Monday, January 16, 2017

Salaam Maalekum, Dakar!

The air is crazy. If I hadn't been so anxious when I first got off the plane, I would have spent more time appreciating it. It really is great, like standing in the steam of a sweet, spicy dish cooking on a stove. It's a very welcome change from the horrible, terrible bitter cold of Minnesota, and the slightly more palatable but still bone-chilling damp fog of Lyon. From the airport you can see the ocean, with the truly enormous “Renaissance de l'Afrique” jutting out over it. Between the tarmac and the water is a neighborhood so close to the airport that you can almost feel the wheels of the plane skimming the roofs of the houses before hitting the ground. After I was picked up at the airport Saturday morning, we pulled up to a stucco house and unloaded my suitcase. The man who drove me rang the bell a few time before Pape appeared at the gate and led me through to the courtyard inside of what could reasonably be described as a small, cozy compound. In one corner of the court is a small enclosure for sheep, two ewes and two lambs, cute at first but loud and a little frightening at 6 am.


One door leads to the kitchen, one to the bathroom, and another to the main house. There are a few other mystery doors, which I later learned lead to more bedrooms where other students have stayed before the boys moved out. In the middle of the courtyard is a large tree with shady branches and clothes lines strung from it. A small garden sits on the far end of the yard, and most days laundry is hanging out to dry in the sun, and stray cats are hiding underneath the leaves. Honestly, the fist thing you really notice about living in Senegal is that the American way of life is disgustingly opulent and luxurious in comparison. Buildings here are older than at home, and because they don't insulate against cold, only heat, most building are just made out of concrete with layers of paint over it. It doesn't matter if it's our house in Sicap Baobab or the 4-story apartment building occupied by a single extended family in Yoff, decor is often sparse, bedrooms usually contain only a bed, and a dresser. All rooms are lit by a single bare bulb. I'll take you on a tour of the house. In my room were two small four-poster beds hung with mosquito netting, and a short vanity between them. There's a single dresser against the wall, and most of my clothes fit in it but it also serves as a linen cabinet, so it's a little cramped. The window is covered in a wrought-iron grid painted white and the light is kept out by two large shutters that don't open. I have a fan facing my bed and two laters of mosquito netting (because I need to be able to stick my leg out from under the covers but I'm paranoid that if I just use the net they gave me, I'll still get bitten. So I have two nets. Plus it's pretty. Also, Senegal is dusty as heck, and every day I come home with my feet covered in dirt while Mariane and everyone else I know manages to be neat as a pin. I don't know how they do it. So, my feet are perpetually dusty, and the floor is always dusty, and I'm the only one who seems to attract any of the dirt. Lucky me. Across from my room is Mariane's bedroom and the master. All of the area in the house that isn't bedroom is living room. There's a TV and 4 couches and some low tables where we eat and hang out most of the time. A black and white photo of a woman is pasted over an informational calendar with pharmaceutical information on hemorrhoids and hung with a long length of Islamic prayer beads. If you go outside the house, you'll find the door to the kitchen, and a few feet away from that is the bathroom, with a toilet, sink, and little shower. There's also a big sink in the courtyard where we usually brush teeth and do laundry.


  I think the best comparison I have to Senegal is Mexico. Stray cats and dogs prowl the streets or sunbathe on the side of the road. Everyone greets each other(this is very important, as my teacher told me. If you don't greet someone, they won't talk to you at all. Asaala Maalekum. Waalekum salaam.) There are always people, everywhere you go. Sitting outside polishing shoes, drinking tea, hanging out at fruit stands, chilling in piles of rubble next to unfinished apartment buildings. In fact, I think the biggest difference between Dakar and Playa that I've noticed so far (beside like, different continents) is that because the parts of Dakar I've been to is less commercial that most of the parts of Playa I've seen, there are just piles and piles of sand and dust and building materials everywhere. Next to really beautiful, modern and old buildings there will be a seemingly abandoned construction project. So, to imagine Dakar, think of Playa, but subtract about a billion tourists and add about a million more cinder blocks. And that interests me, because it's just the norm here. In the States, I can't imagine that going over very well anywhere outside of very, very poor neighborhoods. But then, that's the standard. This isn't uncomfortable at all. It's just the reality. There are just unfinished buildings and lots of dust and it's not a wealthy neighborhood by any means, or probably even an upper middle class one. But it's not uncomfortable. If this is the most uncomfortable I am in my life, then I'm in for an easy life. It's hard to explain. It's not gross or bad or dangerous. It's just not the pristine, bright, shiny life that Americans (and Europeans. And most people you and I know) think they/we are entitled to. I'm fine with that. It's like the food. In the States, I feel like we eat such a limited variety of foods. Today I picked fish meat off of its bones twice and watched while someone plucked the eyes from one of the large, toothy, terrifying fish heads and eat them. Everything is a tiny bit crazier than the very tame, very mild, rather boring U.S. It isn't unusual to eat lamb's head on a Sunday, or be slightly afraid to ask what's in a sauce, or sometimes (though it hasn't happened to me yet) find a stray bit of intestine in your food. I love Senegalese food, but I can assure you, there's a reason Andrew Zimmern has done an episode of Bizarre Foods here. Today the Lewis and Clark study abroad group and I drank tea the traditional Senegalese way, which is in three rounds. The Tuareg people (Bombino!) share the tea ceremony and recite a long poem before each round. You use the same tea bag for all of them, so the first glass of tea you drink is scaldingly hot, ultra sweet, and suuuuper bitter, in the Tuareg poem, compared to the dry desert wind. It represents death. The next glass is a whole new pot of tea, with the same bag. It's less bitter, and represents life. The final glass of tea you drink is the least bitter, and the lightest in color, and that represents love. By then the tea leaves are spent and you can't drink anymore.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Paris

We left for Paris on Friday at noon, and made the roughly 5 hour drive all packed into a very small, very French car. Post-Sheep-Head Grace was too tired to make conversation, and elected instead to stare out the window at the French countryside and listen to some quality, Slavic-brass-inspiredtravel music. Between naps, Margaux, her friend Pierre-Louis (who was staying with us for the week preceding the trip), and I munched on soft, junk-foody pains au chocolat and flicked through a few pages of our reading until the car careened around a corner and we all had to put down out books.

We arrived in the city after dark, and dropped Pierre-Louis off near his metro station, then made our way to the largest and most luxurious apartment I have ever been in. It was glorious. 

No wonder the Jacobins revolted.

Too tired to go out on the town, we spent the evening at home with a friend of the family who owned the flat, and awaited the arrival of Margaux's friend Zita, who took the train in to spend the weekend with us. The family skyped Alice, their other daughter living in New York, who was baffled by the popularity of the greatest holiday of them all Halloween. It's not a widely celebrated holiday in Europe (to my chagrin), but we did get the whole weekend and half of the week off for Toussaints, so a girl can deal.
The next morning we headed off to see the sights in a city that had largely been deserted by native Parisians, fleeing for the holiday weekend. The huge, wide avenues were still packed with people, but it became very apparent, very quickly that in Paris, one is more likely to hear English than French.

They just don't make 'em like they used to, kids.


After descending the tiny, dizzying spiral staircase, we made our way down the Champs-Elysées. Perpetually hungry, the girls stopped for chocolat chaud and croissants at Brioche-Dorée (think French Dunkin Donuts) Somehow, in a city of cafes, this is our chosen venue. What would Jean-Paul Sartre think (not that I actually care at all what that man thinks. Get a job! Stop being a Soviet apologist! Be nicer to your wife! She's way cooler than you!). Satisfied, we continued our stroll down the road to the Place Vendôme, hopped onto the metro, and headed back home, where the girls rounded out the night with a fierce game of Mario Kart.
The Opera
Day three. Sunday. We went to mass at the Église de la Trinité and jogged over to the Musée Nissim de Camondo, the home of a Turkish family of Jews who settled in Paris and have one of the greatest collections of 18th century furniture and art I've ever seen outside of like, Versailles. There was a Japanese cabinet that I had some serious envy for. After the museum, we skipped over to the Jardin des Tuileries, and looked at some statues (one of which looked like it was dabbing. Tragically I did not take a picture. Next time folks.)

 At this point, it was way too late to even think about tackling the Louvre, but we did make time for the gift shop. The number of historically inspired perfumes I had to keep myself from buying was astounding. 

Notre Dame

After the Louvre, that behemoth, we popped on over to Notre Dame, and then to my favorite place in the entire city

What is Shakespeare and Company? We've never heard of this.”

This is the question I faced from every single Frenchman when I told them what I wanted to see in Paris. Apparently, as wildly popular as it is with Americans and Brits, Shakespeare & Co. is virtually unknown to the French. A quick jog over the Seine, this two story, cramped bookstore is the re-iteration of a bookstore founded by Sylvia Beach in Paris in 1919, where authors like Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ezra Pound, James Joyce, and T.S. Eliot (to name, like, a few) flocked in the years following the First World War. By far, my favorite spot in the city, although this isn't the original location. In 1962, after the death of Beach, George Whitman's store Le Mistral (then the hottest place in Paris for literary figures to hang out) was renamed in honor of her. Very, very, very cool.
I feel, ya, Ern.
Wary at first of this weird, tiny Anglophone bookstore that I was VERY enthusiastic about visiting, the girls eventually understood its appeal when they saw the piano and the typewriters and the beds and cots and couches for reading and writing poetry. It's magical. Even if the picture I took of it is less than stellar. After a huge dinner at a very dinky Greek restaurant, we turned in for the night. I was too excited to wait until I got home to read my new books, so I flicked through the pages of T.S. Eliot on teh metro. I didn't realize how lovely the English language could sound until my family said that the opening lines of Prufrock were beautiful, even if they were nonsense to them.

 “Let us read and let us dance; these two amusements will never do any harm to the world.”  ~Voltaire
                            

You have to get your book stamped. Its the RULES.
Day Four. Monday. LOUVRE DAY. So much has been said about this museum. It's big, it's cool, it's an old palace. I can't really add to any of these descriptions. Instead, look at some of these low quality pictures of high quality paintings.
The Louvre

BEHEMOTH


Gainsborough, aka my dude.
Seriously, Jacobins. I hear you,

Wow, I am really bad at cropping pictures,


Turner, my other dude.
After the Louvre, which we somehow sped through, we hit up Sainte Chapelle, private cathedral of the French royal family. It recently underwent an 8 year long renovation because the windows were so covered in pollution and grime that the light couldn't shine through them. It's almost a completely different cathedral now than it was the last time I visited 8 years ago.

I didn't take any pictures. I'm sorry. I'm a bad traveler. But honestly, that space is so overwhelming, and my measly little iPhone camera can't handle the kind of definition needed to do it justice. So I've linked to some actual, nice, quality photos for you to enjoy. We ended the day by strolling on the quais of the Seine. The next morning, mass again for Toussaints, this time at Notre Dame, a visit to the home of Victor Hugo, and a return trip to Tassin-la-Demi-Lune. I'll return in the Spring to hit up some cafes on my own time. Until then.

Notre Dame