One hot afternoon in late October 1998, in a dusty courtyard in Segou, Mali, I baked a chocolate birthday cake.
This was quite a défi (“challenge,” in the ligua franca of this Francophone West African country) because all of the cooking for my host family’s meals was done outside on an open wood fire in their enclosed compound’s courtyard. There was no kitchen. There was no oven. There was no table for prepping, nor was there the requisite kitchen equipment. I had no cake pans.
What I did have though was my innate stubborn determination to bake a cake for my friend Youssef’s thirty-third birthday and to make a party of it for his large and welcoming family.
Word got out about this event in the neighborhood, and before long the courtyard was filled with many young Malian mothers (curious, perhaps, to learn how to bake a birthday cake) and their many, many little children. The children sat close together, cross-legged on the dusty ground, looking up at me expectantly, waiting quietly and patiently for their taste of cake.
Somehow, the cake gods were with me, because, after rigging up a large cauldron like an oven and cooking the batter in the big bowl I’d mixed it in (which I set on tin cans at the bottom of the dry, closed cauldron), a fat, domed chocolate cake emerged (when flipped), like some sweet dark miracle.
I drizzled the dome with melted chocolate bars, stuck a white candle in the top, and displayed it triumphantly like a trophy. The mothers were amazed. The children got excited. I cut the cake into thirty-six tiny pieces, hoping each child might at least get a taste. In an instant the cake was gone. Merely a memory.
One of those children, the eldest son of Youssef’s older cousin Makan, the patriarch of my host family, was eleven-year old Tidiani, a serious and shy boy who seldom spoke but obviously observed and privately recorded everything.
Today, twenty-five years later, Tidiani is a responsible married man in his mid-thirties with two small children, the second of whom is a baby girl he named after me. As I wrote in my WOW blogpost, “The Christmas Gift,” a year ago, shortly after her birth (www.blog.bonnieleeblack.com/the-christmas-gift/ ):
“The tradition in Mali, as I came to understand it in my three years there, is for foreign residents to take on Malian names and thereby become part of the overall Malian family, regardless of one’s age, skin color, ethnicity, nationality, or religion.” I chose for myself the name Bani because it’s pronounced just like my actual first name and because it’s the name of the sister river to Mali’s mighty Niger.
My little namesake Bani turned one year old last week. I’d sent her dad Tidiani, who’s been a Facebook friend for many years, a little money via Western Union for her birthday, and he thanked me by sending me photos and videos of the birthday party he and his wife made for her with the money I’d sent.
There she was, striding across the courtyard alone on her slim-but-evidently-sturdy one-year-old legs, wearing red mary janes, a lacey dress, and a pointy paper crown. (My mom always claimed I was walking, talking, and out of diapers by my first birthday; but I have no videos to confirm this.)
And there she was, sitting alone at a small table in front of her big, round birthday cake emblazoned with her name and “Joyeux Anniversaire,” looking a bit bewildered as well as bedazzled as the gathered crowd of kids sang “Happy Birthday to You” – in English! – no doubt coached by her daddy Tidiani and meant for me.
Her face, looking up, reads, What’s going on here? – the same quizzical expression I always saw in my own baby pictures. She’s not, it appears, loving being the center of attention.
Someone places a white candle in the center of the cake, lights it, and encourages her to blow it out. Her body language says to me: Wait! What? What’s happening? And then she takes off her paper crown and plops it on the ground beside her. She’s determined not to be a princess.
You could accuse me, rightly, I guess, of reading too deeply into Bani’s first birthday photos and videos to find likenesses with myself: The same stubborn determination to be who we are (not princesses), to walk alone on our own two sturdy legs unaided, to question everything (What’s going on?) and recoil from the limelight. She and I are not connected by blood, but I like to think we’re connected by more than just first names.
One of the good things about getting old, I’m finding, is this: If you live long enough, you begin to see life’s circular patterns more clearly (“What goes around, comes around”?).
Some of those circular patterns are beautiful, like this one, in the shape of a round birthday cake.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
For the full account of my experiences in Mali, read HOW TO MAKE AN AFRICAN QUILT: The Story of the Patchwork Project of Segou, Mali, available at Aurora Books in San Miguel de Allende or online from Amazon.com or the publisher Nighthawk Press (http://nighthawkpress.com/all-authors/bonnie-lee-black/ ).
What a lovely story!
Thank you, Helaine. Glad you liked it. Happy New Year to you!
Oh abani, how touching! Mil gracias
De nada, dear Pat! I hope you’re well. Happy 2024!
all good, except dear SMA friend Susie die recently, may be in town and hope to see you
Oh, Pat, when might you be coming? It would be good to see you!
Love the story!
Thanks, Victoria. So glad you do. Happy New Year to you!
Thank you. What an inspiration!
Thank YOU, Lyn. And Happy New Year to you and Lee. — BB
Oh my, what lovely and insightful thoughts. Thanks for both
your memories of the first cake and the continuation of this
friendship. You’ve shared the beauty of unending roundness and the strong flavor of warm chocolate. In this time of
heart-breaking visions from contemporary news, images of
beloved and treasured children tasting cake and testing their
own selves is a wonderment. Thank you, thank you.
I’m very touched by this comment, Marie. Thank you so much. — BB xx
Oh Bonnie, I loved this story so much. You’re modeling what it is to look for connections to those who are much younger, a different nationality, even a different ethnicity. It reminds me of the French term d’accord. Looking for accord, seeking connection, cherishing harmony. This is such a beautiful little story about an independent little girl (and her independent eponym). I alternated between laughs, tears, and shivers while reading it. xoxo ~ Be
You’ve given me shivers reading your comment, dear Be! Thank you so much! — Abrazos fuertes, BB xx
Oh my, a lovely story of treasured childhood milestones even
as the year ends with evidence many are struggling. Thank you.
Thank YOU, Marie, for your thoughts. Happy New Year — and Peace to all!
Belleza! She looks cute!
I remember the chapter in your memoirs.
Now, some of us do want to be princesas with tiara and everything 🙂 Feliz 2024!
Well, you ARE a princess! 🙂 xx
Merci beaucoup BANI pour ces commentaires
Vous êtes merveilleuse et une personne de bon cœur
Ah, Tidiani — merci un million pour tout, et beaucoup d’amour toujours a vous et a votre famille. — “Big” Bani
What a beautiful, touching story. A part of you remains in Segou, and she is flourishing!
Thank you, dear Katie. That’s such a nice thought. 🙂
I absolutely love this story!
Thank you, dear Karen! Please share it. 🙂 Feliz ano nuevo. — BB
I hope you get a photo or video of little Bani every year! Cake for her and new memories for you.
I hope so too! (I suspect I will.) 🙂
There IS a connection between you and Bani. It started the day you baked that cake and the shy impressionable 11 year old Tidiani had an experience that affected him profoundly. Seeing the result of a woman’s determination and inventiveness when most wouldn’t even try. Maybe he hopes that his Bani will follow in your footsteps and make great achievements despite the odds being against her. I hope she does, Bonnie, and I hope you will see it happen. Happy New Year!
Dearest Loula — Your sensitivity never ceases to astound me. Thank you so much for making this connection for us. I deeply appreciate your contribution to the conversation. — Happy New Year to you and yours, BB xx
Dear Bon,
I think that all the time about seeing patterns. Age also reveals the connections between things, I think. Little Bani is adorable, and I sense the commonality between you.
When a beautiful memory this is.
Love,
Paul
Thank you, dearest Paul! Maybe she’ll even grow up to be a writer? xx