Thursday, February 5, 2009

TIA

This Is Africa:

So I am eating breakfast Monday morning (the morning after the SuperBowl) watching the news on television. It is tuned to a local channel (TBC, Tanzanias Broadcast Corporation??) but it's an English language broadcast picked up from a Russian station. The news seems pretty normal, at little Soviet centered (they were advertising an special on South Ossetia) but it’s enough to keep me occupied while I am eating my eggs. Then the sports news comes on (or "Sport" as the rest of the world seems to call it), so I expect to at least get a score from the game. The coverage was pretty indepth; it covered most of Europe's major soccer leagues, even got into track and field a little bit, but there wasn't even a mention of the Superbowl.. silly American.

The next day (I really don't like the Steeler's) I am taking a quick 5 hour ferry over to the island of Pemba in the Zanzibar Archipelago. The boat ride is pretty uneventful (there was a loud noise and a little smoke at one point, but evidently it was inconsequential) and as we are getting to our destination a man comes up to the deck I’m on, selling soap. Now this in itself is not unusual, one is never lacking opportunities to buy food, toothpaste, bed sheets, or anything else whether you are sitting on a bus or in a cafĂ©. However what made this particular moment in capitalism auspicious was how many customers the guys had. In the 15 minutes he was selling his soap he probably had 20 customers, buying an average of 5 bars. I guess I’ll never know if it was great soap or a fantastic bargain because I didn’t buy any, but I can’t imagine the set of circumstances that caused so many people to purchase soap on the Pemba ferry…

1 comment:

Randy said...

Maybe if you wash a lot, the mosquitoes in Zanzibar leave you alone!