Now let’s turn the spotlight on Aissata Ba from Kolma Peuhl, Senegal.
Interview and photos by Anna Vanderkooy, Tostan Projects Assistant,
Senegal
Aissata Ba |
A few weeks
ago I traveled to the village of Kolma Peulh in the Kaolack region of Senegal
to meet with Tostan’s Community Empowerment Program (CEP) facilitator and interview local
community members. The community of
Kolma Peuhl began to participate in Tostan’s three year Community Empowerment
Program in 2008.
During my visit, community members were eager to share how community
learning has influenced Kolma Peulh. They highlighted examples such as: the
active involvement of women and adolescents in decision making;increased
priority on child health and the creation of a health closet; the abandonment of
child/forced marriage; and a new commitment to schooling for girls and boys. With
women and men of all ages ready to talk about Tostan’s work in Kolma Peulh, we
stayed up late into the night, sharing stories and songs as I scribbled down
notes by candlelight.
One of the highlights
of my stay was a conversation with a young girl, Aissata Ba. When I asked her
if she would like to talk to me about herself and her life in Kolma Peulh, she
smiled unassumingly and nodded, and the conversation (translated from Pulaar to
French) began.
Aissata reading Tostan's children's books |
Anna: (after introducing myself) A lot of people in Senegal and around the world are interested in what is happening in Kolma Peulh. Could you introduce yourself to them?
Aissata: My
name is Aissata Ba, from Kolma Peulh. I am six years old. My mother is Aminata
Ba – you spoke to her yesterday.
Anna: Oh
yes. I think she said that you will be going to school next year for the first
time, right? Are you excited?
Aissata: I’m
signed up to start in a few months and I can’t wait! My mother and a lot of her
friends learned how to read [in Pulaar during Tostan classes], so they have
already been teaching me to read the Tostan picture books. My favorite one is
about an antelope who works very hard to cook dinner. But I’ve read all of them
now and the older children say that there are lots of new things to read at the
school. There will be so much to learn there and I already have a bit of a head
start.
Anna: Is
there a subject that you’re most excited to learn about?
Aissata: I
don’t know how to add numbers or write words, so I’m excited to do that. Actually,
I want to stay in school for as long as I can so that I can learn about
everything. I’m going to be a teacher, or maybe a nurse, when I grow up, so I
need to study all the school subjects.
Anna: Have
you heard about or noticed any things that have recently changed for girls
growing up in Kolma Peulh?
Aissata:
There are more girls who go to school now, and my village has decided that girls
can stay in school for as long as they want. My parents have told me the same
thing and I always listen to them. They said that they will make sure that I
don’t get married [before I finish high school]. I can decide when I want to
get married. I want to stay in school for a long time, because you need to
learn a lot of things before you become a teacher. I want
to be like my mother because she is now in charge of lots of decisions in Kolma
Peulh. In my village now, people say that girls can do as much as boys, so I
would like to show them that I can do a lot of things and can be a very good
student.
Anna: I’m
sure you’ll do a great job in school. Is there anything else you’d like to talk
about? Do you have any questions for me?
Aissata: I
liked the questions that you asked. I was wondering what you want to be when
you grow up. I think you should be a writer because you write down lots of
things very quickly. You could write new books for children like me who are
going to school and I could read them.
Anna: That
sounds like a great idea!
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Show your support for girls by sharing Aissata’s story with your friends and family! Looking for more? Read other Spotlight on Girls posts here.
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Show your support for girls by sharing Aissata’s story with your friends and family! Looking for more? Read other Spotlight on Girls posts here.
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