![]() ![]() She has never married, but has a relationship with a recluse like herself who suffers from post-polio syndrome. Working for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, she studies the life histories of viruses, including AIDS and the Ebola virus. She views her own children as the beginning of the healing process.Īdah is trying to save children by learning about disease. Leah wishes for forgiveness from Africa for what her people have done to it. Families come to live with them and help them raise pigs and grow maize, yams, and soybeans. There's the possibility of balance." She and Anatole are living in Angola now, on an agricultural station. What there is in this world, I think, is a tendency for human errors to level themselves like water throughout their sphere of influence. After a lifetime of fiercely believing in justice, she comes to the conclusion that "there is no justice in this world. Leah imagines Africa before the Europeans came and thinks about how the Europeans changed life there for the worse. She recognizes that Africa is Africa and cannot be changed, as much as men like her father believe it can be: "The way I see Africa, you don't have to like it but you sure have to admit it's out there." ![]() She imagines she can never go home to the United States now, not after so much has happened to her she just wouldn't be able to fit in. She is proud of her hotel and how well she has kept herself, but she misses the United States and regrets not having children. ![]()
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