Two easy flights, and I’m looking out of the window and down
at Lilongwe spread out like a child’s roadway play mat beneath us. It looks disappointingly normal, just like a
UK airport – I don’t know what I thought the landscape would look like, mind
you – vast herds of stampeding wildebeest, perhaps? Or a family of charging rhinoceros?
Nothing so exotic appeared to distract my attention from imminent collision
with the ground at a considerable speed. I did notice that the runway appeared to be
dirt, but this magically switched to concrete just as the plane came in to
contact with the ground, and a tension I hadn’t previously realised was there
was suddenly released with a robust outburst of clapping and cheering. Its decades since I’ve heard passengers burst
into spontaneous applause when the pilot successfully lands the plane. It
tickled me pink.
The landscape around the airport was dull and scrubby
initially, but once we had passed through the (very small) central terminal and
stepped out the other side, everything magically changed. The landscape greened and bloomed all around
us. Palm trees, extraordinarily brightly coloured flowers and plants of every
kind, and of course lots of Malawian citizens in their brightly coloured
clothing. Plus the chirping of the cicadas, always a wonderful sound.
Andrew, a taxi driver, was there to meet me. The drive in to the Animal Sanctuary took
about 30 minutes. It was a very pretty
drive in many ways, but some of the broken down shacks we passed marred the
landscape. These were interspersed with
little clusters of men, women and children sitting on the ground and apparently
hoping to sell some of the pumpkin like things they had in the middle. I
assumed these were shacks were to provide shelter against the worst of the
midday sun.
Then we came to a stretch of road where a curious structure
began – a long neat brick wall, running roughly parallel to the road, and it
went on for miles and miles. Sometimes a second wall appeared meeting it at 90
degrees; sometimes an enormous square was marked out in the brick. Andrew the driver explained these were built
with money given to the Malawi government in order to build homes for the
people. These walls were about 6’ high,
and they ran for many kilometres on and off.
All around the walls weeds grew, some of them so high they were almost
as high as the walls themselves. There
was no sign of any houses getting any further along. No roofs, no building materials lying around,
no workers. Andrew explained the money
was stolen by corrupt government officials, and none of these promised houses
got any closer to being finished than that.
Meanwhile, shabbily dressed women grey with dust walked along the dry hot roadside with
impossibly large bundles balanced on their heads. I could not see where they had come from, nor could I make out where they were going. Here and there were clusters of men, women and children sitting in the grey dust beside the road for no obvious reason Now and then appeared a pile of what
appeared to bundles of firewood neatly bound with twine;
small dishevelled children were just sitting or playing along the
roadside.
I asked Andrew if there were many homeless people in
Malawi. He was scornful. No! - Well, very few - no one is homeless if
they want to have a home. It’s easy to
build a home! There is plenty of mud and wood everywhere, and corrugated iron
can be found lying around in all sorts of places. You can use mud and grass
anyway! No, no-one is homeless if they
want to have a home. I had the feeling
he was despising his idea of ‘homeless’ as just plain lazy. A little further on we passed what appeared
to be some old derelict bunkers or homes, and I asked about these. Andrew was
astonished. Obviously, ordinary people
didn’t live in a place like that, he told me.
You had to be very rich indeed to have such a home. Many of these has running water, quite a few
had electricity. His voice became
hushed, apparently awed at the thought of such senseless luxury.
Later I learned that Malawi is the poorest country on
earth. The majority of people do live
in the little broken down bits of shacks I has seen along the road. Only 7% have access to electricity. The vast majority used firewood as their main
fuel for cooking and heating purposes. I
didn’t ask what they used for lighting, in case I shocked poor Andrew again
with my reckless ideas. I just accepted
that they very probably don’t have any.
When we arrived at Lilongwe, it took me a while to clock
it. No enormous fancy signboards, no
advertising and fanfare. A dirt road led
towards a dusty gateway, behind which were a cluster of grey looking
shack/buildings. I’ll write more about
Lilongwe tomorrow.
One of the first pieces of news I received was that there
were over 200 animals living at the sanctuary.
A new orphaned monkey was reported to the centre 3 days ago, and he has
been being bottle fed and cared for overnight since. Today he was placed with a very motherly
monkey who has taken on many orphans.
Little Cesar seems very disturbed, not surprisingly, but the staff talk
about him with great hope and enthusiasm.
Lots of crossed fingers and toes, we will see what he is up to in the
morning.
Sounds like a good start. Hope things are going well and that you are enjoying yourself! Heather x
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