Penn State students and alumni are traveling around the world to conduct research, teach English, attend master's degree programs and more as part of the Fulbright U.S. Student Program, a highly sought-after international educational exchange program funded by the U.S. Department of State. This essay was written by Jonathan Hanna, a Penn State Fulbright recipient who has embarked on his Fulbright trip.
Ten Penn Staters earned Fulbright awards for the 2017-18 academic year. For more information about applying for the program, visit the University Fellowships Office’s website.
"You want pot-trie? Look, I got loads!" The half-naked man was yelling out the window of a small, dilapidated board-house, shaking a bowl full of prehistoric ceramic sherds.
I looked up. "No, no, I'm just trying to find the boundaries of the site, thanks.”
The man mumbled something as his face turned sour. "Eh, so ya pay dat man and not me??" A machete appeared next to his bowl of ceramics. I apologized, but he kept yelling as I walked away.
The man was right: I did pay the landowner a few dollars to survey a site (Montreuil) on his property, but this guy doesn’t own any land -- he’s a squatter. And I certainly don’t want to encourage his looting activities. As I got closer to the river, footpaths were running in all directions, dodging feral gardens and old plantation walls to connect myriad shacks like this one. With that amount of people, it would be difficult to investigate further. I headed back to my jeep and decided to give up on Montreuil.
That was last year, when I began an archaeological survey project to assess the locations, sizes, and chronologies of every prehistoric site in Grenada as part of my Ph.D. dissertation. As a major entry point into the Caribbean, Grenada was likely a landmark to prehistoric mariners traveling to and from mainland South America. Yet, in comparison to the Greater Antilles, much of the Lesser Antilles have been under-researched. And Montreuil is one of just two inland sites known in Grenada — all the others are within a few hundred meters of a beach.
Grenada is like a second home to me now. As a former Peace Corps Volunteer, I had already learned its culture, its language, its politics, and its poverty before my Fulbright experience. But it was exactly that experience that made my project so feasible. Who else was better placed to, “empower local people to become stewards of their cultural resources,” than an archaeologist who had already lived and breathed that culture for years in the Peace Corps?
My counterpart in the Ministry of Tourism (Michael Jessamy) agreed, and he wrote a strong letter of support for my application. The aim of the project is to expand public outreach and awareness of Amerindian sites, while simultaneously conducting fieldwork for my dissertation.