Concern
began here and Paddy Magennis is currently Director of that worthy
organisation, working out of Dublin
too. Our reader Brian Fitzpatrick is
just returned from Belarus
with a Newry aid group that helps repair asylums there, and we await his
written report on site here! We have
just reported on the historic work of Sister Baptist Russell in gold-rush California and we are
about to write about some other of her siblings.
There
are other Development Workers from Newry all over the world. This is the story of one and the hidden
perils on the job. His tale is
serialised.
Chronicles of a Development Worker : by Earth Walker
Surviving in another man’s war
The narrative that follows is based on the true account of what happened to me
during my stay in a country that was beginning to undergo political upheavals
from numerous directions. To all intents
and purposes I was a neutral spectator both before and after the fact. Indeed it would seem that I was simply in the
wrong place and at the wrong time during a set of unforeseen circumstances that
developed into an extremely violent but thankfully a short lived struggle. The similarity at least geographically and in
a sense politically between where I was born, Newry, and this location was
uncanny; even its distance from the border was about the same. For some unknown reason, luck, fate or
whatever, I, the victim of these circumstances managed to survive the sequence
of events that were trust upon me, before, and during the birth of a new
nation.
For those that died may their God be with
them. Should the right to take someone’s
life be a matter for the judgment of mere mortals?
You should know that I had been living alone on an island about the size of Ireland,
with minimal communications and in a very simple dwelling on the edge of a teak
forest. Water I collected daily in two 20 litre plastic containers on my
motorcycle from a monastery about a kilometre away. As well as for cooking, this serviced the
outside toilet and bathing area.
Electricity was a luxury which came on for about three hours a day; this
could be in the middle of the night. The
windows had no glass in them - as was customary - and you relied on a set of
wooden shutters for protection from the weather and from the many thieves who
worked on the presumption that I was a rich westerner. This was a very common misconception by many
people in the developing world and one not without some credence.
During the monsoon season one’s clothes
were in a state of perpetual dampness while you often shared the house with
scorpions, spiders, armies of ants and snakes - not to mention various large
insects and the omnipresent mosquitoes.
There was another European who lived in the town some eight kilometres away to
the east of the forest but we met very infrequently. A small community of foreigners resided in a
diminutive city 300 kilometres across the mountains to the west which served as
the only transit point to get off the island.
I regularly made my way to this location for a welcome break from the
isolation, and to keep in touch with the outside world. Although I did speak
the language I was still light years removed, culturally, traditionally and
socially, from my hosts. This had its
effects and influences at a range of echelons of the community.
In reality you are a stranger, whether you
like it or not, and it is you who must accommodate your hosts by understanding
them rather than them understanding you.
Being the stranger was to play a very important part in what was to
follow and very nearly cost me my life.