Monday, March 30, 2009

shame shame

Why do white people throughout history think they're better than other people??? I'm often so ashamed to be in this skin. It breaks my heart the things that have been done to these other cultures that I happen to love.

An Indian woman from the hospital has taken the girls and I under her wing. She took us to dinner last night and on a tour around her town. She told us about her days as an activist for the end of apartheid. She had to leave the country because of the ways the government was hurting her family. She showed us these terrible places where the government moved all the Indians so that they wouldn't be living in the same areas as the whites. The Indians weren't even allowed to drive through the white towns or they would be shot. There were large walls to keep the white towns from even seeing the others driving on the highways. At first, the Indians had been allowed to sell beer in the white areas and the blacks weren't allowed to. An influential man in the black community said the Indians were making all this money from it and instigated violence on the Indian communities.

This was all so recent and the feelings are still very strong here. We're told on a regular basis not to go to places because it's where the black people are. It's not that it's a high crime area, just that the black people are there. I'm so ashamed.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

we swam in the Indian Ocean




and I didn't get sunburned.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Sinik'ithemba

Meet my friend. I had lunch on the swingset with him. He's 8 years old. He has an uncle who snores and a cousin who wants to paint cars. He likes McDonalds and KFC. His favorite juice is grape and he wants to be a doctor when he grows up. He wants to play rugby when he gets older too. He doesn't like speaking Zulu. We shared my mango slices. He has HIV. He calls it the sickness and asked me if I had it too.
There are so many kids here with HIV. Happy, jumping like frogs, playing soccer, spiderman wannabes with HIV.
One of the 16 year old girls I saw, met a guy and had sex with him once. Now she has HIV too.
If a patient has HIV, they're almost guarenteed to get TB here too.
I'm working in the HIV/AIDS clinic, Sinik'ithemba, right now. So all my patients are HIV positive. Some of them are really sick with the largest livers I have ever palpated, while some of them have high CD4 counts (that's good) and are living healthy lives on their ARVs. It's encouraging to have those healthy patients come in after a day full of sick patients who are full of opportunistic infections. I'm really glad I am getting this experience, since I don't feel like I learned much at all in nursing school about the different ARVs (the medications to keep HIV patients healthy) or the opportunistic infections patients frequently get with HIV. I'm especially glad for this experience since I want to open a clinic one day. Now I'm even getting to see the politics involved in all this and how the government's regulations really effect the patients care.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Next time we'll figure out the Kombis

Yesterday, we decided to go to city center to do some shopping, because we've discovered that parts of our wardrobe aren't very appropriate for Durban. People here are very conscious of how they dress. Flip-flops are a no-go for restaurants (and they don't have fast food). If you carry a backpack, everyone knows that you're American.

So we planned on catching a Kombi (a 15 passenger van used as a shuttle) to city center. We started walking and every Kombi that passed by was full, so we just continued walking. We were almost to city center when our building supervisor passed in his car. He pulled over and had us jump in. He told us we don't want to go to city center because "it's where all the black people go." He said he would just take us to the beach instead. This bothered me a lot, as he's still very much in the mindset of apartheid and my classmates and I are not exactly on board with that. We'll just go to city center another day.

The beach was wonderful, even in our street clothes. It wouldn't have been out of the ordinary for us to get in the water in them anyway. People were swimming in jeans and a nice tank top that they might also wear to the bars.

We happened upon a beach boating competetion. We watched a canoeing and a kayakcing race. Lauren and I decided we could be happy with all the tall blonde men here. Gorgeous.

There were lots of vendors along the beach, but every mat we passed had the exact same items that were obviously mass produced.

Durban's not quite what I expected. It's much more westernized. I don't really feel like I'm in Africa. There are definitely cultural differences though. The dress code is much nicer here. Men wear speedos at the beach. It's very laid back. The waitress never brings the check until you ask for it. Dinner out costs $5. Stores close at 6pm. There's no fast food. Even coffee's not to go. The vendors when they're trying to get you to buy something say, "Please support me." It's a bit heartbreaking. Those are just a few of the little things I've noticed so far.

I haven't gotten even the slightest sunburn! Thank you SPF 55.

I miss everyone already. Send me lots of love. My email is elisaac3@gmail.com


p.s. I found Clement St. even in South Africa. I knew I was home.

C'est bon?



I’ve arrived in Durban after a very long and eventful 2 days of travel. Ellen and I left Baltimore at 2pm on Wednesday and arrived in Durban at 3pm on Friday.

On the flight from Boston to Paris, we each got about 2 hours of sleep, so spending the day walking around Paris exhausted us to the point of narcolepsy. I fell asleep mid sentence twice and Ellen nodded off while we were talking.


If you have the option, always fly Air France. We got 2 meals on each flight, no matter how late at night the flight was. Wine and beer were complimentary, although the flight attendant asked if I was at least 18 and said I looked young when I laughed a little.


Paris was beautiful. We spent some time in the Jardin de Plantes, walked down the Seine by Notre Dame, walked through the courtyards of the Louvre, and walked to this very modern building (I forget what it was called). Basically, we did a lot of walking. Our very limited French made us freeze when someone would start speaking very quickly in French. Eventually, I got used to using a few key phrases again, so I had a response ready.


Ellen and I were looking through my Lonely Planet book for South Africa, when this Parisian man told me to stop looking, he was right there, I had found him. I should have asked him to marry me right then.

We had some adventures finding bathrooms we could use. I spent 4.70euros at Starbucks just so we could get the code for the bathroom doors. We found a bathroom where the door had been left open to the men’s room, because we didn’t have change left to unlock the doors. We saw a student strike and a public transport drivers strike. The drivers strike meant we didn’t have a bus back to the airport, even though we had paid for a round trip ticket. Luckily, there was a couple that spoke French and English who helped us figure out what was going on and let us share a cab with them back to the airport.


Friday, we finally made it to Durban and it was beautiful! Our apartment is so cute! We had a nice dinner at an Italian place called Spigo’s and then walked along the beach.


Here are some photos of my place and my view.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

leaving on a jet plane, maybe never to return again


I leave for South Africa tomorrow and have so much to do! I'll be able to post on here semi-frequently, at least once a week. So if you're interested, check back for updates and pictures from my trip!