Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Village Stay round 2


I'm back in Fort Dauphin after 12 days in a rural village near one of the tourist circuits for Andohahela National Park. I was there to do my research for my Independent Study Project, which was looking at how rural villagers view conservation and the park. The interviews were all fascinating and the response I got from villagers was very positive as very rarely do vazahas(foreigners) talk to the villagers, generally they come straight to the park to hike the circuit. After the interviews we did hike the circuit, but I have to say, being in the village was by far my favorite part of the experience. I'd like to think that my Malagasy improved some too, but I think that's partly because a lot of the conversation is based on agriculture, so I'm just better at picking up words for food- rice, sweet potatos, zebu, manioc...




During our time there (me and a student from the Ecological School in Fort Dauphin, who was my translator), there was a death in one of the neighboring villages, an old women who had been on her deathbed. Because of this we suspended our interviews for a couple of days, to pay our respects, we also attended some of the process of cutting the tree for the coffin, running of the zebu, and the burial itself, among copious quantities of toka gasy(local rum). Ceremonies for burials and deaths are big events, as beliefs regarding the ancestors are strong, people sacrifice zebu and fire gun shots into the air to represent the wealth of the individual who has died. The whole experience was fascinating and I feel very lucky I was able to attend such a huge cultural event.





            
Entrance into Park
Vazaha harvesting rice
Wild Pineapple
After finishing the interviews we did hike the tourist circuit. The forest in this area is considered "humid" although as the rain for the season hasn't started yet here, it wasn't heavily "rainforest-y". The circuit included some pretty views, we passed some snakes including a boa in the path, and a natural pool at the top.We also spent some time seeing the fields of the family who hosted us, including visiting thier manioc fields on a hillside and helping pick rice in one of the fields. Overall, being in the village was an incredibly rewarding experience and the welcome and well wishes we received makes me want to return some day. But now, it's down to compiling my research and writing up my paper. Hopefully I'll be able to find a computer where I'm not paying 50 ariary a minute to use  (granted 50 ariary is not much, but it adds up). So that's it for now, I'm living in an apartment with two other SIT students who are doing their research in Fort Dauphin, and living off of bagedas (sweet potatoes) and bananas. Wish me luck with my paper! Now it's less than a month left in Madagascar...

Monday, November 1, 2010

Tana- encore!



 We finished off our road trip in Tana, the capital where we spent some time working on one of our few large assignments and preparing for "ISP's"- independent study projects. Being back in Tana was an interesting experience, from the point of view, seeing different parts than we had initially, but also from the perspective of having been throughout other parts of Madagascar for the last month compared to our first impressions when we first came here. In some ways, Tana is hard to reconcile that its the same country with rural villages, rice fields and zebu- but at the same time going through certain parts of Tana you see just that. We stayed in a more urban area, so there was actually traffic, street lights and sidewalks. Seeing  fashion boutiques, nightclubs, expensive restaurants, and a lot of other "vazahas" (foreigners) added to the strangeness of the experience. All in all though, being in Tana was fun, I wish we had had more time there without papers and projects looming overhead. I did get a chance to explore a bit and visit one of the big street markets, selling everything from produce to wedding dresses, and managed to avoid any mishaps with pickpockets.


Powered by Orange in Madagascar? Not really, but an
"Orange" (cell phone provider) building
 We also got the chance to visit this restaurant called the "Cookie Shop", which was basically like a U.S. coffee shop- bagel sandwiches, hot chocolate and blended coffee drinks, and of course cookies and desserts. It was a neat little place not to mention delicious. Being at the cookie shop was another of those moments reconciling between cultures, where there's something of lingering suprise that this exists in Madagascar.


The group
 My last day in Tana we had a rainstorm, that was pretty dramatic with thunder and lightning, not to mention some enbankment that had washed out, so that there was something of a landslide coming down into the road and then running down the street. Our last day we also visited a "ShopRite" which pretty much emulated a U.S. grocery store- it was a bizarre experience realizing that this exist in Madagscar. All the same, got stocked up on some dark chocolate to prepare for my ISP.

Rainstorm and mudslide


By the way I didn't finish the road trip chronicles between Anjy and Tana, for which I apoligize- but I felt to need to catch up to recent events, if I have a chance to go back and post more there's probably 2-3 more posts in the making. I flew back to Fort Dauphin yesterday, I'm going to be leaving tomorrow to start my ISP which is going to be in villages near Andohahela National Park, so I don't know what the update situation will be like. Until next time, Veloma!