It has taken me a long time to decide how I should end this blog. Now
that I’ve been home in Canada for a few months and had plenty of time to
reflect, how should I wrap up this challenging, rewarding, heartbreaking, joy-filled,
hilarious, transformative year?
A few weeks ago it came to me—a simple, poignant memory that captures
the heart of my life in the Mountain Kingdom:
It’s a sunny winter day. I’m walking through the fields that are on the
way to Thaba Tseka High School with my colleague, Masheane. (He and I spent a year sharing the day-to-day ups and downs of life in the field office.) For a while we are
both quiet, lost in our own thoughts as we take in the stark, yet beautiful
landscape.
We climb a small hill and the school comes into view. It’s about 100
meters away, precariously positioned near the edge of a cliff. Behind the cliff
are mountains that go on for miles. I’ve seen this view every week for almost a
year now and still it never fails arrest my soul.
“You know Mary,” Masheane breaks the silence, “I’ve learnt something
from you this year.”
“Yeah?” I say.
“Even though you are too pale,” Masheane tells me, “you are not so
different from us Basotho. You still eat, sleep, talk, laugh…You and I, we are the same.”
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