There were all kinds of stories told about the war that made it sound as if it was happening in a faraway and different land. It wasn't until refugees started passing through our town that we began to see that it was actually taking place in our country. Families who had walked hundreds of miles told how relatives had been killed and their houses burned. Some people felt sorry for them and offered them places to stay, but most of the refugees refused, because they said the war would eventually reach our town. The children of these families wouldn't look at us, and they jumped at the sound of chopping wood or as stones landed on the tin roofs flung by children hunting birds with slingshots. The adults among these children from the war zones would be lost in their thoughts during conversations with the elders of my town. Apart from their fatigue and malnourishment, it was evident they had seen something that plagued their minds, something that we would refuse to accept if they told us all of it. At times I thought that some of the stories the passersby told were exaggerated. The only wars I knew of were those that I had read about in books or seen in movies such as Rambo: First Blood, and the one in neighboring Liberia that I had heard about on the BBC news. My imagination at ten years old didn't have the capacity to grasp what had taken away the happiness of the refugees.
The first time that I was touched by war I was twelve. It was in January of 1993. I left home with Junior, my older brother, and our friend Talloi, both a year older than I, to go to the town of Mattru Jong, to participate in our friends' talent show. Mohamed, my best friend, couldn't come because he and his father were renovating their thatched-roof kitchen that day. The four of us had started a rap and dance group when I was eight. We were first introduced to rap music during one of our visits to Mobimbi, a quarter where the foreigners who worked for the same American company as my father lived. We often went to Mobimbi to swim in a pool and watch the huge color television and the white people who crowded the visitors' recreational area. One evening a music video that consisted of a bunch of young black fellows talking really fast came on the television. The four of us sat there mesmerized by the song, trying to understand what the black fellows were saying. At the end of the video, some letters came up at the bottom of the screen. They read "Sugarhill Gang, ‘Rapper's Delight.'" Junior quickly wrote it down on a piece of paper. After that, we came to the quarters every other weekend to study that kind of music on television. We didn't know what it was called then, but I was impressed with the fact that the black fellows knew how to speak English really fast, and to the beat.
Later on, when Junior went to secondary school, he befriended some boys who taught him more about foreign music and dance. During holidays, he brought me cassettes and taught my friends and me how to dance to what we came to know as hip-hop. I loved the dance, and particularly enjoyed learning the lyrics, because they were poetic and it improved my vocabulary. One afternoon, Father came home while Junior, Mohamed, Talloi, and I were learning the verse of "I Know You Got Soul" by Eric B. & Rakim. He stood by the door of our clay brick and tin roof house laughing and then asked, "Can you even understand what you are saying?" He left before Junior could answer. He sat in a hammock under the shade of the mango, guava, and orange trees and tuned his radio to the BBC news.
"Now, this is good English, the kind that you should be listening to," he shouted from the yard.
While Father listened to the news, Junior taught us how to move our feet to the beat. We alternately moved our right and then our left feet to the front and back, and simultaneously did the same with our arms, shaking our upper bodies and heads. "This move is called the running man," Junior said. Afterward, we would practice miming the rap songs we had memorized. Before we parted to carry out our various evening chores of fetching water and cleaning lamps, we would say "Peace, son" or "I'm out," phrases we had picked up from the rap lyrics. Outside, the evening music of birds and crickets would commence.
On the morning that we left for Mattru Jong, we loaded our backpacks with notebooks of lyrics we were working on and stuffed our pockets with cassettes of rap albums. In those days we wore baggy jeans, and underneath them we had soccer shorts and sweatpants for dancing. Under our long-sleeved shirts we had sleeveless undershirts, T-shirts, and soccer jerseys. We wore three pairs of socks that we pulled down and folded to make our crapes* look puffy. When it got too hot in the day, we took some of the clothes off and carried them on our shoulders. They were fashionable, and we had no idea that this unusual way of dressing was going to benefit us. Since we intended to return the next day, we didn't say goodbye or tell anyone where we were going. We didn't know that we were leaving home, never to return.
To save money, we decided to walk the sixteen miles to Mattru Jong. It was a beautiful summer day, the sun wasn't too hot, and the walk didn't feel long either, as we chatted about all kinds of things, mocked and chased each other. We carried slingshots that we used to stone birds and chase the monkeys that tried to cross the main dirt road. We stopped at several rivers to swim. At one river that had a bridge across it, we heard a passenger vehicle in the distance and decided to get out of the water and see if we could catch a free ride. I got out before Junior and Talloi, and ran across the bridge with their clothes. They thought they could catch up with me before the vehicle reached the bridge, but upon realizing that it was impossible, they started running back to the river, and just when they were in the middle of the bridge, the vehicle caught up to them. The girls in the truck laughed and the driver tapped his horn. It was funny, and for the rest of the trip they tried to get me back for what I had done, but they failed.
We arrived at Kabati, my grandmother's village, around two in the afternoon. Mamie Kpana was the name that my grandmother was known by. She was tall and her perfectly long face complemented her beautiful cheekbones and big brown eyes. She always stood with her hands either on her hips or on her head. By looking at her, I could see where my mother had gotten her beautiful dark skin, extremely white teeth, and the translucent creases on her neck. My grandfather or kamor-teacher, as everyone called him-was a well-known local Arabic scholar and healer in the village and beyond.
At Kabati, we ate, rested a bit, and started the last six miles. Grandmother wanted us to spend the night, but we told her that we would be back the following day.
"How is that father of yours treating you these days?" she asked in a sweet voice that was laden with worry.
"Why are you going to Mattru Jong, if not for school? And why do you look so skinny?" she continued asking, but we evaded her questions. She followed us to the edge of the village and watched as we descended the hill, switching her walking stick to her left hand so that she could wave us off with her right hand, a sign of good luck.
We arrived in Mattru Jong a couple of hours later and met up with old friends, Gibrilla, Kaloko, and Khalilou. That night we went out to Bo Road, where street vendors sold food late into the night. We bought boiled groundnut and ate it as we conversed about what we were going to do the next day, made plans to see the space for the talent show and practice. We stayed in the verandah room of Khalilou's house. The room was small and had a tiny bed, so the four of us (Gibrilla and Kaloko went back to their houses) slept in the same bed, lying across with our feet hanging. I was able to fold my feet in a little more since I was shorter and smaller than all the other boys.
The next day Junior, Talloi, and I stayed at Khalilou's house and waited for our friends to return from school at around 2:00 p.m. But they came home early. I was cleaning my crapes and counting for Junior and Talloi, who were having a push-up competition. Gibrilla and Kaloko walked onto the verandah and joined the competition. Talloi, breathing hard and speaking slowly, asked why they were back. Gibrilla explained that the teachers had told them that the rebels had attacked Mogbwemo, our home. School had been canceled until further notice. We stopped what we were doing.
According to the teachers, the rebels had attacked the mining areas in the afternoon. The sudden outburst of gunfire had caused people to run for their lives in different directions. Fathers had come running from their workplaces, only to stand in front of their empty houses with no indication of where their families had gone. Mothers wept as they ran toward schools, rivers, and water taps to look for their children. Children ran home to look for parents who were wandering the streets in search of them. And as the gunfire intensified, people gave up looking for their loved ones and ran out of town.
"This town will be next, according to the teachers." Gibrilla lifted himself from the cement floor. Junior, Talloi, and I took our backpacks and headed to the wharf with our friends. There, people were arriving from all over the mining area. Some we knew, but they couldn't tell us the whereabouts of our families. They said the attack had been too sudden, too chaotic; that everyone had fled in different directions in total confusion.
For more than three hours, we stayed at the wharf, anxiously waiting and expecting either to see our families or to talk to someone who had seen them. But there was no news of them, and after a while we didn't know any of the people who came across the river. The day seemed oddly normal. The sun peacefully sailed through the white clouds, birds sang from treetops, the trees danced to the quiet wind. I still couldn't believe that the war had actually reached our home. It is impossible, I thought. When we left home the day before, there had been no indication the rebels were anywhere near.
"What are you going to do?" Gibrilla asked us. We were all quiet for a while, and then Talloi broke the silence. "We must go back and see if we can find our families before it is too late."
Junior and I nodded in agreement.
Click here to continue reading Chapter One of A Long Way Gone
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Excerpted from A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah. Copyright © 2007 by Ishmael Beah. Published in February 2007 by Sarah Crichton Books, a division of Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC. All rights reserved.
Learn more about A Long Way Gone at the Starbucks Book Break group.


Comments: 42
" I still couldn't believe that the war had actually reached our home."
Will there ever be a generation that doesn't say this ? Your story is everyone's story, whether they realize it or not.
Looks like a great book. I hope it does well so that many ,many people learn of the struggles you and your people went through. God speed.
Halfway reading through, I needed to make a trip out to Omaha to help my friend Maurice with some money again. On my way in I stopped at the bookstore and decided the only book I needed was yours. Even people here in Nebraska are reading your book, as the one I bought was the last copy they had.
I truly liked what I had already read, and it's one way for me to continue learning toward my own writing. I'm quite sure your book will be more than that. God was with you when you wrote your book, and whatever higher power we want to call it, God will remain with you.
If you'd like to read a synopsis of mine, you may search Parallel Opposites. I'll be sure to come back to this page and let people and yourself know how great I think it is. We're born the same year, 1980, I thought that was interesting, too. And how strange it is how many different stories in the world there are that aren't told, and that we're all in this world together. You seem very bright, and I can tell by your writing how bright those of us who write often are.
Additionally, I've been reading Antwone Fisher's memoir Finding Fish. You may like the way it is written, and you may soon decide to write more on your experience as an African living in America, NYC specifically, which is quite an achievement, and I believe most people want the best for you, including people like me.
This article from CNN features Ishmael when he was 21, perhaps while he was in college.
very interesting story. You will be a great writer.
God has you right were you are for an eternal reason.
In His Matchless Mercy we forget that eternity starts here, in our hearts.
Love in Christ,
Soni
www.myspace.com/sonicido
much sorrow for you. I will pray for your well being. I will read more of your story
and I thank you so much for sharing this.
Thank you for your kind words. I will not forget the words of my grandmother and generally the tenets of my traditional and cultural upbringing. They gave me the strength to survive that ordeal of my life and to share my story for the benefit of others.
Ishmael
I would love to hear about your thoughts on the rest of the book when you're done reading.
The reception of the book has been great and I think people have come to understand more about my home and the possibility of its full recovery. Thank you for your good wishes.
Thank you for reading the book. It is indeed the case that even in the worst of circumstances, there are some who are kind and retain their humanity to help others, like the fisherman you spoke about.
I just finished reading your book and was very touched by your story. I was just curious on what kind of action you would like to see in Darfur based on what you have been through. When I read about when you first entered the rehabilitation center I was surprised but then realized how your resistance only made sense. Ever since I heard about the "Invisible Children" and the child soldiers in Uganda I have become passionate about this issue, but I am not sure what the right approach is. I was just wondering if you had any thoughts you would could share about what action should be taken. I loved your book and wanted to thank you for sharing your story. God Bless.
This jaw dropping book was a serious eye opener for me. I thank you for not only bringing awareness but for the inspiration that you have instilled in me through your creative writing to help others in need. "A long way Gone" will also inspire Americans to help put a complete end to this madness and to restore the country. I look forward to hearing your response and to one day meet with you in person during your Starbucks tour. It would be an honor to share with you my full thoughts on your book. You are a true hero and as painful as it may have been to constantly revise your book and to re-visit the horrible memories of your past, I thank you again for sharing your story. God Bless Ishmael.
- Sincerely, Jennifer
Mirika
mirikacornelius.com
Brooklin
Your book was so captivating and inspiring. It was an unbelievable accomplishment and memoir of what you went through. I hope many people can read your book and understand the message that comes with it. Thank you so much for giving me such a different understanding of how life can be so different from one person to the next. I wish you all of the best in your future!
-Bret
Im sorry for your loss, your stronger now.
And your an inspiration.
Merci