32 hours of travel later, I made it to PE and to my new
home! I’ve been here a day, and I already know that this is going to be a very
different experience than I had last year.
I had a fabulous few months and was exposed to things that have really
shaped my outlook, but I can already tell that this is going to push me in a
whole new direction.
I am presently living in a suburb of Port Elizabeth with a
white parishioner family of Mater Dei. Beyond being fabulously accommodating
and hospitable, they are fascinating bunch of people! They are both very well versed on the social
and economic issues that face the future of this country, and feel that there
is a world of potential waiting… I think I will be doing a lot of listening and
absorbing! The home is lovely, and I
have a flat to myself.
A bit of our dinner conversation was about a brand new
township that is forming across town: a white’s only township. Lewis spoke of the decimated opportunity for
white skilled and semi-skilled laborer jobs in the past few years, and so this
flux of families have erected a few hundred shacks and created a township. I vaguely remember the occasional white
beggar, but I had no idea that there was a whole community of people that don’t
get a whole lot of consideration.
My biggest first world problem at the moment is learning to
drive….. I have forgotten how hilly this
city is. I know that people use the
horn more that we are used to in the states, but holy, do I get tooted at! I
have the cutest little matchbox car, a florescent blue two door Citron coup, that
my post-tamsak, 5’10’’ body looks absolutely boss in. J
I met a very lively group of people that I will be working
with for the coming year, and I must say, they are a hoot. I start work on tomorrow, train for week, and then
have a holiday for a month! Talk about
Africa time.. Hope to have more to say next time!
The car is definitely a cute fashion statement. You can coordinate lots of bright outfits with it! :)
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