Naleighna Kai's Literary Cafe Magazine BH Magazine Final | Page 6

An American in Sweet Liberia Editor Naleighna Kai interviews Susan D. Peters, author of the award-winning memoir Sweet Liberia, Lessons from the Coal Pot. “Sweet Liberia, Lessons from the Coal Pot is a delightful, painfully honest, memoir that chronicles the thick slice of humanity sandwiched between Liberia’s April 12, 1980 coup and the Civil War, in 1989.” Susan Peters lived, worked and owned businesses in Liberia, and I’d like to get some insight on her life in Liberia. NK: Why would you and other African Americans chose to relocate or immigrate to Liberia? SDP: People immigrate from one place to another seeking opportunity. We were looking for a better life and a way to reconnect to our African roots. There was this idea of making ourselves useful in a way that advanced African people. After considering the Black Panther Party, following the teachings of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, we finally embraced the Black Nationalist ideology for a while and when we decided we really wanted to live in Africa we joined the Original African Hebrew Israelite Community because they had settlements in both Liberia and Ghana. I was captivated by the promise of living in a community in Africa. So, in 1979, me, my eldest daughter and my infant son departed Chicago, to join my husband, who had traveled a few months earlier. NK: Were you able to connect to your heritage? SDP: Certainly, as soon as I deplaned at Roberts Field I looked around and got the immediate validation of looking at the people and seeing your family characteristics mirrored in the faces of people who never crossed the Atlantic in 6 | NKLC Magazine bondage. It’s a feeling of finally realizing you are a leaf on a very big tree. Of course, there are cultural differences but there is also cultural validation. NK: What did you learn about being successful in another culture? SDP: The most important thing I learned is that you can’t come from outside of a culture and understand the people of that culture. And you can’t impose your solutions. That painful lesson is one that, while learned in West Africa, is the lesson upon which I built my career in Communications and Community Relations. Cultivating people with different cultural beliefs takes time. NK: What was your proudest moment in Liberia? SDP: Once I realized that I wasn’t in Liberia as a savior, I began to observe and to learn from my indigenous staff and Liberian friends and they learned from me. There were some great personal epiphanies but my proudest accomplishment in Liberia was the foundational work my staff and I did toward the establishment of a day care center for market women! I was a director of the Liberian Red Cross Day Care Center and Kindergarten which served working-middle class Liberians. Liberia is very class conscious and my middle- class daycare center parents would never stand for mixing their children with market women’s children. My indigenous staff suggested that the market women really had different childcare needs. They suggested that I tailor a program to meet their needs in their space. I listened. The project was heavy lifting but eventually it was successful. When the first market daycare center opened, I was a keynote speaker and members of my staff conducted the day long training workshops.