Monday, September 24, 2012

Weekend near Mt. Kenya

The past several weeks have been nuts.  This has meant little time to write, and less time to get online, but I've got several posts in the works about some of the things we've been doing, and I should start at my placement next week--I'm hoping that will mean a more stable schedule in the near future.  In the mean time, here are some pictures from this past weekend.
Mt. Kenya, in the distance

Zoomed in on Mt. Kenya

The dog sleeping outside the kitchen.
Coffee.
Red Coffee
Behind me is a natural lime-spring, with human-consumable mineral water. It was tasty.
The group descending down to our first waterfall of the day.
Foliage and a waterfall.
Yeah, I'm cheesy.
The second waterfall.
The fire for heating our bath-water.

Sunset
Sunset
Catherine and Nicole with the Javocado (Giant-Avocado)
Gina and rice fields.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

A Saturday in Mathare


 “The guillotine is the concretion of the law; it is called vindicte; it is not neutral and does not permit you to remain neutral.”
     -Victor Hugo, Les Miserables

Pulling into the parking lot, my eyes are irresistibly drawn to the bright light of the blow torch.  My sunglasses do little to protect my eyes, but despite the pain and my best efforts, each new burst brings fresh temptation to look right into the flame that forms the burning heart of this outdoor metal shop where craftsmen make decorative bars for windows and other pieces of useful, industrial art.

Past the metal shop is a concrete block of a building, some three stories tall, with several shops lining the ground level advertising mobile telephone airtime, produce, and Coca-Cola.  To my left is a butcher shop, a leg of beef hanging in the window.  We park and proceed into an unlit hallway between two of the shops, stepping over puddles created by water flow.  Later, when we leave, I see people washing dishes with this water, using one of the larger pools as a basin, filling the others with soapy foam as the dirty water flows away.

We turn left and emerge into a dim room, where goat is being cooked over one of the small charcoal grills so common here.  To my right is a large door open to the outside.  Exchanging greetings and handshakes with the many people in the room, we make our way through the room toward the door.

Now on the other side of the concrete building, we hop down to the packed dirt street—the building is apparently built into a slight hill.  In front of me are two double lines of children, holding plates and spoons.  At the head of each line, adults serve them a creamy looking soup with beans and some of the already cooked goat meat.  At the back, the line bends to avoid a large pile of rocks.  I climb up it just enough to peer over.  The other side runs steeply downhill into the Mathare Valley, filled with a sea of corrugated metal roofs.

For a while, I stand, nearly frozen, trying to take it all in. Eventually, I am interrupted by a small child in a yellow shirt, perhaps about four years old.  He comes up and takes hold of my leg, looking up and smiling.  I smile back and ask him his name, but get no response—it seems he speaks about as much English as I do Kiswahili.  After a while, he points at my sunglasses, now hanging from my shirt.  I kneel down and put them on him.  He smiles wider; my host father notices and snaps a quick picture. 

Within moments, the other children also notice.  They come over, each wanting a turn with the glasses.  Each child who puts them on is greeted by smiles and a chorus of “Mizungu!” (white-person).  Soon, however, they press a bit too tightly and begin to fight over the glasses.  Reluctantly I stand and extract them from the crowd.  Music has started, and the children quickly disperse and begin to dance.  My yellow-shirted friend looks at me, betrayed.

I look away, toward the source of the music and see that speakers and an amp have emerged from the room.  Painted around the door is a brightly colored mural showcasing the vibrancy of the community.  At the top, framed by two arms holding hands, is the name of the organization we are visiting: “Inspiration Ministry.”

One of the leaders of Inspiration Ministry has recently been married, and today is celebrating his wedding with the children he serves.  I get the chance to speak to him a bit and discover that he grew up in this neighborhood, and was one of few to have the opportunity to attend school and university.  Now he leads this organization, ministering specifically to the children who are ignored by many of the other churches in the settlement, seeking to give them hope for a future unrestricted by the hard conditions of their upbringing. He tells me that many of the children there are being raised by single mothers, so he provides child care and a free lunch so their mothers can go to work. He tells me that many of the families survive on less than a dollar a day. 

I wonder if they know the glasses I briefly let them play with could feed them for a month.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

From the Plane


What's below was originally written on the flight in to Nairobi, but I haven't really had the chance to post it until now.  As a teaser, today was also eventful, however I still need some time to process before I post anything about it.  Hopefully more will come soon.

Kenya now lies below me, or at so the least the flight tracker on the screen in front of me says.  I am unable to verify this fact, partly due to my aisle seat, but even standing to give myself a better angle, nothing is distinguishable below.  I see neither lights nor roads, and given the darkness, have no way of knowing if this is simply because there isn’t anything to see, or if cloud cover obscures my view.

I desperately want to see something.  Anything to prove to myself that after four years it is really Kenya which lies below, that we are in fact only about 40 minutes from landing in Nairobi.  Alas, my field of view is too limited.  I am tempted to ask the amiable Danish couple sitting to my left, but then the map displays again, and it looks like we are over a large lake, whose name, to my chagrin, is unknown to me. It appears to be part of the greater rift valley—a long and comparatively narrow body of water running roughly North-North-West.
 
I find myself for the first time really wishing that our original flight plans had held—not to say that we had any choice, and certainly it seemed a blessing at the time—one fewer layover in exchange for only an extra two hours of total travel time.  Alas, I did not think about the setting of the sun, nor do I think anyone else much considered the idea. 

I have been struggling to maintain consciousness throughout this flight, but have been doing my best to force myself through so that I might wake tomorrow largely synchronized to Nairobi time—we should be landing at around 8:10 PM, so hopefully there will be no plans for the night, and I can just concentrate on hanging on for a few more hours, though at this moment I am not sure how I will do so; caffeine seems to have lost its effectiveness for the moment, but at least I was able to make it through The Hunger Games—both the first book at the movie.

Yes, I know, I am WAY behind.

Regardless, I suppose that begins both the book and movie list for the year.  Hopefully no more than one of those lists will get too much more serious.