Blog #2 9/24/11
“Installation and Getting to Site”
So after swearing in on September 16, 2011, we were all officially volunteers! The next day groups of us shipped out to begin installation. I went with a group of people to Tana to do some shopping for installation. This would be the only place to get a non-stick pan, a good chef’s knife, a spring mattress, and some other random items. I was installed with one other person, and so the day after shopping, we left the capital to head to our banking town, Moramanga. This place can either mean “easy blue”, or “cheap mangoes”, but we found out actually referred to cheap labor/cheap slaves during the period of colonialism in Madagascar. Not as pleasant, so we kick around the other two translations…
This town is basically a stop on the way to the coast from the capital. It has a pretty big market, a couple of nice hotels and some “vazaha” food like pizza. Vazaha is the equivalent of “gringo” by the way. It’s something I’m called everyday even in my own town. Usually, when people see that you can speak Malagasy they’re blown away and any negativity is replaced with laughter. I was supposed to be in this town for one day, but then I encountered my first roadblock: the train didn’t run.
I can only get to and from my town, Lohariandava, on the train. It goes to my site from my banking town on Mondays and Thursdays, and eventually on to Toamasina or “Tamatave”, a beach town that is a popular tourist destination. I had to stay in Moramanga until Thursday afternoon, so each day I did a little more shopping and a little more eating, taking advantage of what was around me, but watching my money evaporate.
When I finally got to town, I was surprised at how small it actually was. I had thought that 13000 was the population of my town, but this was in fact for the entire commune of Lohariandava. My population is more like 1300 and it’s all little shops and houses on either side of the tracks for a total of maybe 2 kilometers. Basically if you walk more than 10 minutes in any 1 direction from leaving my house, you probably reach the limit of the town. I felt a little suffocated for a minute, particularly because there is no road to get in or out, but this size of a town is really what I expected.
The staff who were helping to install me could only stay part of 1 day in order to catch the next train back to Moramanga, so a lot of stuff couldn’t really get finished. I was lucky enough, though, to have a person who works with RANO HP come back the next week to help me get some things done.
Here are the “before” photos, and the “after” are yet to come. I probably won’t have the house the way I want it until mid-November.
Yeah, I’ve got a lot of new roommates. We used ant poison but that worked for a few hours only. I think I’ll always have these guys around…but they don’t bite me, they’re organized, and they clean up the place. Drew and Tyler couldn’t even do all three of those things. But seriously I’d much rather have people-roommates.
Here’s a general photo of the room, without any furniture of my own, just some things borrowed from the commune and the hospital.
Here’s a shot of my “ladosy”, or shower.
Here’s the kitchen where I may or may not put a table and chairs.
Here’s my water source, a spring in the mountain. There are several of these in my town, but there are still long queues: I sometimes wait about an hour to fill up a couple of buckets.
Here’s the train station, the biggest building in town.
And here’s my terrifying bridge. There are a lot more holes and every metal plank moves and bends as you walk across. Oh well, at least it’s pretty high up and people have fallen in the past…
Here are a couple of shots outside. One photo is with the doctor, who lives beside me and is an awesome guy (called Buddha by friends). Another one is with a kid named Giovanni. He’s a great kid and is really patient in helping me communicate and learn more Malagasy. A side-note here…I didn’t learn a dialect during training, but in this town, many of the people are of a different ethnic group—another one of the 18 tribes—and I need to pick up on a new dialect as well as continue on with Standard Malagasy. Luckily people understand my Malagasy because it’s taught in schools, but many of the vocab and verbs are different for everyday language, so understanding people will be difficult for a while.
Now for the views…
This place is beautiful, tucked away in the mountains and the forest, overlooking a river. It’s probably ~60 km from the east coast and is already much hotter than the training site.
So now I’m settling in at my Peace Corps site, the place I’ll live for the next 24 months. Hopefully soon I get to start exploring the commune with some of the people who work with the various NGOs involved in the water project. I don’t want to leave site too much too early, but I’d really like to get to see some more of the region, and some actual work would be nice. I don’t know if I idle too well, but that’s the mode that Peace Corps has its volunteers in for the first few months. It might be even longer until I really figure out my projects.
For now this is where I’ll leave off. I’m really just getting started with all of this, and I’m excited to see what I can do with the Malagasy people over the next couple of years.
P.S.
Politics is not forbidden in this blog because I have a nice disclaimer, but it is still cautioned against. I just want to say that just before coming to site I read that former president Ravalomanana (the names get much easier to pronounce when every word looks like that) will be allowed to return to Madagascar after 2 years of exile and that he can participate in elections and the transition. I’m excited that Madagascar may finally have elections so that the government can be recognized by the African Union and the rest of the world again. But Peace Corps has already been evacuated from Madagascar twice in its short history here. Let’s hope we avoid a third and instead witness a peaceful process whenever it comes about.