Mana (Sister) Gloria was the first
person that I met from Chokwe. Before volunteers go to where they will be
living for the following two years, they attend a conference with their
supervisors or counter parts and Gloria attended the conference with me as my
counterpart. I remember that the first day we had to
present each other’s histories but we didn’t have enough time to discuss
everything about ourselves. So mana Gloria wrote down her history for me
to read and was reviewing it with me while other people were presenting. She was very worried about it, like we
would be in trouble because we didn’t have enough information about each other. I thought it was cute. After the conference I moved into my new
house in Chokwe. Of course it is always
hard and somewhat awkward to be living in a new place but mana Gloria was
always welcoming with a smiling face, interested to talk and catch up with me
whenever we worked together.
A while back I got the chance to
interview Gloria on her life story, in order to write a biography to share with
churches in the states in hopes that she would get a sponsor to pay for her to
go back to school. She had been
working in youth development for over 10 years, first with World Relief and
then with Hlauleka. While working for
Hlauleka she facilitated kids clubs in the community 3 days a week. When she was not teaching the kids clubs she
would stay busy at the preschool buying our monthly supply of food, helping in
the kitchen or in the classrooms. She
was married and a mother to 5 children of her own but also a stand in mother to
multiple orphans in her neighborhood. Gloria had a heart for children, especially
orphans because her husband was an orphan. During the interview we talked about the
fact that she would be going to school out of town and so her husband would
have to help out a lot more at home. He
said he didn’t mind and that he wanted her to take the opportunity to go to
school. In this culture that is nothing
less than amazing for a man to be willing to do this for his wife. It was really cool to see a relationship like
that within this society.
Later on in the year I invited Gloria
to another conference where we learned about grant writing and project
management together. On the drive to the conference we chatted and
laughed a lot. I remember there were
some Asian people on the bus with us and she asked me if I could ever marry a
Chinese person. I told her I could,
that race wasn’t important to me and we had a long conversation about
relationships and different cultures. During the 3 day conference we worked together
to write out a chicken raising project proposal. When we returned home we continued writing
and planning for the project and before I left to visit the states in Sept 2012
I turned in the proposal to Peace Corps.
I am still waiting to hear their response.
Unfortunately Mana Gloria had been
sick since 2008 and was only getting worse with time. She always felt weak and sick and had been
coughing up blood for a long time. She
had gone to both hospitals in Chokwe to try and discover the problem but no one
could diagnose her. Instead of sending her to specialists to find
the real problem the hospital prescribed her tuberculosis medication for 6
months. Finally after the meds didn’t
fix the problem they referred her to the hospital in Maputo. When I
was traveling to Maputo to come visit the states in Oct Gloria was on the same
bus. We sat together and were able to
chat a little bit. She had some tests
done in Maputo and returned home. A few
weeks later she got up to use the bathroom early in the morning and passed out
on her way back to bed. They took her
to the hospital but she passed away a few hours later.
When I returned from the states
the first thing I was told is that there is bad news … Mana Gloria died. I didn’t know how to react. I was told so nonchalant, matter of factly,
it just caught me off guard. We
attended the funeral the next day. There
was three parts to the funeral. First
everyone met at her house. Neighbors,
family, co-workers etc… it was a packed house, inside and out. They had her body at the house and were
letting people walk through to look at her.
I realize now that I got there as soon as her children were walking out
from seeing her. I am friends with all
of her children and that was definitely the hardest part, seeing each of them
reacting in their own painful way.
I saw Tlongi, 14, first and she
was being carried by 2 women screaming crying mama! Mama! As I walked closer to the house I saw Milda,
19, sitting against a wall on the ground crying by herself. A little further in front was Katoura, 18,
who had already passed out once that day.
She just looked like a zombie, completely void of any emotions or
thoughts. Dorka,13, came out of the house crying being
held by 3 women, collapsing and having to be carried. Nelson, 10, came out being helped by 2
ladies, went and laid down with someone.
It became very real after seeing these children morn for their mother
who they had all been so close with.
My co-worker, Paulo, told me he
would go with me if I wanted to see the body, but before I had a chance to
respond my other co-worker came and brought me to where all the preschool staff
were sitting. When I first walked in I
didn’t recognize anyone but as I looked around I realized that I knew everyone
around me. Our whole group was sitting
together crying for their loss, so I just joined right in. After a little while we all got up and got in
cars to go to the church. Friends and
local business owners offered their cars to transport everybody to the church
and later to the cemetery. I think
there were around 10 busses and trucks packed beyond capacity.
In the car ride over some of my
co-workers just lost it, whimpering uncontrollably. I could feel that this was becoming real, the
last goodbye. We all entered the church
and listened to a few groups of people sing songs and say something about
Gloria. They opened the casket one last
time for people to see the body but I just couldn’t do it. I know its supposed to be for closure but I
just couldn’t bring myself to do it.
We got back in the cars again to go to the cemetery and we sat for a
while more while they buried her and said some more words. The whole ceremony was in changana so I couldn’t
understand anything.
Afterwards we all went back to her
house to talk and eat some food. The
family slaughtered a cow and cooked 75 kilos of rice for all of the
guests. It was very odd to me that as
soon as we left the cemetery people’s demeanor immediately changed. They were back to normal, like they had done
their morning and now the event was over.
The older children were still distraught but the younger two were even smiling
and helping serve food. The way this
culture deals with death is just amazing to me. I guess if you dwelled on every death you
would be constantly depressed but it is still something I don’t
understand.
People here do not die just from
HIV/AIDS. They die from unnecessary,
treatable illnesses. I am not saying that
what Gloria died from was preventable but I do know she would have had a much
better chance with better doctors and technology to help her. It just irks me that her husband and close
friends are doctors and still no one saw this situation as grave, needing
immediate attention. She had been sick
coughing up blood for over 4 years and worked up until her last day.
Instead of dumping butt loads of
money into “fixing the problem of HIV” foreign aid should be going towards education
and work experience opportunities.
Doctors should know that yes, coughing up blood is grave, usually ending
in death and should be taken very seriously!
I heard recently that the only thing doctors in moz can diagnose is HIV,
malaria and TB and from my experiences here it seems pretty true. Because of this doctors just hand out
malaria and TB meds like candy when they cannot find the real problem, thus
provoking the sicknesses even more.
I guess I just feel like putting
money towards HIV is an easy out, only dealing with the surface issue that
cannot be fixed without really getting to the deep rooted problem which is lack
of education and experience. But that
would just take too much time and energy to deal with… lets just give them the
medication… never REALLY monitor or evaluate the process and hope the
problem fixes itself. If we really want to help these people
merely giving them medication and training them on how to use it, one time per
year, is simply not enough! Sorry if
the end seems like a tangent but it is all relative to me.
Thank you Elyse for sharing your journey and the mark your friend Gloria has made on your life.
ReplyDeleteYou are right that money is the easy fix. Investment in time, talent and building relationships takes real commitment towards helping to empower and enrich lives.
Will share the news with the ones here that love those in Moz. You will all stay in our prayers as you grieve and celebrate her life.