Shana McRae
Reflections of Tsilamaha

© WWF / Shana McRae

© WWF / Shana McRae
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Hello, my name is Shana McRae and I participated in the 2008 WWF Explore Programme in Madagascar. As a Canadian Citizen, I feel as though it is important to give back to the environment and to volunteer my abilities to those in need. Integrating into a small Malagasy village allowed me to put my journalistic and communication skills to use. It also broadened my knowledge of the world around me and put my life in Canada into perspective. I am very grateful to have been a part of this learning experience. Although brief, the Malagasy people have made a great impact on my life and I can only hope that I have done the same for them.
A day in the life of Tsilamaha - a remote village in the south of Madagascar
It's 6am and as the sun breaks through the cracks in our wooden hut a rooster croaks to welcome the day. With spears in hand I watch the men from our village lead their herds of zebu to pasture. They leave behind the women who are now making their way back from the river with full buckets of water on their heads and a baby strapped to their back. They will be preparing rice and corn for the older children before they head off to school.
The warm sun hits my face as I emerge from the hut. I know already that it is going to be another sweltering day in the desert. Through squinted eyes I peer around to see the small faces of children staring at me. They watch me as I brush my teeth, prepare my breakfast and eat silently under a shady tree. The villagers curiously observe every move that I make. This is their first real opportunity to live amongst a ‘Vasa’ their term for foreigner.
I know that culturally we are worlds apart and integration is made even more difficult by the fact that I don’t speak Atandroy and they don’t speak French or English.
