Island People
Finding Our Way
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Henry R. Danielson
このコンテンツについて
When I think of what Julie and I did, it humbles me.
We were right out of college, just married, working a job I didn't care for. She got the invitation, I took a test, and we were both accepted. I was of draft age, but there would be no deferment.
Can you imagine joining the Peace Corps, where you would train to teach in segregated Macon County, Alabama? You and your wife, northern whites, in 1967, would train to teach in a segregated all black school. How would you manage? Think of going to Likoma Island on Lake Malawi in Central Africa. You would live for two years on a two-by-five-mile island with no gun, no civil authority, no police. The island was home to crocodiles, spitting cobras, green mambas, puff adders, and other deadly vipers and often fatal illnesses, but no resident physician, just 5,000 Africans and you.
Think about teaching school to 80 adolescent African kids, 40 in a classroom, none of whom had any notion of Western culture. What if your home were attacked by a raging African man whose family had been killed by white soldiers? What would you do?
Ever thought about what it is like to be a teacher in Western New York? How would you deal with 125 adolescents daily? Imagine preparing lessons for five classes each day, grading papers, teaching, and then driving 30 miles to graduate school and back before a late dinner each night. Suppose you had summers off and you and your wife learned to sail, and on your 25th anniversary, you sailed the 600 miles offshore to the island of Bermuda! Ever been in a full gale on a little boat at sea? We were island people, finding our way!
©2017 Henry R. Danielson (P)2020 Henry R. Danielson