Thursday, May 24, 2012

Photo Friday on Thursday


Photo Friday and a quick post. OK, my first photo Friday is occurring on a Thursday.  Friday is a holiday here and I only have internet at my office. I’ve decided to begin posting one or more photos on Friday along with some of my more random thoughts and experiences.  So, these Friday (Thursday) posts may be a bit sloppy. 

You know that moment in a dream when you start to realize it’s a dream?  That moment that the word “dream” hasn’t entered your mind yet, but you begin to question the reality of what you’ve just been experiencing?  That feeling has occurred to me a few times here while I was awake.  I had one of those moments last Saturday morning as I stood looking out the back door of my flat, eating my guacamoatmeal breakfast (not Namibian) out of my big Herero cup (blue, not yellow) and wondered how I might spend my weekend.    A man came to my back fence and asked if he could clean up my yard.  Across the street behind him a woman walked with a flaming stick, followed by one young boy naked from the waist down and two skinny dogs.  She was setting the brush on the side of the road on fire.  Then a precession of cars and pickup trucks packed with passengers passed by, kicking up dust and blocked the fire lady from my view.  I asked the man at my fence what the precession was for.  He said “a wedding”.  I asked him how long the wedding would go for and he told me it would take the entire weekend.  He then called me by my name.  I had no idea who the man was or how he came to know my name.  Perhaps one of my neighbors told him about their new American neighbor.  You’re left scratching your head here a lot.  I told him “thanks, but I don’t need my yard cleaned up.”  To which he gave my yard a disapproving look.  I then said “Ame mulizambeli.  Randa kwato.” Which means “I’m a volunteer, I have no money”.


Oftentimes, people look at me here like a potted plant might burst out of my ear at any moment.  Nobody wants to miss that.  Sometimes I walk the 3 miles home from my office to get more familiar with the neighborhoods of Rundu.  I’ll stop at a few shops and buy something small, sometimes food, sometimes a bottle of beer, sometimes some candy to hand out, and I try to speak a bit of Rukwangali with the shopkeeper.  This is met with varying levels of delight and confusion.  Cars pass by outside the shop door, kicking up dust, the always-present Namibian children staring at me with curiosity or awe or completely dumbfounded.  The shopkeeper, protected behind a steel cage, bars wide enough to hand me whatever I’ve pointed out and paid for, does their best work with my limited Rukwangali.   

During my commute home, I walk through both “formal” and “informal” locations.  The informal settlements tend to be the poorer areas, mostly consisting of corrugated metal (what they call “zinc”) shacks, and mud and stick huts on dusty sand drives.  I pass a Tumbo joint everyday on my way to lunch.  Tumbo is sort of homemade fermented beverage that packs a punch.  Everybody inside and outside of the tumbo shack is pretty haggard.  Tumbo costs N$1 (that’s 1 Namibian dollar which is less than 20 cents American) for a large mason jar full.    All the women sit in a row against the outer fence wrapped in dark dirty clothes.  The men sit in small groups on the ground, on old tires, or on the few benches available.  Mason jars filled with the brownish yellow used-turpentine-looking tumbo are passed.  There are always a few noticeably intoxicated people moving about and sometimes a few lying on the sandy ground of the open air establishment.   The scene doesn’t change much from noon until 5:00PM or from day to day. 

I eat lunch nearly everyday with a woman named Keto.  She’s one of three female owners of a restaurant/shebeen (a bar) in location near where I work (about a block from the Tumbo joint).  Her business is clean and appears to be well run.  Keto runs the restaurant, which consists of about 4 options served out of large catering pans and a few picnic style tables under an awning that is attached to the bar.  I typically get chicken, porridge, and mutete (sort of a stewed spicy spinach).  Keto patiently answers my questions regarding Namibian business practices and how she and her sisters (I doubt they are really her sisters) managed to save enough money to open the business.  I’m sure she has little idea what to make of me or my questions, but she seems curious and entertained and genuinely happy to see me. 

Sometimes Keto sips beer while we chat.  She always gives me way too much food and I slide my plate over to her when I’m done and she finishes it.  Twice a mentally challenged man came in, a fixture at the tumbo joint, with a gray beard and deeply wrinkled face, carrying his homemade toy rifle and speaking quickly and endlessly to me in Rukwangali.  “He’s saying you shouldn’t be scared of him” Keto tells me.  I say “I know, please tell him I’m not.”  (And I really am not.  Besides having a few things stolen here and dodging cars, my experiences with Namibians have been good).  Keto then gives my plate to the man to finish.  He walks off into sun and dust outside with his toy gun slung over his shoulder and then returns about a minute later with an empty plate.   

I love Namibian pedestrians.  The drivers I could do without.  My experience so far strongly suggests that Namibians, when driving a car, are wholly unconcerned with anything other than their destinations.  The gas, break, and steering wheel are tools used only to manipulate a car toward a destination.  Any human that might cross their path is, constructively speaking, invisible.  I might as well be a pigeon.  I have some experience with this from my days in Vietnam.  Running is an interactive experience here.  I ran at night once.  The sand looked like snow in the light of the approaching cars.  Looking up I had bouncing headlights intermittently blinding me.  When I didn’t have headlights in my face, my visibility was limited by all of the smoke and dust in the air (people set brush fires here a lot.  I believe to remove habitats for snakes).  Looking down I could only see the confused shadows of drifted sand made more confusing by the shifting light.  Long story short, I’ll run in the morning or not at all.  Namibian drivers seem to sleep in. 

My work is going well so far.  I’ve already started some work on multiple projects.  I’ll be facilitating a large business plan writing workshop next month.  I’ve also started working on a female empowerment through entrepreneurship workshop, though real work on that will have to wait until after the business plan writing workshop.  My pet project is an exercise and nutrition club here at the youth center.  I'm pursuing this project for purely selfish reasons.  I’m pretty much just trying to get a bunch of kids to work out with me in the afternoon a few days a week.  I’ll stick a talk at the end of each session on health or nutrition or malaria…I’ll make it work. 

Thanks for reading.  My goal for next week is to take a number of photos of the things I see daily so that you can see a bit more of what I see everyday.  

My favorite photo of the week is not mine and is not from this week.  I hope you like it.  (Thanks to Vilhelm G. Wilmason aka Pam) 
Photo hunting in Omaruru.  PGW

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

18 million years


It’s been a busy three(+) weeks since my Rundu site visit.  Besides training, I had to prep for my final language exam and mentally prepare to be separated from the gang of other trainees that I’ve formed some pretty strong bonds with over the past 8 weeks.  As I begin to write this, I am sharing the backseat of a Neon sized vehicle with two other newly sworn in U.S. Peace Corps Volunteers, Geri and Nathan.  We’re headed on a 9-hour journey to our permanent sites to start our 750 days as PCVs in the Kavango region.   

My training in Omaruru ended about one week ago.  I spent this past week in a mountain lodge with the rest of the trainees.  It was nice to have the whole gang back in one spot for a few nights.  I passed my Rukwangali language proficiency exam and was sworn in as a US Peace Corps Volunteer on Friday.  I arrived in my permanent site Saturday.  As usual, way too much has occurred over the past three weeks to cover it all, so I’ll hit some of the high points, low points, and other oddities. 

The deepest low was finding out that our most loved team member, Cathey, would be going home.  Cathey was the undisputed heart of our group.  She was a champ everyday.  If she ever had a bad day, she never showed it.  She always did whatever she could to keep everybody’s spirits up.  She cared about all of us and never had anything but words of encouragement.  We’ll all feel her absence.  

Cathey and the guys


The high of my past three weeks occurred during a morning run with my friend Pam.  My morning run, many times, is the highpoint of my day.  That’s not to say there aren’t many other good moments, but the beauty of this place in the morning, particularly Omaruru and Windhoek, is hard to top.  The rest of the day sort of has the deck stacked against it.  Add the mountains of Windhoek into the mix and forget about it.  So, anyway, the story goes like this;

I met Pam at about 6AM for our first Windhoek mountain run.  We’d spotted a trail the night before from the back deck of the lodge and decided to give it a shot (Pam later reminded me).  We first ran to a circular building on the top of the first peak (photo below) that appeared to be an old lookout.  We reached it in time for the sunrise and then proceeded to the next peak, which provided a beautiful view of Windhoek far below.   

The beginning of our run (see the little outlook on top?)
We had just started our run back to the camp when I heard some strange grunting sounds.  I’d heard a deep grunting sound during our run out but figured it was some sort of cattle in the valley.  I looked off to the west and saw three dark figures perched on a rocky outcropping atop an adjacent peak.  At first, I thought that they were hikers, but I then wondered why they were all wearing the same dark outfits.  I then noticed movement much closer on the hillside that slopped away from me and spotted a dark face looking back at me.  And then another. 

When I took in the whole valley in I couldn’t believe I’d just run through this scene and had not noticed the 30 or so baboons that were wandering between the two peaks.  I was surprised at their size.  They're much bigger than I thought they were.  There were two large baboons that were watching Pam and I closely.  The rest spread out through the shallow valley behind them and up to the next peak.  Pam pointed out some babies running up toward the rock outcropping I’d spotted the first ones perched one.  It turned out that the first ones I saw were the furthest away.  The closer guards watching us were a little more than 150’ away.  The big group appeared to be passing through.  I saw one that was walking on a piece of road that we’d just run twice and the direction of the group suggested that they’d just crossed our route.  I wondered if we’d split the group as we ran out.  I wondered how long ago we shared a common ancestor.  I wondered if we should be worried.    My friend and I were on a mountain top just after sunrise, in Africa, and alone with a large pack of baboons.  It was beautiful.  We stood for a short while in the cool quiet morning and took the scene in and then continued on our run. 

Some other events of the last three weeks included an American Food Day, during which the PCTs got to make American dishes for their host families.  I made German potato salad.  I know, it’s German, not American.  But it’s also a pretty common item at picnics in Pennsylvania and I figured it'd be a crowd pleaser.  We also had a sheep slaughtering party.  After the whole chicken thing, this wasn’t too hard to handle.  The actual slaughter was a bit hard to watch at moments, but that didn’t stop me from getting about 100 pictures.  PCV rock-star Rob did the hard part.  The party started with the sheep tied to a tree and ended with it in our bellies.  It was impressive to see how quickly a few Namibians could slaughter, gut, butcher, and prepare a sheep for dinner. 

Leaving Windhoek and the NAM 35 gang was harder than I thought it would be.  When I met them all in Philly, I figured we’d only be together for 8 weeks and wondered how close we could actually get in that time period.  Turns out you can get pretty attached in 8 weeks.  They’re a great group of people and I’m looking forward to seeing them all in three months.  

Sorry for the brief post.  I’m now sitting in my office at the Rundu Youth Center (yes, I know I started in the backseat of a car on my way to Rundu, but even these little posts take time).  I’ll be more connected now that I’m at my permanent site, so expect my normal posts every two weeks.  But, right now, I have a ton of work to do to get my head wrapped around what needs to get done here and how to approach it.  Thanks for reading.  I'll leave you with a few photos from the past weeks.  I hope you are all well.  


The gang at swearing in

The men of NAM 35

I took a walk in one of the unofficial locations one morning.  This was my favorite shot of the day.

Photo from a bar in Omaruru.

Some of the gang taking in the sunset at the Windhoek mountain lodge