9.11.2014

Stories from Some Travels

Friends,

I had the opportunity to travel to Nothern Uganda to attend the ordination of a Jesuit friend and learn more about East Africa.  I wish to share with you some of my journal entries from the trip so that you might feel some of the joy I felt during this immersion into another part of East Africa

21.Aug- Written on a bus traveling from Kampala to Gulu

Yesterday we reached the Ugandan-Tanzanian border at 2:00pm and entered into the land of bananas.  Mwanza [a Tanzanian city bordering Lake Victoria] had helped to adjust my eyes to a world of green that I have since forgotten during these dustiest days of Dodoma, but the mountains and trees of Uganda were a new beauty that my eyes devoured the full four- hour bus ride from the border to Kampala [the capital of Uganda].

In Kampala my life changed from a partial-understanding of what the Kiswahili store signs and billboards and people of Tanzania said to the overload of information that being in a place that speaks your native tongue can bring.  I now had to hesitate before speaking and remind myself not to use the Kiswahili greetings that have come to be natural, almost instinctual, during my interactions with others. 

Our friend met my community mate and I at the bus stand upon arrival in Kampala and in his private care we slowly squeezed our way through the disorganized mass of traffic that is the streets of Kampala on a typical day.  Twice I fell asleep in the midst of traffic jams as we waited with the engine off for the vehicles in front to nose their way into an opening.  I believe there were traffic lights, but the drivers seemed to dismiss any instruction the lights were intended to give.  The fourteen-hour bus ride from Mwanza had worn me out enough for this misuse of space to annoy me and make me long for the fluid and at times empty streets of Dodoma. 

Our friend took us to our house for the night- a concrete abode sitting not more than two blocks from Entembe road, known well as a major highway jetting through the city of Kampala.  The Mama hosting us had milk tea prepared for us while her gregarious four-year-old daughter taught us Lugandan.  Dinner was served- potatoes boiled with tomatoes and sautéed spinach, and my first Ugandan banana- a fat tiny one no longer than the average-sized person’s index finger.  With shampooed hair and a full stomach I fell asleep on a pillow-less floor bed before having time to remember where I was.
--~--
24. Aug – Written in Kampala, after returning from the ordination

Upon our arrival in Uganda our close Ugandan friend told us that people in Uganda are very expressive.  This became apparent to me the day of the ordination when the joy and excitement began even before reaching the church.  On the way our van picked up a load of people, mostly women and children.  Within seconds of the door sliding shut a woman inside let out a cry that I mistakenly took as a cry of pain.  I swiveled my head to see what the problem might be and saw only smiling faces.  A moment later there was a van-load of shrieking, ululations and singing with such great ardor that I began to loathe all the quiet times in my life that made this moment so un-earthly as if my eardrums could not endure such high-decibels and would surely shatter from the forceful vibrations that could not be cushioned to soften the noise.  I come from a family where laughing is acceptable only for an exceptional joke and we raise our voices only during conversations when it seems necessary to increase the volume to support one’s point.  Shrieking and singing is very far from our form of expression.  Discovering the novelty of such and experience changed my attitude that was at first irritation to admiration.  That form of expression is a kind of freedom I do not think I could ever bring myself to know.

“The Ordination”

The churchyard was filled with people neatly arranged in tents according to their community affiliations: ‘Seminarians and Sisters,’ ‘Kampala-Arua,’ ‘Choir’, ‘Business Community,’ ‘Government Officials and NGO Representatives,’  ‘Other Religious Representatives (Protestants & Muslims),’  CWAAD/Catholic Action,’ ‘The Two Deacons and Their Parents,’ ‘Main Celebrant and The Clergy,’ and ‘Parish Members,’ to name just a few.  I was told at least 3,000 people would be in attendance.  The tents, tables, altar chairs, trees and dancing children were decorated in yellow and white; the choir and band danced and sang as people were seated and we were lead to the Kampala-Arua section (perhaps because the usher didn’t know where else to put us as their wasn’t a section that described our connection with the Jesuits).  At the end of the celebration we were graced with the petrifying honor of introducing ourselves as ‘Jesuit collaborators’ to the thousands of faces before us and so made up for the missing sign that would have otherwise explained why we were there.

The ceremony began with a grand entrance led by the dancing children, women dressed in floor-length satin gowns tied with a wide sash -a traditional Ugandan outfit worn only by married women called gomesi- followed by four women dressed in simple local fabrics and carrying on their heads pots of incense and flowers.  Next the priests paraded in: Jesuits, Franciscans, Salesians, Diocesans, among others and finally the two Deacons walking in front of the Jesuit Provincial, Bishop and Parish Priest.  The ceremony went as one might expect an ordination to go- there was much singing from the choir, music played by drums, electric guitars and local instruments, and dancing by children, the four simply-dressed women, and two Jesuit scholastics.  The Deacons said their vows, laid face-down on a mat as prayers were said, the Bishop made the laying on of hands and gave the blessing of the kiss, etc, etc.  Five hour later, just before the final blessing there was a song and celebratory dance by the community.  The Mama sitting on my left, dressed in an elegant bright green and black gomesi, had actively participated throughout the entire ceremony: singing, laughing, dancing, and passionately waving a small bouquet of yellow flowers that was nothing but leaves and stems by the end of it.  She was among the first people to dance to the middle of our square, pulling two other mamas into the center to dance with her.  Within a matter of moments the majority of the 3,000 guests were gathered in the center dancing and waving their hands around the two newly ordained priests.

After the Mass the church committee went to work preparing tables of food to feed the masses.  By this time we managed to slip into the ‘Seminarians and Sisters’ section so that we could sit with our friends.  Our slick transition won us an early spot in the food line, although once seeing the amount of food that had been prepared it became clear that position in line would not determine whether one would be fed or not- the table-sized pots of rice, pasta and potatoes promised everyone would be well-fed that day!  There were Ugandan stables- starting with stiff porridge made of millet and cassava, mashed and cooked bananas called matoke, rice, pasta, boiled potatoes, boiled spinach, savory beans, boiled cow and goat meat, boiled cow intestines, roasted insects in peanut paste, and chopped cabbage and carrot salad.  The dancing continued as we devoured the food.  There were traditional performances by the local clan and choreographed routines danced by the youths in the community.  Satisfied with food, we slipped away from the dancing and merriment to take a walk through the quiet village surrounding us.  A light rain came in the late afternoon but in the distance we could hear the drum still beating as the celebration continued into the evening…
--~--
We spent a few more days in Uganda, staying on a farm in a village with our friend’s family.  The family shared with us the many uses of bananas- from teaching us to make banana beer (called mwenge), to showing us how to weave baskets and mats from banana fibers, to cooking our food in banana leaves and serving us piles and piles of matoke.  We toured the hills of their coffee farm, visited the sweet-hearted woman across the swamp who brings the family fresh milk every day, and entertained the family as they dressed us in gomesi.  The family’s warm welcoming and hard-working lifestyle deeply reminded me of my own hard-working farming family in Kansas and for the first time since moving to Tanzania, I began to feel the pains of homesickness: that longing for the comfort and familiarity of our lives as we experienced them when we were young.  

From the village in Uganda, I went back to Mwanza in Tanzania, and then back to Dodoma!  Now, we have one more week of “fall” break before the students return for an exciting last three months of classes.

Peace,

Mary