Wednesday, March 28, 2007

These Days

These days I seem to think a lot...

So where to start... How about Thursday? It was early afternoon, and I was on my way to my class titled, "Topics in Pan-Africanism: Workshop in Pan-African and Diasporic Jazz Improvization." (What a long and drawn out name. The class is supposed to be about improvization, but really it's just a class where we play the same four beats on a big cowbell every week. So anyway, I was on my way to this class, hoping that today we would do more than play bells, and I decided on a whim to take the short cut to class. It's not really a whole lot shorter - more of an alternate path that seems more direct. I didn't start using it at all until maybe a month ago when it occured to me that I wanted to spice my life up a bit, take a different path for a change. This alternate path goes right by one of those large sewage streams that violate my nostrils. Well, this particular day there were several men in the ditch shoveling out trash and mud so that the sewage could flow more easily. I put no blame on anyone for what happened when I walked by that sewage stream, because, I suppose I should've let them know I was passing by. How could that nice man working to clean out that ditch have intentionally shoveled sewage on me? No, no one was to blame. This was what we call an unfortunate experience. I had gross, smelly sewage mud all over my shorts, my arm, and my water bottle. I instantly froze and tried to assess the reality of the situation.

The men instantly realized what had just happened, and they felt pretty bad. One guy got out of the ditch and started trying to clean me off, which was nice, but I just wanted to get out of there. Now, if you know me, then you know that I don't let foul smells stop me from my daily activity. I walked to the academic center and washed my right hand and arm thoroughly (and they say it's the left hand that's dirty) thoroughly. I washed my shorts as best as I could, and then went into class with one of my dad and my sister's new fragrances... "Sewage Shovel... by Ralph Lauren." Luckily, we had class outside. In class, we actually did something than play bells! We got litte bamboo reed flutes, which are pretty cool. The tone quality is not so hot, but it's fun to play, and it's pretty much impossible to make it sound bad. As long as you can breathe properly and move your fingers a bit, you're in business (meaning I'm in business).

I'm still worried about the fate of the class... we're supposed to have some sort of little concert as our final, but it seems that we've done so little in the way of actually improvising or playing instruments other than bells and bamboo flutes. Actually, I have been playing Henry's drum for a little while now. He got a beautiful drum made, and it sounds AMAZING! I'm actually going to the Arts Center tomorrow to get one made. I'm going to the same guy who made Henry's drum, so I know I will be getting quality. I've also begun to pick up Dipesh's guitar recently and strum a few bum-diddlies. I haven't been singing quite as much as a result of all these other things, but hey, sometimes you gotta try out new things - or revisit past loves.

Speaking of new things, we are starting to make films in my "Documenting the African City" course. During the first half of the semester, we learned a few things about how to use the cameras - lighting, focus, setting time codes, hooking up microphones, etc., etc. In another class we took a field trip to Jamestown and Nima. We've also had some pretty cool guest lecture filmmakers. We've watched some movies. It's a pretty good class. Two classes, one before Spring Break and then one the day after Spring Break ended, we made short little films in the compound just to let us get some practice using the cameras. Seeing as how the academic center isn't very big, there wasn't a whole lot to film, but we all came up with some pretty creative ideas. Some worked, some failed. As films do.

But now we're actually off making two films. The main one we're making is a 15-minute documentary about the waste management situation in Accra. In many parts of the city, there is no infrastructure for waste management. There are no trashcans around, no public authority enforcing proper waste disposal, and so people just throw their plastic water bags on the ground like it's the most normal thing in the world. We're going to perform an experiment where we set up five trash cans 50 meters apart along a busy stretch of road. On each trashcan, we're going to attach a sign that says, "Please put your trash here." We've chosen two locations: Ring Road near Labone Junction and Jamestown, both very busy areas where there are no trashcans. We're going to monitor the amount of trash that goes into the trashcans and onto the ground, one for the purpose of just seeing if people would use trashcans if they were around, and two to interview both people that use the trashcans and don't to find out their motives. Then we're going to interview a few students at La Yahoushua Primary and Junior Secondary School to find out if they are taught anything about waste management in school. We also want to look at the institutional side of the equation as well, both government and private waste management services. It's a pretty ambitious project, and I look forward to starting.

But we haven't started filming that yet. Right now we're working on a five-minute documentary to give us practice for the longer one. Hannah, Tania, and I (my fellow filmmakers on both projects) sat around and thought about what a person could possibly make a five-minute documentary on. We knew we should try to focus on one simple thing, a process. "What about the chicken thing, killing and eating a chicken?" Hannah so brilliantly suggested. So this past Sunday, we went to Apapa, a nearby neighborhood, and purchased two chickens, just like last time. Only Hannah and Tania weren't present last time (in fact neither of them have seen this been done, and they were both reluctant at first, even Hannah who had the idea in the first place). So the three of us and Rasheed went and got us some chickens.

We got out the camera and set it up on the tripod, white balanced the camera, adjusted for the current lighting, and action after action after action. This is when I discovered that making films isn't quite so easy. It seems like you could just point the camera and shoot, but oh no, there's so much more to it. The difficulty isn't just in the technical aspects of adjusting the camera and the lens' setting, but also in framing a nice shot and having it look like it's just happening - there's not actually a camera pointed at those two people, and a boom mike hovering above them. Yes, documentary filmmaking, where fact and fiction intermingle ever so intricately.

However, there was no fiction to be found in the fate of those chickens. We captured some shots of Rasheed and Hannah entering the chicken place (well, I'm sure it's someone's house or something, but to me it's the chicken place), a few shots of the chickens in the cage, some shots of the chicken man (same logic as above) getting the chickens for Hannah and Rasheed, and then finally a few shots of Rahsheed cleaning chicken poo off of his shirt. Oh Rahsheed. You're such a great sport. After that, we cabbed it over to Rasheed's house for the slaughter. We were in a hurry because we didn't want to run out of the daylight. The whole lighting thing makes filming so much more inconvenient. Unless it's overcast outside, you can't film from maybe 10AM to 3PM because it's too bright outside. But once it hits 6PM, the light's almost out.

We did not run out of light that night, and luckily, no one ran out of patience, although Rahsheed almost lost it once. We wanted to get lots of different shots of the chicken and the people watching the slaughter, the de-feathering, cleaning, de-gutting, etc, and so we had to stop him in the process many times and ask him to wait for us to set up a new shot. He was fine, though, and we were all happy with the shoot, our first filmmaking. Today we filmed another scene at the Top-in-Town supermarket in Osu. We had Hannah browsing the freezer aisle and picking up a packet of pre-cut packaged chicken, and then proceeding to the checkout to purchase the chicken. We're also going to film a short little interview with her about where she gets her chicken and whatnot, and then tomorrow night we're going to cook the chicken which is currently sitting in my freezer. We'll get shots of putting the chicken in the oven, and then shots of Rahsheed and Hannah chomping down on some tasty chicken. Hopefully it won't be too chewy this time. This weekend, we edit, which I'm sure will be a whole new adventure.

So I've got a lot ahead of me just with those films. It kind of sucks, though, because all my classes seemed to have saved all the work for the end of the semester. The first half of this semester, I didn't even feel like I was in school. We hardly did anything in my classes, had practically no work at all, and the week of independence I only had 1 out of my 4 classes, and then the week after that was Spring Break. And now I've got these films to work on, this concert to think about which I still have no idea how we're going to pull off, and two big research projects to do, one for my African Popular Music class, and the other for my Globlization and the Developing World. I'm actually excited about working on all of these projects, but it sucks that I have to do them all in about a month.

One thing I realized recently is that, in terms of the pace of life here, I actually kind of feel like I'm in Douglas for the summer. Every day I wake up, it's really hot. And every day I wake up, I wonder, "What am I going to do today?" Of course, I always find something, it just seems like nothing happens here. Don't get me wrong - I didn't say that nothing happens here, just that sometimes it seems that way. Maybe the heat has something to do with it. I also think the weather in general here might be to blame. I was talking to Meagan the other day and I said to her, "Don't you think it's weird that the weather just doesn't really change here? It's just always hot, all year long. Half the year it doesn't rain at all, and half the year it rains some, but that's about the only change." Then she said to me, "I think it's weirder that in New York it can be 100 degrees outside but then a few months later it snows." She's probably right. That is strange now that I think about it. But nevertheless, I'm used to seasons changing. Normally I would be witnessing the emergence of spring this time of year, but instead, it's still just really hot. On top of that, when I finally do get back home (I'm speaking of Douglas home, not New York home), the South Georgia weather will pretty much pick up where Ghana left off.

We in Accra did receive a pleasant surprise this past Monday, though, when we received our first rain of the year. I'm sure some sort of precipitation has fallen somewhere in Accra before this happened. Perhaps there was an invisible drizzle one night as I lay in my unconscious. But this was the first for real rain. It started pouring when I was in my "Documenting" class, and I immediately knew that I needed to be in that rain as soon as possible. I stepped outside after class and became nice and wet, but most surprising, COOL! I never thought this would happen in Accra, but I was actually kind of cool walking around outside. I expected that the rain would be hot (I love hot rain, warming up my foot in a nice puddle by the road), but this rain was actually kind of cold. Of course I didn't complain. I need some cool weather after endless days of heat. It stayed pretty cool for the rest of the day and night. It was incredible. In fact, we actually had a power-out night (the water level in the Volta Lake Dam is low again) that same night, and I had no trouble sleeping at all because it was so nice and cool. (In all reality, it was probably more like lukewarm, although those sorts of words are usually saved to describe water).

That's pretty much what's been going on with me. On Saturday and Sunday, I'm going to a small village outside of Accra to participate in a Habitat-for-Humanity build. I'm looking forward to it. If you are not familiar with Habitat for Humanity, go look it up. Peace.

Friday, March 23, 2007

If America was a bit more like Ghana...

*You address a person by the color of his or her skin. "How are you, black man?" "I am fine white man." You could say something like that. Or perhaps, "Indian woman, pass the butter." Something like that.

*When you're walking down the streets of New York and you've got to pee really badly, you don't look for a store that has a bathroom. You just go right there on the sidewalk, as long as there's no sign telling you not to. If you have to poo, just go to Coney Island.

*Advertising isn't such a lucrative business, except for Coca-Cola (because no one can escape the presence of Coca-Cola). Instead of reading billboards and seeing commericals all day, you just walk down the street and people will yell what you want right at you. "Pure water!"

*It takes 8-10 hours to get from Douglas to Atlanta, or DC to New York, depending on the quality of the road that day and how many police barriers you encounter.

*However, even if you live in Douglas, you can simply walk out to the highway and within a half hour, flag down a crowded, half broken-down van that should've been recalled in the 50's, hop in the back, and be on your way. The journey only costs you about $6 or $7.

*Whenever you are surprised, shocked, disgusted, or having a revelation, you let out a nice emphatic "Ooh!" sound.

*All chain stores decide to make a reference to God in the name of their stores. Some of the changes include, "The Lord Lives Wal-Mart," "Bethlehem Fried Chicken," "ChurCheese" (oh wait! That's actually in Ghana!), "Hail Mary Radio Shack," and of course, "Victoria's Secret Immaculate Conception."

*Instead of drinking water from bottles, you drink them from plastic bags, and when you're done with that bag, you just throw it on the ground. Someone will gather and burn it later.

*You approach foreigners and immediately try to be their friends. Within a minute, you have their phone number, or a big, "Up yours, buddy."

*You go through the drive-through at "God's Will Burger King," and instead of ordering a hamburger, frech fries, and Coca-Cola, you order fufu with goat meat and peanut soup and a Coca-Cola (because no one can escape the Coca-Cola empire).

*You have just gotten your master's degree, but you can't get any job other than selling plantain chips and pineapple on the side of the road. To add to your pains, your oldest son has an English teacher who hasn't showed up in over two months. But on the bright side, you don't have to hire anyone to watch baby Jim for the day. You just strap him on your back and take him with you to work.

*Your electricity goes out quite often. (Okay, that one isn't funny. It's just true).

*When you turn six, you start school and the teachers try to teach you everything in Russian. And they actually expect you to learn! (Oh wait...)

*You ask someone on the street if they have the time, and they say, "Yes, please."

*You go to "The Lord Giveth Walgreens" and bring a tube of chapstick to the check out. When the cashier rings it up and tells you, "That'll be $1.19," you say, "Oh no, that's too much. I'll give you 70 cents."

*"The Lord Gives Wal-Mart" has decided to make all their stores outdoors and just have independent sellers for all of their products. They are now "The Lord Gives Wal-Market."

*There are men on bicycles with horns selling bags of frozen chocolate milk and frozen strawberry yogurt. You cannot wait for them to come your way again.

*You wake up every day and it's hot as balls outside.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Spring Break, Day 7

Saturday, March 17

In the middle of the night, I awoke with quite a disturbance. I had no idea how long I had been sleeping. The fan was off - the electricity must have gone off. I was hot and sweaty and extremely dehydrated. I laid there in the bed not really knowing what to do, just feeling completely bizarre. After a few minutes, it became clear that I couldn't just keep laying there. I got up out of the bed and stood up. In that instant my mind and my stomach felt like they had just been twisted up like a little kid on a swing and then just released to go back and forth, back and forth. Rachel woke up and asked if I was alright (it's always Rachel and me in the middle of the night... Tania just sleeps through it all). I told her I needed some fresh air. I walked outside to a little concrete area in front of our room. I then proceeded to the front door of the hotel which was locked shut. I felt very weak, so I immediately sat down on the concrete. Right after sitting down, I knew I was going to hurl everywhere. As much I didn't want to move, I didn't want to throw up all over the concrete for someonoe to clean up the next day.

I stumbled to the bathroom, unable to see a thing (remember, electricity off), so I just felt for the toilet, clutched it, and then let everything go. I threw up a lot. It was pretty intense. The whole while I was throwing up and gagging and drooling, I could taste that meat from the sandwich I ate earlier. It was hot and nasty. Some of it clearly hadn't digested so well. Tania and Rachel immediately got up and asked if I was going to be alright, horrified by my spewing but also kind of laughing at the situation. I told them I'd be ok. They went outside. They were having a hard time sleeping anyway. We all were considering the heat with no air conditioner or fan.

After my long hurl session (Tania would later tell me it was the most she's ever seen or heard anyone throw up), it became clear that I had another problem on my hands. Well, on my hands, in my intestines actually. It was the most intense diarrhea attack I've ever experienced. I told Tania and Rachel and once again they were horrified but laughing, not only at me, but just at our whole trip in general, all these crazy things happening, and here's what Drew gets for it. I finally finished releasing all the various wastes from my body, and I stood up. I felt okay. Clearly whatever was inside me that had made me sick was gone now.

Unfortunately, the toilet wouldn't flush, and the fan still didn't work, so now the room was hot AND it smelled like crap. So I went outside with Rachel and Tania, and we all sat around on the concrete, just laughing in disbelief at how little life made sense. Finally we all layed down on the concrete, no pillows or blankets, me only in my boxers. It wasn't cool outside or anything, but compared to being in the room, outside was a blessing, and we all fell asleep there on the concrete.

I woke up again when the sun was up. I was still outside on the concrete in my boxers. I didn't see Tania or Rachel outside, so I turned my head and I saw them laying on the bed in the room, the door wide open. I got up as if I had just done the most normal thing in the world and went back to the bed. The fan was working now, so it would not be such torture. I woke up again at 8 in the morning, once again feeling pretty dehydrated. I quickly got dressed and left the hotel. I still had the taste of regurgitated meat in my mouth. I found a little store and bought a bottle of water which I drank very happily. I then went back to the hotel and took a much-needed shower. I had only showered twice on the whole trip, and I just felt disgusting.

When Rachel and Tania got up, they showered and we chatted once again about how little sense life made. We also decided at this point not to stay in Ouidah Saturday night, which we had been thinking about doing. We went to get breakfast. We couldn't find any coffee and omelettes, but we did find a later selling rice, spaghetti, and beans with different sauces. So I ate some which made me feel a lot better. It also made me realize how tired I still was, though, so I told Tania and Rachel that I didn't think I could do anything in Ouidah. I said it was fine if they wanted to do some stuff, but I was just too tired to enjoy anything. So I went to the cultural center in town which was really more like a nice park that can't be seen from the street. I went to a little bench where we all sat down our bags. Tania and Rachel bid me farewell for a few hours, I laid down on the ground, and then I went to sleep. There were only a few people there, but they didn't seem to mind. A teenage boy came over to me and asked me if I was okay. I explained as best I could to him that I did not feel well but that I was alright and my friends were coming back.

They did come back quite soon after I got up. That was a relief to me because I didn't want to sit around this place all day. They did a few things - went to a market, met some Spanish lady, saw a few temples - things like that. We took zemidjans back to the main road where we could get a taxi to the Benin-Togo border. That's when we met the lady whose daughter lives in Atlanta. She was really nice. She shared a taxi with us to the border, and she also helped us get a good price for the taxi (which we needed desperately because we had almost no money). Luckily, at the border, people were exchanging cedis and CFAs. We had cedis, so we got some CFAs so we could get a cab ride to Ghana. It turned out that one of the guys we shared a cab with to the border (it was a 6-person operation) was a taxi driver, so he took all five of us who had ridden with him to the border. Amazingly, it only takes about 45 minutes to drive from the Benin border to the Ghana border. The country's that skinny!

I was so happy to cross the border and get back into Ghana where life at least kind of makes sense. I could tell the second I crossed the border that the people had changed. It brought a smile to my face. We found the tro-tro to Accra, and I eagerly got in the back, excited to be going back to Accra. Well, the ride back was horrible. I mean, horrible. There were twelve, I repeat twelve (12) police barriers between Aflao and Accra. The whole trip is only about 220Km, so that's more than one police barrier every 18km. It got to be pretty aggravating. A few of them only took a few minutes to take care of, but some of them took 10 or 15 minutes. One time we got stopped immigration officers, and we all had to get off the tro-tro and show the officers our passports and IDs. What should have been a three-hour drive ended up being a five-hour drive. Not the ideal ending to a long trip, but most certainly a fitting ending to the craziness that was my Spring Break. As soon as I got back to my place, I made a big bowl of oatmeal and sat around the rest of the night doing nothing but enjoying the knowledge that the next day, I didn't have to go anywhere.

The End.

Spring Break pictures

Here are the rest of the pictures from my Spring Break trip. The first three I got off the internet. The rest Tania took. The first 12 pictures are from Porto-Novo. The rest are Ouidah. Hope you've ejoyed the journey as much as I did!






















Spring Break, Day 6

Friday, March 16

It would be inaccurate to say it started raining when I woke u, because I actually woke up many times throughout the night, but the time I woke up and it was becoming daylight, it began to rain. Up until this point, I had yet to experience raining in West Africa. It's been the dry season since I've been here, but the dry season is just starting to end, so I got my first West African rain. Even though I was extremely tired, I immediately jumped out of bed and said to the wind, "Is that rain?" I went out to the back porch, and indeed, it was rain. It was so beautiful seeing the rain hitting all that water. What was even more amazing was the sound. At first it was just a trickle, and I had laid back down and almost drifted back into sleep, but then came crashing down by far the loudest thunderbolt I have ever heard in my entire life. It seriously sounded like the earth had just broken in half or something. Right after the thunder, the rain got crazy, and all I could hear was water hitting more water really fast and really hard. I didn't get up to see it, but I did drift off for the ump-teenth time to the sound of that rain.

The next time I woke up, the rain had stopped and the sun had really come out. For some reason, I felt like I had slept until 2 in the afternoon, but in reality it was only 10 in the morning. I wanted to just sleep all day long, not just because it would have been awesome laying in bed all day, but something about the stilt village had me kind of hypnotized or something. A woman came rowing by sellings beans and gari, and since the hotel breakfast was extremely overpriced, I bought that woman's beans and gari. And they were delicious. That woke me up pretty well, so with that, we were all ready to leave the stilt village, probably the only one we will ever see, and go back to land. We had a very pleasant boat ride back, and we had a great conversation that will be the topic of a future blog (because it was just that special).

As we got closer to land, we started getting some more dirty looks from people in boats, just as we had gotten on the way out to the village. I wonder what they were thinking. Anyway, we got some pineapple and then caught a taxi to Cotonou. We asked the driver to drop us off at the station for Porto-Novo, the capital of Benin. As soon as we got out and asked someone about Porto-Novo, a man came and started grabbing our bags and saying, "Come this way, follow me." (Well, I imagine he said that... I don't speak French, you know). He took us to a taxi that a was a little longer but more narrow than other taxis. There were three people in the front, three in the middle, and one girl in the back. They told us to get in the back, so two of us got in and we figured out that there was no way another person could fit in the car. So then the driver kicked the girl in the back out of the cab. We were really upset and confused by this. Her money's just as good as ours. Why should she get kicked out?

We were just about to get out of the cab when a few other ladies started getting angry about something (none of us had any idea what they were talking about... when people argue, they use their native language, not French or English, which always makes these arguments confusing). They were arguing with the driver and some other lady in the cab, and so they left. So then the girl who got kicked out of the back got back in. She didn't seem upset by any of this, just confused. Soon another person got in and we finally left for Porto-Novo. Since the city is so close, it only took about an hour to get there.

Porto-Novo is the capital of Benin, even though Cotonou is much bigger. It's a city of about 250,000 residents, a good size for a city to be. The guidebook had said that there wasn't a whole lot to do there, but that it was a really pretty city. I was in the mood for a medium-sized, boring pretty city by this point in the trip. However, when the cab dropped us off, it didn't look much different than some radom town on the road from Accra to Cape Coast. There was nothing but dirt roads and small shops. We thought that surely there must be more than what we were seeing before us. We asked a few people where centreville was (downtown). The first woman we asked told us there was no centreville. The next woman told us that we were in centreville, which I found very unamusing. Another man told us he wasn't sure where centreville was, but he gave us a direction to walk in that he thought would be good. Great.

So we walked down dirt roads for about 30 minutes, feeling a bit discouraged and a lot disappointed. We would have been happy with just a cool place to hang out, but there was no such thing. So we kept walking, changing direction from the one the guy had told us, and soon we came to a paved room. All of a sudden, I noticed the road ahead as well as the sidewalk was covered in beatiful grey patterned bricks, the kind of touch that makes a city feel like a classic. Well, we had just found centreville. Apparently those people we had talked to earlier have never taken that 30-minute walk from where they work to town or else they just didn't understand what we were asking. We found three zemidjans drivers and asked them if they would give us a 30-minute tour of the city. They agreed, so we each hopped on the back of a motorcycle and off we went. All of a sudden, my dreams of being in a quiet pretty city were realized. Porto-Novo is a beautiful city. The city is what one would imagine a colonial Brazilian city to be like with that distinct Portuguese architecture. All the paint on the buildings is slightly fading away, but not to the point of decay, adding another element of that classic feel. There were many beautiful buildings in Porto-Novo such as the cathedral, a mosque that was in the style of a church (so incredible!), and the main voodoo temple. There was also a beautiful park in the middle of the city with benches and a nice green lawns. On top of the beauty of the city, the people were also noticably more dressed up and very friendly. I couldn't believe that this place was only an hour away from Cotonou. The difference is incredible. We met a nice man named George who worked at the cultural center. He watched our bags for us while we were in the city, even though looking back we probably should have just stayed the night.
After the motorcycles dropped us off, we explored a bit, hitting up the market and a telecenter to call our parents. We tried to go inside of the mosque, but it was Friday so we couldn't enter.

We visited the Palace of the King (well, it was for several hundred years... now it's a museum). The tour guide showed us around the palace, pointing out to the us the uses of every room. The rooms were very Roman, with three or four different levels in each room that started low in the center and then went up on the sides. There were rooms for bathing, eating, relaxation, receiving guests, and there was even a suicide room. Only the King can enter that room, and he can only enter if he plans to commit suicide. Two kings have used the room before. The tour guide told us that when a king died, all 18 of his wives had to die as well, as so they would poison the women and then bury them alive with the king, and then they'd all die from the poison. Pretty crazy.

After the palace, we went to get our bags and then we were hungry. Tania and I got a beef and pepper sandwich to split from a street vendor. Rachel got a mayonaisse sandwich (barf) since she doesn't eat meat, and then we went to that beautiful park to sit on the grass and enjoy our evening meal as it was getting dark. As we were finishing up, a group of 10 young children attacked us (if you haven't figured out now, when I use the word 'attack,' I'm only referring to the level of enthusiam with which they approached us). They started asking us our names and where we were from, who's the president of our home country, our emails, and all other sorts of random questions. They told us it was for their homework, but when we looked at their papers, it had nothing to do with strangers' nationalities and their presidents. We left those kids after about 10 minutes to go to Ouidah, the voodoo capital. Of course, we had to take a tro-tro to Cotonou first. I sat in the back with Rachel and two other women, and halfway through the ride, the seat gave out and we all went flying back at the same time. It was pretty funny (well, the first time anyway).

So we got to Cotonou, already our third visit to the city. We were dropped off in a random place not knowing where to go to get to Ouidah. So we asked someone. They directed us to go across the street, so we did. Then we asked someone else who said it was just up the road, so we walked a little further. We kept asking people where it was, and just like with finding the hotel the first night and finding the American cultural center the day before, people kept telling us to go just a little bit further in a certain direction. After walking for about 20 minutes, we asked a zemidjan driver where we could get a taxi to Ouidah. He told us that we should get on his motorcylce because it was too far to walk. We'd be walking all night, he told us. Well, he was right. Even though I really didn't want to, I hopped onto the back of a zemidjan on a Friday night, essentially throwing myself into a video came called something like "Thunder Road Death Match." But I survived, and it turned out the zemidjan driver was right. It took about 15 minutes to get to the taxi by motorcycle. Who knows how long we would've been walking.

Rachel and I got stuck in the front of this bush taxi (remember, 6 people). I sat on the inside, practically on top of the gear shift. Halfway through the ride, my butt started to go numb and Rachel fell asleep on me, her weight pushing me further and further into the driver until finally I woke her up. We got to Ouidah and told the taxi driver the hotel we wanted to stay at. He drove us right past Ouidah to the beach where the hotel we had chosen was. We discovered, though, that the hotel only had the most expensive rooms available at that moment which cost about 18,000 CFA ($36) a night. We didn't even have 18,000 CFA on us. No seriously, we only had about 15,000 CFA and we discovered that the only ATM Ouidah had was an Ecobank, which doesn't accept Visa cards. So we sat outside of the hotel on the dirt road for a long time, waiting for a taxi or a motorcycle to come by. It seemed very unlikely considering how late and deserted it was. The guy at the hotel kept trying to convince us to stay, and we kept trying to explain that we just didn't have the money. Finally a zemidjan came by and agreed to take us back to Ouidah to a cheaper hotel. Tania went first since she could actually talk to the people at the hotel. While Rachel and I were waiting for Tania to come back, we sat in the hotel with all the workers and possibly some of their friends, about six people in total. There were music video playing on the television. They were all so hilarious. Whoever directed the videos must have just gotten their first blue screen and had a field day with it. Each one was just a woman or some group of strangely dressed men singing and dancing with random images of mountains and buildings and whatever else in the background. It was pretty great.

The zemidjan took us to the new hotel, only 5000 CFA a night. We had a small room with a double bed and a fan. I needed some water immediately because I felt dehydrated, and all they had was a frozen sache of water. All the stores in the town were closed, so I had to deal. I stayed up for a long time, trying all kinds of creative methods to make it melt a little faster. I stuck the bag under my armpit, breathed on it, ran water under it... just to get that little bit of water. Then I layed down and immediately passed out, unaware of what surprise would await me several hours later...

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Spring Break pictures

The first pictures here are from Ganvier, the stilt village. The second bit of pictures are from Cotonou. The last picture I found on the internet. It says more about Cotonou than I ever could.

















Spring Break, Day 5

Thursday, March 15

Other than the creepy knocking in the middle of the night, I awoke from a very peaceful and heavy sleep. We went to get breakfast at a little breakfast stand like the one I went to my first morning in Lomé. There were all kinds of misunderstandings in our order. We ordered three coffees, two oatmeals, two omelettes, and three saches of water. So then we got one omelette, one oatmeal, one coffee, one sache of water, and one baguette, which we didn't even order. So we had to tell the guy our order again, and this time again he brought us one of every item as opposed to what we actually wanted. Everyone else at the breakfast place was looking at us like we were retarded and didn't know how to order food. Like I've said, some things I'll just never understand.

We decided to take a walk around Cotonou. When exploring a city, there's no better way than to just take a long stroll. We quickly discovered that Cotonou is by far the most polluted city I've ever been to. The number of motorcycles in the city far outnumbers Lomé, and we discovered that they don't exactly use the cleanest fuel possible. Some even use coal just because it's so cheap. So the result is that thousands of motorcycles are emitting dense, thick, dirty exhaust, making it extremely to breathe. Mixed with the heat, the pollution makes Cotonou almost not worth exploring at all for me. Of course, it's not quite so bad off the main roads.
I'm not really sure what to make of Cotonou. It's not a particularly beautiful or ugly city. The city is much more chaotic than Accra or Lomé, and people are generally not as friendly (although we also got harassed even less here, so it's a win-lose situation). The city is not as clean as Lomé, but probably also not quite as dirty as Accra. The city has a lot of cool restaurants, plenty of businesses, a cool market, a beach - all the things Lomé and Accra have. The only difference is that Cotonou doesn't seem to have much charm. Walking around the city, I didn't get the feeling of being in a particular place. The city didn't seem very local. I just felt like I was in some big city.

There were a few cool places we went to in Cotonou, though. The big church of Cotonou, which looks like a big candy cane, was very gorgeous. There was a funeral taking place when we visited, so we weren't able to go inside, but we admired the church and took a moment to take a break from breathing in motorcycle exhaust. We also went to the cultural center where we met a poet and painter named Chevina. Chevina was telling us his philosophy on art which sounded to me like "art for art's sake." He told us that his biggest defect was that he talked to much. I'd say he was right. He also told us his favorite books were the Bible and Les Miserables. Hmmm... not my cup of tea, but fair enough. Nonetheless, he was an interesting guy. He wrote all these poems using the acronyms of French-speaking countries around the world. I was unaware that there were quite so many! He gave Rachel a book of his poems and signed it for her. Of course, I'm not sure how she'll read it since it's in French.

We had read in the guidebook that Cotonou had an American Cultural Center, which amused the three of us. We talked about how all the big cities in West Africa - Accra, Lomé, Cotonou, Ouagadougou (which I didn't go to, but Rachel and Tania did) - have French cultural centers, so we wanted to see what an American cultural center was like. Of course, I told you about asking for directions in Cotonou. People kept telling us where it was, but they always made it seem like it was just around the corner when in fact it was really far away. So we kept walking, the whole time thinking we were about to be there, and then finally we realized that we just weren't meant to visit the American Cultural Center. I'm still curious as to what is there, though.

We decided that Cotonou wasn't the most fun place to hang out, so we decided to leave earlier and head for Ganvier, a stilt village on a lake just outside of Cotonou. This was probably the strangest place I've ever stayed in my entire life. We got to the lake, only a 30 minute drive outside of Cotonou, and bought tickets to take a boat out to the village. There were tons of boats and people in the departure area. We saw a few other tourists, which was to be expected when you have the opportunity to stay the night in a stilt village. Some of the people in the little boat area gave us really dirty looks, like we were intruders. I suppose we were in some ways. One woman even covered her face as she was rowing by us so that we couldn't see it. As soon as she passed us, she took the cloth off of her face.

The three of us loaded up in a canoe with our bags and two guys who paddled for us. The guy in the front told us the story of the village. The lake the village is on is 218 km², and the village itself is 8 km inland, about a 30-minute canoe ride. The village, Ganvier, was founded in 1717 by people who lived in a little village on the Togo-Benin border. The king of their tribe was waging war on another tribe, and so the king was drafting people to fight in the war. The people in this village were not in support of the war and didn't want to fight, so they decided to build a village on a lake to avoid being drafted. Talk about draft dodging. There's another story that goes along with it that has to do with all the villagers getting to the site of their village on the backs of crocodiles, but I was a little unsure of if the crocodile thing was related to the war. Anyway, the village primarily makes its money from fishing (what else are you going to do on a lake?), although there are also other jobs within the community. I was surprised to learn that the population of Ganvier is 35,000, larger than Douglas! We told the guy rowing the boat that the town I'm from in is smaller than Ganvier, and I'm not sure he believed me. I should also note that Ganvier is not the only village on the lake, but its the largest and most commercial (meaning there are hotels there).

We moved across the big still lake, beautiful yet dirty (because it does not communicate with the ocean). Right after we reached the point that we could no longer see land on the horizon behind us, we began to see little buildings make of small wood sticks standing tall and proud above the water, supported by even more smaller sticks, the stilts. Right when we went between the first two buildings (the outskirts you could call them), we were in the village. Suddenly, more and more buildings started appearing everywhere. Children poked their heads out windows and ran out to the porches to wave at us, scream at us, ask money from us, or just laugh and smile at us. After being in the village for a few minutes, all I had seen were children, so I began to think maybe the village was run by screaming little children. We began to notice that several buildings had artificial earth built in front or around them, serving as people's only land to stand firm on. Sometimes these patches of artificial earth connected a few buildings, but for the most part, you had to take boats to get from one place to another. I was surprised (although I shouldn't have been really) to find that there were tons of chickens, goats, and boars in the village. I felt kind of bad for them, especially the goats, trapped on their small pieces of artificial earth.

As we went further and further into the village, it became clear to us that this stilt village extended for a long time in any given direction. Pretty much all the buildings stuck to the same design, but some buildings were very colorful. Some pieces of artificial earth contained voodoo temples, statues, and fetish priests. The guy paddling the boat pointed out to us the local school, the hospital, pharmacy, the market and a few restaurants. But the real joy of the village is what happens in the water. Lots of people were wading about in the water, trying to catch fish or crabs. Women rode by with boats of pineapples or pharmaceuticals or vegetables, selling them just as they would on land (except on land they carry these things on their heads instead of in boats). Lots and lots of people would hold their hands out as they went by us, wanting us to give them a little money. I suppose it's like our payment for intruding on their life.

The boat took us to the hotel we were to stay at, Chez M. Ironically enough, Chez M was probably the nicest hotel we stayed at on our whole trip. The hotel had a large dirt courtyard, a big restaurant and craft shop, and rooms downstairs and up. The rooms actually had showers with running water and a toilet that flushed! It was amazing. The hotel even had toilet paper! (To add more irony to the situation, though, I have to say that I had my worst sleep yet that night, but I'll save that for later...).

Since it was almost dark, we wanted to check out the stilt village a little more. The same two guys took us out on the boat to visit the voodoo chief of the village who also happens to be the storyteller's grandfather. We went to one of the larger pieces of artificial earth to meet him. There were about fifteen little kids that came running up to us immediately, all wanting to touch us or just be in our presence. There were also several women and a few men around. They were all pretty young, and three of the women were pregnant. We had already noticed by this point that this community was half-naked and half-pregnant. There were tons of naked children, tons of pregnant bellies, and more pairs of old wrinkly droopy breasts than I've ever cared to see. The voodoo chief came out with absolutely no pretense surrounding him. He was just chillin' in his blue wife-beater and beat up green cargo shorts with a bottle of palm wine in his hand. They sat the three of us down on a bench. Everyone, kids, women, and voodoo chief, all stood around us in awkward silence. Here we were, two worlds colliding. I knew I would never be able to understand what life was like for these people, and they would never be able to understand me, and we didn't even speak the same language, but for this one instant in time, we just decided to stare at each other and smile with no plan for how to proceed from there. While I was experiencing this moment, Tania was talking with the boat paddler. We weren't really sure why we had come to meet the chief (other than to meet him), so the guy told us the chief could tell us our future for a price or something like that. We sat there for a long time in more awkwardness and indecision, until finally we just got back in the boat and left.

After that, we went to a place that was called a museum, but was actually just a place where some guy sold shirts and paintings of life in the village. They were all very beautiful, but as usual, I didn't buy anything. It was during this time that I began thinking about how a person would feel growing up on a stilt village if they knew that they could live on land. I suppose if you grew up doing it, it would be normal for you, but at the same time, for me, it's sort of like living in northern Alaska - why would I ever want to do that? I think if I had been raised in some little town in Alaska or Russia that only got above freezing in the summertime, I'd be kind of made at fate, or my parents. Of course, kids in Douglas get upset at having to grow up there. (As for me, I'm not upset I grew up in Douglas... it was the whole sticking around after high school thing that didn't sound so appealing). I wonder how the youth of the stilt village feels about their living situation.

"I hate you mom! I hate you dad! I'm rowing away from home!"
"You can't row forever!"

We came back to the hotel as it was getting starting to get dark. It was about this time that rush hour started and everyone in the village got in their boats to row about. The sunset on the lake was so beautiful. After the sun went down, it became extremely dark, but the town was just waking up. I'm being kind of serious. A huge loudspeaker was playing with election campaigns, people were rowing about more than in the daytime, and talking, laughing, crying, and screaming could be heard all over the village. I suppose they have to release their energy some way to make up for the lack of walking (although I guess the arm work involved in rowing does that).

I wound down the evening with a nice game of solitaire, and then we had dinner. Because dinner at the hotel was so expensive, I just had an egg and some peas. I was still hungry afterwards, so I ate some Snappy nuts that I had bought earlier. Then after dinner the girl and the two guys working at the hotel sparked up a very awkward conversation with the three of us about marriage, virginity, kids, sex, and all that. It was clear that for them, even at the age of 18 or 19, getting married and having kids was pretty much the point of your life. They even told us that a life without kids is a wasted life. It does make sense to me somewhat in the sense that you leave a legacy behind on this earth by having kids, but then again, growing up in America, it's completely acceptable to not have any kids. In Ganvier, I suppose you'd seem very strange if you didn't have a spouse and kids.

We ended the conversation after a little while because it was becoming a little too much for the moment, and so we just played cards instead. Ever since dinner had ended, I had started feeling extremely tired for some reason. I felt like I had been hit by a garbage truck or some other heavy-load automobile. Maybe I was just tired of traveling. Or maybe Andrea, the girl who worked at the hotel, put a voodoo spell on me or something. I wouldn't put it past her. (Just kidding!) So the three of us went to sleep in a double bed laying down horizontally, our bodies on the bed but our legs hanging off the end. Once again, in the middle of the night, I was awoken by the door, but this time it was Rachel trying to get out of the room. Apparently she had been trying for 15 minutes to get the lock off the door. Fortunately, I knew the trick to opening it, so I let her out. As I was falling back asleep, I heard people rowing around outside. It was kind of creepy, but I guess it's just how things go.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Spring Break pictures

Here are some pictures from the trip. Unfortunately, we weren't able to take pictures in Lome or in Kpalimé or in Kumakonda because the camera battery was dead and there was nowhere to charge it. However, I found a few pictures on the web of Lomé, by no means representing the whole city, but nonetheless... I'll post pictures for the remainder of the trip once I have written blogs for those days.
Area surrounding Kpalimé.

Kpalimé.


Area around Kpalimé.


On the road...
Hut we stayed in by the beach.


Coconut shells.



Market in Lomé.





Lomé.




Lomé.




Tania and Rachel on the beach in Lomé.




Cathedral in Lomé.





Lomé.




Stadium.




There's already a caption.




Market in Lomé.


A woman with her baby on the back of a zemidjan.