Bids have been cast, decisions made, handshakes offered and accepted and for many of us, the latest bidding season has come to a close. Although there is only one true Flag Day at the start of our careers, I still like to think of the day we get the bureau's handshake email notifying us of our next assignment as Flag Day. Even though it arrives unceremoniously in an email, the event still forever changes the trajectories of our lives and careers and therefore should be given due respect.
Therefore, I announce the sixth flag to proudly hang in our Hall of Flags (i.e. the sunporch) will be:
Not looking familiar? Try searching for "flags of the world" and scroll alphabetically through the list. Don't worry; I'll wait. Keep scrolling. You'll find it second to last on the list, just before its neighbor Zimbabwe.
Yup - Zambia here we come!
Lusaka, Zambia to be precise. My next assignment will be the Consular Chief at our embassy in the capital city Lusaka. To your next question - what the heck is a Consular Chief? Is it the Consul General? Well, no it's not. In a small consular section like Lusaka's, the role is called Consular Chief. I'll be working with a staff of one (or hopefully two) other American employees and four locally employed Zambian staff. That's six or seven of us total. In comparison with my first tour in Ciudad Juarez where I was one of 48 (interchangeable) entry level officers each responsible for a very thin slice of the pie, now I'll be running the section and sitting on the Ambassador's weekly Country Team meeting. My pie slice just got a lot bigger and I'm waiting to start feeling hungry.
It's a good assignment and we are very excited to be headed there. I'm particularly grateful to have a tangible spot on the horizon towards which to orient the next eight or nine months. During bidding, I'd heard only positive reviews from friends about the country and my husband and I are starting to learn about the country to begin picturing ourselves in these new lives.
Let's start with a few fun Zambia facts and how those might translate to our lives:
- While English is the official language, there are 72 spoken languages stemming from the Bantu language family. Bemba and Nyanja are the predominant ones, and we'll hear Nyanja in the capital.
- Translation: No FSI language training. Zikomo kwa ine!
- Zambia is roughly the size of Texas, Maryland, and Vermont combined. Or the size of Ukraine, Greece, and Montenegro combined. Hmmm, those are odd comparisons. How about this even weirder map comparison that makes Zambia look disturbingly like the United States' sonagram:
- Translation: It's a big country with long distances to drive to go see the cool stuff we'll want to see. No more Salvadoran day trip decisions: 45 minutes to the beach or 90 minutes to the mountains? More like three hours to "Are we there yet?"
- A few traditional Zambian foods:
- Nshima (corn meal like grits or polenta)
- Ifinkubala (mopane worms/caterpillars)
- Kapenta (dried sardines)
- Samp (coarser corn meal, more like hominy)
- Ifisashi (general term for stewed greens mixed with ground peanuts)
- Translation: I will not be eating Ifinkubala. Sorry.
- There are some really awesome things to see in Zambia:
- Victoria Falls!
- Game reserves!
- Camping in game reserves!
- Canoeing with hippos on the Zambezi! (We're in the canoe, they're in the river - at least that's what I'm assuming. Hmmm...)
- Translation: Choose your own adventure and danger level.
- We'll live in a house with a big yard, maybe even a pool.
- Translation: Cats will continue to live in the style to which they have been accostomed in El Salvador. I'm picturing weekend mornings on the veranda curled onto a ratan couch, a linen-lined tea tray within reach, watching the cats chase butterflies across the manicured lawn.
So that's where we are now. It's fun to start trying on the new life, imagining that in a year we'll be saying things like, "Hey, I'm popping down to the Abo Abbas, can I get you some horned melon?" Already my husband bought two new cots and is eyeing a tent big enough to put them in. His research on camping in game parks brought about a conversation I didn't think we'd have: "Yeah, so they say not to worry about the elephants as they'll generally avoid your tent and if they do come close, they're careful about stepping over the lines. Apparently it's the hyenas we have to be wary of as they'll carry away anything we leave outside. And if we wake up with a snake curled up next to us - not to worry, it's just trying to keep warm. Just give it a poke and it'll be on its way."