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Sierra Leone—A most unusual encounter

January 4, 2009 | Stories From The Road

My December trip to Sierra Leone was no ordinary travel escapade. It was more of a working trip—something I think of as voluntourism. We were there 10 days and we spent a lot of time getting closely involved with the villagers of one community. I traveled there as part of a seven-member group under the auspices of The Lance and Julie Burma Foundation (http://lanceandjulieburma.org). The foundation’s stated mission is to enrich the lives of the people of West Africa specifically in the country of Sierra Leone through support of education, healthcare, and economic development initiatives.

We more or less did that—more in the sense that we moved some education and healthcare initiatives ahead, less in that our work didn’t include any economic development activity.

While we didn’t really go to see the sights, we did see some sights. Took a home-brew tour of Freetown, the capitol. Stayed in Makeni in central Sierra Leone and managed to get downtown a few times. Drove to another town, Yonibana, a 2-1/2-hour ride (one way) that I will talk about but never want to take again.

Our accommodations were light years away from what any normal vacationing traveler would consider acceptable, although in their own right, they were acceptable. The food was different but good. However, our bodies had to adjust to it—gastronomically speaking—a process that worked itself out in a couple of days.

It is a wholly different place than most of us can imagine. Traveling and living there produced the kind of intense awareness that dramatically affected my perspective. I have spent a lifetime living or traveling in first-world countries and suddenly thrust myself into a third-world country trying to recover from 10 years of civil war. No electricity in most of the country. Little clean water. Poor, if any, healthcare. A broken economy. Extreme poverty.

Still, the adventure was not disheartening by any means. It was rather enriching and enlightening. To see people living in a place so remarkably different than my own, and to see them happy and joyful—well, I had to ask myself how that was possible. And I’m not sure I have the answer. It just doesn’t seem as if people living in some of the living conditions I saw should be happy. On the other hand, some of them have lived that way for 800 or 1,000 years. In my semi-philosophical moments, I tend to think that life is what life is; we have two choices: be happy with what we have, or not.

Ok—I’m not a philosopher or psychologist. No need to roll your eyes. But as I said, this was not the usual travel experience. It was more than a visit; it was somewhat of an immersion, a close look at another culture. I recommend it. Don’t let the opportunity pass should it present itself to you.

Over the next couple of weeks, I’ll be posting some stories and photos about my visit to Sierra Leone. I hope you enjoy them. Feel free to comment. Just click the comment link at the bottom of each post.

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Category: Stories From The Road

About Joseph Koppi

Joseph Koppi is a traveler and writer with over 40 years of writing experience. He currently treks the world, writing about his adventures in foreign lands and with the amazing people he encounters. Read More

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Comments

  1. Ruth Zouzouambe says

    January 7, 2009 at 12:16 pm

    Wonderful! I especially love your questioning of people’s happiness. That seems to be a common discovery for people living in first world countries. When we travel to third world countries, we often think that we will show others the way to live, when in reality, they are showing us the way to live!

  2. Sharri says

    March 18, 2009 at 5:03 pm

    Well, you just answered my question. Its all relative. I like your conclusion.

About BoomerTrekker

When you travel, only one of two things can happen: something good or something bad; either way, you have a story to tell.

Boomertrekker.com is the cave wall on which I try to etch the stories and pictures of my travel experiences. You will find stories of setting out to go one place, but arriving at another; of finding, quite by accident, experiences that I could not have anticipated; of meeting and becoming friends with people whose language I cannot speak. Sometimes you will find me paralyzed and out of my comfort zone, as I was in Cambodia when I regretfully let pass my opportunity to eat a cricket. At other times, I hope you marvel, as I have, at the intelligence and ingenuity and inventiveness of ancient peoples everywhere. These are the stories I tell here. They are the stories of my travels to foreign lands in which I am the foreigner. Read More

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BoomerTrekker

Joseph Koppi is a freelance travel writer with over 40 years of writing and communications experience in both the media and corporate arenas. He currently treks around the world, writing about his adventures in foreign lands and with the amazing people he encounters. Read More

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