
By Francis O’Leary
Each summer, SOJC students travel to Ghana to immerse themselves in hands-on fieldwork. This is the final in a series of posts chronicling the Media in Ghana program through the eyes of student intern Francis O’Leary.
For the first time since I left for my internship in Ghana, I have the apartment to myself. My 19 former housemates have all dispersed. Now I’m sitting in the dining room, trying to come up with some way to summarize six weeks in 500 words or fewer.
I can’t. I could write this post 15 times in 15 different ways, and each would paint a different picture of my time in Ghana. I know already that it will be a long time before I’ve fully unpacked everything that happened. I feel like right now I bring up Ghana in every conversation I have because it’s such a presence in my mind.
I know I can’t stay in the United States forever. I will return to Ghana one day, and to other parts of Africa. I’ll be sure to see Eastern Europe and the Middle East on the advisement of my father. I’d like to practice journalism in the Spanish-speaking world. There’s no place I don’t want to learn about, go to and meet the people of. Though Ghana wasn’t the first country I’ve been to abroad, it’s the first one I’ve been privileged to experience so deeply. And it’s just the beginning.