March Happenings and South Africa
The Beginning of March in the Village
In the beginning of March I started working more in schools again but this time I had help. I worked with NAPS and designed a program that we could implement in a school and have classes with each grade 1-9 and reach an entire school in one day. It was challenging and tiring but we did it, and it was fulfilling. The teachers appreciated our presence there and the youth asked a lot of good questions.
After the school push I decided it was time for a vacation so I packed my friend's backpack (my backpack couldn't fit all my junk) and took off for South Africa. I visited Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban. It was an adventure!
South Africa
First stop was Johannesburg, which unfortunately we didn't stay that long or do that much touristy stuff because of the fear that everyone ingrained in us because of the crime and assault rates in the city. But we got around a bit anyway.
Johannesburg is like the New York City of Africa, almost all of South Africa is extremely Westernized or "developed" if you will. All the roads are paved, the consumption of material goods is high, the country has a lot of money, the vehicles on the roads are as diverse as in the states, it was a real culture shock for me since I've been in Zambia for almost a year now and it is considered "under-developed", fewer paved roads, and maybe only 4 or 5 different styles of vehicles.
The night life is huge, we went to a lounge, very chic! And Jo'burg must have a mall in every town and they are HUGE! It was too much for me, from the village to the BIG city.Guess which city this is?
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Or this one? Which bridge is this and in which city?
I also had an opportunity to visit the Museum of Africa situated in Market Theatre of downtown Johannesburg.
And my last stop was the Apartheid Museum which was a huge and well designed history of the Apartheid in South Africa. The journey through the museum took me almost 4 hours and ironically they had a special exhibit on the "Separate but Equal" history of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. It included info on Brown vs. the Board of Education and other issues over the country. And it compared Apartheid to the Civil Rights Movement, it was fascinating. Unfortunately I couldn't take pictures inside but I have a few of outside.
The next stop was Cape Town. I was fortunate to have a college buddy who was doing an internship there, she had been there only a week and a half before I got there but she knew enough to show us around and help us save a huge amount of time in the city. Here's a picture of all of us. (Left to right, me, Nyasha, and Beyola)
Highlights of Cape Town included the Robbins Island tour of where Nelson Mandela was held for 27 years in captivity for his political affiliations with the ANC. The tour of the prison was led by a former prisoner.
The things that stuck out for me on the tour were the gruesome hardships that the prisoners had to go through. Apartheid even stretched through prison bars by the differentiation of treatment of Black prisoners (also called Bantu), coloured prisoners, and Indian prisoners. The Black prisoners were given less rations of food than the coloured and Indian prisoners. Here is a record of rations based on race.
There were 100-150 prisoners per cell and only three blankets and a mat were given to each prisoner. Cape Town is extremely cold, especially on the island and the prisoners only had one uniform khaki shorts and shortsleeved shirt to wear year round. They could only wash it once per week. They were only allowed one 30-minute visit per 6 month period, and they had to speak in English or Afrikaans so that the guards would be able to monitor them. They were only allowed 1 letter for every 6 months that had to be 120 words or less, if it was more than 120 words the guards would tear off from word 121 onward and not deliver the rest of the letter until the next 6 months. They sometimes buried prisoners alive with their heads left out as punishment, and when the prisoners asked for water when they were thirsty, the guards urinated on them and made them drink it. If you read Nelson Mandela's Long Walk to Freedom autobiography, you can learn of more of the horrors.
The tourguide also talked about the more positive parts of prison. Many prisoners entered illiterate and left with degrees because they taught each other with every spare moment they had. They said the "each one teach one" saying originated at this time and they received donated books from other countries and materials for learning.
We also visited Cape Point where the Indian Ocean meets the Atlantic. Cape Town is a beautiful place, very mountainous. You can see Table Mountain from all over the city, it's so dominant.The final stop was Durban, where we stayed with my lovely Soror Charlotte Fuller. She owns ocean front property, so every moment we woke up to the sounds of the waves and a beautiful Atlantic sunrise.
Soror Charlotte was the hostest with the mostest! She is a retired teacher who is making big moves in Durban, and still organizing projects to help orphans, street children, and the larger Durban community. She is well respected and well connected. We had the most home-cooked meals of our entire trip as we met her kind friends such as the Naidoo family, where we had home-cooked Indian cuisine.
We enjoyed our time together immensely. It's wonderful to connect with Deltas all over the world!
The End (for now)
4 Comments:
i still owe you another letter.
Hey Natalie! Im glad you can share all of these pictures and stories with us...and I am glad you got to go on vacation! You deserve it!
Peace!
hey yo. 2 months and no update. let's get it poppin yo. what's the 4-1-1.
Hi Natalie! This is Monica Byrne, a fellow Wellesley 2003 alum. I don't think we ever formally met, but I just read about you being in the Peace Corps in the Wellesley Magazine. Awesome!...especially because I want to go too :) Be well, and keep posting.
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