Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Day 1 Africa




It has been several days since I posted and my world has changed dramatically. I arrived in Kampala, Uganda, late in the evening and met Stephanie, the young, energetic and capable site director. She prepared me for the exhausting journey to the border and on to the isolated Karagwe site in Tanzania.


The above picture, taken from my bus window, is a vivid reminder of the sea of chaos I found in my first day in Africa. Intensified by torrential rain and sloppy, trash-filled mud and wearing a heavy backpack, I slogged my way clutching my carry-on luggage through throngs of impoverished people. It was a scene out of a movie I was in, a tourist out of place and caught in a morass of strange world.
As the bus made its way past the outskirts, the magic of Africa began to reveal itself in a different light. Lush tropical forests and gentle rolling savannah offered scenes of local people dressed in colorful clothing working or relaxing by their homes or visiting in the market. I saw smiling faces, relaxed and living in a simpler world. It wasn't a romantic picture exactly because there was all the trappings of poverty. It was life here, accepted, predictable, and peaceful.



I can only with great luck upload photos so I hope to show a variety of scenes, but it is an incredibly slow process. It is hard to believe that there is connectivity at all.

7 comments:

  1. Thank you for persevering. Your photo and text really do paint a picture for us. I'm looking forward to what comes next.

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  2. Yes, indeed, you do paint a picture with pictures and words. What a change from London!!

    Sylvia

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  3. There is connectivity...your words and images are coming through loud and clear. I can only repeat what tapirgal said: Thank you for persevering. Keep on keeping on--it's worth it.

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  4. I hope you have managed to shake off your cold.
    Are you glad that you stopped in London between the Altiplano and Africa? Do you think you would have perceived things differently if you had flown directly to Uganda? Sorry to be asking such seemingly stupid questions but it's what came to mind seeing these photos and reading about the poverty again.

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  5. Your beautiful photos reach to a core of what survival is for humanity--so many times removed from the safety of our technological bubble and an eye-opening view of the world outside. Thanks for sharing and hope this finds you well!

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  6. Hope you're feeling better, Lee. What an amazing place you find yourself in. My best wishes in your new adventure!

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  7. I can see that image~~"a tourist, out of place". The adventure begins anew. MB

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