Erin and I
headed towards Zomba Plateau this weekend.
I met her while hiking Mulange. Parts of the road to Zomba are under
construction and our driver Hassan took a number of detours over rocky and
bumpy dirt roads. We passed the
notorious Zomba Central Prison which is the largest prison in Malawi. It is meant to be for about 800 prisoners but
it is so overcrowded that it is housing three times the number of inmates with
prisoners packed like sardines in their sleeping arrangement. The prevalence of
HIV and TB is not known but is believed to be high.
We did not stop at Zomba but instead
drove up to the plateau. The day was hot
and hazy. As we turned into the road that led up to the slope of the plareau, a sign said, "Welcome to Casa Blanca". Many women, girls and some boys were carrying heavy bundles of
firewood from the plateau to the town to sell.
Because of the distance they had to travel a piece of wood could fetch
50 to 100 kwacha (15 to 30 cents). Again
we rarely saw any man doing this kind of heavy work. Hassan said it is cultural.
Most of the heavy work is designated for women including tilling the land and
if a man is seen doing the chores he is not considered manly enough. That is not to say that there are men who do
till the land and chip boulders. If a
man earns any kwacha, most of it goes to drinks not to the family, unlike the
women who think of feeding her family.
The boys we saw carrying the wood bundles are selling them for their own
spending. As we drove higher we saw men
selling wild berries: strawberries, blackberries, mulberries, gooseberries, raspberries and
passion fruits. They were very sweet and
tasty. Being Muzungus, we were charged
Muzungu prices.
|
Carrying Wood down from Zomba Plateau |
|
Tasty and Colorful Berries |
We
asked if a woman sells the wood at the market, who takes care of her
children? Hassan said the older children or the grandmother if the children are
young. But I have seen women carrying
baby on their back with a bundle of goods to sell atop their head. Erin thought
the women here need “women’s lib” and again we asked why they even bother to
get married, Hassan answered with a hearty laugh, “They want what the men can
work at night.” And after a pause he chuckled, “They don’t know that they can
have it any time of the day.”
I
said, “They work too hard during the day.”
Ku Chawe Hotel, a
posh hotel sits at the very top of the plateau. The plateau is several
kilometers across, windy and cool. Queen Elizabeth and Emperor Haile Selassie
came to Zomba Plateau by helicopters and both had viewpoints named after them,
but the best one yet was an unnamed viewpoint that Hassan took us to, too rocky
for a helicopter landing. The day was
hazy mostly from the burning of the mountains so we could not see too clearly
but we imagine Mulange in the indistinct distance.
|
The Rocky Viewpoint |
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