- the sweetness of matooke as a daily food.
- the gritty dry season dust which covers everything.
- the savour of curry, tomatoes, and onions: our basic spices.
- the smooth pleasure of soda from a glass bottle.
- Kajoba's chapatis: the best around!
- the taste of a three year old's kisses.
- water boiled over a wood fire.
- the rare indulgence of dark chocolate melting in my mouth.
- fresh passion fruit on a sunny afternoon.
- the tart flavour of unripened mangoes.
- groundnuts planted with my own sweat and labour.
- hot tea made from our garden: warmth on a cold night.
- posho and beans, posho and beans, posho and beans.
- the slight sweetness of dry season dust.
- sauce cooking on a charcoal fire.
- "jinga" (ginger) steeping in the tea flask.
- the newness and life of a freshly bathed infant.
- pre-adolescent boys herded back into the classroom after lunch hour football.
- rubbish burning by the road side.
- breads and cakes at Tuwereza bakery.
- meat hanging from the butcher's hook.
- the feverish sweat of a body racked by malaria.
- vegetables rotting in the market.
- rain approaching from the east.
- forty loud voices competing to greet me as I enter a classroom.
- my brothers' humorous attempts to speak English.
- children calling to me from the roadside wherever I go: "Bye, Auntie Muzungu."
- incredulity at how non-fragile and non-weak I am.
- the comfortable sound of my mother's voice after a long day of work.
- a young baby's cooing and gurgling.
- the cries of children being beaten.
- the drums beating a kiganda rhythm.
- my students singing at holy mass.
- the strangeness when an occasional Americanism escapes my lips.
- the pleasant joy of old friends and family members on an international phone call.
- the call to prayer from the mosque loudspeakers.
- the sudden lakes and rivers created by an afternoon downpour.
- toothless grins and smirks as nursery schoolers race to greet me first.
- the smartness of a shaved head, polished shoes, and school sweater.
- babies growing and developing before my eyes.
- my students heading off to secondary school.
- the devestations of war and of development.
- the delight and pride when a student notes his/her own improvement.
- children discussing the meaning of a rainbow.
- the horizon filled with stars peaking over the latrine wall.
- the strength of women who carry families and communities on their heads and backs.
- the hollow emptiness of water tanks during the dry season.
- the awing beauty of an equatorial sunset.
- the anxious way people scan the skies for rains that should have come.
- love in my friends' eyes.
- the hungry look, dirty feet, torn clothes, and long hair of poverty.
- committed teachers struggling on behalf of their students despite untold challenges.
- the uneven ridges of dirt floors in my classrooms.
- small and dirty hands grasping my own.
- loving embraces as my brother welcomes me home.
- the itch of jiggers, mosquito bites, or caterpillar hairs on the soles of my feet.
- the weight of my backpack laden with a day's worth of water: 2-5 litres worth.
- the awful power of a rainy season deluge.
- the painful heat of a motorcycle burn.
- the weight of a hoe in my hands as I dig in the garden.
- the wind in my face and hair as I ride to town.
- the tiredness of a long week of work.
- chalk dust drying out my hands after every lesson.
- the quick sharp pain of the piercing gun.
- the press of bodies in the market and bus park.
- the bone-jarring speed of public transportation.
- my brothers' soft cuddling.
- a baby's fuzzy curls.
- the slickness of my hands and soreness of my arms on laundry day.
- the agonising pain of new intestinal guests.
- the shocking chill of a pre-dawn bath.
- love and sorrow.
- delight and fear.
- pride and frustration.
- comfort and confusion.
- joy and anxiety.
I have loved and been loved,
known and been known,
seen and been seen.
Bukoto, I will always carry you in my heart.
known and been known,
seen and been seen.
Bukoto, I will always carry you in my heart.
1 comment:
I loved this and it made me teary a bit! My list would include: having read the poetic prose of my friend Kristina!
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