January 19th, 2015 by Rachel | Tags: Culture Exchange, Peace Corps, Photo Essay, Photography | No Comments »
This is a long overdue blog post. This photo essay features an upper-middle class, modern host family with whom I lived in Mengong, a rural village just outside of Ebolowa, during training. The photos give the Americans and other foreigners an insight into the life of a group of Cameroonians in a home. While most Cameroonians do household chores similarly, my host family certainly does not represent the entire population of the country. Note the gender equality in the pictures as the males are also very involved in household chores such as cooking, getting water and ironing clothes. In a modern and highly educated family, like my host family, where there are traditionally less than six children, males are usually more involved in household work.
My host father is both a high school math teacher and assistant principal of the high school located right in the village. My host mother owns a boutique and sells household items such as packaged food, office supplies, and toiletries. There are four children living with them. Two of them are their biological children. The other two children are a niece and nephew of my host parents’. In Cameroon, it’s very common for children to live with their aunt, uncles and cousins instead of their parents due to various reasons including work, illnesses, and finances. My host parents also has a third biological son who I never met as he is currently living in Doula for university.