Showing posts with label village. Show all posts
Showing posts with label village. Show all posts

September 09, 2012

Memoirs of a Nigerian Youth Corps Member-Episode 5

Having shared my NYSC roomy experiences with you, let us go straight to my Place of Primary Assignment proper. Anytime I think about it, I still feel very sorry for the inhabitants of Bataki-Idiya, the village where I served, especially the younger ones who have so much ahead of them. Not one of them could speak the English language fluently, as Yoruba language was their means of communication. Their lifestyle was outdated and void of civilisation. 
There was no good source of water supply. They drank coloured water straight from the well. What they called a stream was a pool of dark-coloured stagnant water with spirogyra growing around it. There were some days I had to use sachet water to have my bath. This occurred mostly during the rainy season when the well water became muddy after downpours. 
The telecommunication system was so poor that we had to go to certain spots to get network. I literally hung my phone with a scarf close to my window to get network. They used sacks to make their beds and most of them used firewood to cook (only few could afford a kerosene stove). There was no electric power supply in the entire village though few had generators. To be more explicit, Ibadan was their London and Cornflakes was strange to them.  There was no structure to attract anyone to the village; they just stayed in an isolated world of their own.
However, one beautiful thing about them was their attitude. They were very accommodating, respectful and generous. They never discriminated. They respect individuals for who they are and don't force their culture on anyone.
As for the younger ones, the beautiful thing about them was their willingness to learn. The students were always excited in class and showed genuine interest in what they were taught. I taught Basic Science and Mathematics to the Junior Secondary School students. I could have taught Chemistry but there were no resources to teach the science. There was no laboratory and in my opinion, Physics and Chemistry would scatter their head-Fela.
I was as patient and practical as possible when explaining because, that was the best way they could understand. I remember vividly when I taught them about the different forms of drugs, I had to take some drugs to the class such as capsules, tablets, creams for illustration. They found it difficult to relate with me when I taught them ICT-Information Communication and Technology,  as they were not familiar with computer systems let alone the internet. A funny incident was when I asked them to give me an example of a carbohydrate and a group of students confidently chorused ewa (beans in Yoruba language).
After school hours, most of them went to the farm, hawked goods or went to sell in shops at the expense of their studies. I could not blame them as their parents saw those activities as more important since they brought food to the table. To them going to school was just a routine.

Below are some pictures I took when I was in the village.
a cross section of the students in assembly-look at that boy in the 3rd row posing for the camera

the staff room


a female student sitting in front of the staff room during break
a student getting ready to go to the farm for Agric practical

the head boy

a villager wishing us goodbye


It is no surprise corps members posted there refused to stay. I thank God I served there. At least, I can talk about it and I learnt a whole lot. Though I am not abreast with the current state of affairs in the village, I would love the Government of Oyo state to look into that village under Ido LG. They are humans like us and deserve a better life, as least for the sake of the children and youths who are the leaders of tomorrow or today. They deserve a better telecommunication system, power supply, standard houses, and most importantly a better formal education and civilisation. Hopefully I will visit there in the nearest future and keep you all posted.

August 05, 2012

Memoirs of a Nigerian Youth Corps Member-Episode 2


I was heartbroken and didn’t know if turning back was a better option. We moved further till we saw a blue car heading our way. A man in the vehicle told the bike man to stop and then I started screaming “Don't stop oo? Do you know them? Lets’ go! Lets' go”  
They were not kidnappers like I thought they were but the school authorities. We got to a more convenient spot and talked. Sorry correction, they talked while I cried. After our brief communication, I was beaming with smiles. Strangely, I felt peace in my heart. I knew I made the right decision because I could feel it.
When I got to the lodge and shared the shocking news, my roommates could not believe it. They told me I made a mistake but I couldn’t care less. I was happy and that was all that mattered. Since I would not be spending my whole week in the village I looked for another room in the city and I got one.
Before I go into details of the room I got, let me share few photos of my room in the village.
The bungalow in which my room is situated
That is my reading corner

My best part of the room, my bed; because when I sleep, I have no idea that I'm in the village. The blue cloths are the curtains

A pix of me in sleep mode though feigning it
 
The walls of the room were not plastered and it was the least comfortable though I got used to it. (Thank God for the survival instincts)

August 02, 2012

Memoirs of a Nigerian Youth Corps Member-Episode 1

When I got my letter, I was confused. Where on earth was I posted to? The name looked so strange that I had to ask God which sin I committed to get posted to such an unfamiliar school...Community High School Bataki Idiya, Ido Local Government! What kind of name was that? I was hoping to see Nigerian Breweries, NNPC or some tush name for that matter not CHSBI! I asked a superior corps member if he knew the school and his response was the least encouraging. The first thing he said was “ViiillAAge!!!” (stretching the word in a loud voice). Then he went further without trying to make me feel better by telling me there was no telecommunication network, no power supply, and the place was far from civilisation. 

We went to the Local Government lodge, did all the necessary formalities and I got a place to stay in the corpers’ lodge of my Alma Mata, Command Secondary School Ibadan. When I told my roommates the name my PPA, they gave me more pathetic stories about using guns and setting traps to hunt for meat (when I thought what I was told earlier was the worse). They told me that people posted there usually do not show up and advised me to do the same. (The other people posted to the school had made up their minds not to work there.) I tried all I could to get redeployed. I even went to my Alma Mata and pleaded with them to take me. I also went to NYSC secretariat to see a woman that I was directed to by my ex-Chemistry teacher. But they all said the same thing, ‘’we need a rejection letter from your PPA’’. I got fed up with the whole thing, and I wasn’t willing to tell the slightest lie to get my way.

In frustration, I headed to the strange land I was posted to. Even the journey was not encouraging because those I asked for directions kept saying “igbo” (meaning village, hope I got the spelling right). It got to a point where I had to take a bike because buses were not plying that route at that time.  The bike ride seemed like forever, I kept asking myself when we would get there. Then we got to a Y-junction, the left arm the tarred road continued while the right arm the red sand began. We went from the tarred to the not tarred road (red sand to be precise).
Then I began to cry...To be continue

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