Sue and I moved into our three-bedroom bungalow on Monday, Jan. 11 following a week of renovations (new air-conditioner, security gates, some lighting, etc.)
We have been assigned a 24-hour security guard (3 8-hour shifts), not on our request, but we have no problem having them around (there are still a few spots in the bungalow that are a bit too accessible from the large back yard). Must confess to a bit of “post-colonial” guilt here – the guards, like all KNUST staff, are incredibly deferential, insist on carrying anything you have up to the house for you, call us “Sir” and “Madame,” and two of them even salute me when I come in and out. It’s a little weird.
Our yard consists primarily of extremely dense vegetation, and we were happy to see mango, orange, papaya (paw-paw), pears, cocoa, bananas, cassava, and other fruits and veggies growing in the cleared areas (the papayas have been outstanding; the mangoes are not yet ripe). We also have several large palm trees, and a woman came and cut off a few large palm branches, hacking on them for nearly an hour, then turned the job over to a young boy who cut away hundreds of individual palm nuts that we learned would be used for palm soup. Beyond the back yard is the “valley,” which is uninhabited and consists of impenetrable trees, shrubs, grasses and who knows what else. We also have two small outbuldings known as the “boy squatters’ houses” on the property, wherein a small family that we have yet to meet or even see lives. We were told it was our decision whether they are allowed to stay or not.
The acoustic ecology of our surroundings is amazing. Between 5 and 6 am, thousands of birds circle the yard and create a contrapuntal cacophony of mammoth proportions. We hear other assorted chirps, caws, croaks, and tweets throughout the day. The enormous flock of bats that appears at dusk makes its own unique symphony, and the goats that our neighbor is raising let loose with their yelps around our dinner time (maybe theirs, too). We also hear the large number of neighborhood loose dogs raising a ruckus from time to time (day or night), and the sound of an avocado falling from a tree onto our slanted tin roof adds an always-surprising entry into the ongoing environmental ambient performance. We heard gunshots this morning and learned that people were shooting the bats. Our daytime security guard, a very sharp Ghanaian who is fluent in French from his years studying in Cote D’Ivoire, told me that they are shot to be eaten; he had bagged two on his way to work.
Ghanaians typically have two or more media playing simultaneously; we have been to many restaurants, hotels, bars and other establishments where a TV and a radio are both on. Soccer matches run nearly 24/7 on one or both of the devices and religious programs are also ubiquitous.
We sprang for cable TV to boost our channel access from the 5 locally available to 50, and of those, at least 45 are religious (predominantly Christian, but a fair number of Muslin as well). Occasionally, those stations will switch to some sort of rural/ethnic programming, and we watched an amazing video of a live ceremony, in which each of a large number of clans (a clan is a social unit larger than an extended family but smaller than a tribal ethnic group) performed in costumes that exemplified their respective animal totem (symbol). These included bats, dogs, buffalo, birds and more.
The only three non-indigenous channels are BBC, Fox Africa (which shows old Simpsons, Scrubs and Buffy repeats), and MGM (old movies – the same ones run everyday for a week). Al Jezeera (sp) and National Geographic Adventure (with Arabic subtitles) fill out the roster. The local channels run a series of “rural-based” (village settings) soap operas, complete with traditional dress, the best of which is Africa Magic. Fortunately, we have a large collection of unread books, and catching up on regional news in the paper is always fascinating. We have also been waiting most of the week for our Internet service to be installed, but we’re not expecting much. The service we purchased (for almost $50 per month!) runs at 128 kb, and unless I read the specs wrong, that’s about the speed of a modem I used 15 years ago.
We’re in the dry season now, and the harmattan winds blow dust all the way down from the Sahara; clean up is pretty much a constant endeavor. We are fastidious in every respect – even a single crumb of food will draw ants in an instant. We have to boil the tap water to use it even for washing dishes, and preparing food (mostly fruit and veggies – there is no meat at the local “super” market) is a time-consuming affair. Our commitment to the environment has taken a step backwards – we go through about a case (12) of large bottled water bottles per day, and I am not aware of any recycling efforts anywhere in the area (we’ll keep looking for a 5-gallon dispenser). We also use only paper plates in order to reduce the amount of cleanup. We keep in our (small) fridge just about enough food for a day or two, pretty much mandatory, as the power goes out randomly, at times for a few hours. We also learned this week that water is being rationed and that it will be available for only four days per week for the near future. We've both given up coffee for tea - instant coffee is the only thing you can find anywhere.
The fellow who picks up our garbage every morning (in a wheel barrel!) asked me to save out the bottles for him, and when I asked, he said he had an (undefined) use for them; like every Ghanaian we have met, he seems to be very industrious. The plumber who came to fix a clogged drain had no snake with him; he simply went into the back yard, cut a few long bamboo branches from our tree, and whittled them down to the size he needed. It’s amazing what people accomplish using only natural resources.
Logistics
I picked up a used 125cc Piaggio motor scooter this week (Piaggio makes the Vespa brand, which is what mine is), and it has been a huge help in getting around our very large campus. We have also been assigned a driver who takes us in a pickup truck to get large items, groceries and the like. There’s a very small commercial area on campus with a bank, a post office, and a couple of stalls selling dry goods, and a small town right outside the gates that has a small grocery store. For most things, we head into the Adum (city center) area of Kumasi, about a 20-minute ride. At every stop light along the way, people come up to the truck to sell numerous items, ranging from paint brushes to toilet paper to bags of fried plantains to Golden Tree chocolate, my favorite brand.
Adum sits just above the Central Market (aka Kejetia), which, at 10,000 stalls, is the largest in West Africa. Sue and I ventured around the market today with no trouble; there’s a mass of humanity even on the outskirts.
Travelling after dark is like entering Dante’s Inferno. In additional to the smoke from factories burning charcoal (for sale) and the ever-present diesel-fuel exhaust filling the air, there are small, individual fires burning down every alley (and of course, the ever-present burning garbage). There are no street lights or street signs (mail is not delivered), and only some of the larger potholes can be seen before being entered. Wheeless tro-tros (public transportation vans), broken down semis, and stalled cars are found at every turn, both in the middle and on the side of the road. Like everywhere else, patience is the required response. If a driver doesn’t know the way somewhere, he will lean out of the window, address the next person he sees as “Brother,” “Boss,” “Champion,” “Chief,” “President” or some other familiar term and request directions.
I'll be visiting an orphanage this weekend where I might be working. Stay tuned!
-DHM
Monday, January 18, 2010
Saturday, January 9, 2010
AFENHYIA PA (Happy New Year!)
Sue and I, along with around 20,000 Ghanaians, spent New Year’s Eve at a gospel concert/sanctified service at Independence Square in Accra. The evening, which ran from 7 pm to 2 am (we only stayed 4 ½ hours ;-)), consisted of about 10 different musical groups performing “Gospel” (religious) music, though the music actually encompassed a wide range of styles including reggae, calypso, high life, and South African-flavored (Johnny Clegg-style) and other “Afro-pop” styles, interspersed with some very fiery preaching by different ministers. At midnight, the head pastor of the International Central Gospel Church (ICGC, the sponsor of the event) gave the headliner sermon, which, like the evening itself, focused on “crossing over” into the new year and “breaking through” to higher ground. Unfortunately, this was about the time we left. I made a short video of the event that you can find at http://www.vimeo.com/8637884
and http://www.vimeo.com/8648069.
The crowd was totally charged by the program, dancing and singing continuously, and everyone but us seemed to know the words to every song. At one point, the two young boys of a family we were sitting with got separated from their mother (who carried a baby on her back the whole night, even while dancing), and I had to take them out into the crowd to try and find the mom; it was a crazy scene.
The next evening, we stumbled across a club event in our neighborhood (Osu) where the entry tickets were going for 100 Cedis ($70). This is a staggering amont of money to many Ghanaians, but there was no shortage of “elites” who could easily pay the fee and partake of the all-you-could-eat-and-drink arrangement. The former president was among those in attendance, and several major Ghanaian pop musical artists performed.
We continue to be struck by the vast class continuum in Ghanaian society, which extends from extremely poor to very (but not, at least from what I can gather, fabulously) wealthy. We had a lengthy chat with a Ghanaian business professor, now living and working in the UK, about questions of efficiency and productivity and he said, quite without irony, “But you know, Ghana is the most disorganized society on the planet” (his field is human resources and personnel management). There are many people who spend the entire day sitting by the side of the road or selling small baggies of water to motorists stopped at traffic lights. And everyone in the administrative offices on our campus has a computer sitting alongside Kafkaesque mounds of paper documents, many of which spill out onto the floor. It seems that nothing is computerized – database programs are non-existent, even at the bank – and the country appears to operate on a cash-only, face-to-face, later-is-as-good-as-now, basis. The concepts of frustration, impatience and aggravation have left our vocabulary (and were never found here in the first place). “Take it as it comes” is the way to proceed.
Of course, once you leave your “hurry” at the door, you realize that the face-to-face delivery of services also allows a social interaction you might not otherwise have. When you first enter any office or shop, you stop to say hello, how are you, happy new year and how is the family. When I went back to a busy store in Kumasi that Sue and I had been to a few days before, I was met with greetings of “where is your wife,” and “how is your wife? (I wonder how she recognized me ;-))” Everyone we have had any interaction with, however small, has been completely welcoming and friendly – never seen anything like it.
Our days have been filled with preparing to move into our three-bedroom bungalow, which needed, above all, air conditioning and better security (the temperature averages mid-90s, with 99% humidity). We have been told that minor theft is not uncommon on campus, but our place is in pretty good shape. I had a whale of a good time trying out motorscooters at a scooter market in Kumasi, and I’m moving ever closer to finding a placement for my day time activities, helped immensely by my new best buddy, Rev. Martin Adi-Dako. Martin runs the Cultural Center on campus and wants to do similar volunteer work to that which I’m hoping to do; we may both volunteer at a local orphanage run by a former faculty member. He is also extremely committed to maintaining Ghanaian cultural heritage and I hope to assist him on a documentary on drum making that he is producing. We may also find some opportunities to publish and market samples (digital recordings) of the vast number of drums the Center owns, many of which were made by students in his drum-making class (I’m signed up for this semester).
Sue and I took our first-ever solo trip into Kumasi today – the city was hugely less crowded (but still very hectic) than we have seen it previously because many people, we were told, were home with their kids (it’s Saturday). We stayed on the outskirts of Kejetia market (the largest – over 10,000 stalls - in West Africa), which is in the town center and had no trouble maneuvering along the side streets/alleys/stalls that form every block. There’s good cab service to and from town right from campus (I don’t plan to ride my scooter off campus) and we’ve managed to find reliable suppliers of many essentials, such as hand sanitizer and mosquito repellent. As always, people are tickled when we speak Twi to them – I totally impressed a bunch of seedy types by telling them, in Twi, that we were not tourists and that we live here. Sad to say, but there are some areas very close to town that give off an apocalyptical haze from burning garbage – it is very disheartening to see kids playing in these same areas. We have been told that major cleanups are in store, and would have been completed except for the recent change in government (a lot of projects were reassessed by the new administration).
Sue has been at work the whole week – each day starts with a one hour sit-down/tea with the entire Biology faculty. Academic concerns, news of the day, movies, international affairs, crystal formation and methods for electron microscopy, among other topics, are discussed; enthusiastic, loud and passionate at times. The Dean of Science and Biology Department chair preside over bread and tea, chocolate (Milo), milk, or coffee. Work recommences at 11 until 1, when everyone leaves for lunch for one hour. Sue’s office is centrally located, air conditioned with fast internet and more than adequate, and she is very fond of her colleagues.
So much more I could report – every day has been jammed with new sensations, sights, sounds, challenges, amusements, intellectual provocations, epiphanies, and more, but I’ll let it go for now.
Me ba ochina! (I’ll be back tomorrow)
-DHM
and http://www.vimeo.com/8648069.
The crowd was totally charged by the program, dancing and singing continuously, and everyone but us seemed to know the words to every song. At one point, the two young boys of a family we were sitting with got separated from their mother (who carried a baby on her back the whole night, even while dancing), and I had to take them out into the crowd to try and find the mom; it was a crazy scene.
The next evening, we stumbled across a club event in our neighborhood (Osu) where the entry tickets were going for 100 Cedis ($70). This is a staggering amont of money to many Ghanaians, but there was no shortage of “elites” who could easily pay the fee and partake of the all-you-could-eat-and-drink arrangement. The former president was among those in attendance, and several major Ghanaian pop musical artists performed.
We continue to be struck by the vast class continuum in Ghanaian society, which extends from extremely poor to very (but not, at least from what I can gather, fabulously) wealthy. We had a lengthy chat with a Ghanaian business professor, now living and working in the UK, about questions of efficiency and productivity and he said, quite without irony, “But you know, Ghana is the most disorganized society on the planet” (his field is human resources and personnel management). There are many people who spend the entire day sitting by the side of the road or selling small baggies of water to motorists stopped at traffic lights. And everyone in the administrative offices on our campus has a computer sitting alongside Kafkaesque mounds of paper documents, many of which spill out onto the floor. It seems that nothing is computerized – database programs are non-existent, even at the bank – and the country appears to operate on a cash-only, face-to-face, later-is-as-good-as-now, basis. The concepts of frustration, impatience and aggravation have left our vocabulary (and were never found here in the first place). “Take it as it comes” is the way to proceed.
Of course, once you leave your “hurry” at the door, you realize that the face-to-face delivery of services also allows a social interaction you might not otherwise have. When you first enter any office or shop, you stop to say hello, how are you, happy new year and how is the family. When I went back to a busy store in Kumasi that Sue and I had been to a few days before, I was met with greetings of “where is your wife,” and “how is your wife? (I wonder how she recognized me ;-))” Everyone we have had any interaction with, however small, has been completely welcoming and friendly – never seen anything like it.
Our days have been filled with preparing to move into our three-bedroom bungalow, which needed, above all, air conditioning and better security (the temperature averages mid-90s, with 99% humidity). We have been told that minor theft is not uncommon on campus, but our place is in pretty good shape. I had a whale of a good time trying out motorscooters at a scooter market in Kumasi, and I’m moving ever closer to finding a placement for my day time activities, helped immensely by my new best buddy, Rev. Martin Adi-Dako. Martin runs the Cultural Center on campus and wants to do similar volunteer work to that which I’m hoping to do; we may both volunteer at a local orphanage run by a former faculty member. He is also extremely committed to maintaining Ghanaian cultural heritage and I hope to assist him on a documentary on drum making that he is producing. We may also find some opportunities to publish and market samples (digital recordings) of the vast number of drums the Center owns, many of which were made by students in his drum-making class (I’m signed up for this semester).
Sue and I took our first-ever solo trip into Kumasi today – the city was hugely less crowded (but still very hectic) than we have seen it previously because many people, we were told, were home with their kids (it’s Saturday). We stayed on the outskirts of Kejetia market (the largest – over 10,000 stalls - in West Africa), which is in the town center and had no trouble maneuvering along the side streets/alleys/stalls that form every block. There’s good cab service to and from town right from campus (I don’t plan to ride my scooter off campus) and we’ve managed to find reliable suppliers of many essentials, such as hand sanitizer and mosquito repellent. As always, people are tickled when we speak Twi to them – I totally impressed a bunch of seedy types by telling them, in Twi, that we were not tourists and that we live here. Sad to say, but there are some areas very close to town that give off an apocalyptical haze from burning garbage – it is very disheartening to see kids playing in these same areas. We have been told that major cleanups are in store, and would have been completed except for the recent change in government (a lot of projects were reassessed by the new administration).
Sue has been at work the whole week – each day starts with a one hour sit-down/tea with the entire Biology faculty. Academic concerns, news of the day, movies, international affairs, crystal formation and methods for electron microscopy, among other topics, are discussed; enthusiastic, loud and passionate at times. The Dean of Science and Biology Department chair preside over bread and tea, chocolate (Milo), milk, or coffee. Work recommences at 11 until 1, when everyone leaves for lunch for one hour. Sue’s office is centrally located, air conditioned with fast internet and more than adequate, and she is very fond of her colleagues.
So much more I could report – every day has been jammed with new sensations, sights, sounds, challenges, amusements, intellectual provocations, epiphanies, and more, but I’ll let it go for now.
Me ba ochina! (I’ll be back tomorrow)
-DHM
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