More or less what Kedougou looks like during the rainy season |
Aftermath |
The fire was so huge that nothing could calm it down. The heat radiating from it was so intense I could feel it while standing next to my hut. The men were there trying to see if anyone was inside while the women started yelling Malinke prayers to consol themselves and others. I knew who lived there, so I was crying with them. The crying was so real and in unison that the fear and shock was evenly spread amongst all those present.
I'm happy to say that no one was inside when it happened. Noone was hurt, and once that was realized, everyone came together in front of the hut to comfort the family, say prayers, and sacrifice a goat as a message to God to not strike the village again.
And from then on, lightning hasn’t struck Fode Binea. But I’ll never forget watching that hut burn to the ground and crying with the women. Even though this was a horrible thing that happened in a village I call my home, it actually made me feel more apart of my community. When that hut got struck, everyone felt that shock together, not just the person that owned it. In Fode Binea when something bad happens to one person, it happens to everyone.