A review of 101 Arabian Tales - How We All Preserved in Peace Corps Libya by Randolph W. Hobler.
In 1968 several dozen naïve American
Peace Corps Volunteers confronted 12th century Libyan culture. This collection of anecdotes from the first
volunteers to go to Libya in the late 1960s recounts encounters with huge
cockroaches, rabid dogs, male dominated society, cloistered women, primitive
sanitation, Islamic strictures, bureaucracies (both theirs and ours) even as
they taught English to fifth graders and
learned Arabic from peers. The idealism
and the optimism of the young Americans is infectious as they are alternately
bewildered or enchanted by their Libyan hosts. They ate camel burgers, dodged
the draft, fell in love, travelled extensively and taught their classes, but
above all they made a difference. Their lives were irreducibly changed, and so
perhaps were their students and friends. But it quickly came to an end with the
coup d’etat that brought Gaddafi to power.
This collective memoir based on diaries and recollections aptly captures
the era, the challenges, the despair and the accomplishments of Peace Corps
Volunteers sent to bring enlightenment to a most backward corner of the world.
This is a very unusual Peace Corps memoir in that it is not one person’s story.
Although author Randy Hobler does tell his saga, he makes a point to add and
cite observations, anecdotes and recollections of dozens of his peers. The sum
then is much greater than its parts. The book is indeed a compendium of all
that was experienced by the first two groups of Peace Corps Volunteers to go to
Libya. Assigned to isolated village
schools - the women to urban schools - their task was to teach fifth graders
English. Along the way they needed to build Arabic language proficiency, which
they began in training so as to function in their various communities. They had
a tough time, especially the women who were compelled to operate in a society that
disdained females. But for all
experience overcame ignorance, flexibly conquered stodginess, brashness and
innovation won out. Hey, they were
twenty-one so open to the newness - to them - of a structured, inflexible
archaic religious dominated culture.
The book takes a chronological approach to their experience.
First was training in either Utah for the single men or Arizona for the women
and married couples. Mostly training was
ineffective. Arabic lessons were meager, TEFL training poor, and cross culture
education lean. The prospect of “de-selection”,
meaning you got sent home on specious psychological criteria tainted the whole
process. However, the trainees bonded and such bonds would be needed in Libya.
In Libya the now sworn in volunteers dispersed to various
posts, some in cities of Tripoli, Bengazi or Derna, but most to isolated
villages in the interior and a few to oases far south in the Sahara desert.
Aside from enthusiasm, the PCVs were poorly prepared for what they
encountered. No one spoke English and
their Arabic was rudimentary. Students
were incorrigible. Housing was
abominable, often a small room shared with Libyan colleagues. Water and food
were well below standards. Intestinal or insect generated disease was
common. Above all was the challenge of
integrating themselves into their communities.
Folks were uniformly hospitable, but circumstances were bizarre. PCVs had to learn how to cope in order not to
offend.
The book digresses in the summer of 1969 to detail lots of
regional and European travel , but then picks up again and closes with the
problems arising from Gaddafi’s take over and the resulting expulsion of
Americans. It was hard to leave, but all
finally made it out safely.
Finally, after naming so many volunteers during the course
of the memoir and relating their individual memories, the book closes with an
epilogue of what many ultimately did in life after Libya.
I have read dozens of Peace Corps memoirs and always find
the impact of service on the individual writer to be profound. However, this memoir contains not just the
memories and observations of one volunteer but of dozens. It is therefore that
much more authoritative. It does encapsulate a time and a country experience -
one that was not likely replicated anywhere else. It is truly an opus of cross cultural blunders
and inspired rectifications. The author’s breezy whimsical style is
readable and the book is full of relevant photos. This is a good read. Former
volunteers from anywhere will appreciate and nod affirmatively at many of the
recitations. Other readers will enjoy the saga - we came, we immersed, we
persevered.