Saturday, August 30, 2014

Better Homes and Gardens: Malawi Edition


Better Homes and Gardens: Malawi Edition


The boundaries of our village are lineated by the shore of Lake Malawi to the South, and the unpaved road (prowling with baboons) stretching to the provincial capital to the Northwest.  Our house is located close to the market, at the base of a hill that leads to the health clinic.  The market, the bustling heart of the village, teems with women relaxing in the shade and selling their husbands’ catches of fish, male tailors sewing outfits out of beautiful chitenje fabric on hand powered sewing machines, and people selling eggs and soap out of closet-sized shops.  During the school term break, children often work in the family business. The other day, while buying Chinese cabbage, we observed a boy, aged approximately seven, buy a single cigarette out of a pack from a female vendor aged around ten, presumably for his father or uncle.  

If you walk for approximately 200 metres in the opposite direction of the market, you’ll reach the borehole.  One of half a dozen in the village, it draws clean water through a hand pump.  Small girls methodically pump the handle to fill several buckets full of water without pause, while my arms ache after one bucket full.  No matter, because the girls often insist on pumping water for us themselves.  

Another landmark in the village is the cemetery.  It is a swath of land covered with scrubby trees and dotted with wooden crosses.  Located to the side of a path we use to traverse between our house and the guesthouse/office, we’re overly cautious about stumbling upon it in the night time.  To do so may impart rumors of witchcraft among village inhabitants.  Witchcraft is the solution to all that is unexplained.  Recently, one of our local staff members explained to Chris that on several occasions he found small sums of money missing from his house.  Rather than question his family members or search for it in his house, he immediately suspected witchcraft.

As I mentioned in the last post, two mountains tower over the village on either end.  One is uninhabited and is habitat for baboons and hyenas that occasionally skulk around the village at night, resulting in a cacophony of angry dog howls at 2am.  The other mountain contains some houses, as we can occasionally glimpse tendrils of smoke from cooking fires rising from the trees.  On Tuesday, inhabitants of the mountains attempted some controlled burning of the bush.  This is usually done at the start of the dry season, to prevent wildfires from careening out of control as the months pass and the land becomes parched and highly flammable.  Rarely, however, have I seen truly controlled burning.  Often times there is collateral damage as winds change.  As night fell, the burning bush stretched down the sides of the mountain, molten twinkling.  By moonlight it looked like a volcano erupting.  

Our closest neighbors, whose yard borders our back wall, is a family of four.  Matthews and his wife Janice are in their late 20s, and they have a five-year-old son named Moses and a 7-month-old named Davies.  They invited us to dinner this week, and we feasted on the staple food of nsima (known as nshima in Zambia), beef with a rich soup, and cooked Chinese cabbage.  We also watched a Bollywood movie poorly dubbed over in ChiChewa.  There was a lot of violence, and a glaring lack of musical numbers.  

Many of the houses in the village have some sort of wall, often constructed of thin reeds and tall grasses, to separate the dwellings of one family to the next.  Our house is a square white building surrounded by a sandy courtyard and a brick wall.  Housing is provided by my employer, which pays K 20,000, or $50 a month, to rent the four room building.  
                                                                                         

 In the front of the house, there’s a large living room with four comfortable, brown couches and a coffee table.  A small hallway leads to the rest of the house.  On the left there is our bedroom, equipped with a double bed shrouded by a green mosquito net, a shelf, and a pole for hanging clothes.  Next to that room is a guest bedroom, (which lies empty in anticipation of Todd and Maureen’s Christmas time visit!), which we use mostly for storage.  The right side of the house is composed of a pantry/kitchen area.   
The living room
The hallway behind the living room













The bedroom




                                                        
The rememberance wall in the bedroom


The guest bedroom


The pantry/indoor kitchen

Our "sink"
Water storage
The pack porch, used as our outdoor kitchen
Our actual cooking are is on our back porch, as we are currently using a charcoal burning brazier.  To cook on one of these, you add a small pile of charcoal, some parafin or a candle stub to get the charcoal lit, then fan it vigorously until all the charcoal ignites.  It takes about 20 minutes to get it hot enough to actually cook on, so no meal here is ever instant.  However, during the week we eat breakfast and lunch prepared by our excellent cook at the guesthouse, and often take home leftovers for dinner, so we only have to cook for ourselves a few times during the week.                
...which is a re-purposed USAID container of cooking oil.
Our "stove," a charcoal brazier...

Lastly, our "chimbudzi," or latrine.  There is an inside wall dividing the structure into two small rooms.  Our bathing area is on the left, and the latrine is on the right.



Electricity has been a new development.  Some of our neighbors have reported waiting years for the ESCOM electricity company (based in Salima)  to come install electricity, but our wait was only about three weeks.  Our landlord has been very persistently asking them to come, which probably helped.  Our house was already wired for electricity, so they only had to connect the line and install a meter.   We will have to   
purchase prepaid units of electricity in Salima, then enter a code at our meter at the house to use that power.









Our steadfast security guard, hard at work protecting the compound from errant chickens and curious children.

Friday, August 22, 2014




True to the title of this blog, we have once again traversed on the bush path less traveled by, this time to a rural fishing village on the shores of Lake Malawi in southern Africa.  What's brought us here for the next year or so is my new job as project manager at a Swiss non-governmental aid organization.  As project manager, I oversee four Malawian staff and 1 American in various projects benefiting the community as well as volunteers who come from all over the globe.  Our current projects include partnerships with the local clinic, a pre-school and primary school.  At the clinic, we are in the planning stages of constructing a new building to house patients with tuberculosis, are supplying the maternity ward with new mattresses, and travel twice a week with clinic staff to administer "under five" baby weighings and public health awareness in the surrounding rural villages.  The pre-school, which is run by an HIV/AIDS community based organization, caters to orphans and vulnerable children affected by HIV/AIDS or other chronic illnesses.  Every day, children between the ages of 3-6 come to be taught in two different classes divided by age, by volunteer teachers.  The organization is currently offering English classes to the volunteer teachers, as well as support in the classroom.  We are also constructing a third classroom building.  Finally, at the primary school, we are offering merit-based scholarships to the top three standard 8 students so that they may attend secondary school in an urban center that would otherwise be financially unattainable.  Our volunteers also co-teach standard 7 and 8 English classes, and offer computer classes during term breaks to the highest performing students.  My responsibilities include overseeing these many projects, as well as supporting the international volunteers, handling logistics for the guesthouse where the volunteers stay (also my office), and accounting.



The village where we stay, Mudzi*, is situated on Lake Malawi, an expansive Rift Valley lake the size of the state of New Hampshire.  Although predominantly Christian, there is a sizable Muslim population, which worships in a large brick mosque next to the pre-school.  We live across from the Catholic Church, so Sunday mornings always mean that we will be listening to gospel music in ChiChewa language from 7am-11am.



Many of the men in the village are fisherman, waking up before sunrise to prepare to spend the day on the lake catching small fish.  They return in their small wooden boats at sunset, and dry their day's catch on long reed mats suspended above the sand.  Other people make their livelihood through agriculture, growing pumpkins, Chinese cabbage, millet, and maize.  The village is a sandy conglomeration of a handful of large houses built on the lake by wealthy Malawian retirees, medium-size houses equipped with tin roofs and electricity, and small, traditional mud huts with grass roofs.  Goats and sheep roam at will, and ox carts driven by gaggles of children with whips careen around the twisting, sandy paths.   A bustling market serves as the center of the town, selling small, dried fish, vegetables, eggs, and other necessities.  From the north and south, the village is overlooked by rocky mountains.

Many people have wondered how our dog, a black and tan Basenji mix born and raised in a small Zambian village, then transported to the luxaries of American dog food, dog beds and toys, will adjust to living back in Africa.  She is already getting used to eating small, dried fish mixed with whatever staple food we've eaten.  Our house is in a walled compound, so she has a sandy yard to wander in.  We've been extraordinarily busy in the two weeks we've been here, so unfortunately she's only been out in the village once.  We elected to walk her on a leash to avoid harassment to the many goats and chickens that have free range of the village, as well as to avoid frightening the many people here who are terrified of dogs.  She left an impression on many of our neighborhood children, who now ask to see our dog every time they see us.  Their favorite game involves me and Wilo running towards them (with her on a leash), them running away and shrieking in fear, then returning with big smiles on their faces and asking to be chased again.





*The name of the village we live in has been changed to protect he privacy of the people mentioned within.  I will also not mention the name of the organization I work for, as this blog is my personal account of my life here, and does not represent the views of the organization.  If you want to know, I'd be happy to send you the details through private correspondence. 

This one is just for you, Debby!  They play beach volleyball in the evenings.  Now you have to come visit us!