Once again I am “footing” through the streets of Kampala to buy my bus ticket for the ride back into Gulu tomorrow. What always strikes me, now that I am not “fearing” and have extra attention simply to observe, is the contrast of sights, sounds and emotions that assault the senses. In case you’d like to take a walk with me… not sure I can do it justice, but here goes:
This time I leave from Garden City (image left a bit updated since my days there) where I have indulged in breakfast. Ben, a very well-spoken and intelligent young waiter who knows my name and preferences, asks if I want English coffee (black coffee with hot milk on the side) and an Almond Croissant, but I order pancakes instead. Next time I’ll stick with the croissant. But it’s pleasant out – cool breeze, people meeting over coffee at this upscale place.
Remembering I need to buy my bus ticket, I set off through the 30 or so Boda drivers blocking the sidewalk signaling and calling, “Madame! Muzungu! – Boda?” Declining their offers, I pick up my pace and thread my way through traffic, remembering to look out for and avoid the flock of street urchins begging money in the median yesterday, but they haven’t assembled yet – just more Boda drivers on the other side. I walk up the hill, past the Annex skirting the old women street sweepers, bending at the waist to brush rubbish into rice sacks using the local 3-foot brush-broom and wonder if their backs hurt. Stepping over a few sewer openings (literally open) and holding my breath as I hop over questionable streams of foul-smelling icky water coming down the hill in my direction, I see a Hindu meditation store front with books about chanting and reincarnation and a young woman arranging a basket of roses celebrating the birth of a baby girl.
On my right is the National Theater and African Market with crafts and artwork, just setting up for business; a line of waiting vehicles – matatus, the ubiquitous white NGO SUV’s with whip antennas, Private Hires – already blocking the entrance. A few private hire taxi drivers whose names I now know ask if this is the day I’ll ride with them. Not today – but someday!
On up the hill, across another death-defying intersection, I become aware of a freakish number of dark blue trucks with POLICE stenciled on the door and double joined bench seats in the truck bed seating 12 camo-attired police brandishing big guns. What’s up? There’s a lot of hubbub near Parliament– not a demonstration – but just lots of coming and going of people with brief cases.
Peppering this mix are old women in their bright Gomez dresses (always shiny with pointed sleeves at the shoulder and a wide trailing bow at the waist), others balancing monstrous baskets of bananas or mangoes on their heads, Muslim women dressed in their Hijabs, vendors selling everything from phone-time, artificial hair, and school supplies to sliced mangoes and newspapers. The newspapers have headlines like: Congo Rebels to Take Kabili in 90 Days(things are heating up there again), Sex Scandals Rock Parliament…., Deadly Mudslides Near Mt. Elgon.
I’m walking, I’m walking….. Now onto Kampala Road preparing for the assault of matatus with their conductors yelling destinations I don’t know, accented by the constant honking of horns. (You can’t drive without a horn here.) The new Museveni owned buses add to this mix, theoretically reducing the clamor of Matatus and Bodas. The verdict is still out on that one. Onward I trudge, past a pitifully emaciated man with skeletal legs pretzeled beneath him – sitting with his hand out. A young Ugandan woman with spiked Halloween-orange and black hair and a row of ear studs struts past a dazzlingly beautiful woman with an elegant headdress, but in shabby clothes, and both weave among students, people in business suites and women in traditional dresses of bright African prints. It is dizzying mix. Many of the Ugandans meet my eyes and we exchange hellos, but the Muzungus stare robotically ahead, speaking and smiling at no one.
I have my purse searched before being allowed to enter the Post Office, buy my ticket, and head back via the same route, stopping at Aristoc to check out office supplies for a project at Peace Corps. This feels kind-of normal, but lost in a time warp.
Back the same route… to arrive at the Annex and call to see what time my ride from LABE will “pick me” for my meeting with the Director. As I sit here in my room and write, there is a jack-hammer to my left down below and two doors down, an adopted Ugandan toddler who has been wailing for the past 30 minutes. His very Nordic parents are pacing up and down the halls and stairway to try to console him – but it’s not working… only reverberating and bouncing off the concrete walls. This portends a long day – glad I’m leaving.
And so that’s my morning in Kampala and it’s 12:01. Later, at LABE, I read in the paper that today is the day before the one year anniversary of the Al Shabab terrorist activity in Uganda and things always get tense on anniversaries. Tomorrow seems to be a good day to be leaving Kampala and – after buying my Bus ticket, it seems LABE has a vehicle going that way and I’m getting to make the trip with them. Yeah! The Gods smile again.
The day is done and it’s time for my weekly chat with Brett. Always gives me a lift and he finished third in the Mt. Hoodathon! Training for the Portland Marathon. Congrats Brett! Travis is now is Qatar for a one month fill-in and I got to Google chat with him as well, an unexpected treat because in Iraq, Google chat was off limits. When he gets back, he’ll head to Afghanistan. So close to here, and but his work being what it is, he can’t get here from there without going back through D.C. ! Thank God great kids, good friends and Internet and phone service 😉