Tuesday, June 28, 2011

wedding bells


Once I read about a couple that got married all over the world.  Ceremony after ceremony, in culture after culture.  Initially I thought this was romantic, largely because of my own dreams of travel, but increasingly I’m beginning to see it an endurance event.
 
Last year, I recounted my trip to Jodhpur and my experience attending a Rajput wedding.  Five months into my time in Tanzania, I have finally been initiated into the world of weddings.  As a disclaimer, I freely admit that as with so many aspects of my life here, I am sure that a lot has been lost in translation.  Not that I think any of you are reading this for educational purposes!

Central to the Tanzanian wedding is the ‘contribution’.  Prior to a wedding reception or related party, potential participants are asked to make a financial contribution to the festivities.  I am still not sure whether the amount is supposed to constitute a gift or cover your costs (I defaulted to gift).  Once you hand over the cash, you are presented with an invitation, which you will need to remember to present on arrival.  Luckily, my assistant informed me of this in advance, although I’m sure getting rejected at the party would have made for as good a story as any I had with my fake-id (sorry).

Thankfully, all of my office mates were kind enough to recognize that without instruction, the muzungu (foreigner) was likely to make mistakes.  I was instructed to make my contribution for both the kitchen party and the send-off party (which I had never heard of) – and to write the amount of my contribution on the outside of the card – to ensure it got to the intended recipient ‘safely’! 

A kitchen party has some parallels with a bridal shower.  For instance, only women attend.  There are drinks and snacks.  The bride also makes off with some significant loot.  At the front of the open-air reception hall was a display of all the items that were given to the bride as gifts: a living room set, bedroom set, dining room hutch, stove, washing machine, dishes, pots, pans, utensils; essentially an entire household! Apparently, our office had been requested to purchase a fridge as a wedding gift – which had me choke on my soda water! A fridge! Talk about incentive to marry in Tanzania! (don’t worry, I’m not that greedy)  In the end, a fridge made a surprise appearance during the gift presentations.  I’ve since learned that my colleagues bought her a generator instead!

From my understanding, the roots of a kitchen party aren’t unlike those of the bridal shower – traditionally it is an opportunity for women close to the bride to share information and tips on how to be a good wife and please one’s husband.  Although I have little to contribute to such a discussion, I was looking forward to picking up some local strategies.  Unfortunately, perhaps because the party was so big, the only piece of advice offered came when the bride was shown her new bed and her mother told her it was for her and her husband only.  Constructive, if unoriginal.  However, the same cannot be said for the tastes of the attendees.  The bride picked two different blue-patterned fabrics from which each woman made a dress.  The result was a sea of blue and gold, undulating with traditional, strapless and off the shoulder numbers.  The process of tailoring our dresses involved me driving in the manic midday traffic of Dar es Salaam for the first time.  It also included me painfully explaining through my colleagues that I did not know how the dress fit since I couldn’t pull it over my hips! Skillful handiwork ensured that my dress was ready by the next day – although a proper fitting revealed it to be both short and tight – perfect wedding apparel for the foreigner! (Luckily, some other young Tanzanian women had the same idea)

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

Under the rainy season sky


Lake Bunyonyi, Uganda
I’ve been meaning to write a post about my first complete rainy season and after one of my colleagues told me that the rainy season is already finished elsewhere in Tanzania, I figured that was my cue.
Living through a rainy season held a certain appeal for me.  I pictured floods of water and lazy weekends spent indoors.  I was told that it would not rain all the time but that instead it would rain heavily, sometimes violently, and then just as suddenly the sun would return.  I was warned that transport via bajaj (auto rickshaw) would be less than comfortable and that gashes would open in the roads.  As compensation for our patience, the end of the rainy season promised a reprieve from the intense heat that has persisted since January.

As usual, it was the things that I wasn’t told about that left the greatest impression (with mixed results).

The good
The rainy season sky is spectacular.  I do not possess sufficient descriptive talent to describe this to you.  For once I am actually going to attach pictures to my post in order to compensate.  I honestly think that every picture I took was made more dramatic by the ever-changing backdrop provided by the sky.  I undoubtedly drew curious glances from fellow passengers as I took picture after picture from plane windows traveling across East Africa in March.  To me, the show put on by the clouds proved irresistible, especially with the threat of being caught in a torrential downpour removed!
Although it did not rain all day every day, sometimes it rained for long stretches.  As I predicted, there is something deeply satisfying about sitting quietly, listening to the rain beat down on the windows and resigning yourself to the fact that there is nowhere you can go – and if you’re generous enough with yourself – nothing you can do.