Friday, 26 November 2010

Festivities

London must be looking and feeling very festive at the moment. You can spot a few Christmas trees in Accra, but it feels a bit like searching for a needle in a haystack!
I’ve enjoyed a few interesting celebrations over the last week. Starting with a Japanese festival in a park in Accra. You can’t imagine my joy at discovering a park! The festival was showcasing JICA, the Japanese volunteering service, and the work they do in Ghana. There were hoards of Ghanaian kids demonstrating Japanese dance, men and women walking round in some amazing kimonos and great food being freshly prepared. Sitting there, enjoying a Japanese pancake, watching the dancing, visiting a few stalls, I could have been in a park at home.


This was closely followed by my first Eid outside of the UK, part of which I was lucky to spend with a Ghanaian family. Ironically the way they spent their day reminded me of Eid morning in Brum. I went to a mosque in Burma camp first thing, which is in the military barracks, so everything was very organised and efficient! The mosque accounts were even written out on the wall. The atmosphere was incredibly lively, with drummers, people in brightly coloured traditional wear, and I sported a dress in semi-African print fabric. Did a lot of people watching and befriended a few people. A cow was sacrificed afterwards; it’s the first time I’ve seen it done and I oscillated between curiosity and feeling extremely queasy. Cakes, pastries and drinks (minerals) were given out afterwards, and there was a scramble for the best ones. I offered my juice to a few young girls and they snatched upon it before the offer had barely left my mouth, but then shared it equally amongst themselves.

 
The week ended with a film premiere at the National Theatre. The building was designed by the person who designed the National Theatre in London and there are similarities. The film was a little budget and amateur, set in the 1950s and toying with everything from tribal clashes, the innocence of young, first love, peppered with humour but not really scratching the surface. The cast all came up on stage at the end, and we took advantage of free food, drinks, and enjoyed the atmosphere and (more) drumming.
And finally, I cooked a vat of biriyani for Accra VSOs this weekend, which made it seem like it was properly Eid. With the accompaniment of some classic soundtracks from one of the Indian volunteers!

Monday, 22 November 2010

Speechwriters use the same rhetoric the world over

Attended my first ministerial event last week, and was surprised, delighted, and thoroughly amused, to find the structure, format and some of the rhetoric so familiar. Clearly speechwriters adopt the same clichés everywhere. Not good speechwriters, ofcourse!

Monday, 8 November 2010

A visit to the doctor

I have been plagued by a cough that won’t shift for the last 10 days. It is exhausting and is forcing me to take it easy, not travel, socialise less, stay in and rest, which is all v. frustrating. Menpao cough [I hate the cough]! I also braved a trip to the doctor, where I learned two things – I have lost about 6 kilos since being here, and medication is prescribed in abundance. I left the clinic with a goody bag containing cough syrup, antibiotics, anti-histamines, vitamin c tablets, multivitamins along with doctor’s orders to avoid at all costs cold showers, fans, air conditioning and other draughty conditions. In which case I’ll be going in for heat stroke and invariably another tonne of meds. Vicious circle. Antibiotics are kicking in and I hope the evil lurgie will be gone by the weekend.

Bridges and crocodiles

They are iconic and exist the world over, some more renowned than others. Sydney Harbour, Brooklyn, Tower, Charles, the views from Waterloo and Hungerford being firm favourites of mine, Humber, the Severn, and the amazing Adome in Akosombo in the Volta region. Akosombo is so green and lush, on a massive scale so you get a breathtaking 360  degree view of natural beauty and the bridge spanning the river is incredibly iconic. Too much to capture, even with a wide angle lens. Again, it’s hard to reconcile this wonderful feat of engineering with the surrounding natural beauty and discovering this in the middle of Africa.





A boy of 10 will row you up stream and back, probably to fund his schoolbooks, as you take in the wonderfully pure water, trailing your fingers through it, resisting the urge to jump in. In a hotel close by, you can take it in more, eat tilapia if the service were better and appreciate the mini zoo. Crocodiles lounging in inch deep water, their backs so dried out by the sun that they look like carcasses, grinning less, sleeping soundly, their mouths agape like an old man’s, minus the drool. Monkeys scampering, looking like they would murder a cigarette. So incredible and random.