Ile de Goree

November 4, 2007, Île de Gorée, Dakar, Senegal

When the ferry was ready for us, everyone in the waiting room squeezed through two small exits onto the dock. Then, we crossed over to the ferry with two guys grabbing each passenger to help them across the one foot wide step to get on board. Once on board, the two Germans and I sat on the upper deck. I chose a spot in the shade. In port next to us was a giant container and cargo ship, twelve stories tall. The ferry boat is new, launched in 2006 under the name of Beer. The Germans and I joked quite a bit about that… like, how come no free beer on board? 😉

From the ferry, we had excellent views back to the Dakar harbor and Cape Vert (I think it’s called).

Soon, we reached the open sea with magnificent views of Île de Gorée.

We sailed around the tip of the island where the fortress, now a museum, is located to get a great view of the harbor, beach, and seaside.

The island boasts some wonderful old houses.

Once on land, we paid a tourist tax and walked toward the Maison des Esclaves (Slave House), which was closed for siesta time. On the way to the Maison, we saw this monument to the end of slavery with a man and some children having their photo taken alongside the monument.

We also saw a breadfruit tree with breadfruit hanging from its branches.

We entered a cathedral with some black statues, as well as white ones.

On our way up to a peak where the old cannons are gradually rusting away, we saw many arts and crafts stands and paintings painted by local artists.

On the way down from the peak, we saw a local soccer game with some guys in real good shape.

We walked over to the port for lunch. A man tried to get us to eat at his restaurant, but I really wanted to eat at the place recommended by the Lonely Planet guidebook. Eventually we escaped his clutches and made our way over to the Ana Saban restaurant.

After lunch, we went to the Musée Historique de l’IFAN on the island.

I somehow lost the Germans at the museum, so I walked alone back over past the beach to the Maison des Esclaves, now finished with their siesta break. I started by taking pictures of the “Door of No Return,” which was apparently the last place where slaves bound for the Great Passage across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas set foot on the African continent.

Here’s what it was like to stand just in front of the door out to where the slave ships used to load their human cargo and the sign currently posted by the Door of No Return.

Inside the Maison des Esclaves, an exhibit explained about the history of the slave trade and showed some of the actual fetters used to bind slaves.

In a small museum office with lots of signs and sayings posted on the walls, there is an elder who must have helped to establish the museum. I went in to thank him for what he has done and he replied that to the contrary he must thank me for coming.

After the disturbing and moving museum, it was a real treat to be able to relax on the beach with locals and people visiting from all over the world. I met a sweet Italian fellow (married) who is working in nutrition in Africa. It was so much fun that the Germans and I had to run for the Beer ferry when it was time to go.

To round out the evening, we dashed to Point des Almadies to see the sunset and eat dinner on the seashore.

Waiting for Ile de Goree

November 4, 2007, Île de Gorée Ferry Terminal Waiting Room, Dakar, Senegal

Mixed chatter of a friendly crowd waiting to board a ferry from Dakar to Île de Gorée. On the island, we find the Maison des Esclaves (Slave House) where rich white people cavorted in luxury above a basement where slaves languished in cages. There is some debate about how many slaves were actually transported through Gorée—most historians now agree the bulk of the slave trade left for the Great Passage across the Atlantic from slave fortresses further southeast along the African coast.

The temperature is hot and muggy and I’m sweating a lot.

Some people in the waiting room wear colorful clothing, a grey-haired elder gentleman with a sky-blue jalibaya, a woman next to him who may be his wife wearing a brilliant dress, geometrically patterned white linen over a turquoise layer matching the scarf ingeniously folded on her head, along with a diaphonous white scarf around her shoulders, several gold bracelets on her right wrist and a wristwatch on the left.

As each of the locals enter the room, they greet each person they know, and even those they don’t know who are nearby, with what seem somewhat cautious, reticent, or self-conscious handshakes and big heartfelt smiles. Mothers carry children on their laps or pass them to older siblings to care for them.

Besides me, the only foreigners I could see in the waiting room at first are a small group of Italian tourists with a fellow who ma be their Senegalese guide with whom they seem on quite familiar term—perhaps a family member?

Two women on either side of me participate in a typical greeting ritual, chatting back and forth with standard greetings and almost choreographed responses, but most of the discussion is less structured, with less of a sense of societal obligation.

Last evening, I wandered out of the hotel after a long jet-lag nap to find an Internet cafe and to eat dinner. As a white foreigner, it’s difficult to walk the streets of downtown Dakar without young men approaching you to be your guide or for some paid service in one way or another. Since I’m not intrigued by activities that generally focus on how to transfer money from my pockets into theirs, these interactions can at times be annoying, especially because I fell that my naïve friendliness on new encounters turns into a more jaded suspicious attitude with most people who now approach me on the street. As I asked a bank security guard for the location of an Internet cafe, another fellow who he seemed to trust approached me and said he’d lead me there. As I discovered afterwards, he intentionally walked me past the nearest open Internet cafe at Place de l’Indépendence so he could extend his chat with me about the luck he had in purchasing a bottle of beer and the great reggae party he was going to that evening. I kept telling him I had not interest and he kept offering and suggesting until I basically thanked him once last time and walked away.

At the Internet cafe, I couldn’t accomplish much in a hour at CFA300 because the keyboard had a strange layout and the spacebar got stuck every other time I pressed it.

When I finished, I asked the propreitor if I could bring in my own laptop, but he refused without giving me a good reason. In the cafe, one could also make telephone calls. I met two Germans who there to make calls home, a diplomat and his friend. At first I thought they must be a gay couple, but they explained their wives were back home in Berlin. We all went to dinner at a nearby restaurant called Keur N’Doye (N’Doye House), which had excellent food at a reasonable price and took care to prepare vegetarian food for me. The diplomat had traveled a bit through Africa though not really much to places I was going. His friend was born to a missionary father (and presumably mother) in Namibia. They returned to Germany when he turned six and later visited Namibia for a vacation when he was a teenager.

After dinner, we went our separate ways. I wanted to check out Cafe l’Iguane, rumored to have some gay activity. I walked over to it and found a place closed for renovations. Disappointed, I wandered a bit more looking for another interesting place without success, so I bought a bottle of water at one shop and a packet of laundry detergent at another, then headed back to the hotel.

This morning, the hotel receptionist told me I could switch from the larger higher-priced room to a smaller room for the original price I had expected, so I did. Then, I walked from the hotel to the port, waited in the sun to buy a ferry ticket, and entered the waiting room. The Germans from last night are now here.

Arrival in Dakar, Senegal

November 3, 2007, Hotel Océanic, Dakar, Senegal

Je suis arrivé à  Dakar! The flights here were long, but mostly smooth. I only had to sing my fear-of-flying song on take-offs, landings, and one period of turbulence. South African Airways has reasonably good vegetarian food and good on-flight entertainment. I watched two movies: Opal Passion, the touching story of an Australian girl with imaginary friends, and another film whose title I’ve forgotten about Nelson Mandela, told through the eyes of his white prison guard as his attitude toward Mandela and the freedom movement evolves over time.

Dakar airport arrival was relatively painless and practically on time at around 5:40am local time (Greenwich mean time). Descending the portable stairs wheeled up to the airplane, we walked to a bus that took us to the main terminal for baggage. In the bus, I chatted in French, the lingua franca around here, with a friendly guy about what I thought were the Dakar airport closures. He exclaimed with surprise: “Dakar airport will also close?” I asked what he meant and he clarified that it was Bamako airport that would be closed for renovations through November 7. So, that solved the mystery. I thanked him for helping me to figure out that it was Bamako airport, not Dakar, that is closed.

In the airport, I purchased the flight from Dakar to Bamako for November 8 at the outrageous price of nearly US$500. That brought my total airfare for this second African research trip up to around US$5000. The Air Senegal ticket price was quoted in the currency called Communauté Financière Africaine (CFA) of which there are two varieties. The variety used in Senegal is also known as XOF I think and is also sometimes named after the Banque Centrale des États de l’Afrique de l’Ouest (BCEAO) which issues the currency for a group of west African countries. Since the airline ticket sales agent told me the equivalent of the fare in US dollars at a rate of CFA450 per dollar, I decided to change money at that rate with the fellow standing outside the closed bank in the airport. He initially had offered me CFA435 per dollar based on the rate sign he pointed at in the closed bank. I’m still not sure if I got a good deal, but at least it was a better deal.

Almost everything here seems somewhat negotiable. Speaking of which, I somewhat foolishly also agreed to avail myself of the taxi service from a fellow who was hanging around the airport, rather than going directly outside to where the taxi queue was. I told him I already knew the rate should be CFA3500 to the hotel. Alcohol on his breath–an excellent advertisement for a taxi service–he discussed and discussed and pointed out every possible way I should pay him and the person who turned out to be the actual taxi driver more, including the tricks of pretending not to know I wanted the hotel at the center of the city rather than one near the airport, stopping at the gas station to get me to pay for gas before arriving at the destination, offering to by my guide for anywhere and everywhere I might want to go, and demanding a commission in addition to the fare from both myself and the hotel receptionist when we finally arrived safely at the hotel. I simply told him three times we had agreed on a price and that was that. The receptionist rolled his eyes as if he’d seen the same theater a thousand times. The guy finally left when no one paid any more attention. After he left, the receptionist told me that all the unofficial taxi guys are crooks and I was lucky to arrive without them robbing me.

Because the room wasn’t ready at the ungodly hour when I arrived, I waited in the pleasant garden café of the establishment. I profited from the time by setting up my backups onto the tiny USB disks I brought along as I had on the last African trip. It’s such a comfort to know that even if the laptop gets stolen (goddess forbid!), I’ll still have the crucial writing and travel data with me. I just have to remember to back stuff every time I change anything. The woman working the cafe asked me if I wanted breakfast. Because of something the receptionist had said earlier, I wasn’t sure if I qualified, but she assured me it would be no problem for CFA2000 (about US$4.50). The hot chocolate was excellent but the croissant was too crusty. I was exhausted. The receptionist from the next shift was there and told me that they didn’t have any more single rooms, but I could have a four-person room for CFA35800 instead of the CFA21800 I had planned to pay. I said that wouldn’t be possible. She said since I’m planning to stay until November 8, she could offer me the four-person room at the double-room rate of CFA25,800, until a single room opens up. I agreed, not wanting to schlep my stuff to another place and deal with another taxi ride.

I went for a walk over to the nearby office of Orange, the cell provider here in Senegal that includes international calling, so I could activate the cell phone I purchased when last in Cairo. Unfortunately, the office had closed at noon, so I won’t have a working phone until Monday morning. Walking back to the hotel, I noticed some activity around the Marché Kermel near the hotel. I browsed some of the local crafts and jewelry to the almost continuous bonjour‘s of the sellers, then went in to the market proper where I saw some good fruit. I purchased a kilo each of local oranges and nearly local bananas at the no doubt outrageous unbargained price of CFA1200, but I passed on the expensive imported apples and oranges, thus avoiding mixing apples and oranges. 😉 The transaction involved a fair amount of discussion with two of the guys working the staff, with a gentleman I expect was the true proprietor waiting behind the stall in the background. We had the usual “where are you from?”, name, and profession, with a little bit of the stuff about the hot Senegalese women thrown in for good measure. Practically every guy I talk with has refered to their womenfolk as “gazelles” and “nana” and who knows what else, along with hand gestures symbolizing which part of my anatomy is supposed to go goddess knows where. I haven’t let on to anyone so far that I’m more interested romantically and sexually in guys than women.

Returning to the hotel, I realized I had indeed forgotten to pack something, just as I had predicted when packing at home. Luckily, the item isn’t a total necessity: it’s the wonderfully simple blue plastic orange squeezer that would come in handy for the oranges I purchased at the market.

Tonight, I plan to check out a restaurant with typical Senegalese food. Tomorrow, I plan to visit Isle de Gorée with its infamous Maison des Esclaves.

Escaping the USA…

November 2, 2007, Flight from SFO to JFK

I finally have a moment to sit and just write. What a wonderful feeling!

The travel has its own set of anxieties. I’m in a race of physical progress across the continent versus my ability to reserve flights, find accommodation, and obtain visas, all of which is a constantly shifting scenario that regularly confounds me.

The latest incident: I confirmed my intercontinental flight to Dakar multiple times, but apparently the airport may be closing in Dakar, hopefully not until after I land there. Instead of finding out from United or South African Airlines, the transcontinental and intercontinental airlines I chose for these segments, I discovered this problem while on the phone trying to keep a reservation to fly out of Dakar on Air Senegal. Getting on the phone with Air Senegal is an amazing trick. They are open either late at night or early in the morning during the Pacific time we have at my home in San Francisco. When I call out of business hours, the line is simply busy. When I call during business hours, their phone answers with a recording and accompanying ditty in French about the wonders of Air Senegal, not many of which I can pretend to have experienced. About once out of every twenty calls, the Air Senegal operator comes on the line before the phone system arbitrarily hangs up on me leaving a long quiet static followed by a loud and insistent beeping, to which I hang up and try again. When I do get through on the phone, the first minute is a panicked negotiation to ensure that we are actually on the phone and speaking with each other. I’ve lubricated my rusty French through repeated forays into air reservation territory. The surprise at 2am this morning was that the flight I wanted from Dakar to Bamako on November 6th was canceled, well they didn’t exactly say it was canceled, just that the Dakar airport would be closed. How about the 7th? Flight full. Well, actually no, airport still closed. And the 5th? Nope, closed. And the 8th? Yes, we will switch your reservation to October 8. And who knows? O, and by the way, you can’t pay for the reservation over the phone. By credit card? No, you must pay in person at an Air Senegal office. Is there one at the airport in Dakar? Yes. Will it be open when my flight is scheduled to arrive early in the morning? Yes, it’s open 24 hours. All this in French with a good dose of static in the background, plus a distracting echo at least on my end of the line. Perhaps I will still have a reservation when I get to the Air Senegal office at Dakar airport, that is, if the airport is still open so we can fly there. The Air Senegal jingle still rattles around in my head.

My itinerary is tight-packed, so an extra two days in Dakar, while potentially productive and fun, will wreak havoc on the schedule further down the line. I may have to cut back on early Ghana aka Wagadu empire sites in Mauritania for example.

All in all, I tell myself I am doing well. I only broke down once so far to bring in a travel agency: Air Treks, who specialize in multi-destination world travel. And that only when I couldn’t get Air Senegal to issue me a ticket for one set of flights or even to make a reservation for another set of flights. O yes, the only place I want to fly where a single non-stop flight is available is from Dakar to Bamako. All the rest are multiple segments to get from one place to another, even if the crow’s eye distance is shorter than the route from Dakar to Bamako. And of course those multi-segment flights can only combine when airlines have fare rules permitting one to book them that way. And the fares on some of these shorter flights are quite high. Why fly? I simply can’t cover the distance in the amount I have alloted for this travel without resorting to many flights. Even as is, I will be traveling overland a lot, sometimes under difficult conditions probably similar to what I experienced between Ethiopia and Sudan or in the middle of the Sudanese desert.

Now, off to write some historical fiction. Think positive: the next blog entry will come from west african soil!

Ninth San Francisco Queer Longhair Party: Getting Intimate

At a certain point, the evening got more intimate.

(Left pic on previous row brought to you by Mike of San Francisco.)

(Right pic on previous row brought to you by David of West Hollywood.)

To see the full-frontal nudity at the party, you’d have to have attended. Those who did attend can request a password from Stardust to see the naked longhair pix