Usually, walls and fences inside Palestine are constructed in order to protect Israelis from Palestinians. But Suraiya, an old woman living alone in a house next to a settlement in the outskirts of Hebron would be relieved, if the fence bordering the settlement could effectively protect her. Young settler kids, approximately between 8 and 14 years old, destroyed parts of the fence on Tuesday afternoon, threw stones on the house destroying most of the windows. The next morning Israeli police told us that army would come to protect Suraiya and her house, but they only stopped at a sight about 200 m behind the fence and the kids (which continued their 'operations' all the time) and didn't intervene until sunset.
We stayed two nights at the house. The old woman was so scared that she didn't dare to sleep and spent all the night praying.
Mittwoch, 4. Juni 2008
To Aden along the Tihama
tihama |
The Tihama is the flat coastal strip located between the mountains and the red sea. The landscape changes from small sand dunes to thornbush savannah and cultivated areas with large date palm forests, mango, banana and so on. Though there's rain all year around, the cultivation requires exploitation of ground water deep under the sandy soil.
With a few exceptions, the cities cannot compete with those in the mountains on the architectural level, most consist only of ugly concrete buildings along the main road, without any side road. One of the exceptions is called Zabid. Almost all houses are made of white-painted bricks with beautiful decorations. Little seems to have changed since the city's most prosperous era, when algebra was discovered in it's university, which is only a quranic school today. The narrow dust roads are unsuitable for car driving, the most usual transport is by motorcycle.
On the countryside one can find a lot of variations of buildings, mainly huts, however they look very african. Also the women's wide, colourful dresses are something I'd refer to the black continent. The men's clothes don't differ from the yemenite one's , with the exception that they don't wear a djambia. The absence of kalashnikows is also remarkable.
Most tourists who visit Yemen experience something like a cultural shock, when they see the strict ban of women in the public life. On, the streets, the Tihama is not much different, but yemenis, who are invited to a household in the Tihama might also get such a cultural shock, when they see, that both genders are taking lunch together, chat together and so on.
"But the people here will not kill us?" I suspected her of suicidal intentions, when a 20-year-old "akhdam"-beauty took my hand to take a walk through the old town of Zabid, after she had invited me to her family's home. "In the mountains they would do so," she answered, "but here it's no problem."
Before I made my way to Aden, I still wanted to visit the peninsula of bab el mandeb. It's a military area because of it's important geographic location, but the local police was very friendly and helpful and supported me with a car and two policemen to show me around, in order not to get in trouble with the army there. However, there was no accomodation, and they drove me to the next policestation on the way to Aden, where a less friendly stuff awaited me. I was already sleeping on the roof of the station, when they forced me to enter their car to go to Aden for a 2 hours drive, just to sleep in another fucked up police station. On the next day, they asked me the usual questions and sent me to another station untill i was finally released at 3 p.m. A friend of mine - he's from the village where i was teaching - who stays in Aden only for 1 week also has to survive now a serial of interrogation and got rid of his I.D.-card - just because I wanted to meet him.
However there was also something to laugh about: In one station, 2 policemen brought me to their officer's room and showed him my passport. The officer took a look at my passport, then he asked: "And where is the person?" He obviously recognized me as a Yemeni, due to my imama and the "mawaz", the skirt, most men are wearing in Yemen, Somalia and some parts of Ethiopia.
With a few exceptions, the cities cannot compete with those in the mountains on the architectural level, most consist only of ugly concrete buildings along the main road, without any side road. One of the exceptions is called Zabid. Almost all houses are made of white-painted bricks with beautiful decorations. Little seems to have changed since the city's most prosperous era, when algebra was discovered in it's university, which is only a quranic school today. The narrow dust roads are unsuitable for car driving, the most usual transport is by motorcycle.
On the countryside one can find a lot of variations of buildings, mainly huts, however they look very african. Also the women's wide, colourful dresses are something I'd refer to the black continent. The men's clothes don't differ from the yemenite one's , with the exception that they don't wear a djambia. The absence of kalashnikows is also remarkable.
Most tourists who visit Yemen experience something like a cultural shock, when they see the strict ban of women in the public life. On, the streets, the Tihama is not much different, but yemenis, who are invited to a household in the Tihama might also get such a cultural shock, when they see, that both genders are taking lunch together, chat together and so on.
"But the people here will not kill us?" I suspected her of suicidal intentions, when a 20-year-old "akhdam"-beauty took my hand to take a walk through the old town of Zabid, after she had invited me to her family's home. "In the mountains they would do so," she answered, "but here it's no problem."
Before I made my way to Aden, I still wanted to visit the peninsula of bab el mandeb. It's a military area because of it's important geographic location, but the local police was very friendly and helpful and supported me with a car and two policemen to show me around, in order not to get in trouble with the army there. However, there was no accomodation, and they drove me to the next policestation on the way to Aden, where a less friendly stuff awaited me. I was already sleeping on the roof of the station, when they forced me to enter their car to go to Aden for a 2 hours drive, just to sleep in another fucked up police station. On the next day, they asked me the usual questions and sent me to another station untill i was finally released at 3 p.m. A friend of mine - he's from the village where i was teaching - who stays in Aden only for 1 week also has to survive now a serial of interrogation and got rid of his I.D.-card - just because I wanted to meet him.
However there was also something to laugh about: In one station, 2 policemen brought me to their officer's room and showed him my passport. The officer took a look at my passport, then he asked: "And where is the person?" He obviously recognized me as a Yemeni, due to my imama and the "mawaz", the skirt, most men are wearing in Yemen, Somalia and some parts of Ethiopia.
Sonntag, 25. Mai 2008
2 weeks of everyday life in Sanaa (are enough)
Somehow, after 6 months travelling I felt the need to settle down somewhere for a while. I decided to stay in Sanaa and to attend 4 hours of arabic lessons and 2 hours of oud lessons everyday, something like a (short) comeback to everyday life for me. So i was infamiliar busy and the time flied very fast. Especially the location of the language center was great,in the heart of Sanaa's calm old town.
Usually I prefer to learn musical instruments by myself, but to learn the arabic scales with it's quater intervals, I guess it was necessary to take lessons.
The rain has stopped now and it seems like I can't bear the dry, polluted air here in sanaa. Anyway I frequently caught a cold from it and will flee tomorrow to the hot, but humid coastal areas on the way to the Sultanate of Oman.
Hm, don't know much else to write about, maybe the next days will become more, but hopefully not too exciting.
Sonntag, 11. Mai 2008
Sanaa and the mountains between Manakha and Shahara
My trip to the mountains started with a shock: My camera was stolen somewhere on the way to Manakha, including ALL pictures from my tour since egypt. But as I already took pictures of the area where i planned to trek I didn't return back to Sanaa imediately and continued.
The special thing about the landscape in Yemen is that the buildings on the cliffs and slopes in the mountains complement perfectly with their surroundings and often, from further away it's hard to define where the rock ends and the fundament of the building starts. One can find such fort villages just everywhere, which supports my way of trekking without a planned itinery.
After 3 days I met the next "harami" (criminal): A young man of my age made use of his djambia (the traditional dagger most yemenis wear on their belt) to rob my money, but as i knew his house (i spent the previous night there) i just asked some locals for help to demand my money back from his father, successfully. Later they told me that he will be arrested for 1 year. Seems like a court investigation is not nessecary in Yemen for such a long term. So much about the bad incidents.
Just one day later, in a small village called beit anaheim, i spontaneously decided to start teaching english at the school volunteerly after i found out that they don't have an english teacher there, but my career lasted only 3 days, then police moved into the village to resolve a local land dispute nearby and they wouldn't have accepted me as a teacher there as i have no working visa. Nonetheless it was an interesting experience.The class starts in the morning with a strange, half an hour lasting ceremony, similary to what i've seen in a school in sinai: it's a mix of gymnastics and a military parade without weapons and instruments. At the end the students show the teacher,who leads the ceremony, their clean hands, and if they're dirty they'll be cleaned by hitting them with a stick. Beating up the students with a stick is not considered here as a crime, but as a necessity to push their ambition. Every single person I asked later about this, shared the same mind. Though I totally disagree with this opinion, I have to admit that this circumstances made it much easier for me to teach there, as i have no experience to work with children and lack of any authoritarian character.
So I continued still 2 days to trek north to wadi surdud, a remarkably big and clear stream for yemenite means, and from there up to the main road connecting al mahweet with sanaa, where i took a lift back to sanaa. I bought an oud (arabic guitar) for some 160 euros, attended an ethiopian nightclub to renew my amharic and vibrate my shoulders, and returned near to al makhweet to continue my trek where it ended, after it turned out that the police in beit anaheim would stay longer.
In the mean time the rainy season had started with one month delay, and in the afternoons the wadis were filled with brown,muddy rivers, but fortunately not strong enough to hinder from crossing on foot or by car. Near Hajja I passed by many fresh cadavers of donkeys and goats which were surprised by the floods. In Sanaa the streams on the streets are raising very fast because there aren't any spillways.
In Yemen, even the most isolated village has road access, and many times i didn't mind to jump on one of the occasionally passing by pick-ups, as the speed on the difficult roads is very slow, and it's nice to observe the surroundings with an open air view.
Most people I met on the way called themselve bedu, though they were neither nomadic nor had a significant darker skin than the city people, like in egypt, but at least I've found their legendary hospitality. Some people, the "akhdam", have also some obvious african traces in their faces. In the Tihama, the coastal strip along the red sea there are more of them to find, living in african style huts, but here they assimilated entirely.
In all areas,whenever the dawn was near, the people warned me not to sleep outside as there might be some leopards. I was not sure if i should believe them, but if they really exist, for sure they are very afraid of human beings, as many yemenites carry kalashnikows in addition to their djambia, and wouldn't hesitate to shot them. One guy showed me a tail of a cat of prey hanging from the ceiling of his living room,(looked like from a leopard)which he claimed to have hunted down.
In an area south of shahara, some men asked me if i'd have a metal detector to help them to find old coins from the hameri kingdom (bilquis, the legendary queen of sheba was one of it's reigns), but i had to decline. They said their area is full of them and the rain would erode the soil and might release some tresures. But I tought them that the famous coin of Maria Theresia, which is very popular in Yemen and sometimes still used as a currency, is not from France as most yemenites believe but from my country.
Shahara should become the final destination of my tour, walking further north would lead me to the civil war of Sadaa. Shahara is famous for it's old bridge connecting two vertical cliffs, a must for the photo album of the ordinary tourist. On the pictures I've seen on the internet it looks very impressive but actually it's hardly longer than 10 metres. The village itself is not much worth seen, but the scenery of the mountain top where it's built on all the more. There are two tourist hotels, which frightened me with their high fee of about 12 euros per night which i could drop to 8 euros after routinely bargaining, but the excellent dinner and the breakfast included in the fee alone were worth at least 8 euros, not to mention my first hot shower since I left austria.
The special thing about the landscape in Yemen is that the buildings on the cliffs and slopes in the mountains complement perfectly with their surroundings and often, from further away it's hard to define where the rock ends and the fundament of the building starts. One can find such fort villages just everywhere, which supports my way of trekking without a planned itinery.
After 3 days I met the next "harami" (criminal): A young man of my age made use of his djambia (the traditional dagger most yemenis wear on their belt) to rob my money, but as i knew his house (i spent the previous night there) i just asked some locals for help to demand my money back from his father, successfully. Later they told me that he will be arrested for 1 year. Seems like a court investigation is not nessecary in Yemen for such a long term. So much about the bad incidents.
Just one day later, in a small village called beit anaheim, i spontaneously decided to start teaching english at the school volunteerly after i found out that they don't have an english teacher there, but my career lasted only 3 days, then police moved into the village to resolve a local land dispute nearby and they wouldn't have accepted me as a teacher there as i have no working visa. Nonetheless it was an interesting experience.The class starts in the morning with a strange, half an hour lasting ceremony, similary to what i've seen in a school in sinai: it's a mix of gymnastics and a military parade without weapons and instruments. At the end the students show the teacher,who leads the ceremony, their clean hands, and if they're dirty they'll be cleaned by hitting them with a stick. Beating up the students with a stick is not considered here as a crime, but as a necessity to push their ambition. Every single person I asked later about this, shared the same mind. Though I totally disagree with this opinion, I have to admit that this circumstances made it much easier for me to teach there, as i have no experience to work with children and lack of any authoritarian character.
So I continued still 2 days to trek north to wadi surdud, a remarkably big and clear stream for yemenite means, and from there up to the main road connecting al mahweet with sanaa, where i took a lift back to sanaa. I bought an oud (arabic guitar) for some 160 euros, attended an ethiopian nightclub to renew my amharic and vibrate my shoulders, and returned near to al makhweet to continue my trek where it ended, after it turned out that the police in beit anaheim would stay longer.
In the mean time the rainy season had started with one month delay, and in the afternoons the wadis were filled with brown,muddy rivers, but fortunately not strong enough to hinder from crossing on foot or by car. Near Hajja I passed by many fresh cadavers of donkeys and goats which were surprised by the floods. In Sanaa the streams on the streets are raising very fast because there aren't any spillways.
In Yemen, even the most isolated village has road access, and many times i didn't mind to jump on one of the occasionally passing by pick-ups, as the speed on the difficult roads is very slow, and it's nice to observe the surroundings with an open air view.
Most people I met on the way called themselve bedu, though they were neither nomadic nor had a significant darker skin than the city people, like in egypt, but at least I've found their legendary hospitality. Some people, the "akhdam", have also some obvious african traces in their faces. In the Tihama, the coastal strip along the red sea there are more of them to find, living in african style huts, but here they assimilated entirely.
In all areas,whenever the dawn was near, the people warned me not to sleep outside as there might be some leopards. I was not sure if i should believe them, but if they really exist, for sure they are very afraid of human beings, as many yemenites carry kalashnikows in addition to their djambia, and wouldn't hesitate to shot them. One guy showed me a tail of a cat of prey hanging from the ceiling of his living room,(looked like from a leopard)which he claimed to have hunted down.
In an area south of shahara, some men asked me if i'd have a metal detector to help them to find old coins from the hameri kingdom (bilquis, the legendary queen of sheba was one of it's reigns), but i had to decline. They said their area is full of them and the rain would erode the soil and might release some tresures. But I tought them that the famous coin of Maria Theresia, which is very popular in Yemen and sometimes still used as a currency, is not from France as most yemenites believe but from my country.
Shahara should become the final destination of my tour, walking further north would lead me to the civil war of Sadaa. Shahara is famous for it's old bridge connecting two vertical cliffs, a must for the photo album of the ordinary tourist. On the pictures I've seen on the internet it looks very impressive but actually it's hardly longer than 10 metres. The village itself is not much worth seen, but the scenery of the mountain top where it's built on all the more. There are two tourist hotels, which frightened me with their high fee of about 12 euros per night which i could drop to 8 euros after routinely bargaining, but the excellent dinner and the breakfast included in the fee alone were worth at least 8 euros, not to mention my first hot shower since I left austria.
Donnerstag, 17. April 2008
Socotra
When I returned back to Sanaa yesterday evening, I had the feeling that something was missing on my 2 weeks trip on Socotra, but now I think that after 5 months on the road, path, rail, ship, plane or whatever my feelings became quite blunted and even for unique places like Socotra it's hard to enthuse me.
In fact I had an adventurous trekking tour as usual, starting through the Haggier mountains in the center of the island, that reminded me a bit of the alps, with it's grey limestone and darkgreen bushes, along mountain rivers lined with palm trees and backed up to many natural swimming pools which are hard to pass by without a refreshing bath. After 6 days of flush of water I crossed a dry karst plateau with some dragonblood and francinsence trees and was surprised not to find water in the canyon where I descended next. The canyon surprisingly ended in a stalactite cave, which raised my hope again, but the drops all disappeared in the ground. The next day, after my water was finished and I started to drink my urine I was forced to exploit the water reserves of a temporary left alone home in one of the many caves. Then I soon reached the southern coastal strip, which has not much to offer and I stopped a car to Mahfirin, a fisher village where I had a rest for 1 day and stocked up with food. Then a further 3 days along the cliff line of the eastern part of the island, where I had my first aquintences with tourists outside of Hadibo. The tourist attractions there were a cool spring coming out of a huge, steep, white sand dune and another but more interesting stalactite cave. The majority of these tourists (and in Yemen in general) came from Italy and some Socotris who occasionally work with tourists speak better italian than english. After I returned to Hadibo, the capitol I still had 1 day to go to Galansyia in the far west to relax on the sand beach there.
The people on Socotra mainly depend on their goats, on the coast of course from the fish, but the strong monsoon wind in summer forces them to stay on the land for 3 month every year. Agriculture is very rare, probably worth to mention dats, but francinsence and the red extract of the dragonblood tree (the "dragonblood", which is used as cure and as facial lotion for women) which are sold for 2 euro per about 50 gramm. The Socotris live in very simple stone houses which lack of any decoration, quite similar to those of the Bedu on Sinai, also the wealthier ones. Most have more than one home (up to 5), some also live in caves. Though entirely veiled and always refusing to pose for a picture, the women have a much more confident behaviour than on the yemeni mainland and it's no problem to have a chat with them. I was too lazy to learn some phrases of the local language socotri, as 100% speak arabic fluently. But it was interesting to notice that they call foreigners "farenji" , like in Ethiopia. They also have some common customs with the Somali and Afar like dunking the hand in a porringer before and after consuming food (usually rice, on the coast supplemented with fresh fish) or go great each other by kissing someones hand (if they don't great by touching nose and nose), though most of them have their origin in Mahra in eastern Yemen, which used to be a kingdom including Socotra. There are also some fishermen with obviously pure african faces, but somehow they don't know where their ancestors came from and assimilated to the socotries.
On Socotra I enjoyed 100% freedom of movement, in contrary to the mainland, where I'm supposed to apply for travel permits again. But in contrast to Sudan, the policemen do not notice that I'm a foreigner, when I travel by public transport, and it's no big risk to move off the itinery of my permit, in the case that I want to change my program. In the worst case I'll be sent back to Sanaa. I just have to avoid the areas where kidnappings took place, and I'm sure that I'm well informed about it now.
Dienstag, 1. April 2008
From Djibouti to Sanaa (Yemen)
I've spend quite a boring week in Djibouti city and it's surroundings. I didn't really make contacts with the nomads living there, but I visited almost every single police station of this small state. When I asked them for the reason of their interrogations I only received stupid answers like "Il n'y a pas de probleme" or "C'est pour votre securite". For the first time in my life I also had to give my fingerprints.
The reason I stayed so long was that I had to wait for the ship to Yemen. There is no regular passenger ferry, only cargo ships waiting for goods from Ethiopia. The goods of my ship had been cows. There are no regular schedules and it's not easy to find out, when a ship will leave. When I entered the ship I also found out that I paid 40 euros too much for the ship and could have gone by airplane for the same price. Anyway, even if the airplane was really cheaper I had prefered the ship to cross through the legendary bab el mandeb (gate of lamentation). The ship was quite small with some 15 passengers, 5 crew members and about 100 ethiopian cows, a very familial sentiment.
I entered yemenese soil at Mukha and then went straight to Sanaa, after spending the night in Taiz. Yemen has awsome opportunities for mountain trekking tours, but first i'll discover the not much known island of Socotra in the Indian Ocean. It's closer to the somali coast, but belongs to Yemen. For this destination it is hard to avoid the airplane and I fortunately found a flight for tomorrow. I'm sure I'll have a great time there, I'm just worried about the huge flesh wound on my right hand that still is not cured. It's a memory from the too low ventilator in my room in a "habash" restaurant in djibouti, where i could stay for free, but had to share it with some locusts and cockroachs.
The reason I stayed so long was that I had to wait for the ship to Yemen. There is no regular passenger ferry, only cargo ships waiting for goods from Ethiopia. The goods of my ship had been cows. There are no regular schedules and it's not easy to find out, when a ship will leave. When I entered the ship I also found out that I paid 40 euros too much for the ship and could have gone by airplane for the same price. Anyway, even if the airplane was really cheaper I had prefered the ship to cross through the legendary bab el mandeb (gate of lamentation). The ship was quite small with some 15 passengers, 5 crew members and about 100 ethiopian cows, a very familial sentiment.
I entered yemenese soil at Mukha and then went straight to Sanaa, after spending the night in Taiz. Yemen has awsome opportunities for mountain trekking tours, but first i'll discover the not much known island of Socotra in the Indian Ocean. It's closer to the somali coast, but belongs to Yemen. For this destination it is hard to avoid the airplane and I fortunately found a flight for tomorrow. I'm sure I'll have a great time there, I'm just worried about the huge flesh wound on my right hand that still is not cured. It's a memory from the too low ventilator in my room in a "habash" restaurant in djibouti, where i could stay for free, but had to share it with some locusts and cockroachs.
Sonntag, 23. März 2008
From Harer to Djibouti
The last part of my ethiopia-journey lead me to the Afar region. The most exciting place to visit there is Erta Ale, the world`s only lava lake, but as there were some kidnappings in the last time I better stayed in a safer area around Assaita, the biggest Afar city. There the Awash river, bringing all the liquid waste from Addis Abeba, flows through several lakes untill he ends in the Afambo lake.
Assaita and the settlements along the Djibouti road host a large amharic population. Most of them came here to serve the hungry and tired truck drivers with restaurants and hotels (it`s probably the most frequented road of Ethiopia, as it`s the main connection of the contry to the ports of the world). But I was told that there is no conflict between the two ethnics, they (the Afar) rather have occasional clashes with the Issa, a somali tribe.
The backbone of the Afar is, of course, livestock, and in some areas salt plantation. Agriculture is only possible along the marshlands of Awash.
From the tourist office in Samara (it`s the regional capital but only consists of a cluster of administrational buidlings, very strange settlement) I took an official guide and a permission to go to the Afambo lake. From there I joined a camel caravan for a 3 day walk through empty desert untill Dikhil in Djibouti. It was a nice experience to see the caravan` s daily life but I wouldn`t recommend this tour to others, because the landscape after the lakes is very boring (only lava stones and, sometimes, an acacia tree) and the border crossing was illegal, so i had to go by truck from Dikhil to the border post in order to get my exit and visa stamps. Along some 100 km we (me and the caravan) didn`t encounter any settlements (except some stone cairns which protected us from the nightly desert storms) and no water, and as they fetched their water from the Afambo lake, I didn`t have any other choice than to drink the infamous "Addis Abeba water".
From the border it wasn't far to the capitol and main port, also called Djibouti. Like the Afar region in Ethiopia, Djibouti is mainly inhabitated by Afar and Issa, but in addition to their own languages and french (Djibouti is francophone) most of them speak also arabic and some amharic, which often leads to trilingual dialogues when I get in touch with them. Of course one also meets a lot of arab traders and, easily to indentify by their tough haircut and chunky bodies, american and french soldiers from the nearby military bases.
Since I left Harer I wear a Imama (turban) to protect my head from the heat, and I'm getting tired to explain that I'm no muslim. Just yesterday some bored policemen disturbed me half an hour with stupid question because I confused them (Atheist, austrian name and passport, looks like a muslim, speaks arabic...)
Assaita and the settlements along the Djibouti road host a large amharic population. Most of them came here to serve the hungry and tired truck drivers with restaurants and hotels (it`s probably the most frequented road of Ethiopia, as it`s the main connection of the contry to the ports of the world). But I was told that there is no conflict between the two ethnics, they (the Afar) rather have occasional clashes with the Issa, a somali tribe.
The backbone of the Afar is, of course, livestock, and in some areas salt plantation. Agriculture is only possible along the marshlands of Awash.
From the tourist office in Samara (it`s the regional capital but only consists of a cluster of administrational buidlings, very strange settlement) I took an official guide and a permission to go to the Afambo lake. From there I joined a camel caravan for a 3 day walk through empty desert untill Dikhil in Djibouti. It was a nice experience to see the caravan` s daily life but I wouldn`t recommend this tour to others, because the landscape after the lakes is very boring (only lava stones and, sometimes, an acacia tree) and the border crossing was illegal, so i had to go by truck from Dikhil to the border post in order to get my exit and visa stamps. Along some 100 km we (me and the caravan) didn`t encounter any settlements (except some stone cairns which protected us from the nightly desert storms) and no water, and as they fetched their water from the Afambo lake, I didn`t have any other choice than to drink the infamous "Addis Abeba water".
From the border it wasn't far to the capitol and main port, also called Djibouti. Like the Afar region in Ethiopia, Djibouti is mainly inhabitated by Afar and Issa, but in addition to their own languages and french (Djibouti is francophone) most of them speak also arabic and some amharic, which often leads to trilingual dialogues when I get in touch with them. Of course one also meets a lot of arab traders and, easily to indentify by their tough haircut and chunky bodies, american and french soldiers from the nearby military bases.
Since I left Harer I wear a Imama (turban) to protect my head from the heat, and I'm getting tired to explain that I'm no muslim. Just yesterday some bored policemen disturbed me half an hour with stupid question because I confused them (Atheist, austrian name and passport, looks like a muslim, speaks arabic...)
Mittwoch, 12. März 2008
Harer
I seperated in peace from the "new flower" (Addis Abeba translated to english)and fell in love with Harer at first sight. It's the only city in Ethiopia with a real old town. It has it's very own style of houses (especially the sitting plateaus inside), and even it's own language, only spoken inside Jogul, the old wall embracing it. Harari is a mix of arabic, amharic, oromo, somali and many other languages.
Also the harari folk songs are a refreshing alternate, they sound quite arabic. Regrettably I didn't find any live performance at this time, only bought some records, contrary to it's amharic counterparts in Lalibela and Addis, performed in a so called "asmari bet" , some kind of traditional night club (I forgot to mention it in the previous entries). Eventually I master the amharic "skisa" - dance, which is best described with joggling one's shoulders, to some extent.
Harer is an old trading city. The most important product sold here is Khat, a narcotic leaf, the nr.1 drug in Yemen, Somalia and some parts of Ethiopia. I tried it before several times in Yemen and Ethiopia, but I couldn't get used to it's bitter taste, and also couldn't feel any stimualtion. Unfortunetly the surrounding of harer is covered by a sea of blue plastic inwhich the khat is sold.
Now I stayed here for 5 days, including a day trip to Babile (1 hour by bus from harer), where I took a walk through an amazing stone forest, only angered by the cactus alongside the overgrown paths. Though I really like it here and found some new friends again, I'm quite disappointed now about my soon ending stay in Ethiopia. Within 2 months I couldn't find a place in the rural areas to integrate into the farmer's daily life, like I hoped to do. I've always been always a visitor and most acquaintances were rather cursory.But I'm still far away from feeling homesick.
Also the harari folk songs are a refreshing alternate, they sound quite arabic. Regrettably I didn't find any live performance at this time, only bought some records, contrary to it's amharic counterparts in Lalibela and Addis, performed in a so called "asmari bet" , some kind of traditional night club (I forgot to mention it in the previous entries). Eventually I master the amharic "skisa" - dance, which is best described with joggling one's shoulders, to some extent.
Harer is an old trading city. The most important product sold here is Khat, a narcotic leaf, the nr.1 drug in Yemen, Somalia and some parts of Ethiopia. I tried it before several times in Yemen and Ethiopia, but I couldn't get used to it's bitter taste, and also couldn't feel any stimualtion. Unfortunetly the surrounding of harer is covered by a sea of blue plastic inwhich the khat is sold.
Now I stayed here for 5 days, including a day trip to Babile (1 hour by bus from harer), where I took a walk through an amazing stone forest, only angered by the cactus alongside the overgrown paths. Though I really like it here and found some new friends again, I'm quite disappointed now about my soon ending stay in Ethiopia. Within 2 months I couldn't find a place in the rural areas to integrate into the farmer's daily life, like I hoped to do. I've always been always a visitor and most acquaintances were rather cursory.But I'm still far away from feeling homesick.
Freitag, 7. März 2008
From Lalibela to Addis
From Lalibela to Addis |
Since friday i'm in Addis Abeba. I reached Korem after a 2 days trek and 1 day by bus, and stayed there 2 days , including a visit to the beautiful Ashange mountain lake. Then I still tried to make a trip to the nearby Afar Region in the east and sacrificied 2 days with running from one local authority to the other to get a permission, but without any success. The Afar nomads are known to be very hostile not only for "farenji" (white men like me) but also for other ethiopian ethnics. So it would have been nessecary to take a guide from their tribe in order not to be abducted or even killed. Their homeland is the hottest area in Ethiopia, flat pastoral land, interrupted by many extinct and active volcanoes and salt lakes, very different from the highland. Maybe I'll try it again from their regional capital Samara, when I'm on the way to Djibouti.
Here in Addis I stay with some Somali friend's friends, refugees from Mogadischu who are waiting for their visa to follow their relatives in Austria or other western countries. The Djibouti Visa is also the only reason why i still didn't leave this monster city, mainly consisting of corrugated iron buildings and shopping malls next to each other, without any single park or other alternations. I should get the visa tomorrow, then i'll go to Harer , a historical islamic trading city, most probably better worth seeing. It's only 2 hours (in Ethiopia a ridiculous distance) from Jijiga, the capital of Somali Regional State, which i have to avoid in order not to get into the same situation like in the new year, as there is still a long lasting guerilla war in it's hinterland.
I still have problems loading the pictures, it would simply take days (without sleeping) untill I've loaded all important images. Maybe in Djibouti it's better. Also I cannot open my blog here in Ethiopia, (seems to be censored by the government) and I have to mail the texts of the entries to my sister in austria.
Donnerstag, 21. Februar 2008
I am still alive ( in Ethiopia)
Kassala |
I just couldn't find any opportunity to write a new blog entry in the rural areas of northern ethiopia during the last 4 weeks and on the day I stayed in Gonder, my first stopover within Ethiopia , www.blogger.com was not accessable.
So what happened in the mean time? My second attemp to conquer Kassala turned out to be successful and I stayed there for 5 days. Though it's one of the biggest and most famous cities of Sudan, it's character is rather like a big village. The "downtown" is very small and as ugly as most other cities, and after 9 p.m. the streets are entirely empty. Only during ramadan , as I was told, the city gets more alive, because many sudanese couples spend their honeymoon there. Like me, they are attracted by the coulisse of the famous Tutil mountain nearby.
As Kassala is very close to the border with Eritrea, it's consequential that a huge part of the population has it's roots there. I got to know a lot of Habbasha (a word describing the semitic ethnics of Eritrea and Ethiopia like Amhara, Tigray) who were on their illegal way to europe, by crossing the deadly Lybian desert and the Mediterrean Sea. They either fled from repressions from their governments (mainly Eritrean soldiers defecting from the army) or just looked for a better life. I also was happy to find injera (ethiopian food) as the popular sudanese cuisine is dominated by ful (beans) with few alternativees and gets boring after some time.
From Kassala it was a 2 days drive to Gonder. This city is famous for it's portuguese style castle, datingback from the time when it was the ethiopian capital. It's frequented by a lot of western tourist. On the streets one gets subsequently disturbed by "you you" shouting of the kids, and if one asks for a hotel,bus or other information, people expect money if they help you. While the people in Sudan are used to see Egyptians, Turks and Indians living there (most of them thought that I'm from Pakistan) here it's too obvious that I'm a tourist.So especially after my trekking tour in sudan was so short, I couldn't await to see the countryside and left Gonder after 1 day. On the same day there was the celebration of Timkat (Epiphancy) and Gonder might be one of the best places to see it, but the large crowds on the streets scared me off. After 1 hour by bus to Kossoye and 3 hours walk i arrived at a beautiful site next to a river.Throughout the night the priests were singing beautiful church songs and in the morning they blessed the people with the water from the river.
Then a 6 days trek to Debark followed.The big difference to my tours in Egypt and Sudan was that I crossed densly populated farmlands, walking on the main roads connecting the villages, meeting much more peole on the way. Just this "main roads" are unaccessible by car and there is not any other kind of infrastructure like elictricity, water pipes,etc.
On the way to Debark I learnt that there occur occasionally robberies in this area and sometimes I was accompanied by some local militia (1 or 2 gunmen). The nights I usually spent in the houses of the government workers (teachers, municipal managers, agricultural advisors,..) They speak quite good english and one can find them in every Kebele (the smallest administrational unit, like a municipal. Almost everywhere I was told to be the first foreigner visitor since the italian invadors during the 2nd world war. Sometimes I got a bit paranoid, because everybody, espacially swarms of kids followed me to everywhere, just staring and observing every single move, but from time to time i got used to it.
From Debark i went by a truck to Dima, a small town north of the Simien Mountains Nationalpark. I visited the park 1 year ago and this time i wanted to avoid the entrance fee, the surrounding landscape is not less impressive. In this area I saw very different vegetational zones within a few kilometres. While on the mountains there is rain all year around, enabling eucalyptus and juniper (looks like a fir) I've found semi desert area down in the valleys below about 1800m sea level , dominated by akazia and cactus. Here the wealth of the farmers depends from the seasonal rain between may and september. In that time they are often cutoff from the outside world, stuck between flooded river beds and 4000m high mountains. In some places they started to irrigate the rivers a few years ago to plant banana and papaya trees, very unusual fruits in this area.
My way continued to the slopes of the valley of Tekeze, one of ethiopia's largest rivers.Unfortunetly a huge part of the valley will dissapear under an about 100km long reservoir after about one year. I went along the shore of the river untill near to it's source near Lalibela. The most exciting part, a narrow canyon will be flooded, the remaining part untill Lalibela was a bit boring. Along the river there is no population, the nearest villages lay on the slopes around 2 hours walk from the river, so only very few people have to be evacuated. Most people i met along the river were shepherds, leading their goats and cattle to the water.
The local authorities told me that the area is safe, so I could walk the whole distance from Dima to Lalibela alone. Sometimes i joined some passangers. The biggest danger I met along the way were the crocodiles, whom I had to escape at the countless rivercrossings. I was told that there also live many hyenas and and leopards, but they don't attack human beings. Besides the domestic animals I've also seen a lot of gelada baboons ( a monkey). They climbed in large groups of about 40 animals along the cliffs of the gorge. Last year I've also seen them in the Simien Park and they were always ready to pose for a photo , but here they were very shy and i could observe them only from far away.
Since the horrible droughts in the 70s Ethiopia is invaded by a galaxy of relief organizations, but in the remote areas they did change only little. Malnutrition is still omnipresent In the dry areas the women spend up to 4 hours to carry the daily ration of water in 20 liter canisters from the next river on steep paths up to their homes.
Lalibela, the small town where I write this entry is ethiopias most important historical site, with it's unique rock hewn churches. It's the first settlement since 3 weeks where i found electricity and water pipes! Tomorrow i'll reach the top of my trek (Abuna Josef, about 4300m) end will probably end up my tour in Korem , where i meet a friend i got to know from last year. Then i intend to go to Addis Abeba to plan my trip to Yemen, either by airplane or by bus and ship).
Freitag, 11. Januar 2008
From Port Sudan to Gedaref
The troubles with the police did not end yet: when i wanted to visit kassala on wednesday, the cops at the checkpoint at the outskirts of the city forced me to change the bus to go to gedaref. the problem was again the travel permit. i felt ashamed for the tears i was crying because of this ridiculous problem (i still have plenty of time to come back to kassala), compared to those of the poor people here, but my helplessness towards the police tied me into knots. i planned to go to gedaref later,as it's on the way to gonder (ethiopia) but kassala is much more beautiful, laying on the slope of a very impressive mountain. i hope i can get the permit for kassala tomorrow, after the office was closed on the weekend.
so far i don't have any further exciting stories to tell. i'm very disappointed how things went wrong and i wasted most of my time here in sudan, but on the other hand i'm looking forward to enter ethiopia next week. the permitterror will be over and i'll find endless mountain ranges to discover.
Dienstag, 8. Januar 2008
No expulsion, I can continue travelling
finally after 5 days of investigations the national security office received the order from khartoum to let me continue to travel in sudan freely. i don't know if this order is a result of interventions by austrian diplomats, but i think, if the suspicions by the police were really serious, they had already put me in jail.the only restriction i'm facing now is that i'm not allowed to trek in the mountains anymore. so i'll leave port sudan, heading to ethiopia through kassala and gedaref within about one week. there i'll find more freedom to travel as i've already found out 1 year ago.
i'm quite upset that my story and the blog were published everywhere in the austrian media. i didn't intend to become famous this way, but it's me who put me in this bad situation. i've travelled to many countries before, but i still have to learn a lot, especially about the "not to do's" in police states like sudan.
the last days were mentally very hard for me as i was not sure about the results and consequences of the investigations. to be convicted of spying in sudan for sure leads to a long-term imprisonment. but i have to mention that the police treated me well and was very friendly (there's nobody sitting behind me forcing me to write this), except for forbidding me phonecalls and later also to use the internet.
for all journalists, embassy officials, etc. : you can use this blog entry as a basis for further reports, but i'm not ready for any interview. my problem is solved now and everything about it is written in this blog. i think there are thousands of other austrians travelling around the world with much more exciting stories. thanks for all diplomats who tried to help me, i'm sorry for not answering the mails, but i was not allowed to.
i'm quite upset that my story and the blog were published everywhere in the austrian media. i didn't intend to become famous this way, but it's me who put me in this bad situation. i've travelled to many countries before, but i still have to learn a lot, especially about the "not to do's" in police states like sudan.
the last days were mentally very hard for me as i was not sure about the results and consequences of the investigations. to be convicted of spying in sudan for sure leads to a long-term imprisonment. but i have to mention that the police treated me well and was very friendly (there's nobody sitting behind me forcing me to write this), except for forbidding me phonecalls and later also to use the internet.
for all journalists, embassy officials, etc. : you can use this blog entry as a basis for further reports, but i'm not ready for any interview. my problem is solved now and everything about it is written in this blog. i think there are thousands of other austrians travelling around the world with much more exciting stories. thanks for all diplomats who tried to help me, i'm sorry for not answering the mails, but i was not allowed to.
Samstag, 5. Januar 2008
under supervision of sudanese police
well, the postcards didn't cause any troubles, but the articles about the former rebel groups definetly did. it was just soooooooo stupid to carry them in my luggage. they interrogated me for a few hours and they believe that i'm either a journalist or a spy.
currently the investigations are still running, but they told me that i'll most likely be expelled from sudan, the question is just: to ethiopia or to austria?
in the mean time (since 2 days) i can only move around in port sudan, always accompanied by a guy from the National Security Office. i'm not allowed to call anyone, but at least they let me surf and don't control the websites i'm visiting (probably they do afterwards).i hope that the remaining progress will be finished soon and i can move freely again.
the irony of my situation is that just untill to 2 months ago i worked for an organization assisting illegal foreigners in austria to return to their home country. now i can have a very authentic view from the reverse side, with the difference that there'll be no NGO supporting me. the austrian embassy here has very few influence.
currently the investigations are still running, but they told me that i'll most likely be expelled from sudan, the question is just: to ethiopia or to austria?
in the mean time (since 2 days) i can only move around in port sudan, always accompanied by a guy from the National Security Office. i'm not allowed to call anyone, but at least they let me surf and don't control the websites i'm visiting (probably they do afterwards).i hope that the remaining progress will be finished soon and i can move freely again.
the irony of my situation is that just untill to 2 months ago i worked for an organization assisting illegal foreigners in austria to return to their home country. now i can have a very authentic view from the reverse side, with the difference that there'll be no NGO supporting me. the austrian embassy here has very few influence.
Mittwoch, 2. Januar 2008
Trekkingtour in Red Sea Hills (Sudan)
Red Sea Hills |
my apprehension became true: after a 6 days trek the police arrested me in a small village in the middle of nowhere. they didn't suspect me of anything, but somehow my permit was not valid for this area and they sent me back to port sudan.
the tour itself was great, with very diversified landscape: i started in erkowit, a village inside surprisingly green landscape on the edge of a big plateau. the hills looked like bunches of rocks that were just now thrown on the floor, without any erosion of wind and water. i stayed there one day to recover from some fever and diarroe. the weather there was quite cold and windy, sometimes even with tiny raindrops though the rainy season is in summer. then i met the typical red-brown eroded mountains with vegetation only on the bottom of the valleys like i knew it from earlier trips like sinai and ethiopia. after that i crossed a flat desert, fighting with sandstorms for a whole day to reach again the escarpment of the plateau to descent to the village where my tour ended forcefully.
but maybe the police even saved my life as they later told me in port sudan that there are landmines on the route where i wanted to continue. on the other hand the local people (who have to know about it better) didn't know about the mines so i think they only searched for a reason why i should be thankful to them, and not as angry as i appeared to them.
the landmines are the remains of a civil war in this region that ended with a peace agreement in october last year. the local ethnics, beja and rashaida, similar to darfur, felt marginalized and couldn't participate in the national politics, before the agreement. like in somalia, ethiopia and maybe other countries virtually all rebel groups in sudan are sponsored by the eritrean government. in port sudan i could met some leaders of the beja faction of the rebel group. they told me that they are very disappointed by the agreement, because most of the new government posts granted to them were occupied by the asmara-part of the group, which is rather interested in better relations between eritrea and sudan than the development of red sea region. the region is blessed with a lot of mineral resources like gold and uran and the most important oil pipeline from the oil fields in the south to the sea ports is crossing it, but the local people haven't seen any benefits from it.
the beja, who inhabit the area where i trekked are said to be very hostile towards foreigners, something i could not confirm. they were very friendly and rather worried about me and tried to convince me that it is too dangerous to go there alone. when their arguements came to an end they told me about lions living here, but i knew that the area is lion-free. sometimes i had communication problems because some of them speak only a few words arabic. most of them are raising goats, in the lowlands also camels.
today i had to apply again for a travel permit for another area close to port sudan. this time, they also checked and searched all the stuff of my bag. they confiscated stuff that were suspicious to them: some articles about the rebel groups (i can understand this) and some postcards from austria (!) that i use as gifts for the people i meet along the way. they said they'll investigate it and later , after my 2nd trekking tour will give it back to me. i'm anxious to the investigation's result.
Abonnieren
Posts (Atom)