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Africans offer some perspective on America's 'flaws'.


'Is America great?"

Saido Kamara, a 22-year-old college student from Sierra Leong, asked me this from the back seat as we traveled a road outside Freetown. His tone wasn't that of a man seeking information but, rather, confirmation, somebody to validate what he had already decided. He asked the way you'd ask an angel if heaven was great.

It took me a second to respond. I didn't want to feed some fantasy that American skies are always blue and American streets unfailingly gold. Better, I felt, to give a balanced and realistic view of a nation he has visited only in his daydreams. So my answer contained a lot of "Yes, buts."

Yes, but we still have many problems. Yes, but things are not perfect. Yes, but our people don't always get along.

Not that my caveats had any discernible effect on Saido, whose nation is only two years removed from a brutal civil war. As I said, he had made up his mind long before he ever asked.

Saido was my translator for this leg of a 13-day Miami Herald assignment in West Africa West Africa

A region of western Africa between the Sahara Desert and the Gulf of Guinea. It was largely controlled by colonial powers until the 20th century.



West African adj. & n.
. Suffice to say that I saw and heard things that will be with me the balance of my life.

One of which was Saido's question. By that time, I had become used to Africans speaking nay country's name as if its syllables left a taste of honey in their mouths. Everybody wanted to go there or, failing that, send their children. Get an American education, make some American money, live an American life. "America is paradise," a customs agent assured me with a blinding smile.

Back here in paradise, you'd be hard-pressed most days to find many people who would agree. Politically, we're more polarized A one-way direction of a signal or the molecules within a material pointing in one direction.  than we've been in a generation, and it seems increasingly the case that what divides conservative from liberal is less honest disagreement than open contempt. We are split over a war, vexed by a malfunctioning education system, riven rive  
v. rived, riv·en also rived, riv·ing, rives

v.tr.
1. To rend or tear apart.

2. To break into pieces, as by a blow; cleave or split asunder.

3.
 by isms of race, gender, class, age, faith and sexual orientation sexual orientation
n.
The direction of one's sexual interest toward members of the same, opposite, or both sexes, especially a direction seen to be dictated by physiologic rather than sociologic forces.
.

Not that you have to touch on those great issues to raise the blood pressure of the average one of us. We live in a nation where the interruption of cable service counts as a disaster and a refrigerator breaking down passes for catastrophe, a nation where sell-gratification is a solenm obligation and we feverishly fe·ver·ish  
adj.
1.
a. Of, relating to, or resembling a fever.

b. Having a fever or symptoms characteristic of a fever.

c. Causing or tending to cause fever.

2.
 pursue our ultimate selves--thinner! richer! happier!--under the tutelage TUTELAGE. State of guardianship; the condition of one who is subject to the control of a guardian.  of self-help authors and talk show experts.

And then you meet a woman whose arm was lopped off at the shoulder by so-called rebel soldiers.

And then you meet a man who rests in a shanty shanty, in music: see chantey.  beside an open sewer where pigs defecate def·e·cate
v.
To void feces from the bowels.



defe·cation n.
 and children play.

And then you meet a child who takes your hand and kisses it as if in worship.

"America is paradise," they tell you. "America is great."

It has a way of changing your perspective.

The day I got back from Africa, the ice cream man came by my house, For as long as I can remember, James, an immigrant from Sierra Leone Sierra Leone (sēĕr`ə lēō`nē, lēōn`; sēr`ə lēōn), officially Republic of Sierra Leone, republic (2005 est. pop. 6,018,000), 27,699 sq mi (71,740 sq km), W Africa. , has spent summers driving through my neighborhood ringing his bell and dispensing cold treats from his truck. But when he heard I was back, he parked the truck in my driveway and came in to talk to me.

James has not seen Sierra Leone since he left it in 1989. In the interim, he has become an American citizen. My ice cream man actually has two jobs--the other involves delivering medical supplies. His day starts at 2:30 a.m. Sometimes, he is so sleepy he has to pull his truck over for a nap. He told me all this without complaint.

"Is America great?" Saido had asked. I forgot to pass that question on to James. But then, I don't think I need to.

I think I know what he would say.

Leonard Pitts Lenard Pitts is a nationally-syndicated columnist and winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary. He was originally hired by the Miami Herald to critique music, but within a few years he received his own column in which he dealt extensively with race, politics, and culture.  is a columnist for the Miami Herald.
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Title Annotation:Commentary
Author:Pitts, Leonard
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 9, 2004
Words:653
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