Saturday, December 27, 2014

Lubumbashi Photos

Merry Christmas from Lubumbashi!
Jambo Mart is the only department store in Lubumbashi with 5 levels of goods from groceries to car batteries. English-speaking, South-Asian appearing managers walk the floor while purchases are rung up by Congolese cashiers.
They have an excellent selection of Indian spices, snacks and mixes.

Another picture of the robot traffic signals. Lubumbashi has three but Kinshasa only has two!
You can see "Made in DR Congo" below the robot.


Lubumbashi has a very nice museum which we visited on Halloween. Karen took these photos.

The lower section of the museum is a series of trilingual French, Swahili, and English photo displays from an exhibit put together several years ago that made the rounds to museums in and out of the DRC and is now housed here. The displays cover the natural history, industry, and culture of Katanga. Very interesting. 

Upstairs were artifacts from the necropolis at Sanga.
Below are close-ups, mainly for the benefit of my uncle, the archaeologist.

Note the copper crosses in the back -- these were used as money, and are on modern-day Lubumbashi's city seal.

A vessel. On the right you can see reflected the case in which a skeleton from the necropolis is laid out. On the left is the reflection of my paisley skirt.

More vessels.

This was a surprise -- in the passageway between wings of the museum was an area devoted to Laurent-Desiré Kabila, the opposition leader who overthrew the dictator Mobutu Sese Seko and served as president until his assassination in 2001. His son is the current president. There were no labels or interpretive information in this section, which included a couple of other items related to the DRC's liberator.

Taxi Driver (by Karen)

The view from the passenger’s seat on my way to the office with our usual driver, R, nearing the intersection of N’Djamena and Kapenda (or maybe Kasavubu?).

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First of all, remember those lovely smoky purple flame trees I wrote about before? You may all have known this already, but they’re jacarandas! I've always wondered what jacarandas looked like (doesn't Gabriel Garcia Marquez write about them in one of his books?), and now I know. They’re just like flame trees, but their flowers are purple. In fact, in French, they are called “flamboyant bleu”, or “blue flame”. Done blooming for the moment now.
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Traffic is interesting in Lubumbashi. As Eric mentioned in an earlier post, most of the cars here are imported used from Japan and have the steering wheel on the right, but cars also drive – for the most part – on the right side of the road. This has an interesting corollary; when passing on the left, the driver cannot see around the car in front to assess the oncoming traffic before pulling out. If there’s someone riding shotgun, he or she can give the driver the thumbs-up or -down. Otherwise, the driver has to take his or her chances.
Cars drive on the right for the most part, but in fact, you can find cars coming anywhere, anyhow, any time. More so than other places I've lived or visited where traffic seems confusing or chaotic, traffic here seems anarchic. See an empty spot of road ahead? Drive into it. No matter if there’s another vehicle at the end of it – take whatever you can get. Intersections sometimes end up gridlocked, with vehicles alternating like strands of warp and weft. It’s surprising that in a city as relatively small as Lubumbashi, traffic can sometimes be so bad. It’s worse now that it rains nearly every day: even on paved roads, drivers slow down, unable to tell whether a puddle is just filling a depression or hiding a huge pothole. Existing holes get bigger; mud from the unpaved alleys and side roads coats the paved roads.
No love is lost between pedestrians and drivers. It’s not uncommon to see a driver slow or stop for a pedestrian, but it’s not the rule. There’s no room for error; drivers count on walkers to continue on their trajectories, and if ever one were to slow or stumble, it seems like there wouldn't be enough time on either side to recover or react. I've never seen a pedestrian hit, though. We have seen a few road accidents, but generally not right downtown.  I suppose the anarchy isn't surprising, given that there’s no driver’s education: all it takes to get a license is proof that you’re 18 and $50 every 5 years.
Of course, there are conventions drivers follow, and signals they exchange, which are easier to decipher now that we've been here a while. One thing that still seems odd to me is the way drivers, sometimes 2 or 3 deep, turn across traffic. It’s hard to describe, but first of all, they often make the turn right in the face of oncoming traffic, and then often end up in the middle or on the left side of the road they've turned onto. Everything works itself out, and the benefit of starting the turn immediately is that you rarely have cars piled up behind someone who’s  stopped and waiting to turn left … which is good, because if they were held up for any time, they’d likely pull out into the left lane and cut off the left-turner. Most of the roads here in town are not very wide, and most cars don’t go all that fast, except the taxibuses, which try frantically to get as many runs in a day as possible; supposedly, they’re owned by muckety-mucks in the army or government and so have carte blanche to do whatever they want, but we haven’t been able to confirm that.
In any case, we don’t have a car here, and we don’t drive ourselves. We occasionally take the taxibus, but more often I ride with our regular driver, “R”. (I don’t want to use anybody’s name here, since we haven’t asked their permission, so I’ll stick to initials.) I met R shortly after we moved to our first apartment toward the end of October. I was coming out of a morning exercise class, and I flagged R down. When I told him the driver who’d earlier agreed to pick me up was nowhere to be seen, he muttered something about “these Congolese who are never on time”, which I thought might have been calculated to convey that he was not like THOSE Congolese … of course, being a habitual “retardataire” myself, I knew lateness was not the province only of Congolese, so this did not necessarily win me over. But I was won over when he walked a block and a half from my gate to break a large bill of Congolese francs since I didn't have anything smaller, and then refused my offer of extra pay for his trouble.
My phone was already then – and still is – full of the names and numbers of taxi drivers with whom we’d ridden who urged us to take their contact information and call them whenever we had errands to run. There were a couple that Eric and I had taken to calling, but we weren't particularly fond of any of them. So I gradually started calling R more, and we settled into some routines. He picks me up in the morning  to go to work (though I’m ALWAYS later than our agreed-on time – even when I try to fool myself that he’s coming 15 minutes earlier), and often picked us up after our evening French classes at the Alliance Française before they ended in December. In between, we or I will often hire him at $10/hour while we run errands, but we’re unpredictable clients – some days it’s just to and from the office, a round trip that doesn't even break $10, and some days it’s 5 hours of errands, much of which may be down time for him as he waits for us.
In the past couple of months, we've developed a friendship, though Eric and I (and undoubtedly R) are quite aware of the imbalances between us and him. R has a gentle manner, and speaks French well; it’s harder to understand drivers who speak mainly the local dialect of Swahili. He’s calm and I feel safe riding with him, even if he shares the Lubumbashi drivers’ assumption that vehicles have right of way over pedestrians.
As is often the case when I’m traveling, it’s through talking with taxi drivers that I glimpse what life might be like for locals. R and his wife, whom we haven’t yet met, have a 4-year-old, a 2-year-old, and a 3-month-old. The older kids go to a Catholic pre-school; monthly tuition is $50 per child. Even the public schools charge $20 a month, but parents who can afford it send their kids to Catholic school, and those who can afford even more send their kids to one of the fancy international schools where the expat kids go – the Belgian school, the French school, the English school. The usual school day is from 7-12, so at midday, the streets are thronged with kids in navy skirts or pants and white collared shirts, and traffic is dense as families who have cars head to pick them up and take them home; the rest walk along the side of the road in groups of two or three, sometimes with an adult and sometimes on their own. There are few paved sidewalks in Lubumbashi, and where they exist, they are often blocked by parked vehicles or piles of construction materials or vendors, or interrupted by steps or trenches. Often there is just a dusty strip between the road and the walls of the buildings – most homes and businesses are behind walls – and now that it’s the rainy season, water and mud collect in the strip. So it’s very common to see people walking on the edge of the street, including kids as they’re walking to or from school, and very common to see bumpers and side mirrors come uncomfortably (for me) close to them.
R used to work as a driver for an executive, a job that paid $100 a month – but his rent alone is $100 a month, so he quit that job and started driving a taxi, a job at which he can make up to $100 in a week. He doesn't own the car he drives, and his goal for this year is to buy a car of his own. The owner of the car lets him take it home at night now, which is good, because before, R would get up at 4 AM to take public transport – i.e., a taxibus – to pick up the car, and drop it off again at night, a trip that took up to an hour each way. He still gets up early: at 4h30, he heats water for the kids’ bath, bathes them, makes and feeds them breakfast, and drops them at school around 6h45. If he’s not busy, he picks them up from school at noon, often leaving them with his older sister who has a shop in town. He works till 20h30 or 21h00.
On one particularly taxing day, R picked me up to take me to work in the morning. On the way, I asked how things were going, and he said OK, but his wife was having a problem – she needed an operation to remove a cyst. I asked when the operation would be, and he said that the doctor would schedule it once they paid the money -- $150 up front. R had $50 at home and was planning to work hard that day and the next to get the remaining $100. Was his wife in pain?, I asked. Yes, he said. But the operation would have to wait until the money was paid. Shortly after he dropped me at the office, R called to say he wouldn't be able to pick up Eric later in the morning as planned, because his car had been impounded at a road block. Later he explained that, although he had 5 or 6 stickers on the windshield showing that he was paid up for registration, city tax, insurance (about $150 a year for a passenger car), etc., the police stopped him because he was missing a “TAXI” sign. The sign cost $40, and getting his car out of the impoundment was another $50. So, he was out $90 and, for the better part of the day while he raised the cash from friends, he was deprived of his livelihood while the car sat in the lot. So much for his wife’s surgery.
On that occasion, Eric and I offered help, and R accepted gratefully. It’s been several weeks now since his wife had the surgery, but R told me recently that she was still bleeding from the wound (it sounds like it was a laparotomy). It turned out that her sister, who had come after the birth of their youngest, was no longer staying with them. With no help around the house, R’s wife was continuing her normal routine of carrying water and other chores. I asked if they knew anyone who could help around the house, but I stopped short of asking how much it might cost to pay someone to come and help for a few days and then offering to pay that. Rightly or wrongly, I feel that it would be too prescriptive and intrusive to suggest that. I am reluctant to adopt the role of patron, or maybe just too naïve to recognize the extent to which I already am in that role; but our relationship, despite the financial imbalance, still feels reciprocal. When we were at the DGM (Direction Générale de Migration, the immigration office) in Kinshasa and needed a document we’d left behind in Lubumbashi, he went to our house to get it and bring it to a colleague who was flying to Kin that afternoon. When we planned to be in Kenya over New Year’s and needed a place to leave our stuff so we could be out of our first apartment before moving into our next, he offered to store it at his place.
For Christmas we gave R a bonus to help buy the kids’ new Christmas outfits and shoes, and also got a gift for his kids. I've met the older two a couple of times; so far they haven’t let out even a squeak around me, but R assures me that they talk plenty at home! When our Christmas trip to Nairobi was postponed while we waited for our passports to be returned from Kinshasa with our residence visas, R invited us to have Christmas dinner at his house, and we were excited at the prospect of meeting his wife and baby (and kids, for Eric) and seeing his house (and eating bukari, aka fufu, en famille!). We’re not the only steady expat clients R has; he has a few long-term Belgian clients, and we’d seen a picture of his family with them at his house, so we know we’re not unique. In any case, it was not to be -- he called Christmas morning and regretfully cancelled, saying he had to take the bus to Kolwezi and back to bring something to someone on behalf of someone who was ill, and wouldn't return until night.
I’m starting to get some insights about the cost of medical care through our association with R. There was his wife’s surgery, and before that, the inhaler treatments for his daughter ($12 a pop), and then the kids’ vaccines. The older kids got measles vaccine and vitamin A recently as part of a campaign, and I don’t think they paid for those, but when the baby went for her routine immunizations, it was 2,500 FC ($2.77) per shot and 1,000 FC ($0.90) for a syringe.  With two shots (and one syringe?), it was 6,000 FC. R knows that the vaccines are donated by UNICEF and supposed to be free. An encouraging point is that his family has insecticide-treated bednets to reduce the risk of malaria, and they did get those free through a campaign. However, the nets need to be replaced, or at least re-treated with insecticide … and the two older kids had an illness that was probably malaria a few weeks ago, just after the start of the rainy season. He himself hasn't had malaria since about 2006 (he’s in his mid-30s, I forget exactly how old – 37, maybe?), so, like most adult inhabitants of endemic areas, he’s developed immunity. An interesting side note to this is that colleagues at the university who have traveled abroad quite a bit have probably lost some of that immunity and are more susceptible to clinical malaria than most adults. For our part, Eric and I take daily malaria prophylaxis, but we've heard other expats advise against it in the belief that taking prophylaxis only delays diagnosis and leads to more complicated cases of malaria.
The first time I met R’s kids, they were in the car when he showed up to take me to work. I thought he was late bringing them to school, but he told me that they had been sent home because he hadn't paid their school fees for the month. I didn't say it, but I was thinking about how embarrassing that must have been for the kids, to be sent home in front of all their classmates because their dad hadn't paid their fees … they’d be scarred for life. Maybe R could sense what I was thinking, because after a few minutes he broke the silence to say that nearly everyone had been sent home – it was the first of December, and lots of families weren't caught up with their fees.
One evening after French class at the Alliance, R wasn't there at 19h15. We knew he’d show up before long, and indeed, he did, a minute or two later. As his car approached, I could see someone sitting in the passenger seat. R parked quickly, jumped out, and jogged over to us. I said it looked like he had a client; he said, no, that was his father, whom he was taking home to Kalubwe -- would we mind if his father rode along while he dropped us off in Golf? Of course not! His father, not surprisingly, turned out to be a genial guy. I knew R lived in Bel Air with his wife and kids, but I wondered if he’d grown up in the house in Kalubwe. No, he hadn't. His father described how they used to rent, and over time, slowly saved up for a house of their own. They built? bought? a kiln, and sold some of the bricks, but kept many of them to build their own house. We had seen lots and lots of these brick kilns in people’s plots along the roads leading out of town, so this must be a common practice. People then build the house little by little over time; when you see Lubumbashi from the air, you can look down on partially completed houses that look from the air like little labyrinths. R’s father said that at some point, even though it wasn't finished, the house was habitable; they moved in and continued working on it till it was done.
Since we’re here for a fairly long time, our interactions with Congolese aren't limited to taxi rides. We've met others here: fellow students from our classes at the Alliance Française, colleagues and students at the School of Public Health, a returned Fulbrighter who works in mining, some IT staff and instructors at a school Eric hopes to volunteer at, the owners of the new place we’re looking forward to moving in to when we get back from our New Year’s trip to Kenya. We've also met some expats, but without kids at one of the international schools or a professional connection to a foreign-based mining company or NGO, we aren't really plugged in to that community. More about all that in another post! 

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Clarification

The picture of the raft in the last post is from the movie, "Beasts of the Southern Wild" – we didn't take any pictures on the lake.

Bus to Likasi

We've been talking about visiting Likasi for about as long as we have been in Lubumbashi. Besides the Zambian border, Likasi is the only town within a couple hours of Lubumbashi, and we finally made the trip on Thanksgiving weekend. Buses leave regularly from downtown L'shi (once they are full), and we got on a bus around 11:15 in the morning.
There were a number of vendors – "independent contractors" – on the bus selling soda, water, biscuits, and other snacks. As the bus filled up, the vendors were pushed off and had to settle for selling things through the windows. The bus had a bench for 2 on the starboard side, and a bench for 3 on the port side. I was surprised to see that after all the seats were full, plastic buckets and jerrycans were put in the aisle, and people were seated there as well – one extra person per row. The one-way cost from L'shi to Likasi was 4000 FC ($4.40) each, regardless of where you were seated. We shared a 3-person bench with a young Congolaise, who sat next to the aisle. On her other side was a nicely dressed man on a bucket.
As the bus got rolling, there were only 2 people standing: the conductor and another gentleman, both standing beside the bus's side door. We thought it was odd that people were seated in the aisle instead of standing, since the bus had handles hanging from the ceiling over the aisle, and sitting in the aisle looked more uncomfortable than standing. But maybe not for 2 hours.
Once the bus left downtown, it became clear that the guy standing beside the conductor was a minister (the entertainment?) – he started preaching loud enough to be heard throughout the bus. I could only catch a few words – Karen understood more of the local Swahili dialect – but neither of us remember much of his message besides the initial request to pray to Jesus for a safe trip. The passengers were quiet and many joined in two a cappella hymns that were very beautiful. He was hoarse when he exited after about 25 minutes, just before the toll booth. We didn't take the bus on the return trip – more on that later – so we can't say how common that experience is.

The highway to Likasi is paved the whole way (the road continues to be paved to Kolwezi), but only just wide enough for 2 cars. This makes for some excitement as buses and trucks and bicycles and pedestrians are all overtaking and passing each other. Most of the way I was struck by the emptiness – mostly scrub and woods in all directions. We did pass next to some villages and through a couple of busy trading areas where the bus would slow down or stop and vendors would sell produce through the windows. Instead of the soda and biscuits the vendors sold in Lubumbashi, at these stops we saw live animals, roasted corn, tomatoes, and okra for sale.
Likasi has a busy parking lot functioning as the bus station, but I'm not sure where the buses go besides L'shi and Kolwezi. We traveled light, but still wanted to get our bags into a hotel room, so we got a room at the Greek-owned hotel listed in our guide book as having the best non-Congolese restaurants in town, one Chinese and one Italian. Another place listed in our specially ordered French guide book was Guesthouse Okapi, which was said to have a car to rent. Our goal in Likasi was to visit the nearby lake and rent a pirogue to check out birds, so we walked to the Guesthouse Okapi to ask about their car.
The okapi - a giraffe relative
The Okapi was tucked away behind the main streets. We were greeted by John, the son of "Papa Okapi", who was home on break from studying electrical engineering in South Africa. He was quiet and responsible. We talked for a little bit, but had to wait for Papa Okapi to discuss the details about the car. Papa Okapi was a character: talkative and animated. He was very interested to see the guidebook that listed the Okapi Guesthouse, and delighted to realize that the author must have stayed at his guesthouse since there was so much detail. He also wanted us to get him a copy of the book. I bought a copy today – now we'll have to figure out the hand-off.
Anyway, his driver Kit (pronounced "Keet") could take us to the lake in their 4x4, and John would come along too. But when we asked "combien ça coute?", he asked us to suggest a price. This put us in a awkward position – we don't have a good idea about what is reasonable. This standoff ended when Karen got a little annoyed and pointed out the setting the price is his job and we shouldn't be asked to do his job for him – doctors don't ask patients, "what do you think you have?" [Karen: well, sometimes doctors do ask patients what they think they have -- the example I actually used was an epidemiology example, as in, I wouldn't expect you to know the incidence of cholera -- that's my job to figure out ... ] Back at our hotel, we ate dinner in the Italian restaurant near a table full of expat miners speaking English in a variety accents. I coveted a Chinese broccoli dish that one guy brought in from next door.
The next morning, John and Kit showed up, and we drove to Lake Tshangelele. We turned off the paved road onto a rutted and narrow dirt road that passed through a fairly busy village where we turned off onto a narrower track bordered by deep gullies caused by the heavy rains. At the edge of the lake, there were a dozen people and about twice that many dugout boats pulled onto the shore. John negotiated with a couple guys in a larger pirogue made of planks – the 5 of us wouldn't have fit in a dugout. The two young fishermen sat in back and paddled. John and I sat across from each other in the middle, and Karen sat up front.
This artificial lake was formed by damming a small river, but as the water rose, it eventually opened a channel and started draining out the north end. This second channel was dammed later, but the entire lake is silting up and is pretty shallow. Much of it is covered with tall grasses, and it wasn't long before we were gliding through a well-defined passage in the vegetation. The passage was wide enough that canoes coming the other way could slip past, but we couldn't see very far in any direction as we snaked through the grass. It was a while before we reached a wide-open area full of water lilies where we turned around. They might have been joking, but fishermen said there were hippos in the lake, hidden during the middle of the day. For me, the coolest sight was the "fisherman's restaurant", a floating raft in a wide spot that reminded me of scenes from the movie "Beasts of the Southern Wild" – a raft with a tarp roof, hemmed in by canoes, with people lying on the raft and a charcoal stove cooking food.
Raft from the movie "Beasts of the Southern Wild"
We made our way back to town, with a brief pitstop at a Catholic boarding school for boys. We got back earlier than we would have liked, so we went to the site of what was once the Belgian country club-like sports complex but is now nearly abandoned: there was a soccer game and the remnants of a restaurant where we got beer and chicken and fries, but one could imagine the earlier glory of the large swimming pool with 3 diving boards and the wading pool, both now empty with weeds growing between the tiles and the playground equipment likewise weed-choked.
That night we stayed at the Okapi Guesthouse and had a great room and personal attention by John; we were the only guests. Sunday morning we got up early and walked through town to the surrounding fields. We saw okra growing, but most of the other plants were small, since growing season is just starting. We were looking for birds, and sights, and the opportunity to walk rather than riding in a car. We walked for quite a while and got a little mixed up coming back, but the temperature was comfortable and we made it back to the Guesthouse in time to shower and get breakfast before we left for the bus stop. We walked past full churches and heard a powerful male choir from one. At the bus stop, the bus was pretty full and we decided to wait rather than sit in the aisle. However, we were quickly approached by someone telling us about a shared van for the same price. We decided to do that and joined 6 other passengers sitting 4-to-a-row in addition to the driver and a front-seat passenger who talked nonstop about cannibalism and fetishes and black magic by various bandit groups in the north. Just outside Lubumbashi we were delayed by the site of a pretty spectacular car accident, and our driver stopped the van and everyone got out to look except me and Karen. Disturbing and morbid, but at least it wasn't a fatal crash.
After two months of staying in Lubumbashi, we finally got it together to make a quick trip out of town. It was easy and interesting and maybe a little more expensive than we expected, which was great practice, since a few days later we took off suddenly to Kinshasa, where we spent a week. More on that later...