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Little Country Big Adventure publishes new stories every Wednesday and Saturday.
Browse: Home   /   Soma   /   Page 2
Photo: My little princes

Photo: My little princes

August 27, 2014
Jessica Fryman
Blog, The Gambia Files

Dressed like little princes, my younger brothers are quite possibly the two cutest boys I’ve ever seen!

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From the Kitchen: American Soup

From the Kitchen: American Soup

August 20, 2014
Jessica Fryman
Blog, The Gambia Files

Every time I cook with my sisters, they ask: “Do you eat this in America?” Time after time, I stare into the pot: fish heads bobbing in a red sauce, green curd-like paste made from leaves off our tree, spaghetti with mayonnaise, rice with palm oil. “No,” I shake my head. One day, my sister Sainabou finally exclaimed, somewhat perplexed: “Well, what do you eat in The Gambia?” I promised to show them one day.

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Meet my Gambian husband

Meet my Gambian husband

August 16, 2014
Jessica Fryman
Blog, The Gambia Files

Since Day One, my sisters have been offering to arrange my marriage to a Gambian husband. With each new person I meet, it’s more of the same — a flood of questions about why I lack a husband and child. In a culture where family life plays such an integral role and people are expected to get married and have babies, Gambians don’t understand how a 25-year-old woman could not only be single, but also say she doesn’t want a husband. I’ve tried various tactics to deflect the interrogations and marriage proposals, many of which have been less than successful.

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Gambian Koriteh:  Breaking the fast

Gambian Koriteh: Breaking the fast

August 4, 2014
Jessica Fryman
Blog, featured, The Gambia Files

The neighbors called out and soon the little path outside my family’s compound was full of townspeople and buzzing with excitement as everyone searched for the moon. Through the pink clouds in the evening sky, a faint hairline of the moon shone through, a sign that the month of fasting could finally end.

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Sights and sounds of Soma

Sights and sounds of Soma

August 2, 2014
Jessica Fryman
Blog, The Gambia Files

For my first 10 weeks in The Gambia, I am in Pre-Service Training while I learn one of the local languages, technical job skills and how to integrate into the culture. My training “village” however, is not much of a village. I live in Soma, one of the country’s transit hubs and home to about 10,000 people. Most of my days are spent in the town’s Jola neighborhood.

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Photo: Gambian gossip around 'the water cooler'

Photo: Gambian gossip around ‘the water cooler’

July 31, 2014
Jessica Fryman
Blog, The Gambia Files

Every day, I pump from a nearby well to water a garden my training group planted down the road.

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"Where is the donkey cart?"

“Where is the donkey cart?”

July 26, 2014
Jessica Fryman
Blog, The Gambia Files

When everything is foreign, it’s easy to forget what you know and just go with it because “that’s the way it is here.” Perhaps the only place that seems semi-normal is my language classroom, where I am learning Jola. I say “semi-normal” because the classroom is the porch outside my teacher’s house.

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Disclaimer

The contents of this website are mine personally and do not reflect any position of the
U.S. government or Peace Corps.

Just a little about me

My name is Jessica Danielle Fryman, but I also answer to Fatoumata Camara.

I know three languages, the third being a tribal tongue less than one percent of the world speaks. I like to run even though I’m not that good at it. I read a lot. And I once published a book I wrote, setting all the type by hand on an old-fashioned printing press. I’m an avid traveler and amateur photographer. I’m also a master spider-killer and possess the ability to stalk my prey without the squeamish screams of my former urban life.

I’m originally from Las Vegas, a city with more people than the entire country where I currently live. I now reside in a two-room concrete house with a tin roof and a ceiling made of rice bags. I eat with my hand out of a shared food bowl. I walk down a dirt road to fetch my water and carry it home in a bucket on my head. And yes, I even poop in a hole in the ground.

Read more about me here.

About The Gambia


The Gambia, known as "The Smiling Coast of Africa," is the smallest country on the continent's mainland. Just 210 miles long and no more than 30 miles at its widest point, The Gambia carves out a space in Senegal on either side of the picturesque Gambia River.
Although many regional languages are spoken, the official language is English. A majority of the 1.8 million people are Muslim. About a third of the population lives below the international poverty line on less than US $1.25 per day.

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