Wednesday, May 2, 2012

The Third Month


There is an area in South Africa called the Garden Route that parallels the coast. Over the fall break I was fortunate enough to be able to explore it with a friend.
Day one was straight travel. On the bus. All day. In the rain.
Day two we caught a ride with two Frenchies and went to the Storms River National Park and hiked on some beautiful mountains right on the coast.  The hostel was in a one-horse town (though its one restaurant was Elvis themed...) so we hung out at the hostel in front of the fire met two Canadian and two Dutch girls.
Day three, we get Rocky Road, a hostel run by, you guessed it, Rocky. This guy was so cool. He was a businessman in Joburg and then decided to move to the middle of nowhere and open this hostel. He mostly houses volunteers who work in the nearby township.  He took us to this area called Natures Valley, there were maybe 20 people on the beach and he called it crowded. We decided to go on this tail which was so beautiful, up over a mountain to a lagoon then over rocks back to the beach. We didn't see a soul. That night we hung out at the hostel in front of the fire with this old Afrikaner woman listening to her stories.
Day four. We went to Monkeyland and Birds of Eden. Cheesy, but it had to be done. The girl who let us into the entrance upon learning that we were American asked me if I knew Justin Beiber and Beyonce, I said oh yeah, they are my neighbors! She laughed and I thought we had an understanding. After looking a ton of birds and monkeys, which was really cool, this girl saw us eating our pbj’s and came up and said she would really like to know more about Justin Beiber and Beyonce. Like are they nice? I tried to but she didn't seem to believe that we had never met them or anyone famous!
Day five. We get to this little stink hole city called Kynsna. After looking around town we were sitting in our room hanging out and this couple came and told us that the beds (we were all in the same room) had bed bugs. The guy showed us his arms and legs and they were COVERED in bites. So we skedaddled out of there!
Day six. Woke up early for surfing lessons from a local. Ye-haw.
Day seven. In the town of Wilderness we caught a ride up to this place called Map of Africa where all the paragliders take off. Unfortunately the wind was too strong for us to go, so we hiked a trail to a waterfall. Back in town and hung out around the fire at the hostel. We met a lot of cool people, lots of Germans (I’d bet I have met more Germans than South Africans here...
Day eight. We caught a ride to the town of Oudtshoorn where there was a huge Afrikaans festival. We wandered around with Carrie Underwood karaoke in the background (I realize she is not an Afrikaner but I just accepted it).
Day nine, the last, was the best. We signed up to do this bike ride, unaware that it was did going to be up a treacherous mountain pass, dirt roads, no rails, fierce winds, poisonous snakes and baboons. It took us an hour and a half to drive up to the top. So we start this journey down and it is so fun. You could really fly. On our way down we stopped at the Cango Caves, which were unreal. Along the way there were a lot of run down houses,  few and far between but the area, as so many in SA are, was really poor. There were occasional groups of kids that would stand in the road and when they saw us coming they would get really excited and stick their hands out. I wasn't sure what they wanted but then realized that they wanted drive-by high fives. And bless em I have never seen anyone so excited for a high five.  We continued to an ostrich farm (what this area, Outdshoorn is known for) where I had one of the best sandwiches of my life. Ostrich meat is durn good. We got to see them and watch other tourists ride them. Which was actually quite sad. They put a bag over the ostrich’s head so it thinks it is safe and calms down, the person gets on, they take the bag off and the animal freaks and takes off running. So back on the road we are pedaling along and a big storm blew in. It started pouring rain and the winds were really strong. Eventually it passed and this lovely rainbow popped out. We finally got back into town and stopped at this chocolate shop. The woman who ran the shop (in the back of her house) was really neat, she did her training in Belgium and then moved back to SA to open her shop. And the chocolate was amazing, wasabi, lemon, lavender, black pepper cherry. Mmm. So we finally got out of there and were riding back to the hostel, again in the rain. At this point we had ridden about 35 miles and were pretty tired. As we were passing back through the festival people were all out with umbrellas and holding boxes over grills to keep them dry. The rain let up a bit and this ragtag band walked out in front of us, they were playing this upbeat music on all horns and trumpets.
Day ten. We were on the bus for most of the day and glad to be home when we finally arrived.

Tsitsikamma National Park


Storms River Mouth



Friends on the trail

South African national flower, the petals look like feathers.


View from the top at Natures Valley

More hiking at Natures Valley

Monkeyland

 

Birds of Eden

View from the top (pre-cycle).

Part of the treacherous ride down.

Super-cycle-rs.

Cango Caves


Ostrich about to peck my lens! We were warned to protect anything shiny.

Feeding time

Reminders of the promise

Driving home



Overall it was an awesome trip. I am incredibly blessed.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

The Second Month


The professor of one of my classes, HIV/AIDS, also ran a campaign on campus called ‘First things First’ trying to get as many students as possible tested for HIV. She asked our class to volunteer handing out flyers, talking to students, just generating general interest, she said our accents were a good hook! She warned our class that there was a stigma against the disease but I was not prepared for what followed. Most people just said no or no thanks and kept walking but some would tell you that they didn’t need it or wouldn’t ever be infected. Even some of the students I saw from church narrowed their eyes and asked, Katy why are you doing this? I approached one group of girls saying, have you been tested? You really should be, its quick and free! They stopped to hear what I was saying and asked, wait tested for what? When the word HIV came out of my mouth that all burst out in a scared kind of laughter and scurried off. As the posse walked away they kept turning back, looking at me and laughing, eyebrows raised at my audacity.

I suggest you watch this video during next time you sit down for lunch, its a bit lengthy but the message is powerful and hopeful, 



The past few weeks I have been getting a lot of flack for being an American. There have been plethora of accent impressions (that all sound weirdly southern), jokes about politics and only speaking one language. One of my fellow Tuesday teachers (a German girl) made a poster of the world to help teach our class geography. On Europe she drew the Eiffel Tower and on Australia she drew a kangaroo. When we got to North America she said, and this is North America! Where Katy is from! And then pointed to her rendition of the US and the picture of a cheeseburger on it. I was not amused.
During a meeting the speaker asked where I was from to which I responded ‘the States’ and he said ‘the United States?” “That’s the one” Which he misheard and said “yeah, you’re number one…” and held up one finger and bobbed it around a few times. Rather than trying to correct him I just slumped down in my chair.
During a different meeting (about consumerism) a student said that he wasn’t sure if a rumor he heard was true or not but he thought that in America fat people could ride around stores in motorized wheelchairs. Upon confirming this, a truly dumfounded look spread over his face.

Rugby in South Africa is the equivalent of college football at home. Stands are packed with fans in matching colors. The games are fun to watch, especially because Stellenbosch has quite a good team! One player will often be lifted up by a group of his teammates to catch a high pass. The wave is also alive and well in South Africa, however instead of just throwing their arms up students will toss up beer cans. These cans are often not empty and so you get a light beer rain following the wave.

I have always thought of spoken word poetry as something to be mocked. But upon attending a poetry ‘slam’ here I have been proven wrong. The most moving of the poets was named Katie (so you know she’s talented) she spoke about her father, a white man who was raised by his black, Zulu nanny. The way her words wove in and out with double meanings and plenty of puns was beautiful.

Apartheid seems like something that should not be able to happen in the world we live in, that we are too modernized for that kind of cruelty. Though it has been legally over for years, effects are still visible. In the university most (not all) professors and students are white and most of the cleaning, landscape, and cooking staff are black. On any given Friday or Saturday night you can walk around near the bars and see mostly white students stumbling around drunk and then homeless people, all black, sitting or trying to sleep on the ground. I read an article in the paper the other week about an extremist group in South Africa. Here is a link to some of the images…


One weekend I went to a gay pride festival in Cape Town, this is not a normal activity for me, but I try to keep an open mind. The area was packed to the gills with stalls selling all kinds of flags etc, men in sailor shorts and hats with glitter all over their bodies, cross dressers, people singing and laughing. It was overwhelming, the pictures below don’t do it justice.

The DJ hard at work.


 

 

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Truth. For Anne. 

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Fish from Hout Bay



Sisters taking in the view.


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Penguins on Boulder Beach. For Kelly.


Trying to capture one of the most beautiful views.


The Cape of Good Hope, 
the south-westerly most point on Africa.


An ostrich ambling off into the sunset.

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Cyclists waiting for the Cape Argus to begin.


Little boy getting a good view.


Inside the SA museum. 


At the Stellenbosch Botanical Gardens
(For mom)

I didn’t think many people beyond my parents would read this, so thanks to you for reading and to everyone who has emailed me with kind words! I really appreciate it! 

Friday, March 2, 2012

The First Month


If you imagine Charleston then downsize it, add more plants and dirt paths, surround with huge craggy mountains, then fill with Californians who all have accents, you have Stellenbosch. The university is huge and beautiful. The town is full of coffee shops and cafes.

I live in a residence on campus where a woman comes in to clean the bathroom a few days a week (I don’t make the rules) and I have had a few interesting interactions with her. She has a slow gait, like that of a very pregnant woman and cleans with a tired shuffle. I try to be polite and tell her thank you, like my mama taught me, but she always gives a sigh of a laugh and says ‘pleasure’ but seems to think I’m quite silly for saying so.

I made a bunch of iced tea but the only place I had to keep it was an empty screw top wine bottle. I woke up one morning and was pouring a glass when she came in. She didn’t react.
One Saturday a few friends and I took a short train trip to a cheetah sanctuary. We had just gotten off the train and were walking along the platform as the train started pulling out one of the men like hanging out of the compartment, grabbed my arm and yelled something but all I heard was ‘whitey’. Later I noticed the dirty print of his hand on my arm. 
The International Office took all their students on a trip to Cape Town our first weekend here. We drove through one of the biggest townships in South Africa, a sea of shacks that stretches to the horizon, home to 1.5 million people. The homes are made of whatever people can get their hands on, mostly wood and corrugated tin. The community appears very dynamic with people selling a variety of goods and services, like old windows and doorframes and or hair salons.

Our guide tried to explain some of the complications of the situation. Many of the residents were displaced into these racially segregated communities during the apartheid. Tests were used to determine race, including one where a pencil was stuck into the individuals hair and they were told to lean forward, if the pencil stayed they were black, if it fell they were white. As part of their reparations the government is building homes for these people (so far 3 million since the mid 1990’s, but don’t quote me on that). However, some of the people in these townships have excess income, evidenced by satellite dishes, that could be used to move but they are waiting for the free home promised to them by the government.

Electric poles run through the townships going from the city to city so residents will illegally tap them which drives up the prices for the people who are using it legitimately. South Africa has a huge wealth gap, and situations like this only hurt the shrinking middle class.

The tour also took us to Clifton Beach where we all came spilling out of the bus and onto the sand. The beach is so beautiful, surrounded by 12 peaks called the Apostles and the infamous Table Mountain. Tourists were hiking up and paragliding down the mountains, sprinkling the sky with colorful dots. The natural beauty was briefly interrupted by the more than occasional group of grown men running around in their soggy skivvies and speedos kicking a soccer ball.

The stories of pain and loss surrounding HIV/AIDS are unreal. It seems that we, well I guess I can only speak for myself, have distanced myself from the pain that I know people are experiencing all over the world, it is too much to feel all the necessary emotions. I realized, though it seems so callous, that I believed that the Africans who lost multiple children and family members to AIDS were somehow less affected by these tragedies then us Westerners would be. That somehow because these things happened all the time they were less painful. It can be hard to remember that no matter a person’s circumstance, they are human, they have feelings and emotions that are legitimate.

            The university puts on a street festival called Vensters each year where there are 22 large groups of first years that act out plays. They were mostly in Afrikaans so we had no idea what was going on but they all included lots of choreographed dances, which were hilarious to watch.

            South Africans are very relaxed. A bunch of students were sitting in the classroom before the first meeting and the professor, about 70 hunched over with gray hair, walks in and goes ‘hello, well we have ten minutes, and I want to go have a smoke, who smokes?” so one kid raises his hand and they both go outside and have a cigarette together. Despite their casual manner the professors seem really intelligent and to truly want to get to know their students.

In Stellenbosch it can be easy to forget where you are. The town and university are predominantly white and is very westernized. The blacks you see are often doing hard labor or homeless. There is much evidence of the apartheid. There are subtle reminders of the danger present, homes have electric razor wire on top of barbed wire fences and spikes on trees or anything that could be climbed on. People are mugged and worse on the streets at night. Cars often don’t stop at stoplights or signs because, at night, it is safer not to.

Despite being quite Westernized, in South Africa cross walks are called zebra crossings and streetlights are robots. Band aids are called plaster and zucchinis are baby marrow. Kale is called rocket and cucumbers are gherkins. You pay extra for decaf coffee and an iced coffee is a milkshake. At a restaurant you seat yourself and have to ask for the bill (or you sit there for hours waiting).

Tuesdays I go to an elementary school in the near-by township for a few hours and teach in one of the classes with a few other girls. The biggest difficulty is that the children pretty much don't speak English. The teacher can translate but that is somewhat cumbersome. The kids are really funny and quite smart. One girl in particular is half the size of all the others. She always seems to end up in the middle of a big group of rowdy boys. It does not seem to faze her though. Last week the kids were all singing and dancing, it was great to see. The songs had real rhythm and soul, quite different from American kids do. They made us and 'head, shoulders, knees, and toes' look really frigid.

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I have only seen a small portion of South Africa but can assure you that it is unlike anywhere else you will see. The landscape is inspiring, the poverty is humbling, overall the experience is quite remarkable.  


 This is a shot of Victoria Street, one of the main roads in Stellenbosch. Weekdays this street is full of students headed to and from class seeking the relief from the sun offered by the old oaks.



An art instillation in Stellenbosch often used as a landmark when giving directions. 



One of many beautiful stretches of beach in Cape Town. The water here is really cold, too cold for the Great Whites so it’s a good choice for swimming. In the background are the 12 apostles, whose name is a mystery since there are 17!  



Sunset view from my window.



Hiking up Stellenbosch Mountain. 



Lots of new friends on the trail.


We don’t let nosebleeds get us down! (with Laura, my roommate)



A main mode of transportation in Cape Town is mini buses. Drivers pack people in a then careen around the city.  Drivers often have lots of personality, dancing the whole way blasting South African house music. Another time we took a sharp turn and the front door, luckily with no one riding shot gun, flew open. One local passenger calmly leaned his body through the back window and pulled it shut. This is Alessandro crammed backwards into one. 



These food shots are from the Old Biscuit Mill Market. An oasis of delicious homemade food, homegrown produce, wine, beer, desert and anything else you could want to eat. It is jam packed and full to the brim of people trying to satisfy their cravings. 






Inside the District Six Museum, the largest site of human removal/displacement which happened in the 1990’s under apartheid government.


Blakney and I on the train headed back to Stellenbosch.