An eye-opening journey to Uganda with Peace Corps

An eye-opening journey to Uganda with Peace Corps
Wilson Terrall, front row  right in photo, and co-workers in front of the savings and credit cooperative in Kakumiro District, Uganda, where Terrall was assigned while working as a Peace Corps volunteer. Photo submitted

CORNWALL — It was early in the morning when Wilson Terrall saw the email: He had 24 hours to pack up his house and bid his friends goodbye. It was March 16, and the coronavirus was beginning to impose a new reality on the world. A Peace Corps car whisked him to Kampala, where he anxiously awaited his flight out of Uganda, his home for the past 21 months. 

Terrall, 25, had grown up in Cornwall, a rural town that is nonetheless home to many famous writers and widely traveled diplomats. He graduated from Housatonic Valley Regional High School in 2012, and, seeking new and different experiences, struck out for the West Coast. 

At Occidental College in Los Angeles, Calif., he majored in Diplomacy and World Affairs, specializing in sub Saharan Africa, and began to eye the Peace Corps as a way to gain field experience. 

“The thing that really drew me to it was the length, the duration: two years,” Terrall said. “You really get to know the people and the culture. It’s not just a temporary stop.” 

In June 2018, Terrall arrived in Philadelphia, Pa., his staging area. It was a brisk introduction. He and four dozen other volunteers spent an afternoon together before flying to Uganda the next morning. 

Uganda, with its myriad tribes and languages, is the most ethnically diverse country in the world. This presented a challenge. 

“The problem is that once you get a grasp of a language you can take a taxi 45 minutes away and you’ll be in another part of the country that doesn’t speak that language, or with a very different accent,” Terrall said. “It was really difficult.”

Dispatched to the western end of the country, Terrall worked at a savings and credit cooperative, “essentially a local bank,” where he trained local business owners in financial literacy and helped with business development. 

Three hours over dirt roads from the nearest volunteer, Terrall was struck by the remoteness of the place, how “incredibly isolating the Peace Corps is.”

Far removed from other volunteers and Americans, Terrall made friends with people in town. He raved about the nightlife. 

“Uganda actually has a pretty developed drinking culture, really good music, a lot of bars, a lot of public events.” On weekends, “we’d go out a lot, we’d go dancing.” 

Returning to the U.S. was “certainly jarring.” He had to quarantine in New York City and was “sort of in a fog.” He laughed at the notion that adjusting to life at home is harder than acclimating to a host country. “It’s way easier to adjust when you’re with your family and loved ones.” 

Terrall is still struck by the misfortunes that befall so many in Uganda. Villagers die from colds and infections, minor illnesses that Americans “don’t bat an eyelash” at. He recounted the story of a shop owner in his village, the proud father of a newborn son, Thomas. 

“I met his baby,” he remembered, “and he was really happy.” Two weeks later Terrall saw the man again, and asked where the baby was. Thomas had died of malaria, the father resignedly told him.

American are “shielded from the casual tragedy that happens all the time to people,” he observed.

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