Saturday, December 5, 2015

When Stars Go Astray

The clouds have cleared up to let the stars shine through a bit….and that’s a good thing, because the giants of electricity have long since taken the glimmer out of our lights and lamps, and the stars are the only thing to guide us now.  It’s a lonely night, the first in a long time.  Students left, class by class, until we were left with empty dormitories still echoing with their laughter.  Our Pastor and his wife left to grade the national examination in far away parts of the country.  Their children took the constant pitter-patter of their feet on my verandah, yelling and warm hugs with them to their grandmother’s.  I’m the mama of two large, empty houses now, a wretched task when all I want is Mama Ivan’s lemongrass chai and one of the kids on my lap.  When we closed our final staff meeting of the year yesterday, the other teachers weren’t to be seen again, except in the large rickety buses that took them far away.  Now, it’s a big, dark school, cavernous classrooms and a shockingly quickly overgrown field, and me – with the chance to reflect on it all.

The end of the year brought a surprising amount of challenges.  For me, the most heart-wrenching is news that came from some of our girls.  In Tanzania, girls are often under heard and overpowered.  Yet, the amount of time I spend advising girls over steaming cups of chai and plates of fruit, empowering them through sports, showing them to love themselves through the arts, and encouraging them to battle gender stereotypes amounts to a full-time job.  Through my youth group, many of our small skits and discussions revolve around gender stereotypes and what we can do to work toward gender equality in our tiny slice of this world.

Our students who completed Form Four this year finished their national examinations in a hurry, collected their things along with signatures of all of their teachers, and were packed off to their homes.  Or so we like to assume.  I was beyond dismayed to hear that one of the students, a girl in my youth group, decided to visit her male friend who drives a “boda boda” (motorcycle taxi) in the village upon leaving school, and found it more comfortable than her own home.  Let’s call her Kalunde for the purposes of this blog.  She is a student who I was close with, both at school and in my home.

To my ultimate dismay, I got déjà vu of Kalunde’s story just a few days later, with yet another girl in my youth group.  We’ll call her Nakunda.  This is a student who had been extremely close with me since my first day teaching, accompanying me to church and every step of the way.  When she could see that my eyes looked tearful or my smile was gone for a few days, she would speak to our Pastor, or her friends, and think of a way to cheer me up.  In addition, I did my part to make sure that her time at school was comfortable.  She suffered from a lot of problems related to her menstrual period, and would miss 4 – 5 days of school each month as a result.  I would find her in the dormitory on these days, and beg her to sit up, get dressed, and sit through her classes.  Sometimes, I’d even fill a thermos with soup and take it to her to get her to eat just a bit.  When signing passes for Form Four students, I asked them to imagine where they’d be on this day in one year…then two years, five years, and ten years, in order to continue the dialogue we had started about future plans.   I’ll never forget Nakunda’s answer to my question – the usual sparkle in her eyes gone.  In my rapidly improving Swahili, I asked her, “Nakunda, where will you be on this day next year?”  She answered me, “Only God knows, Madam, only He can help me.” 

Two weeks later, to hear the news that she also decided to stay in our village with a run-of-the-mill village youth was devastating.   I thought back to all those times walking slowly back from church with her, and her being greeted by all types of people – very rare for a boarding student at our school who comes from a far away place. 

Here, each and every student enters my heart.  For students who sleep in our dormitories, far away from their own parents, we teachers become their parents at school.  News from these two girls who had become like my daughters sent my head spinning out of control.  I couldn’t get it out of my head – was it something that I did?  Did those village walks to our youth group meetings give them the opportunity to make friends near and far?  No, they never left my sight. Was it the freedom and the ideas I exposed them to?  I couldn’t imagine what would make them do exactly the opposite of what I had taught them through the last year and a half of their formal education.

And just like that, school ended.  My last night with students was just our Pre-Form One class, who proved to be a wonderful, capable group of scholars eager to learn.  We played games on the field in the afternoon, and watched, “Up!” – my all-time favorite movie at night.  I hope none of them saw the inevitable welling of my eyes when I watch this tear-jerker!  Then, they wanted to watch the DVD I’d prepared of our school choirs, followed by dancing to Swahili songs while we cleaned up until bedtime.  Walking them back to the dormitory, we looked up and gave names to the stars – mine was a bright, blinking and far-away star that we later concluded was an airplane.  If every star could be a friend of ours, what a wonderful place the world would be!  We tried to count them, and came to the conclusion that God loves us because he gave us more stars in the sky than we can possibly count.


And with the childlike wonder in their eyes engrained in my mind, I closed my own eyes and went to sleep.  My work as a teacher is to keep that innocent spark alive at all costs, and to try again and again and once more again, even when the stars closest to me lose their spark and go astray.