Did you ever consider yourself lucky because you can carve a
pumpkin instead of eating it?
Every time I see a
jack-o-lantern, I remember a conversation with my friend Kate Chumo. I met her
in her home country of Kenya. We were talking about a favorite Kenyan food
called uji, a fermented millet porridge.
“Do you know what we
do with millet in the U.S.?” I asked. “We sell it as bird seed and feed it to
birds.”
“That reminds me of
what you do with pumpkins at Halloween,” she replied.
That doesn’t make me
less likely to carve a jack-o-lantern or fill up my bird feeder. But it does
remind me that we are extremely lucky in this country.
Most of the people I
met in Kenya had enough to eat. Several had nicer cell phones than I do. Middle
class, educated professionals like Kate could easily fit in on the streets of
any American city. But their country is not so well off that they mistake food
for holiday decorations.
When I first began
traveling to countries like Kenya, Bolivia, and the Philippines, I felt lucky
every time I came home. My hot shower is a luxury. My drinkable tap water is a
luxury. I go through my first days after every trip overwhelmed with gratitude
for everything in my life.
I’m not your average
tourist, staying in hotels and visiting museums. I stay in peasants’ homes in
every country I visit.
At first, I really
struggled. I didn’t bring a flashlight to Bolivia because it never occurred to
me that the home in the tiny village I stayed at on the shore of Lake Titicaca
wouldn’t have indoor plumbing and that I might have to find my way to the
outhouse in the dark. In Chiapas, Mexico, I realized that I was lucky to have
an outhouse in Bolivia when I asked for the restroom and was told to go behind
a tree.
As I continued
traveling, my perspective changed. Once I got over the various bathroom
arrangements and started packing more appropriately, I realized that I enjoyed
the relaxed pace of rural life and the tightknit extended family and community
bonds that one finds in a village.
I don’t mean to
romanticize poverty. However, I think one can be realistic about the downsides
of rural life in other countries while simultaneously appreciating its good
points.
The richness of walking down tree-lined paths instead of driving on
roads, seeing the stars at night, understanding the use of every single plant
in one’s environment, eating meals entirely grown on a family’s small farm, and
eating three meals a day with extended family — these are pleasures too few of
us have in the United States.
When we think of
small-scale farmers in the Global South, particularly in Africa, we often view
them as I did initially: in terms of all of the luxuries that we have and they
lack. And we don’t even know the scope of our luxuries. Did you consider yourself
lucky because you can carve a jack-o-lantern in your pumpkin instead of eating
it?
Our foreign policy
reflects this attitude, aiming to provide for knowledge transfer, from us to
them. But doing so without first understanding the wonderful aspects of their
cultures that should be cherished and preserved is foolhardy. The exchange
should go both ways. We have a lot to learn from them.
OtherWords columnist Jill Richardson is
the author of Recipe for America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and
What We Can Do to Fix It. OtherWords.org