Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Off to Mozambique.

I can't believe I have been so busy these past few days that I have not written and this should be my shortest blog entry ever. It is going on 11 PM and I have finished everything but packing my bag for Mozambique. I need to choose my clothing, etc. and then sleep to wake up after 5 AM tomorrow. Marcilio and I head off after 8 and will arrive in Maputo around 16:00 and then travel to Chokwe from there. I don't know how much I will be able to write over the next few weeks but when I get time and the internet cafe in Chokwe is open I will pop in and share. I will come back with many stories and photos on the 3rd of January. Have a nice holiday season and enjoy the New Year. I can't wait for my first return to Moz in almost two years. I was there in early 05 so I have only been gone a year although it is really more like two!

Saturday, December 09, 2006

My first major league/professional soccer match in person.

Marcilio, Norman (a fellow HIV/AIDS worker who has contracted with ETC), Norman's brother Raymond and I went to see the Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs play soccer today at FNB Stadium (also known as Soccer City) near Soweto. The two teams are huge rivals and their supports are avid as well as a bit crazy but really know how to make noise and support their side. Marcilio and I took well over a hundred photos but I am having trouble finding the cord so I will have to download, select and edit them later and put them up before I leave for Mozambique if I find the time.

It is hard to believe that this was my first experience after all my travels and work in North and South America, Europe and Africa seeing a professional soccer match in person. I have seen minor league games, mainly in Portland, both the US men’s and women’s teams play exhibition matches, Mozambique’s Black Mambas play a friendly against Zambia or some other country but never before a pro league soccer/football match. I really haven’t watched much soccer on TV here as this is mainly a rugby and cricket household but I wanted to go to a game since coming.

The game was sold out and standing room only and they even let some people fill the aisles using the steps as seats. We chose to sit at the top section at about midfield to have a good view birds eye view over the game, crazy Chiefs and Pirates supporters and get a nice view of the Joburg skyline, mine tailings Soweto and hundreds of cars. The pre game entertainment was from a South African group whose name I don’t recall that played some great music and got the crowd signing in unison. Before the game Marcilio and I walked around taking pictures of vendors, supporters of both sides (in the US I would say fans of both teams, but when in Rome….), the crowd filling the seats and more. We returned to find that Norman and his brother hadn’t held two seats for us very well and thus Norman gave us his seat and he went to find another one.

The Pirates scored early and held most of the momentum, energy and attacks throughout. We were sitting on the Chiefs side, with the sun behind our backs and as I was wearing my South African Bafana Bafana (boys will be boys) jersey so as to support the national men’s team and thus not provoke fans from either side to give me a hard time, I rolled up the collar to act as good protection against the sun. I had heard about fights at these matches, chairs being torn out and or burned and more but on this day to my knowledge none of this happened and people seemed to get along well.

At halftime the entertainment was a more “hip” musical group that the pre game one who moved around the field signing to the four sides of the stadium. Then the “Amakhosi” cheerleaders or whatever the girls are that dance for the home team Chiefs came on to dance to Justin Timberlake’s (I am sorry if this mention of his name gives him any positive publicity) Sexyback. The song alone is bad enough but then to have watch the cheerleaders joined by 20 or so girls from about 10-18 dance in sexually provocative ways made it that much worse. I swear some of the cheerleader minis they had join the big girls must have been between about 10 and 18 and when you see dances like this by children you can see how it adds to the shockingly/disgusting high percentage of rapes in this country. Children grinding and bumping in short skirts in front of drunk spectators doesn’t really help the situation. I wonder if I was the only one thinking about this as it was going on or even now after the fact.

Back to the game the second half saw the Pirates having many more opportunities off of penalty kicks, corners and headers to score but they failed to and in the last minute of the game (injury time) this failure to go up 2 to 0 came back to hurt them when Shaun Bartlett (no relation to the President on the West Wing) scored off a header in the closing seconds. It was a bummer seeing as how the Pirates had dominated most of the game. Some Pirates fans had started celebrating with about 10 minutes to go and were getting rather obnoxious and I don’t think they actually even saw the game as they were too busy dancing, tooting their horns and harassing the Chiefs fans. For more on the game you can see the write up at South Africa’s Premier Soccer League (PSL). Also to find out more about the PSL, standings, etc. go to Premier Soccer League. Speaking of standings I am used to looking to see the schedule of when teams are set to play and the standings of how the teams are doing in terms of wins, loses and ties but here fixtures seems to be the word used for schedule and results for standings. It took me some time to find the schedule on the PSL site to see when games would be taking place as I didn’t know what fixtures and results meant in this context.

FNB is home to the Kaizer Chiefs and the Pirates play closer to Soweto. FNB is going to be the main stadium for the 2010 World Cup the dates for which were just announced this last week. Supposedly this was the last game to be played at the stadium before reconstruction commences to make the stadium fit close to 100,000 spectators. In the shape we found it there is much to be done to clean, upgrade, add on to and get the stadium in World Cup shape. The construction was supposed to have started in early 06 and not now at the end and it is supposed to be done at some point next year to get FIFA’s okay for 2010. It is supposed to be the main stadium hosting the opening and closing ceremonies and a number of matches but I am not sure how this will happen if they haven’t started working on it already. For more on the history of FNB you can visit their site but be a bit weary as you might find spelling mistakes and factual errors like I did or go to Wikipedia.

All in all it was fun to go to the game with friends, be warmly received by fans from both sides with my neutral jersey supporting South Africa, see a decently energetic and athletic game, not witness any violence amongst fans and have another cross cultural experience in South Africa. I forgot to mention that I wasn’t the only white person at the game but I would guess that out of the 80,000 or so fans there yesterday I was amongst no more than 100 white people. Most all fans were black with a few of Asian, Middle East or mixed heritage. The goalie for one team was white, the main ref was colored and so was one of the players for the other team. Soccer is primarily a black sport in South Africa and I wonder how these fans who paid 20 rand (a little less than three US dollars) for open seating (the only option unless you are a VIP or have a company box) will be able to afford World Cup tickets in 2010 that I will guess will go from hundreds of dollars to thousands. Ironic that the people in this country who love the sport the most will be least likely to see it in person and that elites in SA (from various racial groups) along with overseas guests (maybe including myself) will be able to see the greatest sporting event on the planet in person.

Friday, December 08, 2006

Gordon maybe we can be friends after all. Senator Smith, a Republican, calls for withdrawal from Iraq.

Coming from a State that has a long history of being progressive and liberal it is interesting to note that Oregon Senator Gordon Smith, a Republican, just came out against the war in Iraq in a speech on the Senate Floor. Can you say “flip-flop” maybe but at least he is moving in the right direction and he says at least a dozen other Republican Senators feel the same way. With Bush’s approval rating on Iraq down to 27% a new low by 4% it makes sense that Smith and others are coming to their senses whether sincere or just a survival reaction to better their chances of reelection in 2008. To hear the full speech you can visit Air America’s station in Portland KPOJ 620 AM. This may just be one more reason I am prouder to call myself an American and especially an Oregonian. I will be interested to be home for a few days in February and see how the climate has changed in the States!

P.S. I am not sure that immediate withdrawal and leaving Iraq completely on its own is the best answer but I know that the mess the US Government has created in the Middle East must take a different direction. I was appalled the other day when I heard that over 13,000 civilians have died in the area since we invaded a few years back. Plus the over 2,000 US soldiers.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

ESPN for social change?

I came across three articles written recently by LZ Granderson a columnist who writes for ESPN.com’s “Page 2” and wanted to share some insights from them and recommend that you read them. Although ESPN basically reports the news in the sports world it does from time to time tell of NBA poets fighting racism, Olympic athletes promoting sports in underdeveloped countries and in these articles racism, stereotypes and the “n-word”.

The original article “A word with consequences” is well written and insightful and from the follow up written by Granderson sparked interest, controversy and responses from around the world. In it Granderson talks about the “n-word” and uses snippets from interviews with white athletes and musicians about this controversial word. He makes a plea to the likes of LeBron James, Donovan McNabb and Carmelo Anthony to be role models and come out publicly against the use of the “n-word”. He says that athletes have more power than musicians which I am not totally sure about but any start to end the use of this word which has such a terrible history attached to it is a good one.

The second article (found with either the link to the first article or the final one) is a brief follow up to “A word with consequences” and University of South Florida football team which apparently due to the first article decided after debates amongst the athletes to stop using the word in their vocabularies as players and pedestrians.

The final article, “Blake ... or fake?” is about Granderson’s brief stay in Stockholm to cover a small tennis tournament and how he was a star in the eyes of the fans outside his hotel for a few days as he was believed to be either a tennis star such as James Blake or one of the Brazilian soccer (football) players staying at the same hotel. In this city which he said has very few people of color it is interesting to hear how he felt and was treated.

I don’t believe I have read any of Granderson’s columns before but if they are as thought provoking, honest, insightful and socially conscious as these few then I will be reading his work more often. I too have found that social change must often come from the groups being exploited, abused and repressed as they often have the strongest voice and most reason to change the ills being inflicted on them by individuals or society. I for one have always known that the “n-word” is not something to say or enjoy hearing and cringe each time I encounter it in text, music, TV, etc. I find lots of music to have great intoxicating beats but when I encounter this word I often choose to not listen to certain songs or artists again.

I would like to leave you with this quote from A word with consequences which sums up the recent use and abuse of the “n-word” and the disconnect amongst many that are using it with the history and baggage attached to this word.

"It's always n-this and n-that," he says. "On one hand it's just a word, but being raised in an environment where you're taught to never, ever use it because it's so painful, and then see the people who are supposed to be hurt by it use it with each other all of the time, I think sends a mixed message. I'm not using it, but nowadays you hear Latinos use it, young white kids use it. … It's ironic that as the world gets more and more politically correct, you hear that word more often, not less."

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Back safe and sound from Cape Town and busier than ever.

My flight to Cape Town was delayed two hours but the one on the way back actually left a few minutes early and got us in about 15 minutes early. I had a great time with Chris and Xoliswa April from Saturday night till Tuesday afternoon and am really glad I took this chance to see my friends. It was a good experience to be in the townships for three nights and I met many nice people, enjoyed the rain and the sun, took lots of pictures and had some great conversations. I will share more tomorrow but I am currently very tired and trying to get through all the emails I got while gone. I need to run to the Brasilian Embassy tomorrow to turn in my visa application, do some shopping, start one of my final days of work with ETC and continue getting ready for Mozambique, Kenya and Brasil. I have a feeling my blogs are going to get shorter this next week and then once I am traveling I will do my best to write once or twice a week. I will share photos when I get a chance as well as more on my three day stint in Cape Town.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

72 hours in one of the most stunning cities in the world. Off to Cape Town to stay with friends in Nyanga East.

I am very excited to be packing my bags to head off for three days in/near Cape Town. I will be staying with family friends the Aprils who live in Nyanga East which is one of the many townships outside Cape Town and is near Cape Town International Airport. It is near Gugulethu, Khayelitsha, Langa and other townships. I have been to the April’s home before when my mom, dad and sister were in southern Africa in 4 years ago in December and I came from Mozambique to travel with them. I first went to this area in 2000 when I was on the 6 week study abroad through my Alma Mater Principia College. I then visited Gugulethu and Khayelitsta. I will share much more when I get back late Tuesday night. If you visit Etownships.co.za you can learn more about Nyanga East and the other townships in the area plus those throughout South Africa. And for those of you who are concerned to hear I will be spending three days in a township I am confident that the April’s their neighbors, etc. will treat me with love and respect and I will have great stories to share with you. Also the Aprils are well known and respected in their community and doing great things through their church, theatrical groups and more. Finally, Nyanga means “moon”.

Friday, December 01, 2006

A very positive day with negative results. Out of 82 people who did VCT only 7 were positive for HIV which is a very low percentage for South Africa.

Today with World AIDS Day ETC did VCT (volunteer counseling and testing) at a government department in Pretoria. Doug, Ben and another counselor counseled 39 of the 82 people who used the oral test to test for HIV. We would have seen more people but the ceremonies before the testing started late and ran over and we were only left with about 4 ½ hours to do as much counseling as possible. I didn’t counsel nor have to chance to sit in on a counseling session as I was charge with watching over the people waiting to be tested, keep the devices in a private place where only the counselors would know the results and make sure the counseling ran as smoothly as possible.
Out of the seven people who tested positive for HIV only one came to get their result and go through counseling. I am glad that out of 82 people who test only seven were positive as this is a much smaller percentage than the national average of around 30% yet I have a feeling that many who knew or thought they were positive didn’t test and since only one who tested and was found positive came to get their results it leads me to believe the others knew or were suspicious that they were positive. Ben, Linzi and another counselor or two will be going back and continue to share the results and counsel this coming week at this same department as well as testing new people who didn’t do the oral test with us today.
This is a brief blog as I am tired and need to rest to get up tomorrow to try and catch up on emails, prepare for a short three day trip to Cape Town, continue working on my plans for Mozambique and Kenya and write another entry or two before I leave.

Thursday, November 30, 2006

World AIDS Day and VCT. What are you doing where you are to fight this pandemic?

Tomorrow I will be going with Ben, Douglas and an outside counselor to do VCT (volunteer, counseling and testing) with a government department in Pretoria as the start of a week long VCT campaign kickoff on the 25th World AIDS Day. I will not be counseling but rather helping the other three with logistics and ensuring that the process runs smoothly. We will be using a test that doesn’t require drawing blood (unless one tests positive for HIV) but instead requires putting a testing device with a swab on the end in your mouth to get saliva which can be tested for HIV. If one is unfortunate to test positive then we use a disposable needle to prick the finger and a confirmatory test to see if they are really positive. If it comes up negative we do a third test and if this is inconclusive we let them know where they can find a clinic to be tested. The tests are supposed to be basically full proof so the results should be correct.

We will only have each person use the swab to test their saliva after someone who is positive gives a talk about “living positively” and Douglas follows this with the beginnings of a counseling session. This will be to a group of upwards of 200 people if possible. The larger the group the better (as more people can choose to know their status) but we will only be able to see about 30 people total tomorrow as counseling can take up to 45 minutes per person if not more if they are positive or require more attention. Then this coming week Doug, Linzi and Ben will be going back to Pretoria to continue counseling the people who will do VCT tomorrow and others who will come to do it. They don’t get their results until they have been counseled and often the counseling that comes after finding out of they are positive or negative is the most important. Positive people need to know how to continue to live a long and healthy life, not infect others and disclose (if they chose to) to their families, friends, partners, etc. Negative people need to know how to stay negative and not get the idea that they are invincible but must practice safe sex or better yet abstain as it is the best way to remain negative.

It will be an interesting way to pass the celebration of a quarter century of HIV/AIDS. I guess that sounds a bit strange but what people need to come to realize is that World AIDS Day is everyday as everyday thousands of people around the world die from AIDS related diseases and thousands more get infected or infect others. Here in South Africa between 900 and 1,000 mothers, fathers, daughters, sons, sisters, brothers, etc. die from AIDS related diseases. We must not just try to plug up the dykes keeping HIV from infecting or affecting all persons but really react quickly, comprehensively and smartly to this pandemic. Please join me today, tomorrow and until we defeat AIDS to do what you can where you are to combat this ferocious enemy. If we are not part of the solution then we are part of the problem.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Will the US Government's disrespect for the planet over these past six years going to finally catch up with them? The Supreme Court can decide.

This article from Tuesday's New York Times laid out the stakes of the Supreme Court trial that began today. For the latest news check out today's article. I sure hope this coalition of States and other institutions can show the federal government that they can't run rampant with the economy, environment, etc. in detriment to the people, animals and planet.


"November 28, 2006

New York Times Editorial

Global Warming Goes to Court

The Bush administration has been on a six-year campaign to expand its powers, often beyond what the Constitution allows. So it is odd to hear it claim that it lacks the power to slow global warming by limiting the emission of harmful gases. But that is just what it will argue to the Supreme Court tomorrow, in what may be the most important environmental case in many years.

A group of 12 states, including New York and Massachusetts, is suing the Environmental Protection Agency for failing to properly do its job. These states, backed by environmental groups and scientists, say that the Clean Air Act requires the E.P.A. to impose limits on carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases emitted by new cars. These gases are a major contributor to the "greenhouse effect" that is dangerously heating up the planet.

The Bush administration insists that the E.P.A. does not have the power to limit these gases. It argues that they are not "air pollutants" under the Clean Air Act. Alternatively, it contends that the court should dismiss the case because the states do not have "standing," since they cannot show that they will be specifically harmed by the agency's failure to regulate greenhouse gases.

A plain reading of the Clean Air Act shows that the states are right. The act says that the E.P.A. "shall" set standards for "any air pollutant" that in its judgment causes or contributes to air pollution that "may reasonably be anticipated to endanger public health or welfare." The word "welfare," the law says, includes "climate" and "weather." The E.P.A. makes an array of specious arguments about why the act does not mean what it expressly says. But it has no right to refuse to do what Congress said it "shall" do.

Beneath the statutory and standing questions, this is a case about how seriously the government takes global warming. The E.P.A.'s decision was based in part on its poorly reasoned conclusion that there was too much "scientific uncertainty" about global warming to worry about it. The government's claim that the states lack standing also scoffs at global warming, by failing to acknowledge that the states have a strong interest in protecting their land and citizens against coastal flooding and the other kinds of damage that are being projected.

In a friend-of-the-court brief, climate scientists from the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Stanford University and other respected institutions warn that "the scientific evidence of the risks, long time lags and irreversibility of climate change argue persuasively for prompt regulatory action." The Supreme Court can strike an important blow in defense of the planet simply by ruling that the E.P.A. must start following the law."

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Portland Area Global AIDS Coalition and World AIDS Day.

Hello Readers. I have chosen to send you an email I received last night from friend/colleauge Ann Pickar who is one of the co-chairs of the Portland Area Global AIDS Coalition. I know Ann and her co-chair Cara Pattison, Vice President of Bolo Moyo. I know many of you don't live in Portland but for those interested in knowing about Portland efforts to raise awareness, share information and work towards change around World AIDS Day this Friday, December 1st here is an email from the Portland Area Global AIDS Coalition (PAGAC).

"Hello, Portland Area Global AIDS Coalition members and friends!
As I am sure you know, Friday, December 1st is the 25th Anniversary of World AIDS Day.
Here in Portland we are marking the day on Thursday, November 30.
I hope many of you will attend the Rhythms for Life event put on by Africa AIDS Response. It will take place November 30th at 7:00 PM at the Tiffany Center, SW 14th and Morrison. Tickets are $15.00. Before the AAR event there will be the traditional memorial service for those in Portland who have died of AIDS this year.

ALSO: IFARA TV will be taping a series of programs earlier in the day, for airing throughout December. The section on global AIDS, "Portland Goes Global" will feature the work of PAGAC, so I hope many of you will be able to see it. Thanks to Fred Schaich for making all this happen!

Here are the dates and times for the series.

Week !: World AIDS Day Memorial Service.
Sunday, December 3, Channel 23 at 10:00 a.m.
Monday, December 4, Channel 11 at 10:00 p.m.
Friday, December 8, Channel 22 at 9.00 p.m.

Week 2: The global AIDS epidemic: Portland Goes Global.
Same times and channels, that is
Sunday, December 10, Channel 23 at 10:00 a.m.
Monday, December 11, Channel 11 at 10.00 p.m
Friday, December 15, Channel 22 at 9:00 p.m.

Week 3, HIV/AIDS in the Portland community.
Same times and channels on Sunday, December 17, Monday, December 18 and Friday, December 22.

Week 4. Medical advances in the treatment of HIV/AIDS.
Same times and channels on Sunday, December 24, Monday, December 25 and Friday, December 29. (but programs this week are subject to "preemption" by Christmas programming.)

And something practical you can help with: in December I hope to deliver to the offices of our local congressional delegation letters asking them to cosponsor the PATHWAY Act, which will rewrite current US AIDS legislation to remove the earmark for abstinence only prevention programs and focus aid more closely on the need to address the impact of AIDS by empowering women. If you are available during the day and would like to help, please let me know.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Another reason to go to Cuba. SUSTAINABILITY! Watch Cuba: The Accidental Revolution if you can.

If my interest in traveling to, learning from and maybe working in Cuba wasn’t peaked before it surely has been now and I am enjoying the shivers going down my spine while reading about Cuba’s “Green Revolution”. Ironically the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989 and decade’s old US blockade on Cuba may have developed a blueprint for sustainable growth, agriculture and other practices that could go a long way towards reversing the trends of global warming we are experience. That is if the rest of the world takes notice of the great work being done in Cuba, chooses similar methods and takes action. My aunt Sarah sent me an email about a two part documentary on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s (CBC) “The Nature of Things” which is hosted by Dr. David Suzuki (also see his CBC profile)(one of the people who would save our world from our selfish actions if given more help, money and power). The documentary is called Cuba: The Accidental Revolution and it is a composed of “two one-hour documentaries celebrating the country's success in providing for itself in the face of a massive economic crisis, and how its latest revolutions, an agricultural revolution and a revolution in science and medicine are having repercussions around the world.”

If any of you are in Canada and can record this for me I would be very grateful. I will see if my dad can’t get it from the States but who knows. I have spoken about Cuba in at least two other blog entries and the more I learn about this island nation the more I am impressed with wo/man’s ingenuity when placed in difficult situations and ability to prosper as well as provide a better life for people and the planet. The write up about Cuba: The Accidental Revolution concludes by saying:

“Will Cuba's "Green Revolution" become a blueprint for sustainable agriculture, medicine, and biotechnology, or will it be swept aside by the economic weight of foreign investors? Or will the public clamour for consumer goods from a weary people, fed up with lack of choice, overwhelm contemporary Cuba? Will Cuba's enormous experiment in sustainable development be maintained if the U.S. embargo is lifted and Cuba is exposed to the brutal arena of world trade? Whatever the future of Cuba's accidental revolution, Castro and his country has shown that alternatives do exist.” Watch it if you can and I am sure you will be surprised, inspired and educated.

Sunday, November 26, 2006

While poverty persists, there is no freedom. I wish I had been there to hear this great man speak. Maybe I will meet Mandela one day.

Thanks to Judith (my grandmother) who sent this article to me a few weeks ago. I thought this would be a good occasion to "post" it on my site for your reading pleasure. Madiba really is an amazing person and I feel grateful to have lived in two countries that he calls home, South Africa and Mozambique. He will make/is a great ambassador for Amnesty International.

Millions remain enslaved and in chains at a time of breathtaking advances in technology and wealth


Nelson Mandela
Saturday November 4, 2006
The Guardian

In Johannesburg, this week, in the warm company of friends, like Nadine Gordimer, I became an Amnesty International ambassador of conscience. It was a joy for me to receive this honour from the members of the world's largest human rights movement. It was heartening too that the award was inspired by the great Irish writer Seamus Heaney's poem From the Republic of Conscience, which reminds us all of our duty. continued....

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Africa, one word that says so much yet is so misunderstood, misrepresented, maligned, oversimplified and as old as time itself.

From journalists, to politicians, to academics, to travelers, to aid workers, to everyday people from all over the globe including the continent itself Africa is a place of mystery. The origin of the word Africa is still debatable and a potential future blog entry on its own. I guess it isn’t so surprising that Africa which has been and continues to be referred to as the dark continent continues to mystify people and when our “leadership” such as US President Bush refers to Africa as a country no wonder people remain confused. I am not claiming to be an expert but I think I have made an effort above and beyond that of many to better understand Africa in my travels, work and studies here.

Lets be clear Africa is a large continent home to between 50 and 61 countries (territories in some cases) depending on who you ask. Most seem to put the number at 53 or 54. The US State Department and UN have basically the same lists of 192 (193) countries of the world the only difference being Vatican City which is not part of the UN list. Two other sites to visit are Africaninformation.net (which has an interactive map) and Mbendi.co.za for more information on the countries in Africa, population of each, languages, history, etc.

Many of the current problems across Africa date back to the Berlin Conference that took place over a year’s time between November 15, 1884 and February 26, 1885. This meeting of 14 countries mainly from Europe as well as the US and Turkey came up with arbitrary borders of the 2nd largest continent in the world based more on resources, natural boundaries such as mountains and rivers and strategic access to rivers, beaches and roads than the plethora of independent African nations, cultures, languages, religions, etc. that existed. It is no wonder that even today Africans are conflicted between loyalty to their country and their tribe/people. For more on the conference you can visit homestead.com or geography.about.com.

From my experiences mainly in Mozambique and South Africa and brief trips to Swaziland and Lesotho I find Africa to be complex, controversial, creative and colorful. It is a place I love, yearn to better understand and which can frustrate and confound me all at the same time. Not only is Africa abused, misunderstood, etc. by those who have never been here, or come as visitors but also by Africans themselves black, white, colored, Indian, etc. Often the biggest excuse for corruption, poverty, lack of education, corruption, pace of life and more that I have heard during my time in southern Africa has been “it is Africa get used to it”. This sentiment and other similar ones don’t just come from people of all races and ethnic backgrounds.

I am not one who likes to generalize or stereotype although it is often hard to avoid doing this at times. So it bothers me when people in South Africa talk about Nigerians, a group that seems to have made a bad reputation for itself here in South Africa. I find it hard to believe that all Nigerians are bad, in fact I know some Nigerians and consider them friends. Yet, the actions of a few or many Nigerians here in South Africa has made people say that all Nigerians are criminals/tsotsis, drug dealers, etc. Another problem I have when generalizing is when people say “I am going to Africa” or “I have a friend from Africa” or something similar even though this person is visiting Kenya or has a friend from Ghana. Ignorance, laziness and lack of respect seems to make people over generalize Africa and this can be very detrimental. I admit at times I say Africa when I want/can be more specific but it is usually determined by who I am talking to and the purpose of the conversation. Yet, with my up coming travels to Brasil I won’t say I am going to South America but rather Brasil. I guess this is in part because more people know Brasil then they know the Gambia, Central African Republic or Djibouti.

I want to leave you with an example of the complexity of life here in South Africa that is representative of much of the continent. If you take a group like the Zulus and spend time with them, learn about their culture, history, etc. you realize that even within this group there are subgroups. So even the mighty Zulu who defeated the Afrikaners and others and dominated this part of the world for many years have divisions. This is one reason that people say that problems are on the horizon for South Africa when within ethnic groups you still find people who can’t get along. I hope this will not be the case and that South Africa doesn’t go the way of Zimbabwe.

Friday, November 24, 2006

Missing Mozambique and feeling more at home in South Africa.

I am back! I am tired! I need a vacation! That is right I got back this afternoon and although this is one of my final weekends I don’t think I will do much more than sleep, write tons of emails, prepare for Kenya and go to church. I will explain more about this past week in the coming days but can say for now that I had a good time even though things didn’t go quite as planned but one can always find gems even when facing adversity. Not that I really faced adverse situations but just had to roll with the punches. I found that I really miss the communal, relaxed, laid back feeling I experienced and usually enjoyed in Mozambique and found a bit of this in the small town of Orkney where I spent the week. It was nice to be able to sit out side at night, walk around with safety, see the communal atmosphere where most everybody knew everybody and get out of the big city. I did get a few chances to speak Portuguese with some Mozambicans, see the mines from a distance, participate in the training and make some new friends. I will share more stories later as I now need to rest and get some good sleep to catch up from a busy week.

Sunday, November 19, 2006

First extended trip out of Joburg. Heading to the mines to do Peer Education, hang out with Ben and hopefully meet some Mozambicans!

In a few hours Ben will come pick me up to drive about two hours to the town of Orkney which is in the heart of a big mining operation in the North West Province. I was in Orkney with Ben a little over two weeks ago when we went to do the “CD4 Game” and have a booth at a mining exposition. I wrote a bit about the experience at the expo on Friday November 3rd. Ben has been going to Orkney for almost two years now to train and this will be his final trip for the year. Going to a mine to do training in HIV/AIDS has been own of my wishes with this practicum since before I came to South Africa. When Linzi told me about how ETC does training in mines, mainly training HIV/AIDS Peer Educators I was very interested and thus it is excited that in my final few weeks here I will get to spend time at one of the mines. I will do my best to run in to some Mozambicans to speak some Portuguese or Shangaana. I will definitely have many photos to share and stories to tell when I return late Friday. I might sneak into an internet café during the week to post one or two entries but if that is not the case you will just have to wait till next Friday for more thoughts on my time here in South Africa.

Lest I forget, Freshly Ground put on a good show at the Bassline last night and I have many witnesses to testify to the fact that I did dance. Considering the fact that I don’t drink and thus don’t get rid of my inhibitions through alcohol and don’t come from a family of dancers I think I held my own and had fun regardless. There is another concert coming next weekend that I will try and go to if I can just find out the details of when and where.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Zapatistas coming to New England area. I wish I could be there.

I got this email from my good friend Corry who is a fellow student at SIT and doing her practicum with the Mexico Solidarity Network. Please read her message and if you have any ideas for her feel free to email her at corry@mexicosolidarity.org.

“The Mexico Solidarity Network presents its speaking tour Communities Confronting Globalization with the Zapatista Human Rights organization, Red de Defensores from Chiapas, Mexico. We are going to be at SIT this month, but we are coming back to the New England area late Feb. early March. I'm looking for any contacts for school/church/community/ University Groups who might be interested in hosting an event in MA, VT, NH, ME and Montreal. Please let me know if you or anyone you know might be interested in hosting an event.

Thank you,

Corry Banton

corry@mexicosolidarity.org

www.mexicosolidarity.org

Communities Confronting Globalization

New England and Eastern Canada: February 26- March 9, 2007

Since the Zapatista uprising began on January 1, 1994, (the first day NAFTA went into effect) the Mexican military and paramilitaries have waged a counter insurgency war against Zapatista communities. Thirteen years after the uprising, human rights abuses continue and the entire state of Chiapas is heavily militarized. The Mexico Solidarity Network presents a speaker from the Red de Defensores Comunitarios por los Derechos Humanos (Community Human Rights Defenders Network) to discuss the impact of this “low-intensity” warfare, and what is being done on the ground to resist.

The Red de Defensores is a network of indigenous human rights observers from Zapatista communities in Chiapas, Mexico. The Red, founded in May 2000, is a non-governmental organization dedicated to the promotion and defense of human rights. The Red developed an alternative model of human rights work in which community members who suffer human rights abuses at the hands of the army, paramilitaries, and the federal government assume control of their own defense. Self-determination and autonomy are the guiding principles of the Red de Defensores. The Red is currently made up of 25 community indigenous defenders from eight regions. In each case, the community chose their representative to the Red in a traditional process that assigns “cargos” (tasks) to highly respected members of the community. All of the defensores live in threatened communities that have a history of suffering from human rights abuses.

The representative from the Red de Defensores will:

- Discuss threats to indigenous communities, such as NAFTA, Plan Puebla Panama, and the agricultural crisis in Mexico.

- Discuss human rights abuses in Mexico, their relationship to globalization, and how indigenous communities are working to end the abuses and impunity.

-Promote a sustainable model of international trade based on economic justice.

- Discuss the leadership of women in fair trade cooperatives.”

Friday, November 17, 2006

Time to step up Portland. If Boulder can do it so can we. Lets keep up w/ progessive thinking needed to save the planet. We need a carbon tax too!

Again thanks to my dad I am sharing an article from the New York Times with you and again I am going to post it in full so that you can read it whenever and don't have to sign up with NYTimes to read it. My challenge is to my town, Portland, to follow in the footsteps of Boulder who has taken another step in protecting the planet by a recent vote to tax carbon emissions. They are trying to follow the Kyoto Protocol which Portland has also been doing well with these past few years. I hope that this model cities will really influence others throughout the States because truth be told if the US isn't at the forefront against global warming I fear that not much will be done. We need to follow others that are leading and become leaders ourselves or else the planet that we call home will not be able to sustain our impact. Don't do it for me but do it for your children.

City Approves 'Carbon Tax' in Effort to Reduce Gas Emissions

BOULDER, Colo., Nov. 14 — Voters in this liberal college town have approved what environmentalists say may be the nation's first "carbon tax," intended to reduce emissions of heat-trapping gases.

The tax, to take effect on April 1, will be based on the number of kilowatt-hours used. Officials say it will add $16 a year to an average homeowner's electricity bill and $46 for businesses.

City officials said the revenue from the tax — an estimated $6.7 million by 2012, when the goal is to have reduced carbon emissions by 350,000 metric tons — would be collected by the main gas and electric utility, Xcel Energy, and funneled through the city's Office of Environmental Affairs .

The tax is to pay for the "climate action plan," efforts to "increase energy efficiency in homes and buildings, switch to renewable energy and reduce vehicle miles traveled," the city's environmental affairs manager, Jonathan Koehn, said.

The goal is to reduce the carbon levels to 7 percent less than those in 1990, which amounts to a 24 percent reduction from current levels, Mr. Koehn said.

"The climate action plan serves as the roadmap to meet our reduction goal," he said.

The tax grew out of efforts by a committee of residents and members of the City Council and Chamber of Commerce to try to enable Boulder to reach goals set by the United Nations Kyoto Protocol, which seeks to curb global warming.

The protocol requires 35 developing nations to reduce their emissions of heat-trapping gases like carbon dioxide. The world's top two polluters, the United States and China, have not signed the pact.

The Boulder environmental sustainability coordinator, Sarah Van Pelt, said residents who used alternative sources of electricity like wind power would receive a discount on the tax based on the amount of the alternative power used.

A total of 5,600 residents and 210 businesses use wind power, Ms. Van Pelt said.

A program similar to Boulder's began in Oregon in 2001. There, a 3 percent fee is assessed on electricity bills by the two largest investor-owned utilities, said Michael Armstrong, a policy analyst in the Portland Office of Sustainable Development.

The tens of millions of dollars is transferred to the Energy Trust of Oregon, a nonprofit organization, rather than the state government. The trust distributes cash incentives to businesses and residents for using alternative sources like solar and wind power, biomass energy and structural improvements to improve efficiency.

Mr. Armstrong said that although Portland had several programs for "sustainable living," it had not enacted a carbon tax and that he knew of no other American city with one.

"We are interested to see how it plays out and see what we can learn from that," he said of the Boulder tax. "We certainly follow other local governments, and there are lots of innovative initiatives all over the country. It's a great exchange among local communities."

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Freshly Ground. No silly I don't drink coffee but I do love live music and I can't wait for this Saturday!

Marcilio, Miki and I will be going to the Bassline again to see another concert and this time we will see South Africa’s very own hit band “Freshly Ground”. I only first heard of Freshly Ground on the airplane over from the States in July but immediately liked their music and have been hoping to see them since then. Needless to say I am excited! What a blessing to be here in Joburg which despite its drawbacks (crime, terrible infrastructure, pollution, etc.) has been an advantageous place to hear great live music. Freshly Ground is a "mix" composed of South Africans, Zimbabweans and Mozambicans and a good sign for how Africans of different nationalities and races can work together. Let's just hope they remain fresh!

Freshly Ground seems to be getting a larger international following since it won the regional award for “Best African Act” at the MTV Europe Music Awards this year. This was a great thing for them and thrust them into the international spotlight. This will be there first concert in SA since they won the award on November 2nd and when I am driving in the car I often hear their songs being played and praises being sung. The issue I take with the whole thing though is that if you go to Wikipedia’s coverage of the MTV Europe Music Awards you will see that 17 “regions” were given awards ranging from German, to Italian to Adriatic to Africa. Now I might be stupid but first German is not a region but rather a language and second Germany is not a region either but a country and while Africa is a region it sure is a lot bigger, more diverse and populated than France, the UK or Norway, so what gives? I don’t mean to imply that these awards were racist, narrow minded, short sighted, arrogant or pointless or maybe I do. I guess I should be happy that the MTV awards in Europe even included Africa but who knows maybe it is neocolonialism in the musical sense. I honestly haven’t watched MTV in over ten years and from what I understand I am not sure that the whole music part of the name applies anymore but that is for another blog which I won’t even bother writing as it wouldn’t be worth the time. Anyway once again the West/northern countries has given an improper projection that the south is small and insignificant or at least that is my take.

Politics aside I can’t wait to hear Freshly Ground (Wikipedia) and if you want to see/hear a bit of their music check out this short clip off of their song “Doo Be Doo” which is a fun and inspiring song in many ways the opposite of the colder, harsher, ruder gangsta rap that is popular here similar to that heard in the Tsotsi album which I do own and enjoy, within reason. I should say that all of the Tsotsi soundtrack is not kwaito, rap, etc. but rather a good compilation including Zola, Vusi Mahlasela and Mafikizolo. The show should be great and sure enough I will be dancing the night away. I’m gonna miss this place but then again Brasil has some great music as well so stay tuned for a future entry about music there!

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

The gays have it. The right to same-sex marriage in South Africa.

I don't usually like to publish stories in their entirety, especially as I don't want to infringe on the rights of newspapers, etc. but the New York Times likes to make it hard to access its stories after about a day unless you sign up with them. I think it is free but I don't want to make you all go through the hassle of this so here is a story from yesterday. I have pasted the link for this story and basically the same one that they put up today. You might recall an entry I posted early last month called "being gay in South Africa" to which this entry is a follow up. Thanks to my father for sending me this article. I guess South Africa is continuing full steam ahead with being one of the most progressive countries in the world.

From NYTimes

November 14, 2006

South African Parliament Approves Gay Marriages

By SHARON LaFRANIERE

JOHANNESBURG, Nov. 14 — South Africa's Parliament overwhelmingly voted today to legalize same-sex marriages, making the nation the first in Africa and the fifth in the world to remove legal barriers to gay and lesbian unions, according to activists.

The legislature voted after the nation's highest court ruled that South Africa's marriages statutes violated the constitution's guarantee of equal rights. The court gave the government a year to amend the legal definition of marriage. That deadline expires in two weeks.

Melanie Judge, program manager for OUT, a gay rights advocacy group, noted that the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain and Canada were the only other countries to allow same-sex marriages nationwide. In most African nations, she said, homosexuality is still treated as a crime. Some penalties are stiffer than those for rape or murder..

Ms. Judge credited South Africa's liberal constitution with forcing change.

"This has been a litmus test of our constitutional values," she said in a telephone interview. "What does equality really mean? What does it look like? Equality does not exist on a sliding scale."

Religious groups and traditional leaders strenuously opposed the measure, arguing that if necessary the constitution should be amended to outlaw same-sex unions. But the ruling African National Congress virtually demanded that lawmakers support the bill.

Despite deep divisions within the party, the measure passed 230 to 41. It must now be approved by the Council of Provinces, a quasi-federal chamber, and be signed the president to become law.

Vytjie Mentor, the party's caucus chairman, told the South African newspaper The Sunday Independent earlier this month that he expected legislators belonging to the African National Congress to vote for the measure, regardless of their personal views.

There is "no such thing as a free vote or a vote of conscience," he said. "How do you give someone permission to discriminate in the name of the A.N.C.? How do you allow for someone to vote against the constitution and the policies of the A.N.C., which is antidiscrimination?"

The new law allows both heterosexual and same-sex couples to register their unions either as marriages or civil partnerships. But in a concession to critics, it also allows civil officers to refuse to marry same-sex couples on the basis on conscience. Ms. Judge, the gay rights advocate, predicted that provision will be challenged in court.

"We can't be in the situation where civil officers can decide who they want to marry and who they don't want to marry," she said. "They aren't able to refuse to marry a black person and a white person. This is unconstitutional."

To read this story visit:

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/14/world/africa/14cnd-safrica.html?em&ex=1163739600&en=b314cd82710d5160&ei=5087%0A

or for a similar story published today go to:

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/15/world/africa/15safrica.html?em&ex=1163739600&en=5b3a8ffdf1a6904c&ei=5087%0A

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

How can the continent that produces the least amount of the green house gases that cause climate change be feeling the effects of this change already?

An article from the Christian Science Monitor written on last week helps make an interesting link between my life and work in Africa and my upcoming time in South America. Thanks to my aunt Sarah for alerting me to this article. I have only written briefly about climate change before and encouraged you to see Al Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth” and maybe with the recent changes in Washington, D.C. the US can actually begin being part of the solution and not just the driving force behind the problem. I hope that my work in Brasil will allow me to see the effects of global warming up close in another context and allow me to see some tangible means being used to convince people of the realities of climate change and the ways in which we can work together to combat the reasons it is happening. We must all choose to help or hurt each other.

Here is a brief section of the article which I recommend reading in its entirety.

Africans are already facing climate change

Is Darfur the first climate-change conflict? In Kenya, a UN meeting begins Monday to set new fossil-fuel emissions targets.

| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

As delegates gather Monday in Kenya for a United Nations conference to set new targets to reduce fossil-fuel emissions after 2012, climate change is a present reality for many Africans.

In Kenya, Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia, and Chad, people are already seeing the repercussions - including war. The conflict between herders and farmers in Sudan's Darfur region, where farm and grazing lands are being lost to desert, may be a harbinger of the future conflicts.

"You have climate change and reduced rainfall and shrinking areas of arable land; and then you add population growth and you have the elements of an explosion," says Francis Kornegay, a senior analyst at the Center for Policy Studies in Johannesburg.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Brasil bound. Saving the world one person, animal and forest at a time.

That is right my friends I am going to be in 5 countries over the next 4 months. On December 14th I am leaving South Africa to travel for 2 ½ weeks to Mozambique to see friends, catch up, hear some music and enjoy the holidays. Then on the 5th of January I will travel to Kenya where I will stay for just over three weeks. I already have been generously offered places to stay in Nairobi and Mgori and if you have any thoughts on other places to stay and visit they are most welcome. My main reason for going to Kenya is to attend the World Social Forum as well as seeing friends and making new ones. I will be coming back to South Africa on the 27th of January and flying back to the States on the 29th. I will get home to Portland on the 30th and be home till the 8th of February when I will fly to Rio de Janeiro in Brasil.

In Brasil I will be volunteering for Iracambi, http://www.iracambi.com, at Fazenda (farm/ranch) Iracambi for 6 months till early August. Iracambi is located in the province of Minas Gerais. At the Iracambi site you can see maps of where I will be staying. I will be the program coordinator taking over the position held these past 6 months by my friend Rebecca from SIT. During my 6 months I will complete the 2nd half of my 6 month practicum/internship for SIT and work on my capstone (research/thesis paper) for SIT.

I will surely write more about Iracambi in the coming months, especially when I am there. It will be my first time to Brasil and I am very exited about this. I am also thrilled to get to speak Portuguese again on a daily basis and will enjoy hearing and learning different accents, slang, etc. Most of all the idea of getting out of the city and being in a rural nature area again is really exciting. I look forward to long hikes, learning about the forest, wildlife, people, etc. and sharing it all with you. To give you a better sense of what Iracambi was created to do I have cut and pasted text from the entry page to their website.

“Volunteers and Researchers from all over the world come to Iracambi to help us fulfil our mission to make conservation of the rainforest more attractive to our community than its destruction. We live on a working farm in the Atlantic Rainforest, where we daily face the same issues as our neighbors: how can we make a living from the land, whilst also preserving the biodiversity of the area?

The Atlantic Rainforest has been identified as one of the world's most globally important biodiversity hotspots, but this has not prevented it from being reduced to only eight fragmented per cent of its former size. The attack on the forest started when the Portuguese first arrived in Brazil 500 years ago, and continues today. Iracambi is working to reverse this trend. We believe that it is only by helping to find a future for the people who live and work in the forest, that we can provide a future for the forest itself.

To help Iracambi achieve its mission we have programs for volunteers and researchers. There are other ways to get involved in our project too. There is also information available on our project for teachers and children. To find more about our projects: either contact us, or click here to e-mail us.”

Thursday, November 09, 2006

My 15 seconds. The only thing I had to fear was dendrophobia itself. That and a slight case of glossophobia and it was for 101 seconds.

Tonight, I joined Ben, Douglas, Linzi and about 25 others at the Bedfordview Toastmaster’s monthly club meeting. The one and only other time I went to visit was in late August for the humorous speech competition. I had planned to go on the day when I was battling to regain control of my accounts but chose not to as I was worried the would be hacker might try and withdraw more money and thus went last night as my second and last time. I went due to the fact that I am leaving in a little over a month to travel in Mozambique and Kenya and then head home and also because Ben was giving a speech and Linzi was “Toastmaster of the evening”. You might be wondering what I would want to go to a meeting of “toastmasters” for as toasts usually involve alcohol and I don’t drink. The answer is simple, Toastmasters, is not about drinking but rather speaking, evaluating and performing various duties.

As a guest attending my second meeting at Bedfordview I didn’t expect to be given a task to do but I was asked at the last minute to be the sergeant at arms (SAA). This name might also sound strange for me as I have never served in the military or had the interest and to be quite honest would sooner relocate myself to Canada than be forced to fight for any country/cause. My duty as SAA (not to be confused with South African Airways) was to set up the room, make sure everything was in order, open the meeting and start it after breaks by banging the gavel on the lectern and passing it over to the chairperson. This task was just a warm-up for the chance to be one of the “table topic” speakers, the 7th out of 8 to be exact in the impromptu speaking session that followed the prepared speakers.

Before I get to the impromptu I just want to say that Ben did an excellent job with his speech which was open, revealing, brave and moving. He told a heartbreaking story about how his was treated as a boy by his uncle’s wife (as he chose to say it) in which he was treated very poorly more like a servant than family and eventually beaten for a crime he didn’t commit. Ben’s speech along with many other throughout the evening were very personal, moving and disturbing.

After the prepared speech came the “table topics” segment of the evening. As Doug likes to put it when he is training we are all impromptu speakers. We get chances each day of our lives at the store, at work, answering the phone, etc. to begin talking or responding to people and having to “think on our feet”. The way the impromptu session works is that the person whose duty it is to choose the topics that will be spoken on gives envelopes to each of the people who will speak. The speakers don’t know before part way through the meeting that they will be speaking. Then when the speaker before each of us was to go we were allowed to open our envelopes and in the 2 minutes or so they took to give their impromptu we could look at the topic and prepare for ours. As I said before I was the 7th of 8 speakers and so when the 6th speaker began I opened my envelope and found that I was supposed to speak about dendrophobia. But before I could speak about this phobia which I was not sure what it meant I had to get over my glossophobia. In our trainings we tell people that glossophobia is the biggest fear in the world. I am not sure if this is scientifically proven but we are really just trying to make a point when teaching a module to our trainees on public speaking. Glossophobia* simply means the “fear of public speaking” and it seems to be a fear that is shared by many. I didn’t really have to get over my glossophobia as it really isn’t a problem for me these days but I did have to think of a creative way in just a few minutes to come up with an interesting, humorous and credible explanation for the meaning of dendrophobia. I had no idea what the definition of this word was and tried to think of another similar word I knew and what I came up with was rhododendrons. As it was my time to start I knew I would talk about Rhodies, my “fear” of them, how they are sticky when you are pruning them and how I can no longer go into gardens. I spoke for 1:41 seconds on rhododendrons and dendrophobia, got a few laughs (not as many as Nate and 5DaysShy) and at the end of the night was chosen winner for the impromptu speeches. Not bad considering I went up against some very accomplished Toastmasters. It was fun to do and be recognized but unfortunately they decided not to pay for my plane ticket back home which would have been a nice gesture.

If you have read this far, which means I should really consider buying you a plane ticket, then you deserve to know what dendrophobia means. According to overcome-fears-and-phobias.com “victims of dendrophobia believe that trees can turn into flesh-craving monsters when they are not looking at them.” It goes on to say “They can also imagine elfin creatures taking residence in every tree.” I am a bit surprised by this phobia being assigned to me because if Treebeard showed up at my door and began talking to me as I was backing through a forest I would be very excited and maybe consider creating a whole new blog dedicated to him

*For the record I chose to site Wikipedia not because they pay me for this but because out of the first page worth of hits in Google, Wiki was the only one with an actual definition. All of the others were trying to sell various remedies for overcoming this phobia.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Prouder to be an American and one step closer to being home for the 2008 elections. Might we get our “checks and balances” back in order?

I want to keep my blog today short and sweet just like the still to be determined races in Virginia and Montana should be. We don’t need a repeat of the joke elections of 2000 and 2004 where many days and much money was spent to determine the winners and even then the results were and still are in question. It sure looks like the Democrats should win both of these races and there is no reason to drag out the inevitable so I hope that dirty tricks are left aside and the voter’s wishes are heeded. Being seven hours from the East Coast of the US and ten from my Portland it was weird to go to bed last night before much was known in the elections. It was great to wake up this morning and see that the Dems were projected to take the House but since I was gone all day I had no idea that the Senate race was so close. I am sure that many in the US were glad to wake up today and see that the world was still alive and November 8th didn’t bring the apocalypse down upon them. For some the results of these elections might seem like the devastating end of the world but for me they signal a hopeful beginning.

In 2000 I was saved some of the pain of the elections as I was in Saltsburg, Austria with a little less than a month to go on a 3 ½ month trip around Europe. I just hope that now will be different than then in that I don’t wake up tomorrow to find out the results have been reversed and then go through a ground hog’s day scenario for the next few weeks with the outcome going endlessly back and forth. After that trip when I came home after going to a few more countries had I known the way things would have worked themselves out I might have stayed traveling forever. In 2002, I was in Mozambique about to start my second year of the Peace Corps and at that point had no real interest in coming home and actually felt much safer in Moz than most people in the States were feeling. This only increased a few months later when Iraq was invaded. Then it went from the sympathy we had gotten upon arrival just six weeks after 9/11 to a bit of nervousness about how we would be treated as Americans. This was the time when traveling with a Canadian flag started to sound like a particularly good idea. In 2004 I was in San Diego ready to jump the border for Mexico at a moment’s notice. After the results were in the Daily Show and Air America were about my only respite from the harsh reality brought about by the elections. Now, in 2006, I can begin to think about one day saying again “I am proud to be an American*” and I can certainly walk taller and say at least my country has made a significant step in the right direction. I don’t know that I will be singing the national anthem anytime soon or putting an American flag on my car but right now as we sit on the cusp of a potentially great moment poised to reverse the problems the American government had been creating at home and around the world I can revel in today’s victory and pray for tomorrow’s success

.*I want to clarify that when I say American I mean a citizen of the United States of America. Many in the US and around the world seem to confuse being an American that is being from North or South America and identifying yourself as an American because you are from one of two continents and being a citizen of the United States of America.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Rock me Oliver. I am a dancing machine just ask Marcilio and hundreds of music fans at the Bassline tonight/last night.

I found out last night that I prefer dancing in beer to Coke although I don’t drink or support either. At least beer is not as sticky when people are spilling it on the floor and thus doesn’t inhibit your feet from moving like Coke. Then again people don’t get drunk and act out of control and stupid by drinking Coke. So besides the sticky floors and inebriated people around me it was a great time tonight/last night.

For sure many if not most of the audience was from Zimbabwe as many knew the words to the songs, singing along and dancing with pride for music from their fellow countrymen. It was mainly a black crowd, more than the other concert I saw there three months back, but there were a few white, colored, Indian, etc. faces in the crowd as well. Like most things around here it started late, by about 20 minutes, starting at 9:20 and going to midnight with a 20 minute intermission. It is sometimes fun to have an opening act but in this case it was great to just have Oliver Mtukudzi and the Black Spirits. The band consisted of a drummer with a drum set, a keyboardist, bassist/bass player, guitarist, two female vocalists/dancers, one male vocalist/dancer and Oliver, guitarist, singer, songwriter, dancer and creative powerhouse. I must admit most of my favorite lead singers don’t just sing but they also play an instrument and when possible dance. I love multitalented musicians who can do a bit of each and really know how to entertain just like Oliver and his crew did last night or is it tonight still?

Oliver has released over 44 albums since his career began in the late 70’s of which I only have three but still I knew over half the songs last night and was pleasantly surprised by those I didn’t know. I didn’t say much about the sound, style and inspiration behind Oliver’s music in my entry on Wednesday so here is a paragraph I found at World Press.org which talks about this.

“Mtukudzi’s style, known as Tuku music, is a unique combination of several elements: South Africa’s hard-driving mbaqanga rhythm, jit—a fast percussive Zimbabwean dance beat—and the gentler, repetitive mbira rhythms of Zimbabwe's Shona people. In addition to creating a unique musical sound, he has won praise for his power as a lyricist. His precisely worded narratives, with their sense of humor about daily life, stand as metaphors for the social and economic ills that bedevil his country.”

I hope to get to see another concert or two in my time here before I head off to Mozambique to see old friends and to Kenya to make new ones plus see some from SIT or Principia plus those others who I have been communicating with via email. Once again it was great to be here and see a concert surrounding by many talented people who being dancing and singing at such a young age and to whom this all comes so naturally.

Friday, November 03, 2006

The language of love. Semantics in South Africa.

Today, I learned a great deal about dating or going out in South Africa and the importance of understanding the meaning behind the word “love” as it is used by many especially the black South Africans.* To me if I tell someone I love them it means that I don’t just like them or in the dating sense that I am interested in them but that I love them as a friend, family member (i.e. loved one) or a significant other (boyfriend, girlfriend, partner, spouse, etc) in a way that I share this love and affection by saying “I love you”. Here (in English) it seems to have different meanings depending on who is saying it, who they are saying it to, etc.

For example, I heard someone saying yesterday “baby I love you” and I came to find out that if this person had been speaking in Zulu, Sotho, Khosa or another one of the many African languages spoken in this part of the world they wouldn’t have said it exactly the same way. Roughly translated from Zulu he might say something like “one day I hope to send people to your home to pay lobola** for you.” If I tell a girl/woman that I love her and it is in a romantic way I would say this after knowing her for some time, going from interest in her to loving her as a potential partner or wife. But here “love” is used by many as a way to begin talking to someone that you have just met or known for sometime but have an interest in dating, with or without the intention to marry them someday. Just like I don’t completely dominate Portuguese there are South African who haven’t yet mastered the English language so as I understand it this plays a large part in their using “love” when others of us would say like or interest. I was told that if I told a girl/woman that I was interested in her or liked her she would ask me what do you find interesting or what do you like, even if my intention was to say that I want to get to know you more and maybe date. But if I told her that I loved her she would interpret this as meaning that if she reciprocated or accepted this we would be boyfriend and girlfriend.

It seems that some people use the word love knowing the various meanings and implications of saying it to someone else only to trick the other person. They do this knowing that the person they are talking to doesn’t realize that while they are being told they are “loved” the person telling them this doesn’t necessarily love them.

I think this is an interesting case where the semantics of different languages is very important to understand. It shows how it can be dangerous to assume that what you are saying or hearing means one thing when the person you are speaking to or being spoken to by means something very different. I am now very interested to talk to Marcilio about what exactly the word “love” means in Mozambique when it is said in English or Portuguese. And if it is used similarly in Mozambique to how it is used here in South Africa.

*I just want to explain that I am speaking in generalities about conversations I had with two men, one Zulu and the other Sotho and thus my research on this topic is not very deep or wide

**For those of you who don’t know what lobola means another name for it is “bride-price” or dowry. Traditionally it has been an agreed upon amount paid by a man’s family to a woman’s family before they can get married. Cattle, cash, alcohol and other gifts are offered in payment for the fiancée’s hand in marriage. For more see these articles or search for “lobola” on the net.

http://www.answers.com/topic/lobola http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobola http://www.southafrica.info/doing_business/trends/innovations/lobola-homegrown.htm

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Surprise email from an equally avid music listener and Calabash Music employee.

I was pleasantly surprised to get this email just a short time ago from a guy who works for Calabash and somehow came across my blog just today! It is nice to hear from another fan of my blog and good music. I wish I would have known about Moshito as it would have been interesting to attend. So enjoy the email from my new friend and have a great day.

“Blake -

Thanks for the plug on your blog. And thanks for writing about music!

I've been down to jozi a couple times (most recently for Moshito in September), and had a wonderful time each trip. I hope to make it back in December. It is so important that folks write about SA music so that those outside of SA get a sense of what is going on there musically. Not quite as important as your work with HIV/AIDS, but important. ;) Keep it up, and stay in touch.

peace.

I will share more in another entry about how many South Africans (as was my experience in Mozambique to a degree as well) don’t know a lot about their own music but more about American hip-hop, etc.

http://rpc.technorati.com/rpc/ping