After my first few days in Kenya I have gotten a lot of
different advice from a lot of different people that I will now share with you
all.
1. Do not get involved with the locals. Many have given this advice: my travel doctor, friends, and family. However, I will admit that I broke this rule the first day. We went to the giraffe park in Karen and I met a beautiful giraffe named Helen who came over and gave the group “kisses”. Seeing giraffes in person was an amazing experience and I couldn’t help but fall in love with the awkward yet graceful animal.
Sorry Mom, I couldn't help it- Just look at that face!
2. Lie about everything. In our information packet that we
got during orientation week we were told that in the city, people will lie
about their name, age, money situation, phone number, basically anything you
ask about them. We were also told to make up these things when asked, as it is
unnatural for someone to ask this of you and will probably cause you trouble in
the future. However, we were also told that Kenyans are very friendly and the
next day we had “the drop off”. This is an activity where they dropped us off
in the middle of the city and told us to ask questions of strangers. This will
be a very necessary skill to acquire when it is time to conduct our independent
study projects. My drop off was at Nyumbani orphanage for children with HIV/Aids.
All 112 children there were sick and had no one to take care of them due to the
stigma against the HIV/AIDs in Kenya. It was an incredible experience. We sat
with the Kindergarteners while they practiced their letters and they showed us
around the school and playground. I even got to see what Westerners or
“Wazungu” look like from the outside. A bunch of Canadians stopped by and it was so bizarre to see
them with huge cameras in the kid’s faces and treating them as if they were a
novelty. I really hope that I come to understand the culture in a deeper sense
and connect with the culture on a deeper level that helps me learn and truly
understand what is happening in politics and health here in the country. I
would like to add that Kenyans are truly nice and willing to help out, you just
have to be aware, like in any city, that some do not have the best intentions.
Nairobi!
Traffic downtown
This leads me to my last piece of advice:
4. Embrace
the chaos. Nairobi is a wonderful and chaotic city. Nothing goes as expects and
you have to learn to go with it. We had a day in the city and experienced a
matatu- this is a 10 passenger van that miraculously “fits” 15 people inside
it. Since we are wazungu we have to pay extra and after struggling to find one
that would give us a good enough price (Kenyans are all about haggling) it ran
out of gas right outside the city. This began our tour of downtown Nairobi
where we visited the University, saw the Bomb Blast site, and ate at a restaurant
(also a fairly chaotic experience). The cars drive like mad men- I even asked
if you needed a license to drive here apparently you do- Basically the mentality
is do what you need to. It doesn’t matter if you are driving on the wrong side
if there is a pothole and passing is more of a sport than a necessity. The city
is filled with people, noise, smog, culture, and life. I am learning to love
the chaos and adventures that this experience will bring me.
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