Saturday mornings are filled with all the commotion one would rightfully expect on a forward-deployed military installation, and while most service members here have reported for duty, a select few may have the luxury of slumbering through the chronic high temperature of the typical Djibouti morning.
Not so, however, for the camp’s Community Assistance Volunteers who braved the pestiferous heat and begin their weekend at 7:30 a.m., Saturday, when they boarded a bus for the nearby Atta Region to begin renovating the area’s only school house within a six mile radius.
And, if ever there was a facility in need of CAV elbow grease, the ‘Ecole de Basede Nagad’ is apparently it. According to Sameh Ali Ahmed, schoolhouse director, the three-room, one-story schoolhouse has existed in a state of neglect for years.
"It’s been like this for a long time, so we’re very excited about this project - about having the Americans here,” said Sameh. “We’ve been trying to schedule this for a long time."
Following a friendly huddle with Sameh and interpreter Mohamed Kamal Hamadou, the fourteen volunteers went to work filling several buckets with water and then spent three hours scrubbing dirt and graffiti from the building’s exterior walls. Soon the sidewalk lining the front of the school turned blue as spatters of water – stained from traces of the facility’s previous indigo and white paint scheme - streamed across the cement.
"The entire outside of the school needs to be cleaned, wiped down and prepped for painting,” said U.S. Navy Gunner’s Mate 2nd Class Sara Liming, CAV vice president. “It’s going to be painted in accordance with locally approved colors – light blue on the bottom and white on top."
The Nagad Schoolhouse project is currently scheduled to last two months and while the CAV must limit its volunteer work to Saturday mornings, the team appears to have given serious thought to their course of action.
"We’ll start with the cleaning of the exterior and then weekend by weekend, paint each section," said Liming.
Along with this, there are other projects associated with the school that the CAV is mulling over: constructing an edifice for students and teachers to cook under; building benches for students to sit on while eating; and coming to grips with a feasible way to improve the school’s plumbing system or – more appropriately – its lack of a plumbing system. Currently, the institution’s only water supply consists of two cracked garden hoses attached to an ancient pump from which a thin stream of water dribbles into a communal sinkhole.
Liming stressed that these projects are only in what she called the discussion phase. "These jobs have not been approved yet, but we’re very excited about the possibilities," she said.
CAV member U.S. Air Force Captain Matt Sullivan said he looks forward to the effort CAV projects demand.
"I’m prepared to get dirty," said Captain Sullivan. "I took it for granted that I had access to a good clean school – hopefully this volunteer work will give a child the opportunity for an education. The CAV is making sure they have a clean place to acquire the knowledge that will propel them through life."