they are still alive.
She stares down the entire time,
her flour covered hands clasped in her lap.
I feel at a loss. I am not sure
what to say next. I am almost annoyed with myself for making her relive such a
time in her life that she has probably been trying to put behind her.
“You want to do?” she asks me
suddenly.
“Do what?” I ask curiously.
She points at the rock.
I shake my head furiously. I can
imagine what a mess of everything I will make if she entrusts me with what is
clearly a feat beyond my capability.
She laughs. “No you can’t. Too
hard. Your hands too soft.”
As I laugh with her, I can’t help
but think about what she has just said. Yes, it is hard work. Yes my hands are
too soft. But so are hers! This is hard work especially for her.
I wish I could take this burden off
her. Yes, burden. Because she would
probably be doing something else if circumstances were different. She seems like such an intelligent girl and a deep
thinker. I got the sense that she seemed to have been pulled from something
bigger. Something more meaningful and ideal. She wasn’t living the life of a 12
year old girl and thousands of kids just like her have been robbed of their
childhood. So many have been forced to grow up so fast and take on
responsibilities that are beyond their young lives.
Sarah’s yells as she pauses to
chase off her younger siblings who are playing too close to the bucket of fine
flour bring me back to the present. I
assume that whatever she yelled is an insult or threat but it seems harmless
enough as her siblings dart off giggling uncontrollably.
I stand up to leave and she says
a quick goodbye. Before I leave though I ask her one last question.
“What do you want to be when you
finish school?”
She pauses and looks at me for a
long while. I wonder whether my question was too vague or perhaps I should
repeat it again.
She eventually shrugs. “I don’t
know. Maybe a teacher or a nurse. I want to do something good.”
She then gives me a quizzical
look. “What do you do?”
I wasn’t expecting the spotlight
to be swung at me. I hesitate slightly before explaining that I am a writer and
what my work entails. Her eyes light up.
“I like to write too! I like
English! Can you bring me a book to write in?”
I smile at her. Her face is
glowing and those big soulful eyes are brimming with hope. I cannot believe
that this seemingly glum child has so much passion for something. And it
happens to be writing!
I feel my heart expand; I want
greatness for Sarah. I want her and all the other kids who feel lost and confused
to find the right path that will lead them to a bright and better future. I
simply nod because I am afraid my voice will reveal how emotional I am at this
point.
I wave goodbye to Sarah and her
foster mother.
I am going to find a book or two
for Sarah. And a pen. Yes, I bet she would love that too.
I’m loving – Eva by Angelique
Kidjo ft. Asa
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