Monday was Zaoure’s first day to come and work on dolls. She came, but later than we’d agreed on and all dressed up, explaining that she’d visited a friend in the hospital. We talked a little about the friend, that the doctor’s were ruling out meningitis,–can you believe here there is a meningitis season? Thank goodness there is a vaccination for those that can afford it–but the doctors didn’t really know what Zaoure’s friend had. Tuesday I asked her if her friend was better and she said, “She went home.” Today the guard came to the back door with a message for Zaoure: her friend died.
Of course, Zaoure is crying and upset, and won’t stop mopping the floor. “Your friend that was in the hospital?” “My friend!” she says. I was in over my head, French wise, so I had Jennifer come over. (I hate to admit it, but her French is so much better than mine, she knows the word for vomit and condolences.) Not only is this Zaoure’s friend, it’s her roommate, from her village in Benin, the person with whom she moved here to Niger.
Sunday her friend worked until 8 pm, came home and was watching tv. She got up and went to the bathroom, and came out and started throwing up. Got so weak she couldn’t stand up. They took her to the hospital. The hospital never told them what was wrong with her. They said she should try a local healer. Which I guess means: there isn’t anything we can do. Her two aunties took her by bus back to her village, she died once she got there. She was 28 years old.
I feel like such a jerk for not asking more about the situation earlier in the week. I just thought some friend was sick. It didn’t occur to me that someone who worked all day would die three days later.
Special message to my mother: Whatever it was isn’t contagious, no one else is sick like this. Peter suspects a dissecting aneurysm which finally ruptured.
Zaoure came to work today. I asked her if she just wanted to go home, she said she’d rather be here doing something. It’s so sad to have Zaoure’s tear-stained face sitting here making dolls and folding laundry. Niger has the lowest life expectancy in the world.
