Zanzibar

July 18, 2006 by

I’m discreetly posting from work. Shhh. Having internet access on these computers is a mixed blessing. On one hand, it makes getting World Bank documents and recent statistics a lot easier. On the other hand, there is just so much else to do on the internet…   In other news, we discovered a canteen at work that serves rice and beans and curries.

 Right now, I am doing research on the distributional consequences of the EAC within Tanzania. Right now, I’m trying to look at the mechanisms other regional groups use to distribute costs and benefits. It’s been very interesting but I am not sure I am at all useful. ‘Direct service’ might be more fun, but it wouldn’t make much sense because unemployment is so high. I think the way in which I could be the most ‘useful’ is probably writing grant proposals for ngos because there are so few people here who can write well in English. At any rate, I’m learning a lot. Tim and Caitlin are researching the cashew industry in Tanzania– the country exports a lot of cashews to India, a major processing center, but efforts to increase domestic processing have been difficult. Eleuthera is researching the effects of language policy in Tanzania.

We went to Zanzibar the weekend before last and spent one night in Stone Town and one night on the beach. Most of the women there covered their heads (only about 40% do in Dar) and a lot of women wore buibui (like burkas). They still found ways to decorate and express themselves– sequins on hemlines, henna all over their hands. I can understand the appeal of the buibui; people seemed to treat them with a lot more respect than other women. I think laws that enforce burkas as a dress code are repressive but am becoming more sympathetic that the clothing itself could be empowering in some societies.

We ate dinner at a street market on the Indian ocean, where one could buy lobster, shrimp, and other fancy things from the ocean like octupus for less than fifty cents. I had a “Zanzibari pizza” — sort of an omelet inside a chapati– which cannot compete with ‘American” pizza. (Ohh, cheese…) We drank sugar cane juice (extracted by crushing the cane) flavored with ginger and lime juice. It was surprisingly delicious. There were laturns and small fires everywhere.

The night we stayed on the beach, we went swimming in the Indian ocean at midnight.

Tim’s parents are visiting right now. Having them here makes me miss my parents. They were in South Africa for a few weeks– Tim’s dad was lecturing at a linguistics conference and they came up here to visit for a week.

I think Dar might be a hard city to visit for a short period of time. There are some cities that are obviously beautiful, and then there are other cities where you have to look a little bit harder to find the beauty. Dar is a run down city without impressive or elegant buildings where nothing looks new. Unlike so many of its neighbors, Tanzania hasn’t suffered under self-aggrandizing leaders who erect monuments to themselves. There’s no Taj Mahal. The beauty in Dar is definitely in the people.

Like good Tanzanian residents, we’ve all become obsessed with the World Cup. Now that it is over, we spend a lot of time reading rumors about Zidane in tabloid-y papers. The last game made me sad. I was also hoping Italy would go offsides more because it was funny. If anyone wants to suggest a premier league European team I should support in the fall, I’d appreciate it. I’m trying to figure out post-graduate plans that will enable me to help Tanzania AND accidentally wind up in South Africa just in time for the 2010 World Cup. Suggestions?

Update: Last night, as a World-Cup-Substitute, Caitlin read the Da Vinci code aloud for three hours. Eleuthera and I had never read it before. Tim’s mother had brought it to Tanzania with her and hurried to finish it before leaving so we could read it. Although it feels less geo-political and there are no penalty kicks, it is equally gripping.

Dragon, Dodo, and Safari

July 12, 2006 by

Sorry about the amount of time since the last post. So much has happened! Two weeks ago, we were on safari in northern Tanzania, and I think I can safely say that it was one of the best trips any of us has ever taken. We stopped briefly in Arusha, a northern city, and then went to Serengeti National Park, then to the Ngorongoro Crater, then to Lake Manyara, and then back to Arusha for a couple of days before returning home. It was wonderful enough that I don’t really know how to begin to tell you about it, so I’ve decided just to provide a list of highlights. In no particular order:

1. We saw a lot of animals, and some of them walked right by our safari vehicle. It must have been the season for baby animals, too, because we saw families of lions, elephants, zebras, cheetahs, warthogs, and wildebeests. I may be forgetting a few. The baby elephants in particular were very cute, since they were so (relatively) tiny, although there’s something to be said for baby warthogs, which look exactly like regular warthogs but are about half as big. And the baby zebras were adorable (see below).

2. Every time we saw a baby zebra, Eleuthera said, “Oh, they’re so cute!” Eleuthera also explained that she identified with the baby zebras, since they are brown and velvety when they are younger, and Eleuthera herself used to have light brown hair which is now much darker. Very zebra-like.

3. Bree, Eleuthera, and I all really liked the way zebras stand next to each other facing in different directions (presumably so that they can see predators coming). We practiced standing next to each other zebra-style.

4. In other zebra-related news, Tim wandered off one evening and Bree postulated that he had been eaten by zebras. Eleuthera sang “Got eaten by zebras” to the tune of “On top of spaghetti.”

5. We went camping! It was my first time camping, although everyone else had been before, and it was amazing. You should all try sleeping under the stars in the Serengeti. The sky was one of the clearest I have ever seen. We think we saw the Milky Way (not sure though) and the Southern Cross, and I saw a shooting star. We were actually in very warm tents, which was good because it was cold and damp at night, particularly in Ngorongoro.

6. We were accompanied on safari by a high school girl named Lillian, who got booked on the same tour with us, and by a guide and cook who we thought were named Dragon and Dodo. When they wrote their names down at the end of the trip, we discovered that Dragon’s name is actually Reagan or something similar, but Dodo’s name really is Dodo. They took terrific care of us and we would highly recommend them to anyone who is going on safari in Tanzania.

7. Dodo was a terrific cook. Our food on safari was actually better than our food here in Dar. It was also accompanied by his commentary. Dodo’s English was pretty good, and he would sometimes use unusual phrases that made us very happy. On our first night, he told us to wait because soon it would be time of soup. The soup turned out to be great (something involving leeks, I think), and we tried to get him to say “time of soup” whenever we could. He also once told us that before he cooked, he had to go wash his bod. Basically, he was a sweet guy and really good at his work, in which he took obvious pride. We were impressed by the range of food he made while we were on safari, and every night we got bread and soup as well as a main course. We think he should open a restaurant in the U.S., on the theory that people would come to hear him talk as well as to eat his food.

8. Dragon (sorry, I can’t call him anything else) was equally terrific. He had to have a variety of skills in order to do his job—he had to drive rough safari roads, speak English, and know enough about the animals to find them and tell us about them. He spoke Spanish as well as English, so Eleuthera and Tim wound up speaking Spanish with him. Just a very nice, mild-mannered guy. We miss him.

9. I should mention at this point that we were in a real safari vehicle with removable roof panels, so we spent a lot of time standing on the seats and standing halfway out of the truck, looking around us at the trees and animals. It was sort of like being in a convertible but much more so, and it made the experience that much more vivid. (Parents: Dragon was a very safe driver and we were totally okay.) 

10. We camped out on the lawn of a hotel one night, and we wound up talking to some of the salespeople who do business with tourists. They were interested in whether or not we knew American athletes and musicians. Tim told one guy that he knew Elton John and had rice and beans at his house. Another man asked me if I knew Snoopy.

11. Yet another man offered Tim money for his socks.

12. In general, the salespeople wanted to trade us for things from the U.S. We didn’t have much, since it was near the end of our trip and pretty much all we had were dirty clothes and bug spray—although one guy offered to trade for my bug spray.

I’m running out of time, so I think that’s all I can post for now. There will be more updates later, since more happened on safari and in the meantime we have started our jobs and been to Zanzibar.

Also, a very happy birthday and lots of love to my Aunt Connie.

~Caitlin

Dragon, Dodo, and Safari

July 12, 2006 by

Sorry about the amount of time since the last post. So much has happened! Two weeks ago, we were on safari in northern Tanzania, and I think I can safely say that it was one of the best trips any of us has ever taken. We stopped briefly in Arusha, a northern city, and then went to Serengeti National Park, then to the Ngorongoro Crater, then to Lake Manyara, and then back to Arusha for a couple of days before returning home. It was wonderful enough that I don’t really know how to begin to tell you about it, so I’ve decided just to provide a list of highlights. In no particular order:

1. We saw a lot of animals, and some of them walked right by our safari vehicle. It must have been the season for baby animals, too, because we saw families of lions, elephants, zebras, cheetahs, warthogs, and wildebeests. I may be forgetting a few. The baby elephants in particular were very cute, since they were so (relatively) tiny, although there’s something to be said for baby warthogs, which look exactly like regular warthogs but are about half as big. And the baby zebras were adorable (see below).

2. Every time we saw a baby zebra, Eleuthera said, “Oh, they’re so cute!” Eleuthera also explained that she identified with the baby zebras, since they are brown and velvety when they are younger, and Eleuthera herself used to have light brown hair which is now much darker. Very zebra-like.

3. Bree, Eleuthera, and I all really liked the way zebras stand next to each other facing in different directions (presumably so that they can see predators coming). We practiced standing next to each other zebra-style.

4. In other zebra-related news, Tim wandered off one evening and Bree postulated that he had been eaten by zebras. Eleuthera sang “Got eaten by zebras” to the tune of “On top of spaghetti.”

5. We went camping! It was my first time camping, although everyone else had been before, and it was amazing. You should all try sleeping under the stars in the Serengeti. The sky was one of the clearest I have ever seen. We think we saw the Milky Way (not sure though) and the Southern Cross, and I saw a shooting star. We were actually in very warm tents, which was good because it was cold and damp at night, particularly in Ngorongoro.

6. We were accompanied on safari by a high school girl named Lillian, who got booked on the same tour with us, and by a guide and cook who we thought were named Dragon and Dodo. When they wrote their names down at the end of the trip, we discovered that Dragon’s name is actually Reagan or something similar, but Dodo’s name really is Dodo. They took terrific care of us and we would highly recommend them to anyone who is going on safari in Tanzania.

7. Dodo was a terrific cook. Our food on safari was actually better than our food here in Dar. It was also accompanied by his commentary. Dodo’s English was pretty good, and he would sometimes use unusual phrases that made us very happy. On our first night, he told us to wait because soon it would be time of soup. The soup turned out to be great (something involving leeks, I think), and we tried to get him to say “time of soup” whenever we could. He also once told us that before he cooked, he had to go wash his bod. Basically, he was a sweet guy and really good at his work, in which he took obvious pride. We were impressed by the range of food he made while we were on safari, and every night we got bread and soup as well as a main course. We think he should open a restaurant in the U.S., on the theory that people would come to hear him talk as well as to eat his food.

8. Dragon (sorry, I can’t call him anything else) was equally terrific. He had to have a variety of skills in order to do his job—he had to drive rough safari roads, speak English, and know enough about the animals to find them and tell us about them. He spoke Spanish as well as English, so Eleuthera and Tim wound up speaking Spanish with him. Just a very nice, mild-mannered guy. We miss him.

9. I should mention at this point that we were in a real safari vehicle with removable roof panels, so we spent a lot of time standing on the seats and standing halfway out of the truck, looking around us at the trees and animals. It was sort of like being in a convertible but much more so, and it made the experience that much more vivid. (Parents: Dragon was a very safe driver and we were totally okay.) 

10. We camped out on the lawn of a hotel one night, and we wound up talking to some of the salespeople who do business with tourists. They were interested in whether or not we knew American athletes and musicians. Tim told one guy that he knew Elton John and had rice and beans at his house. Another man asked me if I knew Snoopy.

11. Yet another man offered Tim money for his socks.

12. In general, the salespeople wanted to trade us for things from the U.S. We didn’t have much, since it was near the end of our trip and pretty much all we had were dirty clothes and bug spray—although one guy offered to trade for my bug spray.

I’m running out of time, so I think that’s all I can post for now. There will be more updates later, since more happened on safari and in the meantime we have started our jobs and been to Zanzibar.

Also, a very happy birthday and lots of love to my Aunt Connie.

~Caitlin

Tumerudi

July 2, 2006 by

We’re back, everyone! Unfortunately, this is not the long post that we promised you: so much happened on safari that it’s going to take a little while longer to write that. But we thought we’d let you know that we’re home, we’re safe, and we had a wonderful time. We’ll post all about it later this week.

Go Portugal!

~Caitlin

Tutaonana

June 23, 2006 by

Today was our last day of Swahili class. It's hard to believe that we have already been in Tanzania for three weeks. Richard gave us an exam which was a little bit of a surprise. Eleuthera was quite sure that we were going to have one but the rest of us didn't believe her. Richard promised he wouldn't put any vocabulary on it that he "was sure we didn't know," and he was true to his word, although there were definitely some conjunctions that weren't particularly familar.

In some ways, my Swahili is improving. I can read ads now and sometimes understand the focus of other people's conversations. I used to struggle because the Swahili 'r' is not at all like an American 'r' and whenever I tried to roll my 'r's I wound up with a French 'r.' Although Eleuthera assured me it would be cute if I spoke Swahili with a French 'r,' I'm subbing in 'l's instead as some Swahili speakers (mainly ones from the Northwest?) seem to do. If anyone asks, I learned Swahili up near Lake Victoria.

Eleuthera can communicate almost anything in Swahili at this point as long as she has the vocabulary. Last night, she had a long conversation with our security guard about what we could do for his sick mother using the subjunctive. She makes up for it by consistently talking about which teams she is 'voting for' in the World Cup instead of 'supporting.'

Along with the rest of Dar es Salaam, we were pretty excited for the USA Ghana match yesterday. As far as I could tell, we were the only ones at the restaurant who cheered when the U.S. scored (and Eleuthera abandoned us to cheer for Ghana, the traitor). A Canadian woman sitting near us felt bad and bought us drinks. Although we were all a little disappointed to see the U.S. lose (especially Tim, who intially picked the U.S. as one of his teams), everyone here is so excited about Ghana that it is contagious. When Ghana won, they started playing 'One Love' in the bar which was cute.

Tomorrow, we are taking a six am bus ride to Arusha, a city in Northern Tanzania where most safaris start. From there, we are going on a five day safari to Lake Manyara, the Serengeti, and Ngorogoro Crater. Being me, I'm secretly more excited to see Arusha, which is the seat of the East African Economic Community, the city in which the Burundi peace accords are being negotiated, and the place the Rwandan genocide tribunal is being held than I am to see Ngorogoro Crater. However, seeing (baby) elephants, lions, giraffes and zebras sounds amazing, even if they aren't the epicenter of East African conflict resolution. Caitlin has never been camping before, which certainly adds to the excitement.

After that, we are spending a few days in Arusha before heading back to Dar and starting our internships. We will be interning at the Economic and Social Research Foundation of Tanzania (www.esrftz.org). During our time in Arusha, we are probably not going to be able to check email but we will write very exciting posts about the safari when we get back, I promise.

Bagamoyo and Bongo

June 15, 2006 by

I'm writing this post with a little frusteration, because I already wrote it once but it got deleted when I tried to post it. Serves me right for not saving in Microsoft Word. You are all probably tired of hearing about our technology troubles by now, but I just don't seem to be able to escape computers that erase my stuff!

—-

Saturday, we took a trip to Bagamoyo, which is about an hour north of Dar es Salaam. Bagamoyo was the German capital of Tanzania under colonialism and was also a major point in the East African slave trade. Slaves from mainland Tanzania and Kenya were held in Bagamoyo before they were sent to work on plantations on Zanzibar, the Middle East, and islands in the Indian Ocean.

After eating lunch in Bagamoyo, we visited an old Catholic church that had been converted into a museum on the slave trade. Outside the museum was a tower were Dr. Livingstone's body rested for a night before it was shipped back to England. As we were leaving the museum, we saw about a hundred and fifty school children in white and marroon uniforms, waiting to go in. They were very excited to see us, and wanted to kiss our hands. I'm making a connection that isn't really there, but it was sad to leave a museum on slavery to see students who wanted to kiss our hands just because we were white Americans.

The bad condition of museums here also makes me sad. The museums we have visited all have very good content, and the staff seem very knowledgeable, but the displays themselves are falling apart. The text is peeling off the faded construction paper it was mounted on, and the English translations are sometimes too convulted to understand. It would be irresponsible to spend a lot on museums in such a poor country, but it's still sad that the children of Tanzania see such a run-down version of their history.

After the museum, we went to a crocodile zoo, and then to Kaole. At Kaole, there are ruins of two mosques dating back to the 13th century. By this point, Musa's eight year old niece, Anita, was getting bored, so I taught her how to take pictures with my camera. She was much better at it then I am. If you see any photos from my trip that aren't blurry, she's probably the one who took them. To her credit, she was very patient for most of the trip, although I expect her 'fall' in a puddle at the end was more of a 'jump.' Luckily Eleuthera had an extra towel.

———

Sunday, Inno took us to have lunch with his colleague, Joseph. Joseph lives in one of Dar's many poorer neighborhoods. (Can you still call them slums when that's where most people live?) He and his wife and three younger children all live in a two room cement house with a tin roof. Inno says that when it rains (an everyday occurance here in June) their house floods because there is nowhere for the water to go, so they have to bail it out.

They were so happy to have us over, and cooked us a delicious lunch of wali and stew. They didn't eat with us, but just watched us eat. They insisted that we drink bottled water and beer with our meals, expenses that must have used up a fair portion of their monthly earning. Joseph's brother spoke very good English, and told us how excited everyone in the neighborhood was that Joseph was having Americans over for lunch. He said America was a good friend to Tanzania. (Tim asked Inno about this later, because such a pro-American attitude surprised us. Inno said that most Christians in Dar were very pro-American although there was more diversity of attitude among Muslims.)

Earlier that day, Inno had told us that bongo was local slang for Dar. Bongo means brains, and people use the term because you have to have brains to survive in Dar. Joseph's brother echoed this sentiment. "To survive here is very, very, very difficult," he said. "Life is very, very, very difficult. And yet, indeed, we do survive."

When Joseph first recieved a cell phone for the work he does with WILMA, Inno was frustrated because Joseph never charged his phone. Later he found out this was because Joseph didn't have power in his home, and was ashamed of his frustration. Since then, he and Paul Armington have given Joseph seven hundred dollars to buy a plot of land and build his own house. Inno says Joseph cried when he gave it to him. Right now, they are working on the roof.

—–

I wanted to write more about Swahili class, Kuinduchi Beach, and the National Village Museum, but I'm almost out of time. Hopefully, we will post again soon.

Vyura vidogo

June 15, 2006 by

We've noticed that we're much closer to nature here in Tanzania than we were back home–there are animals everywhere. When we leave Dar es Salaam, we sometimes find the road blocked by goats, which come in all different colors and sizes here. The smallest ones, which must be babies, are two feet tall or shorter. Eleuthera and I are very fond of them. (I particularly like the way their ears flop when they move.) There's actually a goat living in Inno's yard as well, which we think belongs to the landlady. Sometimes we see it running around.

We also find tiny lizards living along the walls and Inno's balcony. I saw a relatively huge one the other day in the bathroom–it was about six inches long. It was a pleasant change from the roaches that I've already complained about (which are either all dead or scared to come out). Closest to home for me, though, are the two tiny frogs that took up residence in my room the other day. Neither was bigger than a cubic inch, and I only noticed them because when I got too close, they jumped about a foot off the ground and landed with a soft plop. At first, I tried to get them to leave, since I was worried that they wouldn't be able to get out and might get stepped on. Eventually I realized they weren't going to leave and they didn't seem to be in any danger of being squashed–they'd just jump out of the way. So I went to bed and listened to them jump around. I haven't seen them since then. It's possible that they're gone, but they also blend in, so it's hard to tell. I think one was under my bed for a while.

And to add to our adventures in malapropism: I wasn't feeling well the other day, and normally I would have just mimed having a sore throat, but my phrasebook specified how to say "I have a sore throat": "Ninauma roho." As a lifelong Monty Python fan, I should have known better than to trust a phrasebook, but I memorized the phrase and said it to a few people throughout the day. They looked confused, and one woman put her hand over my heart and said something serious-sounding (I told her I didn't understand), but I figured my pronunciation was just a little off. When I went to school yesterday morning, I said the same thing to Richard, our teacher, who laughed at me. He told me I should be saying, "Ninaumwa koo."

Okay, I said. "So what does 'roho' mean?"

He hesitated. "It means 'spirit.'"

I had been telling everyone that I had a pain in my soul.

~Caitlin

Kombe la Dunia

June 12, 2006 by

The latest news is that we have all become World Cup fanatics, probably to the surprise of many of you. On Thursday night Tim, Bree and I placed dibs on our preferred teams, with Caitlin getting the leftovers since she wasn't there. (Sorry Caitlin. Again.) My teams are Costa Rica, England, Cote d'Ivoire, Angola, Italy, Japan, South Korea and Spain. Caitlin got some of the unwanted colonial powers because we are sensitive to that sort of thing right now and tried to avoid them. So far, I have one win and three losses, but I'm optimistic that my underdogs will prevail in the end.

On Friday Musa and Denis took us to a big restaurant-bar where they were showing the first game (Germany v. Costa Rica — am I writing that like a court case instead of a game?) on big screens. Unfortunately, the screen closest to us was delayed by about three seconds, so every time there was a shot or a goal the other half of the room erupted in glee or disappointment. Eventually another screen came on even closer to us and we could watch in suspense again, but I admit I did enjoy the excitement of knowing when something was about to happen. 

A lot of people were rooting for Germany, including Musa and Bree (it's one of her picks), and there seemed to be lots of Germans in the crowd. We had wondered if people here felt any resentment towards Germany because it was the original colonial power in Tanzania (England took over during WWI), but they assure us all that matters is how the team plays soccer. Which is fair enough. 

Swahili is kind of difficult

June 12, 2006 by

Note: this was supposed to be posted several days ago, but our internet connection died, and I've edited it in spots since then, so in some places "yesterday" means yesterday and in some places it means last week. Sorry. 

Every weekday morning from 9 to 12, we have Swahili class with Richard, our teacher. We meet alongside a secondary school in a Catholic church in Posta, or central Dar es Salaam. The whole secondary school has about fifty kids and maybe half a dozen teachers, and everyone meets in one large room. Each class sits around a whiteboard, and the teachers rotate. We have a whiteboard too, although our teacher stays where he is. Sometimes we glance over at other groups to discover they are learning about algebra, hydrogen chemistry, or the symptoms and transmission of syphilis. (I think that was yesterday.) It's a very different environment than we're used to for school.

Our class is intense. It's just the four of us (Tim is here now), and I've never been in a language class that moved so quickly. I got here speaking almost no Swahili, and I can now put together sentences like, "Do you have the key to my room?" That doesn't mean I can always make myself understood–the words come slowly and my pronunciation is shaky–but I'm amazed at how rapidly we're all progressing. We're much, much better than we were a little while ago. And we've started to almost automatically refer to certain nouns, particularly food, by their Swahili names. So if you ask us what we had for dinner, we might say we had ndizi, nyama, and wali.

That said, we do still make some interesting mistakes. (See Bree's entry for today.) I think we sound pretty demented on a regular basis—I’m reminded of David Sedaris, who has described trying to buy calves’ brains in French and ending up saying, “Is thems the thoughts of cows?” It's easy to make mistakes in Swahili, actually, because of the way the language is structured. It's a regular language with few exceptions, so once you learn the rules, you're okay. However, there are a lot of rules to learn. There are about eight classes of nouns, like declensions in Latin, and while the nouns themselves don't change, everything else has to agree with them. And when I say everything, I mean the adjectives, the demonstrative pronouns, and even the verbs, which must agree with the class, person, and number of the subject as well as occasionally agreeing with the direct object. You wind up with a lot of alliteration. (“My books are bad” in Swahili is “Vitabu vyangu ni vibaya.”)

All the agreements mean that when you're starting to learn the language, as we are, you're likely to misuse words all the time. For example, one of the first words we learned was "nzuri," which means "good." If someone asks you how you're doing, you say "Nzuri." So for a while, we figured that we could say things like, "Chakula ni nzuri," when we meant, "The food is good." Unforunately, that's not how you say that. Chakula is in a different class than a person is, and so we should really have been saying "Chakula ni kizuri." It's not the biggest mistake in the world, but I'm pretty sure it made it even more difficult for people to understand us when we tried to talk. And of course, we make some simple vocabulary mistakes. The other day, I told the people who had us over for lunch that their books were delicious, and Bree, trying to say she was tired, accidentally told our teacher that she was hateful.

Swahili is also different from other languages I've learned in that everything goes on the front of the verb. If you wanted to say, "I taught myself," you would say "Nilijifundisha," in which "ni" indicates that the subject is "I," "li" shows that it's past tense, "ji" makes it reflexive, and "fundisha" is the stem of the verb meaning to teach. This isn't exactly hard, but it takes some getting used to. I think verbs are actually our strong suit–we can make positive and negative statements in four or so tenses, and we can also form imperatives and what I think are called hortatory forms (as in, "Let's go"). I'm very impressed by us. I won’t speak for the others, but for me, I don’t feel like I understand Swahili as a language yet. It’s more like a code that I can sometimes decipher. But it gets easier every day. 

On a more personal note: I moved out of Mikocheni B and into the homestay house a couple of nights ago. I think we're going to switch off staying there, although I'm not sure when. The water seems to work more regularly than at Inno's, where there have been some problems, and I have my own space in a sort of small guest house across the yard from the main house. It's not bad at all–the biggest drawback is that there were cockroaches in the bathroom. I sprayed them with Raid and I think they're all gone now. It's different in other ways. There's satellite TV, and I wound up watching part of The Italian Job with the host family. The family watches Nigerian movies, which deserve their own blog, and we also wound up watching Girls of the Playboy Mansion on E!. Monica and her family asked me if the show was supposed to be real. (For those not familiar with the show, it's a reality show about Hugh Hefner's girlfriends.) I also think that the cook is a bit more adventurous than Mary is, since she's cooking for real Tanzanians. I'm not sure exactly what was in the stew we had last night, but I think I saw intestines. (I ate around that part.) I like Monica and her family very much, and I'm having a nice time, although I miss everyone back at Inno's.

Bree seems to be updating everyone on her reading, so I'll do the same: I finished Beloved, which I thought was good but probably not the greatest book of the last 25 years, as well as both Rabbit Redux and Rabbit is Rich. I liked Rabbit is Rich best; actually, it’s my favorite of John Updike’s books that I’ve read so far. I think I need to read the fourth book in the series now.

Kwa herini and keep calling and e-mailing!

~Caitlin 

Samahani na chakula

June 12, 2006 by

Hi everyone, (It’s terribly presumptious of me to assume an audience after we’ve gone so long without posting, I know. We will try not to abuse you so in the future, dear audience.)

I’m sorry that we haven’t posted in a few days. There was an internet outage which started in the middle of our session last Thursday and continued through the weekend that prevented us from updating. We’ll try to make up for it this week. Today, I'm posting an entry from last Thursday.

June 8th, 2006

As of last night, Eleuthera, Caitlin and I have been in Tanzania for week. I can already tell that our stay is going to go by too quickly. Since we last posted, we've gotten into a routine of going to Swahili class in the morning, and exploring Dar in the afternoon. In between, Musa (a university student here who is our guide) takes us to canteens to eat lunch.

Lunch consists of a protein portion and a carbohydrate portion. The protein options are chicken, fish, nyama, and beans and we eat them with chapati, wali (which is boiled rice, but is somehow much tastier than rice in the United States), and ugali. It may sound like there is not a lot of variety, but there are actually twelve different combinations and I've never been much for culinary variety. Chapati is my favorite in terms of taste, but ugali is definitely the most fun to eat. It's a thick rice-like porridge that you roll into a ball with your right hand and then dip in stew or pick up beans with. As you can imagine, the novelty of food you are supposed to play with is going to take a while to wear off. The first time I ordered ugali, I needed a spoon to eat the stew with and the waitress laughed at me. I thought I was getting good at it today at lunch, but then Caitlin found a chunk of ugali in my hair. Thank you, Caitlin.

Swahili classes are going well. See Caitlin's entry for more general information on our classes. Tim is catching up very quickly even though he came in late. Even though Swahili is supposed to be a perfectly phonetic language, I still manage to pronounce things wrong. The other day, the professor picked up my Swahili text and asked me if it was his book. "No,” I said, "That book is not your toilet. That book is my toilet." This mistake is remotely understandable because the word for toilet, university, and a common preposition all sound very similar. However (and I'm only pointing this out because Eleuthera would otherwise), I didn't actually need to use any of these words in my sentence. On the bright side, I think I'm making progress.

After class today, we went to look at the University of Dar es Salaam. It had a very beautiful campus. It rained a little today, and it was so green there. I had fantasies about doing a post-graduate year there, which shows just how much I like Tanzania so far.

In the evenings, we usually hang out at Inno's place and talk about Tanzanian politics and history, economic development, Swarthmore gossip (reheated from freshman year when everything was more dramatic), or the Amazing Life of Innocent Bash. The capitalization isn’t hyperbole; the topic deserves its own post, so stay tuned.

I am continuously surprised by how cheap labor costs are here. Goods are a lot cheaper than the U.S., but the biggest difference seems to be in wages. I should have been able to predict this after taking International Economics, but I'm still struck by how stark the contrast is. Caitlin broke her shoe a few days ago, and our security guard took it to be fixed for about 200 shillings (15 cents). In Dar, a good salary for maids and security guards is about sixty dollars a month, and seventy five for private drivers. Although the costs of living are lower, the fact remains that the number of people in poverty here is very dramatic. I'd seen all the numbers before, but am just begining to understand what they truly mean.

I'm reading Africa Unchained right now, which is very critical of the efforts of early African leaders to industrialize. I'm a little skeptical of the author's assertion that there is something inherently good and African in the peasant that is lost in conventional industrialization/modernization processes, but it's a very interesting book.

As a side note: During a brief water outage, I learned to take a bucket shower! It was actually very refreshing and made me feel like a character in an adventure novel. Happily, our water is working again now, although I think Inno had to destroy any working relationship he had with the landlady in the process.

Huu (?) weekendi, we are going on a day trip to Bagamoyo, the old German capital of Tanzania.