So, you’d think writing about the people I see and have met
and treat here would be one of the first things I’d do (you would, that is, if
you didn’t know what an introverted curmudgeon I can sometimes be). But, you
know – it’s hard. As I think I’ve said before, of all the places I’ve worked
except, perhaps, Vietnam, Africa (and perhaps eastern and southern Africa in
particular?) is the place I feel I get to know people the least. I know some of
that is my problem. The history of Europe/whites in Africa is so fraught with
horrors – I can remember the first time I went on a work trip to Kenya, I found
myself thinking, “My God, I can’t believe these people will even talk to me!”
And then, as this summer continues to show us, the sequelae of those horrors
are far from played out. So maybe that makes ME stiff – self-conscious – a
little guilty and earnest – in a nutshell, a little blocked and not good at
communicating.
I think it’s more than that, though. As a contrast: In
India, I have the sense (correct me, those who think this is crazy!) that there
was a certain consonance between colonizer and colonized. Meaning that the
Mughal state was a large, integrated, stratified, bureaucratic state, and so
was England – in some weird way, they “got along.” Plus, England was messing
around there for a LONG time, starting at a time when the technological
pre-eminence of the “West” wasn’t quite as strong as it later became. So I feel
a bit like the Indian substrate and the European overlay kind of grew together,
to the point that now, in cities, anyway, what remains is a culture that is
different but not alien, that speaks an English you can understand, that has
entry points but is still unequivocally “local” (it’s one of the things I LOVE
about India).
But I feel like Europe came at Africa when it had guns and
steamships and railroads and mining equipment, technology that gave Europe
power WAY beyond what Africa could muster. And it came at Africa with centuries
of contempt for its people, and with more or less one objective – to profit (oh
– and maybe to convert, too). So that I feel like what happened in the places
where the Europeans came and lived and worked is that they simply pushed
African cultures aside, wished them away, made them go into the background and
underground. The result being that, often, in many places in Africa, you can go
to a supermarket, or a gas station, or in some places a downtown, and it feels
rather dully familiar. But to make the jump from this simulacrum of the West
and enter, even a little, into how people actually live must take time, and
patience, and a kind of commitment.
So, anyway – I don’t feel like I have much of a sense of the
actual lives of the people here (beyond certain physical conditions which I can
observe). But here are some impressions:
English is now one of the official languages of South Sudan
(it used to be Arabic, when it was part of Sudan proper, a scant 5 years ago),
but most people speak it in a way that makes us fairly mutually uncomprehending.
I frequently have to ask the guys I work with in the OR two or three times what
it is they are trying to tell me, and sometimes I have the sense, with me, that
they just kind of give up and make assenting noises, though they don’t really
know what I’ve said. This does not make for easy conversations! On the other
hand, there are these wonderful bits of music that come along with the way
English is spoken here that make me smile. For example, “even” as a modifier
always seems to go at the beginning of a phrase – so it’s not “You can even
wash it,” but “Even you can wash it.” (That just cracks me up!) And “that” does
not appear to be enough to indicate an antecedent; it has to be “that one” (the
way in Romance languages you often have to use an object pronoun where it is
understood, in English?). “You can use that one;” “That one (speaking of my
IPhone) is very nice!” It is subtle (they are not saying “that IPhone in
contrast to other IPhones,” they are saying “that IPhone”), but unmistakable
when you hear it. Gives the sentences a little catch in their step.
There is a certain interest in American politics here –
people have even asked me about Hillary’s e-mail problems! And there seems to
be a widespread belief that, after 8 years of a Democratic president, a
Republican has to be elected, and vice-versa. (I have made it clear I very much
do not want this to come true!) It actually makes 100% perfect sense when you
think that the people I have talked to who hold the belief a) are all pretty
young and so know no Presidents before Bill Clinton, b) live in a country where
power-sharing seems to be the only hope for avoiding intercommunal bloodshed,
and c) may very well not have experienced “elections” as having much to do with
their actual choices. They’ve asked me about Trump, and I’ve told them what I
think – I can’t get much sense if they have an independent opinion (I remember
arriving in India in the ‘80s and being amazed how many people LOVED Reagan!),
since I sort of think they just agree with me out of politeness. When I ask them
about the situation here, they – like the Irish people I talked to during the
“troubles;” like most people in most war-torn places, I imagine – shake their
heads and tell me “what South Sudan needs is peace.”
People come in all shapes and sizes, as you might imagine,
but there does seem to be something along the lines of a “classic” Dinka
physiognomy. VERY thin, VERY tall, with purple-y black skin (think “classic”
Dutch physiognomy but thinner and a whole lot darker!) I think I am
below-average height among the OR personnel, which doesn’t happen to me very
often, and I have run into women who are taller than I am. And the men’s hips
are stunningly narrow; they are like humans as bright gesture, a brushstroke in
the air. One of the “techs” is about 6’3” and I think he weighs, max, 130
pounds (and I don’t think he is malnourished, although maybe deficits in early
nutrition contribute - ?). Some Dinkas also do traditional things with their
teeth – removing the lower incisors (one of the letters in their alphabet is
actually kind of hard to say if you have lower incisors) and, it seems,
intentionally cultivating buckteeth in the upper incisors – although I have met
many people who have not done this. You also see very delicate scarification
patterns (on the face, on the torso), which, apparently, make people’s
ethnicity instantly recognizable – during the civil war, having “Nuer”
scarifications in a Dinka area could apparently be deadly – but I truly know
nothing about this.
As so often everywhere, men tend to look a lot shlumpier
than women – t-shirts, random pants. Although – as far as I can tell, almost
all the clothing stores (er – stalls, rather) in town sell used clothes,
arrived here by whatever Byzantine route, and it is impressive how sharp some
of the guys can make a second-hand button-up look. The women, by contrast, wear
all sorts of colorful clothes, ranging from things that look like a suit you
might see (or have seen 15 years ago) in a suburban office, to dresses
indistinguishable from those on sale at NY summer street fairs, to – most
commonly – something that looks to me like a sari (apologies to those who know
how a sari is actually wrapped!): Tight undergarments of some kind swathed in a
wrapping of colorful fabric, usually with a tie of the same fabric covering the
head. My favorite, however, goes one step further: Many women (and I wonder if
it has something to do with religion? we are very close to Sudan proper here,
and I hear the call to prayer every day) continue the wrap of cloth so that the
end of it sort of wraps and piles onto and floats over their head, like a kind
of colorful cloud. I’m not sure where I’ve seen photos of this style before,
but something about it seems classically Saharan. Picture it: A tall, thin,
dark woman, with a nimbus of bright orange fabric winding about her body and
face, perhaps walking along with a bundle on her head. I don’t want to
exoticize, but it looks very – exotic! And beautiful. (Not to leave the men out
completely: The other day, I saw a guy dressed entirely in white, his head
topped with a white cowboy hat, peddling along on a white bicycle. He looked
like he should be an important person in the community; I wonder if he was?) Men
basically all seem to wear their hair cropped close to the skull; women – any
manner of braid, weave, extension, what have you, you can imagine.
I think that – like many places on earth – there may be a
formality in public intercourse here that makes swearing not like at home –
makes it a VERY serious matter (we could probably use a dose of that in the
States, no?). I actually said “fuck” in the OR yesterday (not AT anyone,
nothing like that, but it was still totally stupid – me getting worked up over
something that turned out not even to be a problem), and I had a subtle feeling
I might really have offended people. More, that I might have lost some respect,
in their eyes. I did my best to apologize, clearly and more than once, and
everyone has been very nice since, so maybe it wasn’t as bad as I thought, or maybe
they accepted my apology (or maybe they are just nice).
Well – hmm – that’s all fine and good, but I’m not sure I
have anything more intimate to say about the folks who live here. People are
usually friendly when you say hi on the street, although, as I’ve said before,
they also (especially patients in the hospital) often look at me like I’m from
Mars – either a potentially dangerous life form that must be carefully
negotiated, or an irrelevance. Though, you know, I think some of that is
probably me overinterpreting the serious look of someone who has to be in the
darn hospital, for Chrissake. Today,
I had to get a woman to bring her child for a lumbar puncture, then take him
back to his bed, and we wordlessly communicated just fine – I wondered whether
there might even have been the little hint of a smile.
Little kids NEVER seem to tire of yelling out “khawadja!”
(“white person!”) when we walk by, even though we walk by every morning, and
they are the same kids every morning. Lauren, I don’t know if you are reading
this, but it always makes me think of a story you told me one time in the
basement of Foley House – how, when you were in Spain in the late 70s or early
80s, people would sometimes point at you and yell “negra!” and you wanted to
yell back at them “I know!!” Makes me smile to this day.
There are street kids at the hospital gate who will follow
you around asking incessantly for money, bringing up all the issues that one is
never satisfactorily resolving – why shouldn’t he have some of my money; but it
might sow conflict if he gets some and another kid doesn’t; and isn’t it
demeaning to be put in a position to beg, and to encourage it; and, anyway,
what happens when I go in a few weeks and no one’s giving him money any more –
on and on. All coming down to the ineluctable fact that, for some reason that
doesn’t make any actual sense, things being left as they are, I get to be
comfortable and he doesn’t (unless he’s a Zen master, which, who knows, maybe
he is).
Some of the babies seem a bit freaked out by white people,
but there was one yesterday – maybe 6 months old, doing great after a bout of
croup, about to be discharged – whom I got some great baby smiles out of while
we were hanging out by his bed. (I love the occasionally bobbing, uncertain
carriage of the head at that age!) His mother seemed happy, too.
And maybe I’ll leave it at that.
Except to say that – I’m sick! I’m sick! My stomach has
NEVER been right since I got here, but I’ve actually felt pretty okay except
when I eat (!). And my eyes have been burning, and then I started to get a cold
a couple of days ago – but I still felt basically okay. Today, however, still
feeling fine, I passed a colleague at the hospital and she asked “Are you okay?
You’re looking a little peaked there.” And, wouldn’t you know it - she was
right. Within a couple of hours I started to have that light-headed sick
feeling, and this afternoon – well, lets just say I’m losing a lot of WATER,
through the LOWER (not upper, happily) orifice. Still light-headed and
headachy; maybe a little fever – but, hey, actually, it’s not that bad. I
started taking antibiotics this afternoon (I’ve had many bouts with bacterial
GI stuff, and this feels like it might be that), and am all ready with my
anti-parasite meds if I’m not better by tomorrow (Giardia has been a bit of a
problem here…). Drinking my oral rehydration salts mixed with Emergen-C (not
bad, actually). Expect to be able to report a full recovery…sometime soon.
(Tomorrow is my day off, wouldn’t you know it? Well, probably better to have it
as a day to recover rather than feel this way in the OR.)
Have a good weekend, everyone – talk with you soon!