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AFROKLECTIC: the Vickie Remoe show

Friday, October 7, 2011

the Vickie Remoe show

I found this video on my Tumblr roll a month ago or so and I was intrigued by this lady. I don't remember what Tumblr, but you can check it out at This is Africa). Her name is Vickie Remoe. She was born Sierra Leone, Remoe fled her homeland to the US with her family in 1994 during the civil war. With a political science major under her belt, returned to Sierra Leone in 2007 to help rebuild her country. She started a blog prior to her return as a platform to share photos from a 2005 Centre for Peace and Global Citizenship sponsored trop to Sierra Leone. The blog turned into a hub for conversation for Sierra Leoneans abroad, and from that streamed the Vickie Remoe Show. A lifestyle program covering everything from fashion, the arts, entertainment and politics in Sierra Leone and other parts of Africa.

“The show for me was a way to kind of break into Sierra Leonean society because after a year of being here I still felt like I was [not] inside, like I was on holiday somewhere and not really integrating into the society,” Remoe said. “So I wanted to do something that would bring me closer to every day Sierra Leoneans who were not my family members.” 


I have seen a few snippets of the show and I think the show is a fresh conversation for the country.

As of August 2011, Vickie moved back to the US and details her experience in the video below.
"This is a personal video reflection on some issues from the time I spent in Sierra Leone. My thoughts range from daily frustrations, relationships with men and women, lack of opportunities for the youth, the expatriate and Lebanese communities, dating, NGOs, entrepreneurship and more. For all those of you thinking of moving back to Sierra Leone here are some things you need to know before you go".

- VICKIE REMOE

I admire Vickie in so many ways. The experience of going back home to do something different is something I aspire to. Although, I am not from Sierra Leone, I feel what Vickie is saying. Even though she praises Ghana, some of the issues she discusses in the video are the same as Ghana. 

I made a promise to myself this year that I wouldn't go to Ghana for another four years or so. I was so disappointed with the country when I went back this year, that I couldn't bare going anytime soon, because I was scared it would just be worse. The Ghana I went to this year, didn't feel like the progressive Ghana I left two years ago. It felt as if the country had taken a step back.
I even left Ghana early than planned because I was that frustrated with the whole situation.
However, after watching this video about 10 billion times, my mind has shifted - only slightly. I am considering moving to Ghana for a year or two in the next four years. You can count on me doing a web series if I go through with it, because I will have plenty to say and plenty of things to show, whether good or bad!!!


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6 Comments:

At October 8, 2011 5:40 AM , Anonymous Mazuba said...

I had a chance to meet Vickie and she's fab!

 
At October 13, 2011 3:48 PM , Blogger Yaa Animwaa said...

I just went to Ghana last year. Would be interesting to hear your thoughts. I know my opinion of it but curious as to if I was just being too critical. It wasnt the Ghana I remembered either. Even my mother who was born and raised there said she will never move back for good. Thanks for posting her link. I think dialogue on these topics are essential.

 
At October 17, 2011 8:39 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yeh, the decision of going back home is a tough one. I am from Nigeria and recently returned home after about 12 years abroad. While I have nothing to complain about in terms of my personal well-being, the country itself is...carnivalesque. That is a nice way to put it. Watching the news or reading the newspaper or living daily with the fluctuation of electricity, or wondering about the worsening conditions of roads, of security, of morale...amounts to a peculiar time entrapment: Same s#$%, different day. A cousin of mine calls Nigeria "N#$$%^ area". To me, all I can say is Wow!

With the same breath, I am challenged and inspired by the FEW Nigerians who DO try to make a difference in their own way; from courageous writers, to social workers, to the governors (one or two amongst 36), and so forth. I guess for me, before settling in someone's land, I would like to be able to say "I tried doing something". Make no mistake though, there is nothing romantic about such endeavor. Nothing. It gets scary. Yet, if we don't contribute the little we can, or try to, while we have the bones to do it...who will? Only Africans can solve their problems.

I guess what I am trying to say is that I respect those who choose to come home to try to make a difference, no matter how little. It's not easy. Nothing is guaranteed. But the fact of such an act deserves praise. All the nest with your journey back to Ghana!

Digging the new look to the blog! Big ups.

 
At October 17, 2011 8:40 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

*best

 
At October 18, 2011 12:15 PM , Blogger AFROKLECTIC said...

@ Yaa, I doubt you were being too critical. We would spend hours discussing what's wrong with Ghana. I like Anonymous' comment. If we just complain and don't do anything about, it won't get any better.
@ Anonymous, I appreciate your comment!!1 You are totally right, it's not a romantic experience but it's worth it if we can make a difference in some way whether big or small.

 
At November 1, 2011 4:18 AM , Blogger Vickie Remoe 'Di Biggest Swit Mot' said...

Hey thanks for the mention. I really appreciate it.
Alas we all have our burdens to bear. Sierra Leone is beautiful and problematic but home is home. We can not escape that. But doesn't mean that we should not be critical of it.
I know Ghana has its issues but it has also come a long way. I have a friend who is an editor of a local Ghanaian mag and we had an interesting conversation about Ghana's middle class and upsurge in consumerism that we both felt could blind folks to issues of inequality and injustice.
But we must keep the faith and hold ourselves accountable for how we may or may not contribute to already existing issues in our countries.

 

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