Wednesday, January 23, 2013

-Six

    Stats:
 
             3.5 weeks total
             20 airports
             10 being unique 
             43 hours in the air, not counting layovers or any time in the airports
             6 different countries

Airports:

SYR, JFK -> Ft. Laud, MIA -> Port Au Prince

Port Au Prince -> JFK

JFK -> SYR

SYR, DC, Addis Ababa, Uganda -> Kigali

Kigali -> Uganda -> Addis -> Rome, DC, SYR 












Sunday, January 20, 2013

A Thousand Barefoot Children Outside

    Finishing up the last full day here in Rwanda. In the middle of packing. Thelonious Monk and Soulive are keeping me going during this process.


    Today we rehearsed with some theater students from the Kigali Institute of Education, and planted our seeds for the show we will be created over the next few months. It was great working with peers who don't think like Americans. Every time they would give ideas and collaborate with us my "brain jaw" would drop to the floor. These men and woman (there was only one girl) are brilliant. I wish we had another two weeks to spend with them creating a work of art.

    I could write a book on the dinner we had tonight. More info on that as soon as I can digest everything. I ate the best fish and avocado I will probably ever eat. Well, I take that back. It sits even with Jaques fish in Haiti. But nothing will touch that avocado.

    I'll be posting a big recap and will talk more about dinner tonight when I get stateside. I plan on doing a lot of writing/sleeping on the plane ride home tomorrow. So don't leave yet.

The group, minus Eve and I





Saturday, January 19, 2013

Three Dogs, Two Cats, and Two Horses

    Today we went to the Gihembe Refugee Camp. There are about 20,000 Africans who have fled to Rwanda from surrounding countries living in this camp due to war and conflict. The living conditions are poor, and very heartbreaking. We were invited in to Clovis's house to meet his mother. Clovis is a young man who is in his fourth year at a university in Kigali. He grew up in this camp. His mother was so beautiful. She was wearing a beautiful purple dress and happily opened her house to us. This house could not have been more than 10'x15' and the roof was very low. As a thank you for visiting her she gave us a corn and bean dish to eat. The corn tasted unlike any I have had before. After we left we took a walk around the camp. About five steps out of the house I had no less than five kids clinging to my arms. They rubbed my arms, touched my nails, pulled out my arm hair and never let go.
    We made it back to the basketball court so we could perform for a few of the residents. By a few I mean about 300. By the time we were 5 minutes in we were surrounded by roughly 582 people and the little kids were getting closer. What a great experience.
   
    By the way, I clearly made those numbers up. There were most likely more people than that, but there could have been less.

    We went back to Kigali to start acting with some students from the Kigali Institute of Education who are also studying theater. I don't fancy myself as an actor, but spending some time acting felt pretty good. These students are smart, very smart and a lot of fun to work with.


The boy with his hand in his mouth didn't let go of me the whole time we were walking around the camp

Friday, January 18, 2013

The Crows Have White Chests

    Yesterday morning we went to the Nyungwe National Rainforest for a quick 2 mile hike. I think it ended up taking 2 hours though. We had to be over 2 miles above sea level. Kigali is already a mile above, and we just kept climbing hills and mountains to get to the rainforest. I have never smelled something so true and clean. I take that back, I have. It's called the Adirondack's, but these smells were smells I've never smelt. Part of the hike had a canopy walk. Sitting here typing this, I got three different heights we were at, which I am having troubles believing all of them. We couldn't have been more than 80-90 feet above the ground. People were told we were 70 meters above the ground, which is around 229 feet. No way. Needless to say, it was a great hike. 
    After the hike we went to the Murambi Genocide Memorial. The most difficult memorial we have been to. I would much rather talk about what we saw there in person, so come find me. 

    Today today today. What a day. We started out with the Women Drummers of Butare. It's taboo here for women to drum so this group is pretty special. They performed for about a half hour. I have never felt music like this. Being front row at the Utica Memorial seeing Phish, and watching them bring in the new year at Madison Square Garden has not allowed me to feel music this way. The music coming from the drums was racing through my veins, I felt eat beat physically. I was nearly brought to tears as I watched these women dance, drum, and sing to us. Seeing the joy in their faces alone could suffice for a full blown show. 
    After they finished playing we got a chance to learn some of their rhythms. They laughed, we laughed, they played, and we played. Unfavorable lighting created a difficult environment to photograph the performance, meaning a lot of the photos did not come out right, especially the dancing and drumming. These women are special and need to be recognized around the world for their talent and what they represent. 
    Our next stop was the Huye Prison. It took Carl and Drew a few times to get us permission to visit the prison. They had to get papers to present to the guards just to let us in. But once we got in, it was like we weren't even in a prison minus the pink and orange suits that the inmates wear. The pink means they have been sentenced, and the orange means they are waiting their sentence. Something that was interesting is that the guards are not armed while in the prison. There were no guns in the open, and there weren't that many guards either. About 90% of the inmates are in that prison because they had a hand in the genocide. 
    We went to go get a tour of the female block and were welcomed with dozens of singing inmates welcoming us to the prison. I was not expecting that one bit. We were escorted by the performers to where about 500 female inmates were seated. We were asked to sit in the front, facing them. A few groups of the women have prepared dances and vocal numbers, all traditional Rwandan music. 
    After they were done, a male inmate told us the history of the genocide, and his role in it. He told us he killed 100 people, 70 men and 30 women. Here was this man, with this on his hands yet he was just like any other Rwandan I have met on this trip. As we left, we were each given a hand made basket from the prisoners. We weren't allowed to have cameras in the prison, so I was not able to capture these moments. 
    Oh yeah, we were all brought up to dance with the women. I was not going to get up there, until this little old lady picked me up off my feet and threw me in to the middle of the dances. I can't believe she actually lifted my body off the ground and pushed me. 

The fact that I wrote this much is quite astounding. If you made it this far, congratulations. Here are some photos. 




Taken outside the Murambi memorial




Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Ketchup, Cats Up

Time for a bit of catching up.

    A few days ago we went to the Nyamata Genocide Memorial. There are no words to express what I saw there, only that it was one of the most heartbreaking experiences I have had.
    That night we met with a lady named Carol. Sadly, I did not get her last name. She runs an arts center here in Kigali titled Ishyo Arts Center. For the past few months she has been fighting with the government who is trying to kick her out of her building, therefore ending the arts center. She does lots of theater here and works with Kiki, who we met earlier in the week. At the moment I believe she has pushed back her "eviction" until March. She is an amazing woman who is fighting to keep theater alive here. We spoke for a few hours about her work, and she asked about our work. Surprisingly enough, she also does work in Haiti. So I am hoping that she can give me a few people I can get in contact with next time I am down there. That would really be helpful to me since I would love to help with a theater group in Haiti.
    There have been several more things we have done in the past two days but I don't have the energy to write about them. Soon.

    So to make up for my lack of writing, here are a few photos from the youth dance company we visited today. I took about 550 photos of these kids dancing. Only 128 made the cut though.

At ease.










Monday, January 14, 2013

Photo Only

Photo's Taken 1/13/13-1/14/13: Unknown
Photo's Kept 1/13/13-1/14/13:   164


I'll do a bit of writing tomorrow on the past few days. Here are a few photo's from the Nyamata Genocide Memorial and Gerard Sena's enterprise.











 


 



Luggage made it to me yesterday.

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Crossing The Bucket List

Photo's taken 1/12/13: 555
Photo's kept 1/12/13:   328

Photograph the African sunrise. Check.
Photograph wild African animals. Check.






Friday, January 11, 2013

Inspiration And White Rabbit Touchdowns

Photo's taken 1/11/13: 130
Photo's kept 1/11/13:    58

    Today we spent all day at the Kigali Genocide Memorial. Really, no words can possibly express the experience I had. My eyes were opened even further to the Rwandan Genocide.
    The memorial had an amazing garden. It had several levels to it and most of it was planted specifically as monuments to the victims of the genocide.
    We talked with Kiki, a woman who started an organization called Professional Dreamers. Right now she is working towards the 20th anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide, and she has big plans. Really big plans. She has been working on a book titled "The Book of Life". It is full of letters written by survivors, bystanders, and the accused. Kiki has really found a way to get Rwandan's to open up about the genocide. She has figured out how to celebrate the 20th anniversary through celebration of those living, and those passed rather than mourning. It is so easy for humans to mourn and dwell on sadness. Kiki has found a way to safely celebrate the lives of millions that were gravely effected by the genocide. She is a true inspiration.
    Tomorrow we head to the Akagera National Park. For me, this is way harder than waiting for Christmas morning.

    Stars, I love them. I stare at them as much as possible wherever and whenever I can. I noticed something peculiar about Orions Belt. It moved from the eastern sky to the western sky in one night. Last night it was pretty much in the opposite end of sky as it was the night before. I've never seen that.

    What do you get when 8 theater students get together to play some flag football? A lot of confusion, a tied game, and a white rabbit. I threw a great touchdown pass though that's for sure.

Time for photos.




The group with Kiki sitting in the middle. K.I.E students also joined us.
   

Still haven't found any of my suitcases. I'm on a great schedule of switching between 2 pairs of boxers, my Phish shirt and my Woolrich flannel. It averages about 80 degrees here, so wearing the flannel is a blast. Tomorrow will be day 6 of wearing the same pair of khakis.


Thursday, January 10, 2013

White Rabbit and Coffee

Photos Taken 1/10/13: 243
Photos Kept 1/10/13:   128

"If you see far, you will go far."

    For most of the morning and a bit of the afternoon we were at the Agahozo Shalom Youth Village. Today was their first graduation. The village was started in 2008 and has not stopped growing since. It is a boarding school where the students learn everything from politics to digital design. The campus is located on the side of a beautiful mountain just outside of Kigali. This graduation ceremony was very similar to the ones we are used to, but with some African taste added to it. It was long. Very long. But I had such a great time being a part of this historical day for this school, and all of Rwanda. There was dancing, singing and acting. The singing was a blast and most of the audience joined in by the end. The drumming was great, no surprise really.
    During one of the musical numbers, the president of Rwanda just kind of strolled in. No joke. At the end of the song, some one walked up to a microphone and calmly announced that he had come. I didn't know he was supposed to be there, and neither did a few other people around me. At the end of the ceremony he got up to say some words to the graduating class. He told a story about how the students are shaping the future for the country. There couldn't have been more than 750 people at the ceremony. All I know is that I'll never be able to witness our president just stroll in to an intimate ceremony to say some words.
    After the ceremony we headed back to Kigali to go to the war memorial dedicated to the Belgium Soldiers that were murdered in the soldier barracks. What a heavy way to end the day, but it opened my eyes to the intense reality that happened here back in 1994.
    I'm not saying this because he's sitting across from me, but Carl Wilkens has a big heart and never ending stories, whether they be joyous or sad.

Oh yeah, and in a matter of minutes on the road, my eyes were showing me why so many people are in love with this country and its landscape.

Oh yes! No clothes still. But that is the last thing I am thinking about here. They will come when they come.
The valley leading down to a lake at he youth village

President Kagami 



Rwandan Sunset

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

And...

All I know is that I'm very far from home, and it feels great.

Luggage lost in Addis Ababa.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Packing The Tech

    As I finish packing for Rwanda I came to realize something. I am bringing quite a bit of technology with me. I have traveled all over the world and I bring very little technology with me. I usually only bring my phone (which never works where I am going) and my iPod (because all I do is listen to music).
   I was in Haiti last week and brought my laptop, which I think I only used once, to book a new flight to New York City because we got stuck in 8 hours of traffic heading to the airport. When I am in the states I am always attached to some sort of technology. I am always on Facebook, Twitter, music forums, technology forums, etc. I am a web master for PhanArt so when I'm not posting new art there, I have involved myself with finding new phan art to post on our site, which involves quite a bit of time scouring the internet. Being a technical theater major, I am often found hunched over my laptop doing research and working on my designs when I have a show to work on. I love technology and have surrounded myself with it on purpose.
    The only time I'm not glued to it is when I'm traveling.  I do that on purpose. I love traveling so much because it allows me to step away from all of that stuff and take in the basics that the world has to offer, such as the amazing people, animals, and landscapes. When I was in Haiti last week I took it upon myself to grab my brothers Canon T4i and shoot some photos. I did this because I am traveling to Rwanda with a Nikon D3100 and a Holga 120N and a few rolls of film (I know, film, right?!) and my laptop so I can keep up with this blog while over there. This is stepping out of my comfort zone in a big way, using so much technology while in a foreign land. Although I say this, I am extremely excited to be able to take photos while there so I can document my travels in a medium that I love so much.
    Tomorrow morning I fly to DC to meet up with the rest of the crew.  

   Very soon the majority of this blog will consist mainly of photography as I am certain that I can speak better that way.

   Here is some Soulive:

Friday, January 4, 2013

A Few From Haiti

Here are a few photos I took while down in Haiti last week.

Cat

Road to Jacmel



The long and winding road