Below is a post by guest blogger Andrew Romaner, graduate student at the University of South Florida. He is currently in Adenta, Ghana where he is working to expand access to clean, usable water. Although Andrew is not working on a project directly related to the Global Network, we thought it insightful to share his firsthand experiences and fieldwork. Read on as he describes what he has taken away from his time in Africa so far.
By: Andrew Romaner
The roles of Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) read like a most-wanted list for the crime of inflicting human suffering. With a combined prevalence rate of perhaps one billion people worldwide, the scale of that suffering is difficult to imagine. As I sit in an internet cafe, in my temporary home on the northern outskirts of Accra in Ghana, I have only one point to make about that suffering today. Tremendous joy can and does coexist with this brutal suffering. The remainder of this post will concern itself only with that joy (which might be an oxymoron) as I have experienced it.
Joy Source #1 – Children. While family size in Ghana is dropping as life expediency rises (the hallmarks of development as presented by Hans Rollins here), Once old enough to speak, children here routinely clamor for my attention by calling out, “Broni! Broni!”, which means “white man,” and lacks the racially-charged connotations that such an exclamation would have the U.S. There is on little girl in particular named Silvia. She can’t be more than four years old, but with exactly the same inflection every time I cross her path, she asks “Broni, how are you?” just as she did this morning. Ghana’s international reputation for politeness seems to result from a socialization process that begins before you ever sit down in a classroom.