Sharing Ideas

Sharing Ideas

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Electricity and Change


Last summer, the Opanga water committee would purchase oil in the next town over and bring it to Luanda to run the water pump. Saturdays were the busiest day when the pump was filled and everyone came to collect water. They would continue collecting water starting with the filtered water until it ran out. Then, they would use the unfiltered water until it ran out. Now, the pump is going to be run by electricity. This will make things much better as the water committee can save the money they normally spend on fuel for maintenance and repairs to keep the pump running. The tricky part that I did not realize is how complicated the process is to get power. Even Benson’s brother who has fully paid for his home to be added to the electric grid is still waiting and has been waiting for months for the power company to come out and do this.

Every day I have been here, I have seen people gathered at the tapstand. I can watch them as I wake up in the morning. The crowd thins as the sun becomes hot in the afternoon and continues to grow again as people collect water in the evening. I have noticed that the animals have not come as close to the taps. The donkeys still enter the gate, but wait by its entrance to carry the containers of water after they are filled.

Benson’s daughter told me that before the pump, she used to bring the donkeys down to the lake every day for water. She would leave early in the morning and walk about half an hour to fill the jerry cans then bring them back traveling uphill the whole way home. Things are definitely improving for the women (and donkeys) in the community.

There are some things about electricity that I worry will change in the community though. One of my favorite times of day is the evening after dinner when everyone “stories.” I love hearing people share tales from their past and stories about the world. I worry that this will turn into tv time like it is in the US and at Benson’s house they already watch lots of tv and they have only had power for a month. Benson says it is really nice to be up-to-date on the news and I agree that this is good, but I will be sorry if storying is lost to the tv.

2 comments:

  1. What kind of news stations do they have in Kenya? Is it like ours?

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  2. The news stations that I have seen so far are like ours except a little more obvious about judging the events that take place. There was this one story about girls at a public school who are suing their teachers for punishing them when they where short skirts. Their dress code only lets them wear ankle length skirts and the news reporter said something like, what a loss of modesty, what will our teenagers think of next. Another story was turned into a rap which was pretty entertaining. After the full story of this member of parliament who lost his job and then uncovered the horrible things his boss did. He ran to Canada when asked to give the police a statement so they turned his own words into a rap about him running away and played it between other news stories.

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