Monday,
June 24, 13
Today was one of those days that,
when you ask me what Ghana’s really like,
I’ll tell you all about; where a series of unexpected events results in pure
adventure, smiles foe everyone involved, and everything somehow works out
brilliantly.
After heading to bed at 9:30, I woke up early at 7:30 to a thunderous
rainstorm. In Ghana, the rainstorms
don’t ever last long – there’s a burst of heavy rain followed by relatively
clear skies for a short while before the next one. I joined Keith for some mango and Ankaa before heading out with Dave for
egg sandwiches. The breakfast was odd;
the cook didn't understand our order correctly and we ended up with one monstrous
egg sandwich and a cup of tea mixed with instant coffee and a whole lot of
sugar. I was the tea recipient, and
drank as much as I could before I decided to peel off in search of
interviewees.
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Keith and his chunky egg sandwich |
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This goat was eying us with quite an impressive mustache |
My first stop was a Bel Aqua salesman. A nice man, Abraham pointed me in the general direction of some water plants,
but I had trouble understanding his English.
I decided I’d take a different route; one off the beaten main strip of
town. I took an offshoot down to the
left, followed that for a while, and took a few more cuts deeper into the
residential area of Tamale hoping to get lost ant take a taxi out later in the
day.
Far down one street, I could see a
lot of commotion and many people gathered near a mosque. I decided “Why
not,” and headed to the cluster.
After returning all the hello’s form the younger crowd, I talked to a
man named Hassad who informed me that
the gathering was a registry and photo event for National Health Service. Ghana has recently decided to subsidize the
healthcare industry and provide basic healthcare to all Ghanaians who aren’t on
a private health plan. After getting a
tour, Hassad fetched his younger brother to bring me to a sachet plant.
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National Health Service registry - notice the picture station to the left |
On our walk, I gathered an entourage
of small boys and girls. Obviously, this deep in the village, white people
don’t often stroll through. We arrived
at the water plant, Mirror Water, but
it was closed. I asked if they knew of
another sachet plant, and an older man nearby overheard the conservation and
directed us to another plant. After another
quick walk, we “arrived.” Or so they
told me. We had walked to the central
market, but I wasn’t convinced that here, in the heart of town, a sachet plant
was producing. I asked if I could see
the plant, and my entourage asked the woman something in Dagbani. She quickly moved
to a large wooden trunk and began to move large animal skins onto a small
table. She had goat, lamb, snake,
alligator, and more. I stopped her and
told the kids – I want to see a “Sachet water plant.” They all nodded, pleased that they had
brought me to my destination. Obviously
my English wasn't working out well, so I decided to go for a visual. I walked down to the gutter and pulled out an
empty sachet. Everyone – the kids and
the skin saleswomen – had an “OH, that’s what he meant” moment. Apparently sachet water in Dagbani must sound like animal skins.
A young man overheard my
confusion, and introduced himself as Joseph.
Joseph said he knew of a plant nearby, but we would have to take his
motorcycle. “Sure, why not” I said. He
hopped on, and I sat on the metal crate on back, and we drove out of the
marketplace. He didn’t talk much on the motorbike, but he let me take a picture
of us while riding.
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If you can't tell, I'M ON THE BACK OF THIS MOTORCYCLE |
We drove very far, at least 3-4
miles out of town, before reaching a large water plant. I pointed out the plant, noticing the
trucks. Here, I met Sharif, the salesman for “Icepack” water. He gladly agreed to a nice, long, recorded
interview. Afterwards, we were sitting
in some large armchairs outside the plant, and Sharif said, “Oh, my father has
come.” At the gates, a nice Toyota
pulled up. There were at least half a
dozen people, mostly children, in the car.
The driver, however, was no child; An older man with a salt and pepper
mustache stepped out of the car. He wore
mirror aviator sunglasses, a traditional northern Ghanaian robe, and had a
cigarette between his grinning teeth.
Sharif had told me a little bit about his family, how his great
grandfather had immigrated to Tamale from Lebanon, and this man certainly was not Ghanaian looking. But he certainly was Ghanaian.
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The big man and I! |
The man introduced himself as Faiz Moutrage, but Mochacho was his nickname (he had a thick mustache). We talked for a long while about politics,
immigration, business, and I quickly learned that this was a very important
man. He owned a sachet water plant as a side business in addition to running the Tamale Coca Cola
plant across the street (a HUGE factory).
He was a war hero during the revolution in the 80s, showing me scars and
bones that had been broken and healed poorly.
In addition, he was a tribal chief of Tamale; but not just any chief, the head chief of the northern
district. And to top it all off, he had
recently served as a member of parliament in Accra (the equivalent of a
senator). He shared campaign posters
with me, both for his parliamentary campaign and bid for vice president
(unsuccessful; he was the CPP candidate, the third party in Ghana and least powerful). All through this meeting, everyone else
around me was silent and kept their heads down; this was a very important guy I
had run into!
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The poster he gave me from his successful parlaiment campaign - his pseudonym was "Mochacho" during war times |
After pictures, thanks, and phone
number exchanges (he entered his name in my contacts as “CHIEF MOCHACHO”),
Joseph and I hopped on the motorcycle again and headed far out of town, maybe for a 20 minute ride, to another sachet
water plant for another interview. By
now I couldn't stop grinning, and I was hungry for lunch, so I asked if he
could give me a ride back to town. He
obliged, but first, he said I’d have to see the national stadium. We headed to an ENORMOUS stadium which holds
40,000 people, and arrived at the front gate.
Joseph sweet talked the guard to get us in, and I got to explore the stadium floor! Incredible.
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It was pretty cool getting let into the floor of the national stadium |
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Joseph, my motorcycle buddy, and I |
Joseph finally brought me back to
town, and the rest of the day was filled with storytelling, transcription, and
some cold Ghanaian beer. It may seem
foolish to rely on fate, but Ghana seems to always deliver.