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john sundman's avatar

1974 — '76, I lived in the small village of Fanaye Dieri in the Senegal River Valley during a time of famine, pestilence, and drought doing agricultural development and famine-relief work. Because of the drought, then in its 7th year, the crops had mostly failed. Had it not been for food supplied by the UN, the EU, Saudi Arabia, and, mostly, the United States, there would have been no food in Fanaye and the people would have had to leave. But USAID food kept us alive. I suppose I'm one of the few people who were born & raised in the USA who has subsisted for two years on a diet of food mostly supplied by USAID, so maybe my story will be of use.

Shortly after I arrived in the village a big tuck came & unloaded dozens of burlap bags bearing USAID logo and the words “From the People of the United States of America,” that contained sorghum & field corn on the cob. It was animal feed in the US, but it kept us alive. The people were very grateful to have it.

[Aside: Sometimes you hear people going on about how food aid like this is stolen by corrupt officials and things like that, but I can attest that in the village of Fanaye the distribution was orderly, according to the town census. After I had been in Fanaye for about a year I spent about 2 weeks on a small convoy of trucks delivering food from the UN's UNICEF program, and that also was properly administered.]

Having sworn an oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States, I did my best to represent our country. Near the end of my stay I overheard a man explaining Peace Corps to a visitor:"Ehbay nyam ko yimbay nyam, ehbay hahl ko yimbay hahl"

"They eat what the people eat; they speak [the language] the people speak." I don't want to overstate my accomplishments but I am proud of the work that I did there on behalf of the American people — and it wasn't always easy. But I know for a fact that not only did the food from the USA help keep the people of Fanaye (and elsewhere across the 4,000 mile expanse of the Sahel) alive, which is obviously a good thing in itself, it also predisposed the people of Senegal to think well of the US. A compassionate and worthwhile project any way you look at it. May the vandals destroying USAID burn in Hell for all eternity. Amen.

To get an appreciation of what it was like to live in a place where food from USAID meant the difference between staying in your home and leaving everything behind to try to find someplace where you and your children wouldn’t starve to death, I humbly suggest reading this essay, by far the most popular of the ~85 I’ve posted on substack to date.

https://open.substack.com/pub/johnsundman/p/the-dark-side-of-the-hut-50-years?r=38b5x&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false

https://open.substack.com/pub/johnsundman/p/the-dark-side-of-the-hut-50-years?r=38b5x&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false

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Darlene Coyne's avatar

My mom was 80 years old and drowning in debt. Collections were calling at all hours day and night-she was incredibly stressed out and helpless. Fortunately I had a gym friend who worked for CFPB (I had never heard of it). Friend took mom’s case on and cleared her credit history and stopped all harassment. It was a lifesaver for my mom. I had never been so proud of our government.

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