Thursday, November 4, 2010

A trip to Burundi - Rwanda's dysfunctional twin.

Long, long post ahead.  But fun!

A few weekends ago, Global Health Corps - Rwanda packed up and headed to visit our neighbors to the south - Burundi.  Almost every person in the GHC-RWA contingent (and some random friends and co-workers who came along for the ride) boarded a bus at 8am for the eight-hour trip to Bujumbura, Burundi's capital.

I won't go into a detailed history of Burundi, partially because I'm not fully familiar with it, and partially because it's not really necessary to appreciate our adventurous weekend.  I'll just hit the highlights.  Burundi and Rwanda were, in the past, essentially the same country - same ethnic groups, virtually identical language and traditions, same system of rule.  Germany won most of East Africa during the Berlin Conference  of 1884, which formally divided up the continent into colonial territories, and Ruanda-Urundi was part of their spoils.  The ownership of these twin countries was transferred to Belgium in the 1920's, and the Belgians proceeded to inflict all kinds of colonial horrors upon both.  The most significant of these was the solidification and stratification of the Hutu and Tutsi ethnic identities, whereby people were given identity cards and highly differing life opportunities depending on which they were.  The last 60 years in both countries have been wrought with violence and horrors as the two 'ethnicities' have battled for control and equal opportunity.  The most famous was, of course, the genocide of 1994 in Rwanda.  Rwanda has bounced back brilliantly in the wake of the genocide, and is everyone's favorite little African country that could.  Burundi, however, has continued to struggle with a civil war, rebel groups, and governmental instability as recently as 2006.  This is important because it explains, at least in part, why Bujumbura seemed to be so different from its fraternal twin, Kigali.

So, after shamefully summarizing hundreds of years of history of Burundi and Rwanda, let's get to the story.

During our Global Health Corps training in Stanford in July, everyone headed to Rwanda made a pact that we would travel to our fellow corps member's- Gerard's - wedding in Burundi in October.  We took a bus on Friday morning from Kigali at 8am.  The cost of the ticket was 6,000 Rwandan francs, or about $11.
Ever the organizer, I was the last person to get on the bus and was consigned to the front of the bus - which made it much easier to see just how often we almost got into accidents.  After a few hours of traveling, we made a pit stop at a small roadside store.  I bought a few hard boiled eggs and a some roasted corn.  The bathrooms were behind the back of the store and I needed to pee badly enough to brave them.  Squat toilets - not exactly clean, but not dirty either, with jugs of water you poured around the hole.  The smell of ammonia was incredibly strong, but you'll encounter much worse in Africa.  Outside the bathrooms, I found this:
That's hundreds, maybe thousands of empty and cleaned cooking oil jugs.  They went back for probably a hundred feet.  People often use these jugs to carry water between public sources and their homes, but that didn't explain to me what so many were doing at the back of this African-style truck stop.  I learned when we got back on the bus that bottles were for milk - the people who owned the truck stop also ran a business selling milk to travelers.  Perhaps not up to strident US health code, but a brilliant bit of entrepreneurship nonetheless.

At the border, we quickly passed through the Rwandan side of immigration where the men behind the window grilled me on why I'd put my country of residence as 'Rwanda' when I couldn't show them a green card to prove my foreign resident status.  I told them that I had applied for one and was waiting on Immigration to get back to me.  They grilled me some more, just for fun, and then let me pass to the Burundi side.  Chaos immediately commenced.  The windows for entering and exiting Burundi were side by side and were crowded with many people, all trying to push their way to the windows, which were manned by exactly two people - one for entries, one for exits.  Here's a surreptitiously taken photograph (military people don't appreciate it when you take pictures on government property) of all of us standing in 'line'.  You can't see the other twenty or so people crowded around the same small window.
Americans LOVE hiking backpacks
The experience of getting visas and passing through immigration into Burundi was like a perfect metaphor for the difference between Rwanda and Burundi.  Our bus load of people passed through Rwandan immigration in about 20 minutes.  It took about an hour and a half on the Burundi side.  Also, at the immigration window on the Burundi side, when we asked how much the visa for Americans was, the guy behind the window said "How much do you think it is?"  Our representative Cher-Wen (who took all the Americans' passports to the window, where they processed them without ever looking at the people whose passports they belonged to) said, "It's twenty dollars."  The man behind the window said, "No, it's eighty dollars per person."  Cher-Wen said, "No, it's twenty."  The man behind the window said, "Ok, it's twenty."
Burundian Border.  The billboard says "Welcome to our place."
Finally back on the bus, we headed into the heart of Burundi, which looks almost exactly like the heart of Rwanda, with perhaps slightly less agriculture.  About a half hour outside of Bujumbura, Burundi's capital and our destination for the weekend, we came across this fantastic scene:
What you're seeing here is not only seven men hanging off the back of the bus, but THREE layers of animals in the truck.  At the bottom are cows, which are a bit hard to see.  On the upper layer are goats and sheep, and on the top left hand corner of the truck is a row of chickens.  I was highly impressed with the do-it-yourself construction style of the bed of the truck, although a bit concerned that the top row of goats might come crashing down on the cows below.  About fifteen minutes after this picture was taken, we came half a second away from a head-on collision with a car.  It was bad enough that even the Rwandans looked shaken.

We were greeted once we got off the bus (about eight hours after we'd begun) by Chandler, Simone, and Liana, Global Health Corps - Burundi fellows.  We chanced money, a simple exchange rate of 2:1, Burundi to Rwanda francs and got coffee and snacks at a hip little coffee shop downtown.   Chandler was gracious enough to let me and two other GHC girls crash at her house for the weekend.  I got to sleep in the room on the back porch of the house usually reserved for house help!  There were around 25 of us who met up for dinner and then we went out drinking and dancing afterwards.
Dinner!
Burundi apparently has a 0% import tax on liquor.  It was painfully, sadly cheap compared to Kigali.  We wend to this super swanky place called Havana - overstuffed leather couches, well-framed photographs of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara on the wall, really nice golden wood tables.  We don't have anything like that in Kigali. I drank a moderately decent margarita for about $7!  This would have cost at least $12 in Kigali.  One of the things I found most interesting about Bujumbura was the noticeably greater disparity between 'normal' folks and the elite.  At one of Kigali's most popular spots - Papyrus - you'll see a broad spectrum of folks including well-to-do Rwandans, expatriates, prostitutes, and generally middle class people.  It's not exclusive, but it's not ghetto either.  This place Havana in Buj was SWANKY and full of sketchy-looking Italian men in really nice clothes.  It felt pretty strange to me.  Anyway, carrying on.  Our night ended in a super-local, packed, sweat-drenched club that was actually nothing more than a wooden platform outside covered by a tin roof - no walls.  Mostly Congolese music (similar to the Youtube video below) and it was so hot and I was so tired that I thought I might pass out.  That was my cue to call it a night.

I woke up about five hours later because it was so hot I had woken myself up with sweat.  Because Bujumbura's elevation is so much closer to sea level, it's HOT.  Seemingly always.  Some ladies and I hit up a courtyard garden brunch.  We ate cereal, fruit salad, pastries, and more underneath the dappled light of a vine-covered trellis.  Very lovely.  From there we headed to the famous and fabulous 'Bora Bora' on Lake Tanganyika.  I'd heard of this lake before, but never realized it's the second largest and deepest in the world.  The shores were almost white and went on forever!  I guess that's what you get with so much wave action.  The only sandy shoreline we have on Lake Kivu in Rwanda is at the Serena hotel in Gisenyi - they brought it in on trucks.  Bora Bora was essentially an outdoor club with a huge white deck, white furniture, royal blue pillows everywhere, and bartenders and waiters at your every beck and call.  Absolutely nothing like this in Rwanda, but I can't say I complained.  The swimming was superb and although there were no fences on the shore to keep the 'riff raff' away, the whole place made it clear that if you weren't white or fabulous, you stay stay away.
Fabulous dahling.
My partner Alain called ahead to make sure he planned his wardrobe accordingly.
I swear I washed my hair before the wedding.  Grease monkey.
We even managed a little physical activity.
The girls and I left Bora Bora in time to run to Chandler's house to take showers before getting ready for the wedding.  As we walked down the road looking for a cab (which were about 1/4 the cost of cabs in Kigali), I was struck by the parade of amusing things carried on bicycles.
Big water barrels on bike.
Firewood on bike.
Tik-tik from India.
We headed back to Chandler's in a tik-tik, which we don't have in Kigali, but I wish to God we did.  More fun than a regular cab, less exposed than a moto.  All the GHC girls - both in Burundi and Rwanda - had agreed to wear umushanana, the traditional dress of the two countries.  We prayed that they'd choose something that looked good on pale skin.  We ended up with white accented with red.  It ended up surprisingly less hideous than I thought.  We all got dressed at GHC fellow Simone's house in an old-fashioned gaggle of women-stye gathering.
The goal was to ADD to the hips as much as possible.
Chandler - beautiful as always.
I called ahead so I could match my earrings to the outfit.  Of course.
Not everyone, but you get the idea.
We were about an hour late to the wedding ceremony, but that was ok, because there was still another hour to go.  We were surprised to learn that it was a quadruple-header.  Four couples married at the same time!  Apparently there's a dearth of respectable churches to get married in, and they stay constantly booked.  The church was filled to about capacity, and we caused quite the stir coming in.  Some people laughed because they thought we were cute, some people laughed because they thought were hilariously inappropriate.  Most of the people with their camera phones out were men.  Just sayin'.
Packed house.
Four veils.
It was actually a little eerie seeing four bridal veils all diaphanous and lit up in a row.  It reminded several of us of the P-Square video, "No One Like You" I posted about in October which also features four brides.  Gerard was a stunna in a white suite, and his new wife Olive was beautiful.
Moment of truth.
After the wedding, we all packed into a minibus and drove to the reception - speeches, sodas (no alcohol), and general funny banter between the families.  Everyone was seated.  Here's a video of the bride's choir coming into the reception hall.

The bride's aunt or mother (can't remember which) made a speech wherein, at the end, she thanked Gerard for all the blessings he had brought to them.  My coworker Jacques translated the last part of her speech as "You have brought us so many blessings - I am even seeing many white people who have traveled far to be here."  And it was true - we really were rolling deep.  Typically, you have a token mzungu or two at African weddings, but we were almost ten.  My fav Emily even flew all the way from MALAWI!

After the reception, we all headed over to a local joint to grab some food.  They graciously converted the dance hall section of the restaurant into a dining room for us.  It was, let's just say, colorful.  I heard everyone else had an amazing night of dancing that night, but everyone staying at Chandler's house went home and passed out.  In the morning, we packed up our bags and headed out to hopefully find a taxi to take back to the bus station.  It started to pour before we did and we arrived at the bus stop completely soaked.

The ride home was long but quiet.  The Rwandan border men didn't give me any trouble coming back.  I was famished by the time we got back, and I was extraordinarily glad to hit Kigali's clean, sidewalked, well-lit streets.

Many thanks to everyone who uploaded pictures to the Picasa album so that I could steal them for this post!

4 comments:

  1. Thank you for another wonderful post. I know I'll never travel to Burundi (I have some Kiva loans there, though), but you brought it closer to me. I appreciate the effort I'm sure it takes to write about all of this for everyone to share.

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  2. Awesome. Sounds like a cool trip--wish I could be there, but it's nice to just hear about a little of it.

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  3. This one might be my favorite so far. Fascinating contrast between the two countries. Keep up the good work!

    Cam

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  4. I LOVE this entire blog!!! Especially this post! You have done such a phenomenal job in re-creating your experience for us regular Americans, lol. I feel like I'm totally there with you and I feel much more knowledgeable about things I would otherwise have zero info about. I've experienced Rwandan bugs, love, weddings, rain, work, political strife and unrest just from reading! KUDOS boo!!

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