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Sani,
a traditional healer, is giving a young boy a haircut
with a straight razor, one of the many services
he offers.
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The
river from Mopti to Diré is a long stretch of rice
fields and white earth, and Diré itself is looked
upon by travel books as little more than a launching point
for boat trips to Tombouctou. But Diré's weekly
market is a spectacle worth dallying for. Besides the
colorful assortment of food, clothing and livestock, you
may have a chance to meet someone like Youssouf Mahomane
Sani , a traditional healer from neighboring Niger. Niger
is famous throughout West Africa for its healers, and
on the day we wandered through the market, Sani demonstrated
why. Using a small scalpel, a glass funnel and a plastic
cup, he was draining "bad blood" from a client's
swollen leg. It is one of the many "cures" he
offers to the dozens of customers who line up eagerly
for his services.
Further
up the river, we stopped to talk with women planting new
rice stalks in neatly carved fields. Even hard at work,
Malian women are gorgeous in their grands bou-bous,
the colorful robes that cover the body to the ankles but
leave a shoulder bare. Some wear twisted, gold-plate earrings
the size of dinner plates, while their children run naked
with only a gris-gris, a beaded belt, to protect
them from evil spirits. Mali is one of the world's poorest
countries and yet its people project a proud self-possession.
Some say it is the collective memory of the nation's ancient,
imperial history, cherished and guarded through a strong
oral tradition, that is behind the unflappable reserve
and unique unity of Mali's more than two-dozen ethnic
groups. But looking around at the dusty fields and the
swollen bellies of the children, the self-sufficiency
of these people is easily explainable. For centuries,
they have had no one to rely upon but themselves.
Now
there is some relief. As it is doing all along the river,
CARE is working to improve the lot of rice farmers on
this dry stretch from Diré to Tombouctou. Dozens
of communities have been organized to rehabilitate the
dikes and canals that irrigate their rice fields. CARE
is experimenting with motorized pumps which shoot water
through fire-engine-size hoses up the steep banks of the
river and into irrigation canals.
Control
of the water has allowed farmers to move their plots away
from the riverbanks and the yearly flooding that often
washed away their crops.
"Before,
you could not count on anything," says Mohamoudou
Alhousseini, a rice farmer from the small village of Chirfiga.
"If the rain and the tide was good, the farm was
good. If it was bad, you suffered."
Fellow
farmer Abdourahamane Maiga likes the pump because it brings
water all the way to his village, via a system of interlocking
irrigation canals. "I'm happy because now we can
farm close to the village. Before I had to walk 15 kilometers
just to reach a good place along the river to farm. I
had to leave very early in the morning and sometimes sleep
there."
His
brother Mohamaoudou Maiga likes the fact that he can now
control the amount of water that washes his rice plants.
"Before, I could never guarantee I would succeed.
Now I have confidence."
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Members
of the Kirchamba Women's Association watch as rice
is husked.
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Still
further up the river in the tiny village of Kirchamba,
members of the local women's association discuss a loan
they received from CARE, part of a credit program CARE
offers to Malian entrepreneurs throughout the country.
With the money, the group purchased a rise-husking machine,
and the two to three hours they used to spend husking
a basket of rice melted into a five-minute operation.
"Before,
my hand was blistered and cracked from husking rice,"
says Kontourou Homma, president of this group of women.
"You used to have to get up at dawn, and you were
lucky to finish the job by the end of the day."
Homma
estimates that her group will be able to repay the CARE
loan in a year, and they already have an ambitious plan
to purchase another machine that can process the husked
rice into saleable powder. This would spare the women
the arduous task of pounding rice with stone tablets and
free up even more of their time for other tasks.
"We
can already see results," says Homma, and she praises
CARE's help. "At our level here, we have never seen
an organization like this. They are helping us for our
well-being only. So that we can be independent."
Independence
is key, agrees her colleague, Kanto Badou, the group's
treasurer. "If you're given food for free, it's only
good one time. But when we are given the notion that it's
for our own good to take care of ourselves, it will continue."
"I
want to thank everyone at CARE who has helped us,"
says Badou. "Even those people in the United States
- tell them also."
Around
a twisting corner in Kirchamba's mud and brick sprawl,
young women are hoisting water from a sturdily-constructed
village well, using an animal skin sack for a bucket.
All along this stretch of river leading up to Tombouctou,
CARE is working with villages to build such wells and
to offer hygiene education that is essential to preventing
disease. It is estimated that more than 50 percent of
Malians do not have access to clean water; many wash their
clothes, dishes and bodies in the same river from which
they drink.Click here to view a video of women at the well.
Continue
to Day 5
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