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Day 8: December 16

Donkey – Burro – Ass: More Than Just A Joke

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The kids get such a kick out of seeing me take a picture of a donkey, and even more if it’s a baby donkey; I’m not sure why! There was this cute little funny guy with the big ears, and I told Rahma, “Donkey.” He laughed but then got serious and said, “Ass, because he is little.” We all laugh a lot looking at and talking about the donkeys. They’re all over the camp! I also taught them that they are called “burros” in Spanish, and they now use that word also.

In the camp, the donkeys mean so much, beside being good for laughing. They serve to carry the heavy bags of grain and other rations given out at the monthly distribution. The camp is big and long, and it would take a lot of energy to carry all of that for some of the people that are not close to a distribution center.IMG_7766The donkeys also serve to carry water from the water station, saving people from the exhaustion of carrying and walking in the heat of the day. Every day you see them loaded with firewood or grass, and this an important job, since it would mean more exposure to dangers outside of the camp for women, if they had to come and go with what they could carry on their heads. The donkeys are also great for plain personal transportation. You can see one, two, or even three people (if they’re small) riding one. Many times you see a mother with a little baby on her back, the baby deep in sleep, as it’s rocked back and forth by the toddler-like steps of the burro.

For some of the families, on their lasts days in Darfur, the burros were what straddled the line between life and death. If you had a donkey and the time to gather it before or during the escape, an older member of your family or someone that was sick might have made it through the long walk to the border. Maybe you could quickly load it with life-saving water and food so that your children could survive. In these cases, the donkey is now joke.

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The kids do like to laugh at the donkeys, but the donkeys almost seem to laugh back. They are stubborn. They’ll lie in the middle of the road, and nothing will move them, if they are just in the mood for a lazy afternoon. They also tend to go and stop quite on a whim, making their owners yell at them instruction, or insults, I do not understand.

All in all, the donkeys seem to have a special place in the lives of the refugees. They are kept in the home compound, and they are fed and given water, even in tough times. The people know that these funny looking animals might be needed again, for rough times or just for a good laugh.

Gabriel

3 replies on “Donkey – Burro – Ass: More Than Just A Joke”

Gabriel and all, I’m so glad you’re there in the camps again, carrying a little bit of all of us with you. The laughter of the children makes my heart sing. The next moment I cry thinking that the world owes these children a safer, healthier place to grow up. Traveling mercies as you return and thank you, thank you, thank you. Joanne

Thanks Joanne. This trip has been an amazing experience. I think I probably say that about them all, but we were able to get especially close to several students in Djabal that have a special place in my heart. Today we met 6 more awesome students who touched my heart and opened my eyes once again. Thank you for following the our journey and the refugees’.

Thank you, Joanne. We feel the same, with our hearts going up and down, from happy to sad. There are so many things that could make us depressed and paralyzed, so we look at what we can do, and then we look at the faces of the children in the camps, and we act. Thanks for always being there, acting with us.

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