Friday, July 5, 2013

Langa Township or 7455


Molo.  

Today I woke up at about 7:45am then I has breakfast. Then I got in a car with the Evanston Sollingers/my family to the township of Langa.  We first went to a center where they were making pottery and art.  In the township, there are three classes: the poor, the middle class and the rich.  First, we visited the poor neighborhood.  In the poor class, people were living in hostels, shipping crates and shacks.  In the hostels, there were three families in each room which was the size of my bathroom.  And so sixteen people lived in a single tiny in a hostel "apartment."  There was one bathroom and one sink for 60 people.    In the shipping container, the size used on a train, there were two families.  And the bathroom and water are all outside and communal.  
But the shacks were the fanciest of the poor because in the shacks they had privacy.  There would be one family and could be two rooms and a kitchen.  All about the size of my bedroom.  They had electricity.  But you had to walk really far to the toilet and water pump.   The shacks, on the outside, look like a fort a kid would make.  It was made out of scraps of wood, metal, and cardboard.  On the inside, it is not dirty but there are holes in the roof.   So if it is raining, with the holes in their roof, they put buckets.  But if you see someone on the roof trying to fix a leak,that means that the leak is over their bed.  

So our guide, named Siviwe, lives in Langa in the rich part of town but he rents a bedroom in the back of the house.  He started an non-for-profit organization to show the kids that they can do something great in the world.  It is called Happy Feet (not the movie and no penguins).  This guy teaches his kids gum boot dancing (this is the type of dancing that tribal people would do while they were working in the mines). (It involves rubber boots).  He also feeds the kids.    They also do shows outside the township.  Most of the adults in Langa can't read.  So Siviwe wants to add two new parts to the school:  teaching reading and computers.   The kids in Happy Feet did a performance for us and it was pretty amazing and an awesome experience.  The little kids who also watched the show held our hands and sat down next to us to watch the show.   

After the show, we went to a place for lunch in the township called Mzoli's Meats.  You walked into this place and it looks like a butchers shop.  There is uncooked meet in trays in glass.  You pick out what meat you want.  They put your group's meat on one platter with some sauce.  Then you go back to the kitchen and you see lots of braais.  And you give them your meat and sauce.  I was expecting it to be gross.  But we got our food, and lets just say, in 10 minutes there was no food.  It was delicious.  

Then we came back to Georgia and Sophia's house.  Then we want to a cafe to meet Lindy and Bev and all my 2nd cousins.  

Now I'm blogging for you.  

On the tour, Siviwe taught us some Khosa, it is the language where you click.  

Enkhosee, thank you in Khosa.  

Lots of love, 
Sarah 

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Flying over Cape Town

This morning at about six o'clock, i went to the bathroom and in the room, there was a glass door in between our room and our parents room.  So, I'm coming back from the bathroom and I'm walking towards my room, and I am walking and then there is a big thud.  I wonder what that was from?  And I wonder what the bump on my head is from?  Oh yeah, I walked into a door! After the door fiasco, we had breakfast.  Then we went to the airport with barefoot banchi, otherwise known as Sophia.  Then we got on a plane to Cape Town, pretty special huh.  We saw Table Mountain from the bird's eye view.  After the flight, we went to Georgie's house.  Then we ate dinner with Monica and her kids.  And now, I am blogging for you.  
Love is always in the air
Lots of love,
Sarah 

Where is it?


Yesterday  (July 2nd)
At 5:30 in the morning, the Evanston Sollingers went on a safari.  We got to see lots of animals like rhino, giraffe, and zebra.  About as close as you can get to zebra and giraffe.  For two hours, we went on the safari.  

When we came back, we ate breakfast.  Have you ever seen monkeys at the breakfast table.  I don't mean me.  Well, I did and it wasn't Ben either.  It was vervet monkeys.  The monkeys tried to get in the kitchen.  

We need more sunscreen!!!  Because apparently mom has been flinging the sunscreen at some Ben-like animal.  But it was outside the tent.  I now call mom "a professional sunscreen thrower."  

Today (July 3rd)

Do you know any special way for packing?  Because it would come in handy because today we packed and moved.  There was warthog, buck, zebra, monkeys, baboon, genet, and hyenas in our campsite. Then we got in the car and drove to the place we are at that no one know what the name is. Then we built forts at the place we are staying at. Then we went to dinner and now I am blogging for you.
Lot and lots of love,
Sarah/squiggles  
            P.s  the place we stayed was called the Hatchery.  Look it up.  

Elephant Driving


Today we  went on a rod trip. On the way to the place we were going (called mpila camp) we stopped at an interaction. The interaction was with elephants! The elephants were in an enclosure but we stood right next to us. We got to feed the elephant and I had to put my hand in his mouth and put it on its tounge to feed it. We also fed him by putting food on his trunk. It was awesome!
Then we got back in the car and drove to mpila camp. Then we had dinner and now I am blogging for you in our tiny tent for 2.
Love your fan,
Sarah