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4.28.2008

Washed Away

It was supposed to stop raining weeks ago and it hasn't stopped. After our adventure in the mire, the next thing to go was the bridge on the shortcut to the office. One morning, pre-caffeine, I went to turn left and ran into the African traffic cone--some cut branches in the road. No more shortcut--the bridge had been washed away.

When I finally made it to the office, a visitor was waiting, from a small community organization from one of our villages. The school's toilets had been swept away in the recent floods, and the children had nowhere to relieve themselves. Could we contribute? One of my staff members came back from yet another village, where he couldn't do any work because the whole village was at a funeral for three people who drowned in a pond. The people in the village who know how to swim were out in their fields when the first person jumped in and the other two drowned trying to save her.

When I got back from India, all the talk was of how great the rains had been and how well the corn was growing. Nowadays the talk is of just how ruined it is. Last week, I drove up one of the best village roads left, which still had sheets of water flowing across it. The tallest corn still looked good--leafy and tasseled--but the shorter stalks were yellowing from the bottom up. One of our community volunteers shook her head and said that now the plants would just make leaves and no corn. Although it is fun to see children playing in swollen creeks, grown adults tromping around in rubber boots, and the sleek coats of animals fat from the green grass, there is a grim time coming when the rain finally stops and there is little to harvest.

Today one of the few roads in town is closed because another bridge fell. I am staying at the office late to write this post and to give the resulting traffic jam some time to subside. Outside, it is raining.

4.13.2008

Glory

Glory is my roommate and my best friend in Tanzania. She is about five foot two and has a sweet smile and unassuming presence. She is my age but looks about 16. She loves to make outrageous statements about her strength and her wealth and her proficiency in English. She teases me for reading too much, for being a slob, for skipping showers, for not going to church anymore, for being sleepy. We watched the first season of Heroes on a bootlegged DVD together, me translating roughly into Swahili, and she loves to squeeze her eyes shut and pretend that she can teleport like Hiro. She has no control over our misbehaved guard dogs and when they jump up on her she screams. She won’t let me get a cat because she thinks it will eat off the stove. Sometimes, when I run into her away from the house, she is wearing my clothes.

Glory is an evangelical Christian and blasts the religious radio station every night when she is cooking. She used to speak in tongues around the house, but recently stopped. She doesn’t drink or go out at night unless I take her. Although she speaks no English, she loves to meet my foreign friends. She remembers every guest we have ever had and loves to tell stories about them—Kate who was white like paper, Ben who had a pet pig, a volunteer we called Little John who spoke his own version of pidgin Swahili.

Glory was alone in our apartment when it was robbed by men carrying giant knives in 2005. We have both seen each other when we were sickest and weakest and most out of our minds. Sometimes when I go out she tells me I am half naked; the other night I wore my most plunging top and she told me I looked nice. Some nights when I come back late she will call me from her room as I get ready for bed in mine. I've come and gone from Tanzania several times since I first met Glory, and every time we've said goodbye, both of us have cried.

Stuck

Back from India, I found Tanzania awash in the worst of rainy season. Our cars got mired down daily out in the villages but never so bad as the Wednesday after I got back. A group of our staff members got stuck, badly, in the mud at about ten in the morning, and by four that evening were still stuck. They had spent the day searching for a tractor, but they were all out tilling the fields and none were available. The only option was for us to send another truck and a towrope and pull them out.

All the other trucks were late coming back from the field, so I set out with Anton, a lovely Rastafarian staff member with a ton of experience driving in the villages. He volunteered for the task and I was glad to have him along, though I knew he had a heavily pregnant wife at home and she would worry if he was late. The village was far away, and by the time we reached the area, we had only an hour or so of daylight left. Land that is usually dusty and barren was now a lake on both sides of the road, and as we got closer we saw houses that had been knocked over by floods. The road was a joke, a streambed really; it was obvious we would get stuck soon and I fumed that my staff had chosen to try to navigate these ridiculous roads. And then we were stuck, the rear fender of the car resting in the mud, the rear two tires spinning uselessly.

We were near a school and the guards there came out to help as the light waned, but the situation only got progressively more hopeless, no matter how many rocks we threw under the tires, how much pushing they did, or digging, or leveraging with boards. Now we had two cars stuck a mile apart from each other, the batteries on everyone’s cell phones were dying, we were in the middle of nowhere, and it was dark.

But soon a tractor passed the other stuck car which did not have a towrope, and our friends sent it to us, who did. The tractor had no headlight so rumbled up out of the dark, and was almost out of diesel, so the driver yelled at us to hurry. As the men fumbled with the towrope, I jumped behind the wheel. It felt marvelous as the tractor yanked the car out of the mud onto solid dirt. Problem half-solved.

We decided to have Anton walk to the still stuck car, and escort the other staff members to the freed car. I waited at the school, watching the cooking fire of two Masai guards. They said nothing, asked me nothing, and only laughed when an enormous cockroach landed in my hair and I screamed. Finally, Anton and the others emerged from the darkness, all in good spirits and laughing heartily. We piled in the car and began driving out the loooooong way, dropping two of the villagers who had helped us as we went. We finally got to the tarmac road, and at that moment, still at least an hour from town, the sky opened up and dropped the kind of rain that is basically like water poured from a massive bucket. I drove carefully, nervously, slowly through the rain, exhausted and scared and wondering what we could have done differently to avoid this whole mess. We got back to town at one am, Anton's wife in tears and all of us spent.

The next day, we sent another car out to retrieve the one that remained. It got stuck as well, and both had to be rescued by a tractor called away from the fields. They pulled into the office at five pm, both coated with mud, at the exact moment a well-meaning researcher from Northwestern University asked me “And how are the roads in the areas where you work?”.

India Journal: Part 6

All that remained for me was to say goodbye to David and get back to Delhi. The second day of Holi involves a lot of throwing of colors (in liquid and powder form) and a lot of drinking, so I was direly warned by the hotel manager about the dangers of traveling alone as a woman on this particular day. I had no choice, so I decided to jump on an early, deluxe bus and rely on my now well-honed “Piss off” face.

But, despite the assurances of multiple people, the buses were not running that morning because of the holiday, and a group of powder-stained drunk guys was following me around the station. I jumped in a rickshaw to the train station, which the driver also assured me was closed, and could he recommend a hotel? “Just take me to the station,” I growled, and we went. He was a liar, and I told him so after I booked my ticket and threw him his fare. Soon I was waiting on the platform with my backpack on and a cryptic ticket in my hand. Aware that I should probably not be talking directly to men without my brother with me, I asked a group of Muslim women in black robes if I was in the right place for the train to Delhi. They stared at me, giggled, and turned away.

I was baffled as the train finally pulled into the station and grateful for the guy with a roller suitcase and a blackberry in his hand who showed me where to get on. He spent the next four hours beside me, telling me about the instant connection he had felt to me back in that train station and the desire he had for me to meet his mother. Sadly, he had to get off before Delhi. At which point the cute guy across the aisle struck up a much more interesting conversation. He was one of the famed Indian IT workers living in Delhi, bringing his young niece and nephew to visit their aunt, his sister, for the holiday. He was not yet married, he confided, but would be in a few months. His parents and sister had chosen a bride for him, and he liked her, though he had never actually met her. I asked him if that wasn’t weird, and he said he thought it was okay. “My parents have more experience, so I think they know what is best for me,” he said. Huh.

Outside the train, villages passed full of pink and green and purple people, covered head to toe with the Holi colors. Whenever we neared inhabited areas, the windows of the train would slam shut, as open windows invited bucketfuls of colored water and fistfuls of powder. As we neared the city, the slums backing up on the tracks were winding up the holiday, with some people crouching by the water taps, scrubbing the colors out of their hair. I liked this as my last vision of India: colorful, riotous, a mess that is slowly getting cleaned up.

India Journal: Part 5

I forgot to mention that underlying the journey up to now has been my ongoing saga with the Ethiopian Airlines ticket office in Delhi. Ethiopian has by far the cheapest Kilimanjaro-Delhi ticket and by far the least reliable booking system I have ever encountered. I was cancelled off my flights twice in the weeks before my departure and as a result was on a waiting list for my return flight. Every morning and afternoon I called the Ethiopian office and had the following conversation:

Me: Hello, I would like to confirm my flight from Delhi to Kilimanjaro.
Hani, the Ticket Agent: What is your reservation number?
Me: DJGIR63
H,tTA: I am not able to confirm that flight at this time please call back this afternoon/tomorrow morning.

Was it Einstein who said that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result? And how many American sounding women were calling that office and trying to confirm a spot on that flight? Couldn’t I even get a “oh hi, Emily”?

Anyway the upshot of all that was that my return flight was delayed by two days so that we circled back to Jaipur, The Pink City, to catch the Elephant Festival. On our previous visit there, earlier in the trip, we had been unpleasantly overwhelmed by the size and the bustle of the city and having seen the major sights, made tracks. I think we imagined the Elephant Festival as a massive parade down the streets of town, huge decorated elephants narrowly passing the cycle rickshaws and fruit stands as colorfully-dressed Jaipurians cheered and threw confetti.

In reality, it was a fairly sedate, yet delightful affair. It was held at the stadium and the majority of attendees were white and came by the busload. The parade circled the grassy stadium and the elephants were great, their faces and trunks encrusted with gems and painted with pictures of tigers and flowers, their backs draped with velvet and topped with a proud mustachioed rider. Despite all the elegance, the elephants still swept the ground with their trucks, snacking on bundles of fresh-cut grass. Between the elephants came marching bands and dancing troupes, from tribal dancers dressed like monkeys to girls with giant peacock tails. The tourists snapped a million pictures.

That night was the first night of Holi, which is celebrated with bonfires. As we left the stadium, these bonfires were being set up in public roads, right in the middle of town. Sheaves of dried grass propped up over sticks with kites and other bits of color were set alight even as regular traffic continued to pass. The fires were huge, and the feeling was part insurrection, part campfire. At some of the fires, holy men in white said blessings, at others families burned more grasses to take to their home’s temple. As dark descended, the fires were left unattended, and subsided to coals.

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