On-going Blog
June 9, 2013
Friends,
I am in South Africa, in
Pretoria. I have been here for a week
now having arrived in the late afternoon of last Sunday.
I have met both of my
Promoters, the two women who have been assigned to shepherd me through the
Research Proposal process and into the thesis process when that time
comes. I have been to the Pretoria
University of South Africa (UNISA) campus now.
It is gigantic. There are about
350,000 students globally. Because this
is an Open Distance Learning (ODL) University there are not generally a lot of
students physically present on the campus.
This would take a lot of effort for me to get used to and grasp.
I have learned that the
library here at the UNISA Pretoria campus is the largest in all of Africa. It is many floors high, some of them
underground, and one of the things that I like most is that the Masters and
Doctoral (M & D) students have a study are with wireless internet. I am hoping to use that for doing things like
Software Updates and downloading tv shows from iTunes. Yes, I am totally about scholarly pursuits,
am I not? NOT!!!
I am at this moment drinking
a cup of Roobios Tea that is a specialty of South Africa. I am rather pleasantly surprised, as it is
quite good. Since it is quite reasonably
priced here, in my own opinion, I may stock up on some to take back to South
Sudan for myself and perhaps as an indigenous gift for people as well.
I am having a time of
puzzlement here in Pretoria. This is a
country unlike any other that I have visited in Africa. Pretoria, or at least what I have seen of it
so far, is quite modern. I do understand
that I must get out of Pretoria and see some other areas of the country during
my stay here in order to see some of the other realities of South Africa. Such as the poverty.
Some of the prices here are
very good. What I found out yesterday in
trying to pursue the idea of getting a new battery for my Apple computer is
that technology costs a great deal more here than it does in the United States. Someone said that the US is the least pricey,
followed by Hong Kong. It just so
happens that six years ago, or so, I bought my first Apple computer in Hong
Kong and indeed I think that the price I paid for that computer was somewhat
comparable to the price in the United States.
So perhaps this is correct information.
There are many things which
are just plain easier to get ones hands on in the United States, and much more
affordable. I plan to be in the states
next summer and may have to hold off on some items until I am there. For a new cell phone here in South Africa the
stores desire a proof of residency, which clearly I do not have. I can’t recall if that was a requirement in
China where I bought my current, and very dated, cell phone. However I did
have proof of residency in China and that may be why I don’t remember, it
wasn’t an issue at that time.
A person is not supposed to
take two computers into Ethiopia. This
makes it difficult for those of us that live in places like South Sudan where
it is not possible to buy a computer should the only computer that a person has
crash. This means that because my path
frequently goes through Ethiopia I should not think of having two computers in
order to have a back up for my first (and only) computer. Yes, I back up data on an external hard
drive. Yes, I have replaced the charger
that was failing. Yes, I am trying to
get the battery replaced so that I won’t have quite as much concern as I do
right now before getting to the states next year. But what do I do if my current, first, and
only, computer should crash? How would I
access internet or word processing?
These are questions that missionaries in particular have to answer. Business people who have access to unlimited
funds may not have such a puzzle to work on.
I also had quite the
adventure with the modems and SIM cards for internet yesterday. I believe that I have three different
operating systems for wireless and/or SIM cards running around inside of my
Apple computer now. I just hope that I
didn’t accidently remove the one for Ethiopia a couple of days ago, and I may
well have done so. So now I understand
that just having a modem and a SIM card is not enough. The operating system for the particular SIM
card must also be installed. Any
missionary novices out there listen up!
This information is for you!
As long as a person has an
unlocked modem it appears that any SIM card can be used in the modem. The modem is just a vessel, it is not the
system. But the SIM card will not work
properly without the individual system being installed. As the man at South Africa Vodacom installed
the Vodacom system yesterday I pried him with questions. One cannot be charged roaming fees if one is
using the SIM card indigenous to the country of the SIM card while in that
country. Even if a different operating
system worked for using it. In
otherwords, I was using an operating system for Zain in South Sudan with the
Vodacom SIM card for South Africa.
Because I was using South Africa Vodacom in South Africa, even though I
was using the Zain system I was not charged roaming fees. This was a relief.
By the time I retire someday
in the misty future I shall hope to know enough to write a book on: What Every Missionary Should Know and Had no
Idea Who to Ask.
Now, on to the confusion I am
experiencing here in Pretoria. I believe
that most of the countries in Africa, with the exceptions of Ethiopia and
Liberia (someone else told me this so if it is wrong I am not responsible),
were colonized. It seems to me that in
the case of most of the countries the colonizers vacated the country. This is not so in South Africa. Nor does it appear to be so in, say, Sudan. In Sudan (in the north) the Arabs from the
Middle East colonized the country and have remained so that in reality Sudan is
an Arabic speaking Arab country and no longer African as I assume it was before
it was conquered and colonized. Most of
the original population of black Africans would have intermarried until the
original populations are no longer original, or have fled to South Sudan.
In South Africa it was, I
believe, the Dutch from the Netherlands, that colonized the country. At some point in something called the Boer
War, I believe that the English fought a war with the Dutch over the country
and the Dutch won. Cry the Beloved
Country and Cry Freedom, two excellent movies on South Africa, helped me
understand some of this more and I am still unsure of my historical footing
here. At any rate, the country
definitely has both black and white
(European ancestry) Africans; although apparently it is not normal for the
white citizens to be called white Africans.
From what I have observed so
far there still seems to me to be a great separation in the lives of the blacks
and the whites here. Having grown up in
the Pacific Northwest in the United States (the Seattle area) I have not spent
much time in the American South to know if this may still be the case there or
not. In my mind I guess that the
American South is what I perceive as being the closest to my experience here in
South Africa of black and white.
I am hoping for more clarity
on this in the coming days, weeks and months.
This also has some ramifications for my thoughts on the United
States. The Europeans were the original
colonizers of the part of North America that became, over time, the USA. “We” did not leave. So in a sense “we” are something like the
Dutch in South Africa. It absolutely
dumbfounds and amazes me how history books are written from the perspective of
the “winner”. I do not remember learning
anything about how the Europeans colonized the Native Americans, the indigenous
people, and did not become good neighbors but instead put the indigenous people
into little pieces of land and took over their homeland. Hmmm, sounds a little bit like Israel and
Palestine too, doesn’t it? And, come to
think of it, this is only about the indigenous people issue in the United
States. We also have the African
American issue that includes the Civil Rights Movement and the history of the
slave trade that involved many countries and much injustice, heart break and
terrible brokenness. All of these things
are a part of American history. It is
not just the red, white and blue.
Anyhow, these are issues I am
grappling with along with the Research Proposal.
Blessings,
Debbie
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