Back Page: Never the Same

Educator Always Learns Something New on Annual Africa Trip

When Cheryl Kirschnerā€™s middle son, Philip, left for a Peace Corps mission in Botswana last year, she booked a trip the next day to visit him with her husband, Philip. When her youngest son, Adam, decided to study abroad in South Africa a few years ago, the whole family of five, including her eldest son, Michael, traveled with him as a send-off.

Kirschner, a professor of law at Babson College in Wellesley, Mass., spends a few weeks in Tanzania each year with graduate students and previously traveled to South Africa yearly with Babson undergraduates.

You might say that Kirschner, of Newton, Mass., knows a lot about Africa. But if you do, she will correct you.

ā€œMy knowledge about Africa is really very limited. The continent is so huge and so diverse,ā€ she said. Africa, the second-largest continent, has 54 nations and about 2,000 spoken languages.

ā€œWe know that going to Germany is different than going to Spain,ā€ Kirschner said. ā€œPeople donā€™t seem to think of the fact that going to South Africa is different than going to Botswana ā€“ even within Botswana.ā€

Back Page: Never the Same

On last yearā€™s trip, she found Botswanaā€™s remote Kalahari Desert region, where her son Philip is stationed, to be much like he had described. ā€œMy son said, ā€˜you know how when youā€™re parked really far from the beach, and youā€™re carrying a lot of stuff over sand dunes? Itā€™s like that, only you never get to the water.ā€™ā€

To find water, they headed north to the Okavango Delta and a three-night walking safari. ā€œI have been on safari a lot but never walking. In South Africa and in Tanzania, we were in a jeep. In South Africa they carried a gun for protection. In Botswana, they donā€™t. You have to be quiet. You have to listen. You learn about standing downwind not upwind ā€¦ Thatā€™s how we saw the female lion.ā€

Farther north, water is plentiful as witnessed at massive Victoria Falls. In nearby Livingstone, Zambia, British-colonial-style buildings were another notable contrast to the brightly painted metal shacks in Cape Town, South Africa, and the drab storefronts in Arusha, Tanzania, with random names like ā€œMichelle Obamaā€™s Coffee Shopā€ painted or scrawled on handmade signs.

Arusha businesses have far deeper challenges than storefront signage, as Babsonā€™s entrepreneurial leadership students learn. Inadequate infrastructure, no access to capital and a customer base with little money are just some factors.

Some things are the same everywhere. Even amid profound economic or social struggles, as in Cape Town, ā€œthere are the joys of watching their children grow or sharing a funny story and laughing with friends,ā€ Kirschner said.

Kirschner has made some true lifelong friends on her travels.

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