The primary purpose of our latest trip to Malawi was to
again attend a male circumcision ceremony for young Malawi boys from the Yao
tribe, who are Muslims. It has been 3
years since attending other circumcision ceremonies and there were several
differences noted.
One of the present problems in the country as a whole is one
of fuel storage. Long lines of cars and
vans are seen at every gas station where there is news that they have fuel or
fuel will be delivered the next day. People
line up in the evening and sleep in their cars and vans to make sure they get
fuel the next day. The storage of diesel
fuel is more acute, resulting in large trucks parking at the service stations
waiting for fuel to arrive, idling labor and the supply of goods and
services. The storage of fuel is
ultimately tied into the real or perceived economic strength of the country to
pay its bills.
Another very noticeable thing is the presence of the
Chinese. China has already built one new
hotel and is in the process of building a very large hotel which will be one of
the tallest buildings in the country. It's the country's first five-star hotel,
$90m worth of well-appointed rooms, a state-of-the-art conference center and 14
opulent presidential suites.
The parliament now operates from a grand new building that was opened in
June 2010. That project cost about $41 million.
There have been
some notable problems with several arrests and deportations involving trying to
smuggle ivory and hard currency out of the Africa. But all in all, the colonization of Africa by
the Chinese continues.
We have a lot of
time to spend in Lilongwe because the jondo and our arrival were badly
coordinated so we spend time to visit the local markets. One of the things we found out is that when
asked where we come from and say “Chicago” the reply is “Obama” instead of
“Michael Jordon”.
We were hopeful
to attend more than one jondo, but in the end we attended only one. To gain permission to attend a jondo one must
first talk to the village leader, a woman, who was away attending a funeral, so
we talked to her husband, explaining that the purpose was to gain knowledge of practices
being used during the circumcision and to use the knowledge gained to see how
it can assist in HIV prevention. Talks
with the circumciser, called ngliba, and his helpers were conducted also. The
ngliba is the man on the right. He was
very experienced and recently had received a kit of surgical gloves from one of
the NGO’s which he used and changed after each boy was cut.
While the women
travel to do the laundry, the men play a game.
When we arrive at
the village just before the jondo (circumcision ceremony) we find that the
village women are upset at our arrival.
Later we learn that a husband and wife Christian missionaries came to
the village and caused all kinds of ill will trying to convert the people away
from Islam to become Christians. So they
were very suspicious of a white couple coming to their village and suspected
the worse. Part of this problem was
because the village leader had been away from the village due to funeral and
had not spent time communicating to the people about our intent. Later, the Imam talked to the people and
explained our cause.
While I was at the
jondo lodge, the men were upset about my presence until the ngliba explained
and frowns turned to smiles aimed at me.
Just prior to this the ngliba took me to the side of the lodge and asked
to show that I was circumcised after generously showing me that he was
first.
Here are photos of the children not showing any
concern. I made no effort to organize
this photo and I love to look at each child’s expression. To me, this is one of the best photos I have
ever taken. I encourage my viewers to enlarge it and study some faces.
As a contrast,
this is a somber photo of the boys ready for the jondo. Understandable, huh?There is a pair of twins in this photo and
one is a sister to her brother sitting at the side.
My part of the
jondo was to edit the photos I took showing the actual cutting and what
happened in the lodge immediately after, then write a description of what I
saw, all of which is confidential.
We drove back to
Lilongwe and left for Rome to attend the International Aids Conference.
2 comments:
Yes, very interesting photos and reactions on their faces. I can't believe that guy was wearing a Chicago shirt!
Old clothing donated in the US and elsewhere make there way to many Aftrican nations. They are sold from vendors along the roads or local market places. They are purchased usually without regard of what the clothing may say. Such a system undermines a country producing its own clothing because it could not compete in price or the resources necessary.
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