I recently went to Germany! I will write about that wonderful vacation at a later time! But I wanted to write about this now.
Last week,
my host sister’s birthday passed by unannounced. In a family where certain birthdays are
celebrated with pizza deliveries, drinks, music, and store-bought cakes, this
was less of a surprise than maybe it should have been. Certain members of my family are certainly
privileged more than others, and on some days, it’s still difficult for me to
discern who gets what, and why.
For example,
most nights at dinner, we separate into two groups. At one bowl, I sit with my host mother, host
father, their grandchildren, and my cousin from France. My other host sisters – girls who live at the
house, somewhat distantly related to the main family – eat at the other
bowl. Sometimes our visitors eat at the
first bowl, sometimes they eat at the second one. And when my host mom’s daughter comes home on
the weekends, she and her husband eat separately with their two children. The daughter from her first marriage stays at
the bowl with me, as usual. The only
method I can find to this madness is that maybe everyone invited to Bowl #1
contributes money to the house, while Bowl #2 is for those who give labor. Because I certainly pay my share of rent, and
the grandchildren and cousin have families that must pass on a lot of money to
my host parents.
But back to
my forgotten host sister. She eats at
bowl #2. Eating at bowl #2 also means
you aren’t always invited to parties and family outings. Or so I thought. Until the other day, when everyone was
preparing for a baptism party, and I saw that normally forgotten sister,
Fatamata, getting her hair done alongside the grandkids. “Are you going to the baptism?” I asked her,
somewhat unable to hide my happy surprise.
She nodded, somewhat unable to hide her enthusiasm under her normally
surly expression. I watched her run
around, giggling with the other girls going, dressing up in her fanciest
clothes, trying on shoes, feeling important.
When it came
time to leave, the whole family moved the car into the street and started
piling in. It was going to be a circus
event for sure – nine people in a small five-seater. I wondered how they were going to manage
it. And then my host parents found a
solution: “Get out of the car, Fatamata.”
And with that, they drove away, literally leaving her in a cloud of
dust.
I stared in
disbelief. They had literally just
kicked her to the curb, without a thought.
Fatamata slowly slinked back to the house, her chin high, her usual
stony expression back on her face. She’s
used to being treated this way by the family.
She hardly looked surprised, but I could tell she was disappointed.
I love my
host family – I do. And I know that they
don’t think that how they treat Fatamata is anything but wonderful. In Senegalese culture, when people open their
homes to extended family members, simply giving them a roof and meals is seen
as the highest form of generosity. And
to make up for that generosity, these kids – almost always girls – are expected
to cook, to clean, to do the laundry, to do all of the manual labor, to do
everything and watch the immediate family members get all sorts of things that
they don’t. It reminds me of Cinderella.
In the world
I grew up in, children are told the Cinderella story and expected to learn
empathy. “The way the stepmother favors
her own children over her stepdaughter Cinderella isn’t fair!” they say. “She does all of the work and still has to
live in a shoddy room with ratty clothes, while her stepsisters lounge all day
in new things, forcing her to do their chores.”
But unlike how those kids react, I haven’t found many people who think
this set-up is something worthy of changing in Senegal. Cinderella used to be a typical, unchallenged
way of life in our part of the world too.
I don’t know when the general opinion shifted it into fairytale
territory. But in Senegal, this is just
the way it is. Everybody knows and
accepts it, especially Fatamata.
Almost all
of the girls who won my Michele Sylvester Scholarships live with aunts, uncles,
and extended family members. I don’t
know them well enough to know whether their lives are like Fatamata’s or not. But I do know that one girl told me she wants
to be a lawyer in the future so that she “can work to end the mistreatment of
girls by their aunts.” I’m pretty sure
she, and most of the girls in my program, live that kind of life. It also makes me think that some girls are
starting to be angry about it, and rightfully so, in my opinion.
Beautifully written, Lisa. Really... I couldn't have said it better myself.
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