Showing posts with label * Student Reflections #5. Show all posts
Showing posts with label * Student Reflections #5. Show all posts

22 April 2009

Kevin's Reflections on South African Elections


The Election Monitoring Network Internship Experience
South Africa national elections have just ended. During the past month and a half I’ve had the privilege of interning at the Election Monitoring Network.

Here’s a quick intro to the history behind South Africa politics and the Election Monitoring Network. South Africa as a nation hasn’t seen a democratic political atmosphere until 1994 when the National Party and along with it apartheid (segregation policies) were removed from government. The new atmosphere enabled people to openly question their democratic governance more, “how are you as my elected party going to address this problem my community has?” Questions of accountability weren’t able to be asked by the majority of the population before 1994. From 1994 to 2008 the one party that received the majority of votes was the ANC (African National Congress). Discontent of undelivered promises cultivated from 1994 to 2008. In 2009 the environment the political parties contested in changed again as citizens became more educated and experience about their rights. Places that used to be ANC dominate were now split between other parties for some reason or another due to discontent with the way the nation was being ran, i.e. lack of undelivered promises by the government over the past 14 years. A more competitive democratic environment emerged because of this – a type of environment South Africa has never seen before in its history.

The Election Monitoring Network’s mission is to ensure peaceful elections. The EMN deploys 500 monitors across the country among the nine provinces. The monitors keep their ears and eyes open for potential conflict hotspots and call their provincial coordinators to have the conflict resolved if one does arise. The EMN was formed by a multitude of civil society organizations across South Africa and is independent of government.

My role at the EMN has been to organize the information the monitors report and to assist my coordinator’s assistant with an assortment of duties – excel sheets, phone calls, setting up materials. Regardless, everyday was exciting and held a new challenge to be dealt with.

Some days were especially different from others. I’d find myself at the Archbishop of the Anglican Church’s house setting up for a briefing on the election related conflict that has occurred so the Archbishop could make a speech to the media afterwards. I’d find myself acting as an observer at a live televised political debate between the ANC, ID, DA, AZAPO, and COPE political parties. And I’d find myself having conversations about democracy and global affairs with election related international workers from other countries like Uganda and Kenya.


Becoming immersed in a fast paced neutral national election related environment was one of the most exciting things I have ever been a part of. What I learned outside of a classroom was the actual dynamics of an organization whose mission was to ensure peaceful democratic elections. My coordinator Derrick, who is the national coordinator of the EMN, took me closely under his wing and involved me in all of the issues at the forefront of the organization. By the end of the internship I had received a 360 degree view of the election landscape and how an organization organizes itself to scan for and respond to election related conflict and then communicate this to other organizations, eminent persons, the media, and the public to ensure peace during the tender and delicate period of elections the nation goes through.

I will be taking so much with me back to the United States from my internship experience. Before the study abroad program I had never been educated or involved with any type of political, governmental, or electoral related affairs – but here I found myself at an internship three days a week where I met with admirable people all united with a common goal of creating a peaceful and fair democracy for South Africa and Africa as a whole. I have the highest respect for the people I worked with when I look at the type of past South Africa and Africa as a whole have been through. The work that they do contributes to creating a peaceful atmosphere where problems are negotiated peacefully rather than by force and disregard for others. I would have never had this learning experience if it wasn’t for the study abroad program and its amazing connections – thanks to everyone involved. I know I will be able to add a unique perspective to many of the initiatives that await me back in the United States. Most of all I’ve learned that I have A LOT to learn and that I’ll never know everything or solve every problem, but I hope to hit the ground running and continue the learning experience once I return.

09 April 2009

Hannah's Reflections on feelings about leaving Cape Town



Feelings about leaving Cape Town….

I can say, with full sincerity, that I am not at all prepared to leave Cape Town in eighteen days. And furthermore, the thought frightens and deeply saddens me. I have come to feel at home in South Africa. I love the relaxed and happy lifestyle I lead here. I deeply cherish my experience at Sonke and the time I have spent with the amazing friends I have made in Cape Town.

For a while, I thought that I would be staying in Cape Town for an extra month. I used this belief to ignore the idea that, at some point, I would have to leave and go back to my old life. Recently, I learned that I would not be able to stay and, all of a sudden, it truly hit me: this is it, the “final stretch”. The thought hit me like a punch in the stomach.

I have absorbed into this lifestyle so completely that I cannot imagine anything else. I have become aware of and have changed my attitude on so many issues. I do not how I will react or what I will do when I return to the US. I have many worries about adjusting back to my less exciting life in New York. Will I feel differently towards activities and things I used to enjoy? Will I feel that I cannot relate to the people I was once closest to? Will I feel frustrated at the waste full, sexist and racist culture that surrounds me? Will I be annoyed with and question everything (as I have learned to do here)? And the thought that scares me the most: will I forget how much I love it here and go back to being absorbed by a less fulfilling, less meaningful and lazier way of life? Although I have all of these worries clouding my mind, I have come to reach one point of clarity: I have changed for the better during my time here.

I plan to utilize my last few weeks here in the most productive way possible. For once in my life, I am able to appreciate and savor each moment, realizing how lucky and purely happy I am. This opportunity does not present itself often and I’m excited for each moment in the next eighteen days. I will ALWAYS remember these last two and half weeks and the value of really living in the moment. If there is one thing that I am sure about in leaving this country, it is that I love it and will be returning in the future.

08 April 2009

Dan reflects on food, jazz and activism

I have recently been pleasantly saturated with the Cape Town music scene, via the Jazz Festival, as well as some delectable meals at the Cape Town Food Festival.  When you have both of these events and a rally thrown in for good measure, it makes for an eventful day jam packed with terrific activities. 

Kevin, Michelle, Jordan, and I supported the Social Justice Coalition rally in Cape Town.  It was regarding the denial of a visa to the Dalai Lama for a peace convention in South Africa.  He was denied entry because China threatened to put economic pressure on South Africa if they let the Tibetan leader join the convention.  It was disregarded that both Mandela and Desmond Tutu had invited him.  This was then related to the bigger picture, that good governance and accountability are necessary for a successful and legitimate government.  Also, human rights are at stake.  The fact that the government folded under the Chinese pressure and placed issues of the economy above those of human rights leaves room for concern. 

 I worked on the mobilisation for this rally quite a bit.  While handing out flyers on the University of Cape Town campus and in the city, I became more knowledgeable and aware of the issue.  It was a nice change of scenery from making phone calls with the goal of gaining media support, to running around and explaining the issues to anyone who asked.  The most gratifying part about it occurred on the day of the rally.  A man walked by and asked what was going on.  I explained, and he inquired further about the Dalai Lama and of what importance he held relative to Cape Town.  I continued to answer and we had a brief discussion.  He then thanked me for helping him understand and went on his way.  It was this aspect that got me quite excited about where I have come since arriving in Africa.  From thinking that rallies and marches were a waste of time to being overly gratified by helping someone understand the issues that I now find are absolutely necessary to be aware of.  I completely expect this attitude to carry over to the US which will be quite interesting to compare the rallies and protests of South Africa to those in the U 

Once the rally ended we decided to search for the food festival.  Jordan left us to run some errands so the three of us ventured forward.  After walking up and down hilly streets we finally found the festival and earned a healthy layer of perspiration as our reward.  The food was delicious but had to be eaten sparingly.  At the entrance we were given 20 ‘crowns’ apiece.  These crowns could then be used to buy meals.  This equalled about 3 ½ proper dishes depending on what was bought.  Although the food was enticing, the real joy of the festival came with all the freebies.  Lucky for me, I’ve acquired the eye of sample searching from my years perusing mall food courts.  While Michelle and Kevin deliberated what dish to order next, I ran around and directed them to the nearest drink or food sample.  It was a viable way to get full and still save all the fancy meals for the end.  We enjoyed ourselves immensely and from the food festival we headed to the Cape Town Jazz Festival 

This was a huge two day event.  With 5 stages and a range of jazz, reggae, hip hop, and salsa it was quite an experience.  I made it a priority to listen to as many artists as possible.  It was quite invigorating and refreshing to be in such a cheerfully relaxed atmosphere.  A large part of a culture is the music that comes from it.  If the artist is good he/she can portray an aspect of the culture. If an artist is great then he/she embodies the culture and the two are inseparable.  That’s how I felt about Hugh Masekela, the legendary South African trumpeter. 

Masekela was energetic, laid-back, adept, amicably boisterous, and enraptured the entire audience with his every note and word.  Also, it was amazing to be dancing in an area that held such a span of ages.  There were people who had come to the jazz festival for the sole purpose of Masekela and those who were pulled in by his aurally aromatic melodies.  It is difficult to describe a culture using only words.  It is so much more than just an explanation.  Actual experiences need to be had to truly understand the friendliness of the people in Khayelitsha, the hectic yet relaxing minibus rides, a true braai ceremony and the ambience surrounding it.  These are just a few tiny aspects that make up the South African culture.  However, it is this array of things that make South Africa unique and wonderful in its own way.  Hugh Masekela was able to project my feelings of South Africa, and an incalculable amount more, through his trumpet.  The experience was unforgettable and enlightening and I think I may become an avid jazz fan right along with my support for activism and great love of food.  

06 April 2009

Rachel's Reflections on the (Im)possible!

“It always seems impossible until it’s done.” This is one of my favorite quotes, and it just so happens to be said by the one and only Nelson Mandela. This quote can be applied to so many things in my life, but I have only really started realizing the magnitude of it until my time here. “It always seems impossible” – that it does, for me at least. Just ask my mom, she probably cannot even count the number of times I have called her up, or emailed her, or simply just told her that “I can’t write this paper,” or “I won’t be able to pass that test,” everything seems impossible for me – that is, until its done and I have finished the paper and passed the test. It sounds like such a simple quote, but for me it is a constant reminder that nothing is impossible, and I can do anything I want if I put my mind to it.

Examples of this are plentiful while I am here.

For instance, it is going to be impossible for me to grocery shop on my own and cook my own food every day.
Done.

It is going to be impossible for me not have Internet, cell phone, television etc. at my disposal everyday.
Done.

It is going to be impossible to take a minibus taxi.
Done.

It is going to be impossible to hike Table Mountain.
Done.

It is going to be impossible to ever feel comfortable here in South Africa.
(Easily) done.

[There are many more examples I could give but I will spare you the long list.]

What I have learned from this is that I am stronger than I make myself out to be, and even if I may whine along the way, I always find a way to finish. And it is finishing those impossibilities that keep me going day in and day out. It is the little accomplishments that make the big picture so great. You cannot look at a painting without appreciating the time that must have been put in to it or the little details the painter must have worked so hard to get just right. Therefore, I will not be able to realize the value of my experience in South Africa without appreciating the small impossibilities that I overcame and made possible during my stay.

I have truly come to understand and appreciate Nelson Mandela’s quote during my time here in South Africa, and for that I am grateful. I am learning and growing every time I find a way to make the impossible possible. I will probably always make mountains out of molehills but I know that I am able to overcome them in one way or another. The various difficulties I have experienced here will help me in future situations for years to come. With that, there is only one thing left to say – it is going to be impossible to leave.

05 April 2009

Cassidy's thoughts on making the most of her remaining time here

It’s hard to believe that we have been in Cape Town for three months and now only have three weeks left. Where has the time gone? The realization of this has changed the vibe in the house. Things are starting to get more hectic with everyone trying to make sure that they accomplish everything they want before leaving. There doesn’t seem to be a day lacking an activity.

I don’t know how I feel about everything being so fast paced. I too don’t want to miss out on anything but I also feel that moving at such a fast pace will make time fly by more than ever. I want to be able to enjoy the time I have left without feeling rushed. This has already proven to be a difficult task but one that I am determined to complete.

I am going to try to focus on participating in events that are unique to South Africa. There are many other fun activities that can be done other places so I will not worry myself with those. If I stay true to this I think my schedule will open up and allow me to experience the things that are really important to me. I want to absorb every part of the culture that I can while here. I don’t want to have any regrets when looking back on this experience. So far, so good.

 Cassidy & Rachel

04 April 2009

Jordan's Reflections the Social Justice Coalition (SJC)

Today the SJC, the Social Justice Coalition held a mass meeting in Tiebault Square in downtown Cape Town. As our group is liable to do, we of course attended to show our support for civil society here in South Africa.

The SJC was formed less than a year ago, in June of 2008, and at least for as long as we have been here they have been one of the most active groups in getting people out and active in politics. Originally the SJC was formed to help counteract the xenophobic violence that was ravaging the country, but since then they have branched out quite a bit. They were responsible for the other main rally that people went to, the Arms Deal one a few months ago. Today's rally though was for something else though... as the t-shirt says..."We the people DEMAND, open and accountable governance"

One of the main focuses of the speakers today was on the issue of the Dalai Lama being refused a visa to visit South Africa. Dalai Lama requested a visa in order to visit in 2010 for a peace conference connected to the 2010 Fifa World Cup.

There has been a veritable outrage across the country over his being refused to participate in a peace conference. Desmond Tutu and FW de Klerk have already pulled out of another conference in Joburg in protest of his not being allowed to attend.

This whole event is just one more thing in the category of embarrassments for South Africa internationally, the other main one being SA's blocking of the UN security council's efforts to put pressure on the governments of Burma and Zimbabwe to stop their human rights violations.

The problem basically, is that the government is succumbing to pressure from the Chinese government, and if they will do this... how far can things go. The Chinese government obviously has their own plethora of reasons why they want the Dalai Lama to not speak anywhere, but there is no reason why SA should be involved in their politics.

Except of course, that China has become one of South Africa's largest trading partners. (A note about trade with China, they also recently refused to resign a treaty that would require at least minimum labor standards on imported goods to SA)

The reasoning from the SA government though, did not include any of that. According to Thabo Masebe, the spokesman for the president, Kgalema Motlanthe; "We in the South African government have not invited the Dalai Lama to visit South Africa, because it would not be in the interests of South Africa," he said. "The attention of the world is on South Africa because of it being the host country for the 2010 World Cup, and we wouldn't want anything to distract from that."

This answer has not proved sufficient to the SJC or many other civil society groups, and so today, we joined several hundred South Africans in demanding the government that was promised to them less than 15 years ago that they still have yet to see.

Days like today really put the politics and issues that we deal with in the states in perspective, it would be a wonder to see what the American people could do if they were fighting for things that meant anything. I have a friend, who tonight, is attending a rally in the states for NORML, whose main goals are marijuana law reform.

Not that there is anything terribly wrong with marijuana law reform, but seriously, who could bother to think about such things when people are hungry and don't have the basic things promised to them by the government like basic sanitation and clean water. Like I said, it just gives a little bit of perspective.

03 April 2009

Emily G's Reflections concerns regarding re-entry

In many of my previous blog entries I reflected on the thoughts I had before leaving for South Africa, and how these expectations compared to my experiences thus far. It is really weird to think that now there are only three weeks left in our trip before we will all be brought back to reality in the United States. Now I am faced with how I am going to deal with reentering a society that I have become far more critical of and seeing all my friends who probably have changed very little compared to the amount I have changed in the past semester. Don’t get me wrong – there are some things I am really excited to return to in the States. I cannot wait to eat good cereal, Parmesan cheese, milk that does not go bad in two days and a really good hot fudge brownie sundae. I am excited to see my friends and family and live in a house with less than 15 people (not that I do not love everybody, but the concept of privacy is long gone). However, I am anxious to adjust back to the college world and leave all the people I have met, the culture I came to love and the beauty of the land I am surrounded by everyday.

Thankfully, we still have three weeks left and some of us made a list of everything we want to do but have not gotten around to yet, and have already been able to check a few activities off. However, it is a new attitude towards our time left – we are all being brought down from the euphoric cloud we have been residing on for most of the semester and have started talking about how little time we have left. As Cassidy mentioned in her previous blog, I have talked with people about my worry of going home and having no way to really share my experiences with anyone. The only people who truly understand this experience are the fourteen other people I live with, and while I have no doubt that we will see each other and remain good friends, I am worried about when I am away from them, so often wanting to reference back to certain experiences and emotions felt in Cape Town, but having nobody there to understand. I also feel that I have so many substantive conversations with my friends here about politics, religion, gender, race, and just generally the philosophy of living life. It is not as if I no longer like shopping, watching movies or gossiping here and there about what some dumb celebrity did. However, I do not know how I am going to go back to such a materialistic world where so many conversations center on fashion, tabloids or any of the many other shallow subjects Americans discuss.

We have also become very used to the South African economy and the Rand, where a really nice dinner and drinks may cost R100 (10 U.S. Dollars). I think it will be incredibly hard to function in a society where jeans often cost 100 dollars (R1000) or where the price of McDonalds is more expensive than a nice restaurant’s dinner in South Africa. I feel like it will be hard to justify spending so much money on anything.

I have also thought a lot lately about how this experience has been about discovering myself as much as it has been about discovering a new culture. I think through my internship, I have really solidified what I value in life, and what I want to strive towards in the world throughout my lifetime. I think living with 14 other people has taught me what all my pet peeves are, what qualities in people I really value, what characteristics of myself could use improvement, and what habits or activities I need to do to keep healthy and sane. I think through my personal experiences and dealing with the challenges I have recently faced in my own life, I am learning about self-awareness, how to deal with emotion and how to take care of myself. I feel like I will come home (not to sound cheesy and incredibly cliché) a changed person and will return to people who do not understand me as well and who have not changed. I realize that it is inevitable that my life back home will change because of this experience, and a part of me is scared to figure out exactly what that change will be. However, another part of me is eager to take what I have learned from all my experiences here, and implement my values and beliefs about the world back at home. I guess I will just have to enjoy my last month here and take it day by day when I get home, reassuring myself that the culture and people I have met here will be a part of me for a very long time to come.

Stephanie Y & Emily G

01 April 2009

Faina's Reflections on Durban experiences


We rode past the sloping mountains, sugar cane fields, plains and trees early in the morning towards our destination: Durban. We have left the safari, and the rivers full of crocodiles and hippos to experience the populated urban city. I looked out the window and saw the sun setting through the magnificent clouds, above hills where far away houses sat sporadically. Soon we were at the hotel and men dressed in all black with red military hats came to help us with our luggage.

The following day we rode through the city to a beautiful mosque. The streets were filled with people. There were tables set up everywhere on which lay everything from fruit, scarves, batteries to house phones to be sold. Next to them sat older women or men waiting for early morning customers to come by. When we stepped out of the van and walked through a passage to the mosque there was a man sleeping on the bench, and another hanging outside the gate, who went to get our guide for us. After the tour we walked across the street to the Indian craft market.


This was a large place where dozens of rooms turned into stores in which owners consistently pestered walker bys to buy the hundreds of African statues, figures, maps, tools, art and other souvenirs on display on their shelves. “There is a lot of tension between the races, and it’s really bad in Durban,” one of the Indian ladies selling things in the Indian Market told Emily. She also talked about how bad Khayelitsha was (a township in Cape Town). “How do you find racial tension in Cape Town? Do you talk to black people a lot?”

”Yea, pretty often, because we work in the school and a lot of our group works in the townships.” Emily said to a surprised face.

“But Cape Town is a lot better,” she explained, talking about the engrained tension between Indians and Blacks in Durban.

After these planned activities, and bags full of goods to take home to friends, we were taken back to the hotel and left to our own devices in this interesting city.
*
“There are some areas that are no-go places.”

“Behind the hotel, that is definitely somewhere you can’t go.”

“Are we going to be able to go into town, to see the city?”

“No. No. In front of the hotel is fine though. You can go to the beach there, the water is really nice.”
*
“We are wondering how we can get into town, where the shops are,” Emily and I asked the man behind the customer service counter at the hotel.
Hesitation. “Have you been to the [describes the casino center we have already been].”

”Yea, we’ve already been there. We went there last night. There is a mall right back there right?” (pointing to the back of the hotel). We had seen it driving back from the mosque.

“Yes, but the stores are small and there is nothing really there. It is not good to go there.”

”Why?”

“It is fine in the day. But when it gets around this time,” it was only 3pm, “vagrants hang around there and it is not good.” He thought for a moment, seeming flustered. He obviously did not want two white girls walking freely too far to be a liability for the hotel. “There is a bus!” He exclaimed triumphantly. “The bus, it leaves right down the street. You can go and come back in an hour.” (Because obviously it is unimaginable for us to stay any longer) “If you get the ticket you can come back for free within the hour, so you can just go for an hour and come right back.”

”Can’t we take one of those taxis?” I asked this almost as a test, knowing that the thought of us riding in the cramped minibus taxis historically used by poor blacks would arise another nervous reaction from the older Indian man, whose white beard hung low to his chest.

“Oh, no no. They are not good. They drop you off very, very far. You would have to walk. It’s too far.” I laughed inside knowing that he just didn’t want us to ride them. If he only knew we took those taxis every where we went in Cape Town, sitting arm on arm with the very people he was trying to “protect” us from. I also knew that the taxis stop everywhere, especially the busiest shopping streets, making it hard for me to believe what he said. “You are foreigners, and it is very easy to spot. People can immediately tell who are from here and who is not.” Of course, I thought, in a city where only 5% of people are white, how can someone not see who blatantly does not “belong” in which area, even after 15 years of rainbow nation propaganda.

After further questioning him about the bus stop he left his desk and walked us all the way down the street and pointed us to the stop. “See there. There are security guys standing there, you see? That is where the bus stops.”

”Thank you,” we said to him as he walked back.

I thought this was a free South Africa, a South Africa flaunting its rights, its liberty, and the free wills of the people. On the exterior it is easy to say that, to celebrate the great feat that South Africa has surpassed in becoming a democratic, free nation for all people, white and black. But on the ground people are not free. Movement is restricted. People must stay in the bubbles that were created during apartheid, their movements constrained by fear. Fear of gangs in the “Coloured areas”. Fear of the whites and the cops in the suburbs. Fear of the blacks and crime everywhere else.

At this point his paranoia was getting to me. “Maybe we should just stay by the beach side where they are selling all those things on the road.” I was referring to the assembled tents which marketed cloths, African artifacts, jewelry, etc alongside the beach. This sidewalk is empty once the sun sets, after the women, dressed in their long skirts or dresses, pack up their belongings and head home.

“Now you’re changing your mind? You’re the one that wanted to see the city.” Emily said to me. We stood there in limbo for several minutes with fear and restraint pulling us one way and freedom and curiosity pulling us in another.

“Let’s just go.” I said finally.

We walked to the bus stop where the four security men sat around speaking to each other in Zulu. We looked at the map of the bus route and planned out our trip. It wasn’t complicated at all. “Excuse me,” I tapped on the security man’s shoulder after what seemed like 20 minutes. “Does one of the taxis over there go into town?” I pointed to the busy corner of taxis which came and went every 5 seconds. He had seen me standing there impatient earlier, “No, no they don’t go there. Don’t worry; the bus will be here very soon. Five minutes.” I knew he was lying. I knew the taxis went there.

Eventually we saw the bus pull around and we stepped inside knowing there was no turning back now. The bus was empty and most of the passengers we picked up were white. It seemed this mode of transportation was pre prescribed to us for this very reason. We watched as the buildings became more condensed and the people more crowded. Almost everyone we saw was black, except those few that looked from Indian descent. We watched the numbers on each bus stop count up as we passed and got off on the fifth one, close to the mosque we had visited earlier. Out on the street I breathed the happy air of independence and liberation. People walked up and down the walkway. The street vendors crowded the sidewalks and mini bus taxis swarmed the road. We walked into shop after shop, bargaining down already cheap shoes. Most of the store owners were Indian, and in every store we went to we were followed by a shop worker who walked behind us so close it became slightly irritating. In some places you had to leave any bags in the front and your purse was checked upon exiting. The stores sold mostly the same things: skirts, cheap sandals, dress shirts, etc and they each played a catchy song, mostly from America.


After stopping in almost every store we walked by, we were satisfied and ready to go back with our newly bought shoes in hand. We started walking down the street and before crossing the road a boy my age looked me in the eye. I wondered what his motives were. “Hello.” He said as we crossed. Maybe he expected me to ignore him so instead I started a conversation with him. His friend walked next to Emily. He told me how he attends an IT school, where they were walking from to their flat, which was nearby. When telling me his name he first said, “Xolisa” and then quickly added, but you can call me, “Steve,” assuming I couldn’t pronounce or remember his real name.
“Oh, Xolisa,” I said, saying the click correctly, “That’s a nice name. My name is Faina.” He seemed content. After more conversation we realized that the bus stop was no where in sight.

“Where is the bus stop?” I asked him, slowing my pace. We did not know which way we walked or where the bus was supposed to be. We were in the middle of no where, with two strangers, who happened to be black. That Indian man at the customer service counter would have had a heart attack. Xolisa stopped and looked back up the street trying to think. “It is that way. You walked the wrong way…Do you want me to walk you there?” It would be a rather far walk back, the opposite direction of his place and I didn’t want to inconvenience him. “If you want to,” I said.

He took that as a yes and we walked back up the street. Xolisa’s friend talked to Emily and I heard him ask her if she was scared. “Why would I be scared?”
“I don’t know,” he said and shrugged it off.

At the corner Xolisa pointed to a taxi. “That one will take you there.” He went to the taxi driver and told him where we were going and made sure that he would stop there. He took care of us not as if we had just met him on the street but as if we were his sisters. We thanked them and waved good bye. I felt the familiar atmosphere of a tight taxi full of working class passengers and smiled as we climbed to the back. The taxi dropped us precisely where we needed to be and we walked back to the hotel past the “dangerous vagrants” who went about their late afternoon like any one else would.

31 March 2009

Steph O: “Psss Do Something”


I have always felt that I was born into the wrong generation. Every time I closed my eyes and immersed myself into my favorite Pink Floyd album Umma Gumma, I thought for sure I belong with the beat generation.

However, my infatuation with the 60’s and the 70’s went beyond psychedelics, flowers, and Tie-Dye – there was something incredibly courageous about that generation that I so desperately wanted to be a part of.

I can recall the countless times I sat, after a long shift at work, talking with my friend Lisa about life. One night, we were discussing how we wished we were alive for the incredible social movements that happened in the past. These discussions lead us to ask the question: why is our generation so apathetic to social change? I could not answer the question back then. It always baffled us how little social change our generation was willing to achieve. How could other generations propel beneficial changes for society such as the civil rights movement and the sexual revolution, and our generation leave no footprint in history? Are we, the future of tomorrow, too comfortable with our lives?

For example, I can’t recall a time in the states that I didn’t have my phone glued to my hand at all times. We text when we drive, when we are in class, when we are eating dinner, and in the middle of conversations with our loved ones. Have we become so aloof to other peoples feelings that we fail to give them our undivided attention? We read Perez
Hilton’s blog and memorize futile celebrity gossip instead of reading the New York Times. This leaves us, a generation with nothing to fight for – nothing to care for except material objects. Our angst has no positive channel except, perhaps, self-destruction. It seems that we begin to hate ourselves and forget about the system that is truly oppressing us.

This is a system, in which our success is defined by what we posses, how much we are worth, what car we drive, and the tag on the clothing we wear. A system, in which we are told that perfection is feasible, but it has a price. We spend billions of dollars every year on materials, which make us feel better about ourselves. The new Marc Jacob boots, the Channel perfume, the new Ipod and the new car, have become our new sources of happiness. But when we fail to amount to society’s standards (an impossible feat), we get low about our lives. We become depressed because for societies standards we are never
beautiful enough, thin enough, never have the right clothes on, or earn enough money to afford the American dream. I mean did you want to be the only kid on the block without a bike when you were 9?

But money is not the only price we are paying. This takes me back to what I was discussing before I began to rant about consumerism. The true price that we are paying is the lack of real values that we posses. We could spend less time in front of the computer and TV and begin to read some books here and there (Twilight and Harry Potter doesn’t count!) that might teach us a thing or two about current affairs. We could become passionate about something other than fashion,
and perhaps, make a difference. For example, where has the feminist movement gone? Simply because women in the U.S. have certain rights does not mean that, systematically, they are not oppressed. But, we are all just sitting back and not getting angry enough about this to induce further change to occur. Take, for instance, child care and house labor. Although women now have the privilege to have a career, many still come home to what sociologists call the “second –shift”: house work and child care. And I am aware that feminism is not everyone’s favorite subject (partly due to the misuse and misunderstanding of the word and cause itself), but there are enough topics out there to be angry about.

This is why I love South Africa; because people here are angry, creating an environment in which change is possible. Every movement is alive and well. Ending apartheid was simply not enough for South Africans. South Africans have continued to fight for an20equal system for all. Chapter Nine was specifically designed to ensure that these rights are exercised. By no means am I saying that South Africa has a perfect government or society, but they are trying. People take to the streets and they protest. Take, for example, the minibus strikes!! So I guess we don’t have to go back in time to the 60’s and 70’s to be a part of something that is leaving a mark in history. I guess social movements are always happening, we just have to look out for them and make sure we part take in them.

When I am older I want to be able to tell younger generations what I was a part of. I want to be able to say that I impacted the world in one way or another. Like our professors Vernon, Vincent, and Marita, I want to be able to recall those times that we fought for our beliefs.

29 March 2009

Julie's Reflections on having fun


I'm going to begin my blog by saying I am writing this entry entirely in the prone position, reason being that I'm still recovering from my excursion exertions. On that vein, I hope that my need to stay in bed won't impact the overall quality that all of our readers are used to. And with that, I'll begin…

I'm sure many of the people who tune in to read 10 Loch Road's blog entries on this web site are familiar with Chelsea's excellent personal blog, and if they aren't, that they should be. She gives a first-rate account of all of our activities on the trip coupled with some really to die for photographs (Sorry if I'm embarrassing you, Chelsea, but I had to say it). So, rather than just summing up what she's already said, I'm going to put my own personal spin on an account of the trip by talking about some of the internal changes that have taken place (in me, at the very least) as a result of our very unique study abroad-style vacation.

Having the advantage of being able to look back on all we've seen and done on our excursion (hiking, shopping, eating, safari-ing!), I can't help but think of it, on the whole, as a much-needed regression into a less troubled, more childlike state of mind. In our work at our internships, each and every one of us, at one time or another, has been confronted by a unique set of serious issues that require a great deal of soul searching to come to terms with. In our daily dealing with such serious social ills as HIV and AIDS, domestic violence, poverty, pollution, and political corruption, it would be impossible not to internalize some of the negativity and pessimism that comes with fighting an uphill battle. After two months of working to combat these major roadblocks for positive social change, I think we as a house would all agree that our frayed edges were beginning to show just a bit.

That being said, the mood of our excursion, therefore, was decidedly (and appropriately) adolescent. I'm not saying I didn't have my fair share of engaging in grown-up activities. I sunned myself in a variety of beautiful locales, "safaried," ate quality cuisine, hiked, shopped in an amazing Indian marketplace, read to my heart's content (an activity vital to all English majors home and abroad), and visited the largest mosque in the southern hemisphere. Now, ordinarily, those activities would have been enough to sustain me, but because I am a member of the 10 Loch Road family, I now realize that I require a bit more from my vacations than the typical offered fare.


I'm not trying to devalue the experiences I've just listed in any way. Each one of them was amazing in its own right, and I enjoyed engaging in each one of them immensely. What I am attempting to say is that, on the whole (and this goes for both excursions; in Plet and Durban, etc.), I experienced a very happily regressed 10 Loch Road. We played games I haven't even thought of, let alone played, since I was in elementary school, let go of our stodgy inhibitions, and just had fun. Looking back on both excursions, even with a slew of fantastic experiences under my belt, I have to say that some of my favorite memories came about as a result of a few off-handed suggestions to play a long ago forgotten children's game like Capture the Flag, Jenga, Manhunt, or Mafia (or as some like to call it, Murder in the Dark). Our pick-up games of some very lazy volleyball and my decision to partake in a karaoke night on our last night in the Drakensburgs also rank fairly high on that list.


My point is fairly simple: Tensions can flare when you live in a house with 14 other people with different agendas, their own set of problems and uniquely timed mood swings. And yet, when we were on this trip, laughing and playing together, without even knowing it, the little lines and frustrations I saw forming at home ironed themselves out on their own. I guess, in a nutshell, what I'm trying to say is that it's hard to have a frown on your face when you're acting like an 8-year-old. Accordingly, I plan on engaging in activities that bring about that reaction in myself and other people far more frequently.

28 March 2009

Emily A's Reflections on Islam

We have spent the past week traveling through Kwazulu Natal on our excursion, staying in Hluhluwe, Durban, and the Drackensberg Mountains. The key to this excursion, let me point out, was specifically to relax and simply enjoy ourselves. However, we did manage to squeeze in one educational activity (by choice) and ended up visiting the largest Mosque in southern Africa.

We were given a tour through this beautiful and grand mosque but were first asked to remove our shoes. Entering through the foyer barefoot, we were met by a huge marble pool stretching up to the ceiling with about twenty stools around it where people may sit and wash before praying. We then proceeded into the main room with elaborately decorated walls and a very high ceiling. The carpet was red with decorative gold outlines indicating where each person will pray. At the front is a place fixed into the wall where the Imam or priest hosts the prayer; everyone faces this point which points towards Mecca.

We then sat in a semicircle around our tour guide as he told us the basics of Islam. He discussed the five pillars of Islam: faith, prayer, fasting, zakah (the financial obligation to the poor), and the Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca, Saudi Arabia) and taught us some typical prayers. He also made an effort to clear up a lot of misconceptions about Muslims such as extremist views, treatment of women, and race relations.

He brought up that not all Muslims are extremists and almost all of them condemn terrorism. There are just as many if not more extremists of Christianity and other religions as there are of Islam. It’s sad that many Americans still think that all Muslims are terrorists or even that Islam promotes terrorism, as was evident of the assault of many Muslims and even those who “looked like” Muslims after the September 11th terrorist attacks.

Islam also tends to get a bad reputation for subjugating women and treating them as lesser beings. However, contrary to popular belief, the only thing the Quran says to this effect is that women should dress modestly. It is not the Quran or the Islamic faith that has declared that women should dress a certain way such as wearing burkas. These restrictions are completely by choice or imposed by society, not religion.

Race is a big issue in South Africa and racial tension is a reality on a daily basis. Our tour guide addressed this by saying that all people are welcome in Islam regardless of race. When it comes down to it, religion is all encompassing; it is about coming together to worship God. Race is irrelevant. It is nice to think that all different people can come together under one common goal even in such a divided country as South Africa.

Visiting the Mosque made me remember how much I love learning about different religions. It is so interesting to see how religion impacts on different cultures and how it can shape certain societies. I think religion and spirituality is an integral part in understanding people different to us. This experience really makes me want to take better advantage of the knowledge and experiences of friends who are of a different faith by attending worship with them or simply discussing religion more frequently.

Jumah Mosque: Corner Grey and Queen Streets, Indian Quarter, Durban, South Africa

27 March 2009

Michelle's Reflections on being a woman in South Africa


Over the past few weeks, I have been thinking about what it means to me to be a woman in South Africa. I have had a tough time understanding exactly what my experience has been in why, because I am aware of the fact that I am an outsider in this country, and I also spend much of my time in a township where I am the only “white” person. So, I ask myself in general, for me, what does it mean to be a woman? What are the challenges, both personally and in society?

My personal experience has been a unique one, because my opinion today, and even over the last five or so years, is different than it was when I was younger. After entering college and beginning to read social and feminist theory and apply those theories to my life, I began to view life through a different lens. I remember one of my first women’s studies professors telling me that once one becomes aware of certain issues in this world, there is no turning back; your life will be forever changed, and your view of the world will be forever different. I had no idea how right she would be.

Even after taking my first women’s studies class, I suddenly had a dramatically different view of the world. It’s not that I learned things I didn’t already know, necessarily, but more that it was explained in a different way. More so than that, actually, it was about beginning of the process of unlearning most of what I had learned in my life. Beginning that process was a difficult and challenging one, but in many ways, it was also empowering. Once I became aware of all the subtle ways in which women are objectified and oppressed in society, both on a personal and systematic level, I also became aware of the many ways that things could change. Although I had previously been involved in animal and environmental rights initiatives, I then also started becoming involved with feminist and women’s rights organizations. Little did I know, it would be the start of me going down a path that would become a defining part of my life.

Being a woman in the United States, for me, is different than being a woman in South Africa. I am always acutely aware of my surroundings, of the dangers of being a woman and so on, but being in South Africa has brought things to an entirely different level. But, I don’t want to fool myself; I do not believe my experience as a woman has been different here simply because of a geographical difference. I think it is also because here, although I am Cuban, I am viewed as a “white” person, and consequently and automatically a person of privilege. In addition, once I begin talking, it becomes apparent that I am also, at least perceived as, a “white” woman of privilege from the United States.

It is strange and also surprising how often gender and violence against women is talked about in Cape Town and in the township in which I work. The estimated statistics in Khayelitsha are that two out of three women were forced into their first sexual experience. Given that I am not from here, I have no right to argue why the statistics are so high. I do wonder, though, if part of the reason is because there has been such a push here to report sexual and domestic violence, but it is not so in the United States. This summer I interned as a counselor at a sexual assault crisis center, and becoming aware of the sickening reality that up to 85% of rapes are not reported in the United States, and of those that are reported and actually prosecuted, only 1% actually lead to a conviction. (These numbers come from the 2000 FBI Statistics and Bureau of Justice.)

The combination of being a women’s studies and sociology major, working at the Sexual Assault Crisis Center, and for the Violence Against Women Prevention Program has left me with a unique perspective of women’s place in society, but it has also left me quite frustrated with the lack of conversation and initiatives taken in the United States. Although the statistics here are beyond comprehension, I do have to commend community members and organizations to their devotion towards bringing about positive social change, especially in the realm of gendered violence. Even the simple fact that violence against women comes up in every-day conversation is something that was unexpected and that I was pleasantly surprised by.

Although I sometimes feel like I am a target in specific areas of South Africa, I also feel like that is because I am an outsider and not part of the community. I think there are a lot of things I still need to take into consideration before I will come to any sort of real understanding. The thing I have been most surprised about, though, is the commitment within the community to changing the current status of women. Even if nothing else, I think this is something that I can take with me and hopefully apply to my work back home. My experience as a woman is forever changing, and endlessly complicated and challenging. But, my experience in South Africa has made me begin to question many things about life, and particularly about myself and what I want to do with my life. I have been reminded how true it is that a committed group of citizens really can change the world.

"You must be the change you wish to see in the world."
     -Mahatma Gandhi


26 March 2009

Chelsea's Comparative Travels

It’s funny how we can find ways to compare just about any new place we visit to other places we’ve been in our lives. No matter how distant or different the location, there always seems to be something familiar to which we can liken the landscape, the atmosphere, or the smaller aspects of the places we’ve encountered since we’ve been in South Africa. After two months of internships, classes, and activist projects, we ventured east this week on our mid-semester excursion to KwaZulu Natal (KZN), and we’ve had the chance to see a part of South Africa that is geographically (and culturally) quite different than the Western Cape. The Drakensberg Mountains – where we will be spending the last three days of the trip – have proven to be the most striking topography of the excursion, and even after hours of driving through the mountains on Wednesday, we still walk out of our chalets at Monte-Aux-Sources Resort to gaze in awe upon the grand panorama.

For every mental picture I capture, I long to be able to describe it in terms that those I know back home can understand, and so I find myself likening almost everything I see to something I’ve known (or heard about) while back in the United States. I may not be well travelled internationally, but I’ve been lucky enough to have seen a large portion of the continental US, so from my summer travels around the country, I piece together a South African landscape through comparison…


Coast Highway



In the sleepy, sun-drenched town of Plettenberg Bay, I see Santa Barbara, CA.


In the middle-of-nowhere road side rest stops along the N2, I see the rest stops of the American Midwest, right down to the Shania Twain soundtrack and fast food.


In the traditional huts and villages scattered across the vast and rolling landscape near Hluhluwe, I see the Native American reservations of the South West.


In the cattle milling in clusters across the middle of the rural farm road, I see the herds of sheep that blocked the roads in my mother’s pictures of Ireland.

In the pink and green neon glow of hotels and casinos on the Durban beachfront, I see the bright lights of the Las Vegas strip.


In the endless sky and long, winding roads across KZN’s vacant, green fields, I see the Oklahoma prairie, and in the hazy blue-green mountains that encompass those fields I see the oversized landscape of Jackson Hole, Wyoming.



In the green and brown stratified peaks of the jutting Drakensberg Mountains, I see the Sierra Nevadas and the southern Rocky Mountains.



And in the waterfalls, pools, and sculpted rocky ridges that surrounded us during our hike through the Drakensbergs, I saw the mountainous landscape of Hawaii. (This likeness is perhaps supported best by my inadvertent repetition of the phrase “Wow, this feels like Lost,” as we hiked through the mountains.)(



The continent of Africa has been so exoticized by the Western world – through the media, even through the education system – that I was prepared to find myself in some wholly alien environment once we stepped outside of urban Cape Town on this excursion to the wild reaches of KZN. A part of me expected jungles, rutted dirt roads, and lions on the prowl. And admittedly, I expected sand dunes, regardless of the fact that we’re no where near the Sahara I was picturing. But in the beautifully dramatic landscapes we’ve seen during the last five days on the excursion, I have found a peaceful familiarity in a continent thousands of miles across the Atlantic from home.

Having been in South Africa over two months, I’d thought I’d surpassed the point of formulating any histrionic assumptions about a “stereotypical” Africa. I have, after all, developed a very grounded and realistic portrait of this country over the last two months as we’ve experienced and learned about issues like racial and political tension, while visiting the many landmark sites on the Western Cape. But it is clear that the romanticized visions of Africa still linger in all of us, from time to time. It’s been said that this is a country of many contrasts and much diversity; the landscapes, the culture, the development, the politics. Sometimes it just takes a trip like this to remind us that there is still so much of South Africa we do not yet know, still so much we have yet to discover.