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Growing up in remote Cameroon, Richard Afuma could not expect to
live much past the age of 40, and his chances of any sort of
education were slim. But at the age of eight, Afuma found his way
to a school run by Baptist missionaries, where he learned to write
on banana leaves. When he was ten, he saw his first white person
who, from the evidence of a flip chart at school, he took to be
Jesus Christ. He was told that the Land Rovers and Land Cruisers he
saw driving down the rutted roads of Kom were made by these same
people-Jesuses with supernatural powers-who were uniformly called
Americans. In The Python Trail, Afuma portrays the kind of journey
that many immigrants have made, but few have described. When he
arrived in Maine as a college freshman, he'd never heard of a
washing machine, a microwave oven, or a coffee maker; the bed
sheets were so clean and white, he was afraid he'd dirty them; and
he believed computer printers were run by ghosts. As much as
anything, Afuma was shocked to learn that poverty and homelessness
existed in a place whose streets he'd thought were paved with gold.
It had never occurred to him that he himself might face hardships
here, so that, despite having earned a master's degree in public
administration, he would fail time and time again to find
meaningful employment. Scam artists preyed on him. Racism, though
subtle, followed him wherever he went.
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