Nassara nassara nassara!!!
(White guy! Three times.)
The kids are greeting us as we walk along the streets of
I really love bargaining. It is such a respectful game. He who hasn’t spent the time to learn the culture rudiments doesn’t deserve a local price. And even then, it is quite a bit of work to get to reasonable amounts, we’re Nassara nonetheless… Everyone smiles:
“C’mon, you have to make an effort, lower it more”
– But my friend, I have to make a profit!”
Negotiating is an art. Yet, it feels strange to be perceived as a big money handout machines. I sometimes wonder how much it takes to build such a reputation, and how much to take it apart.
I barely had time to get used to busy Ouagadougou that already I must travel west, to Bobo Dioulasso – the host city for my year placement with PAMER and BAME (more on that in a future post!). The afternoon trip, on a remarkably well paved road, is plain amazing. I’m traveling in a giant postcard. Baobabs, green birds following our bus, cattle (with a hump on the back), goats, mud hut villages, red earth, mango trees, eucalyptus… The whole way I can see fields of tall corn or millet, intercropped with peanuts, cabbage or green beans… It looks like a new-age-agronomist’s-manual illustration or something! Enough to remind me that we’re pretty close to the road (precisely, we’re on it!); those villages are likely not the worst off. I mostly saw women working in them, although it’s hard to tell in a distance. At this stage of the rainy season, they must be weeding.
Toubabou, toubabou, toubabou!!!
(White guy! Three times.)