Showing posts with label sudan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sudan. Show all posts

Monday, November 29, 2010

an old, early morning

i was trying to organize my desktop and came across a few pictures of sudan that i had meant, once upon a time, to post. this is one of them. it's pretty grainy, but i still find it beautiful. maybe it has something to do with nostalgia. i'm not sure. anyhow, i took this one very early morning when we'd gotten up to see the sun rise.

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Thursday, October 21, 2010

and then i left

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the view from and of the nuba mountains. a small slice of them, anyhow.

well, here they are. the last few photos i took of sudan before i stepped on a plane just a few mornings later and left for ethiopia.

a little context: after heidi and i had left dilling, we kept heading into central sudan. we made it to kadoogli, a small town that we'd heard was greener than anything we'd seen yet. (that, of course, is not saying much.)

when we arrived at the bus stop, we found a town that had been overrun by international ngos. the surrounding area, the nuba mountains, are a central area of conflict in this huge country, and kadoogli offers a nice jumping off point.

we had to pay some $20 a night for accommodation, which, as i write this from my home in portland, doesn't seem like so much, but at the time was a huge expense considering our meager budgets.

all that said, the landscape surrounding the town -- which is what you see here -- was beautiful and unlike anything i'd seen in sudan. or really anywhere else, for that matter. we hiked some small mountains in the massive range, and wandered through hill-side villages. people would point us to the proper path that wove its way through their homes and to the top.

on our way back, a group of children found us, and helped direct us down the hill. the dogs, they said, were coming, and we should get out before nightfall. i'm not joking. not even a little.

there may still be some photos of sudan yet to come, but this really is the end of the bulk of them. i don't want to get too maudlin. so, i won't. but sudan, you were amazing to me.

stay tuned for pictures from ethiopia and mongolia and southeast asia. oh, and portland.

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this, to me, looked like a baby baobab. i'm not sure it is. but i sure hope it is.

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up there would be heidi, my travel companion and translator.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

globes & maps

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a globe waiting for a home in a portland thriftshop.

there's something funny about globes. they give you the world in this manageable form, in this form that you can twist around and run your fingers over and feel that maybe, still, there is enough time for you to get out there and see all the places where your fingers land.

but when you do get out there, you realize all those beautiful globes -- all those bright-blue, muted-brown, black-and-white, stone-inset, whatever globes -- didn't do the enormity of the world justice in the slightest. those globes don't really convey the easy little fact that you could spend a lifetime wandering what they show you as just one square inch and still feel like you didn't explore it fully.

i've always been a little taken by maps. but lately, whenever i come across one, i can't help but find africa and look for some winding path back. maybe, i've lost it. maybe, i've been reading too much david sedaris.

a song to meditate on if you're feeling restless or nostalgic or a little bit of both: Map of the World by Monsters of Folk.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

all at once

here's the best of a few packs of polaroid film i shot over the past couple months or so. click on the images and they'll get real big. so big, you'll be able to see the whole polaroid. wow!

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(most of these images were taken on tz artistic film with an sx-70, though a few were taken with regular ol' 600 film and others with some specialty film from the impossible project.)

Sunday, September 26, 2010

after it rained

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malakia after it rained and the sun had just begun to come out.

heidi and i made it to central sudan just as the rainy season had begun. this was amazing for a few reasons, not the least of which was the fact that in eight months in sudan, i had only seen rain once up until that point.

one afternoon the sky turned a familiar gray -- familiar, i mean, to those who have lived in portland, ore. for any amount of time -- and just opened up. we ran into the living room and listened to the drops smack the top of the tin roof.

when it was all over, one of the cousins came to get us. he held his hands to his face made a little click with his finger. it was time to take some pictures. so we did. and here they are. this, by the way, is my last little bit from malakia. next up: kadoogli.

by the by, i've switched to flickr. here's hoping the pictures will show up as i've color corrected them from here on out.

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some donkeys, with their water drums in a flooded field.

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the cousin who wanted to show us what things looked like after the rain.

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the central market.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

making music and coffee

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a traditional coffee ceremony in malakia, dilling.

almost as soon as heidi and i had arrived in malakia, helawa, the woman who would put us up for the next few days, asked us if we'd like to share a cup of coffee or tea. coffee, we said, would be great.

in sudan, coffee is served strong and spiced with cinnamon and cardamon. grounds are cheap and easy to come by and a cup of coffee is just a boiling pot of water away. but in malakia, things, it seems, work a little bit differently.

after we'd decided on coffee, helawa went into her kitchen and came out with a small fire pit, a pestle and mortar and fresh beans and spices. she set about roasting the beans right in front of us and then grinding them with the spices. nearly an hour after her offer, she served us fresh coffee. the next day, she promised, we could do it again but she'd bring around the neighbors and her sisters.

that's exactly what happened. helawa and five other women gathered to perform a traditional coffee ceremony. they roasted the beans and ground them up and all the while they sang. have a listen to what making coffee in sudan sounds like:



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the coffee is roasted over a coal fire. you have to keep the beans constantly moving or they'll burn.

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once the beans are roasted, they're ground along with some traditional spices.

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the pestle and mortar became the drum beat for the songs.

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while the coffee is brewing, the women sing and the cups are clanked along to the beat.

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the coffee is served in a traditional pot with bits of twigs that act as a filter for the grounds.

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the children don't get to drink the coffee, but they do get in on the singing.

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Sunday, August 29, 2010

after waking up

some more images from our time in malakia:

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the women spent most of their day hanging around the kitchen.

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grandma and granddaughter.

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helawa, our hostess, made some kisra, a traditional sudanese hand bread, sort of like ethiopian injera.

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we all ran inside during a pretty crazy rain storm. it was the first time i'd seen it rain in nearly seven months.

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mom and daughter.

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hamoodi doin' his thing.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

waking up in malakia

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hamoodi.

while making our way through central sudan, heidi and i stopped in a smallish town called dilling that had a reputation for being a dirt-filled pit stop on the way to beautiful kadoogli and the even more beautiful nuba mountains. as it turned out, we sort of found things reversed.

as great and as lovely as kadoogli and the nuba mountains were (i'll post pictures soon), dilling won us over. this was in no small part due to the family we stayed with in a section of town called malakia, where straw huts proliferated and only our family had electricity (and just two light bulbs at that). not only were the adults endlessly welcoming (opening their homes to us for more than a few days, roasting and grinding coffee for us when we first arrived), but there was also the adorable hamoodi who would spend the days teasing us and showing off on his (training-wheel-equipped) bike.

falling asleep and waking up in malakia is an amazing thing. as with most of sudan, you sleep oustide. but in malakia, with lights few and far between, at night the sky looks impossibly full of stars, and when you wake up to the rooster crowing - at least during the rainny season - the air is cool and the sun has painted the sky some beautiful combination of orange and purple and blue.

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hamoodi and his (much taller and older) cousin.

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hamoodi has just started taking his morning tea and bread solo -- just like the adults.

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