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DARK STAR SAFARI Overland from Cairo to Cape Town Paul Theroux Houghton Mifflin Company, 2003, 472 pp. ISBN 0 618 13424 7 |
Paul Theroux is a well-known travel writer and
novelist. He was raised in a
Christian family and appears to be in his early 60’s. He joined the Peace Corps and taught high
school in Malawi and then college in Uganda in the late 60s. He knows some of several African languages. And he knows a number of people, from his
teaching in the 60s, from previous trips, and from his writing contacts. In this book he describes his experience traveling
overland the length of Africa. It is
an inside look at Africa, from the buses and mutatus and log boats, from the
borders between countries that foreigners rarely see, from the panhandlers
and pickpockets and hangers on, and primarily from conversations with
Africans themselves across the continent. Theroux is rich with words and he is especially
picturesque about things that trouble him, of which there are many. In many places the politicians are simply
polished thieves. Interestingly he
seems to feel that Africans are indolent, and kept that way by the
self-serving interests of aid agencies.
He has much scorn for such agencies.
Most of the ones he mentions are secular organizations. He reserves his harshest words for
missionaries and evangelists. But he
likes Africa and Africans, especially the many who helped him on his way and
told him stories. The report that follows does not indicate my agreement,
but having always heard about aid and development and evangelism from a
missionary perspective, I am captivated and alarmed by the descriptions and
analyses of a skeptical observer. “Since the Kenya government cared so little about the
well-being of its people, concerns such as health and education had been
taken up by sympathetic foreigners.
The charities were well established.”
“These organizations had grown out of disaster relief agencies but had
become multinational institutions, permanent fixtures of welfare and
services.” (192) He refers to several books that conclude that ‘aid doesn’t
work’ and ‘aid isn’t help.’ These
writers are kinder to volunteers in disaster relief than to highly paid
bureaucrats in institutional charities, but assert that all aid is
self-serving. (193) Graham Hancock writes, “Here is a rule of thumb that you
can safely apply wherever you may wander in the Third World. If a project is funded by foreigners it
will typically be designed by foreigners and implemented by foreigners using
foreign equipment procured in foreign markets.” Why not use African labor to solve African problems? (193) “Africans refused nothing. A road, a dorm, a school, a bank, a bridge, a cultural center,
a dispensary—all were accepted. But
acceptance did not mean the things were needed, nor that they would be used
or kept in repair.” (204) In Uganda.
“Everything was on the wane.”
“The projects would become wrecks, every one of them, because they
carried with them the seeds of their destruction. And when they stopped running, no one would be sorry. That’s what happened in Africa: things fell
apart. The ruin seemed like part of
the plan.” “Change and decay and
renewal were the African cycle: a mud hut was built; it fell down; a new one
replaced it.” “As the university, a
useless compound, became ruinous, Ugandans fled and saved themselves in their
mud huts, in the ancient refuge of their villages.” (205) “But Uganda, even in its apparent recovery, was a welfare
case. More than half of its budget
came from donor countries. AIDS had
peaked in 1992 at 30 percent and through intense education had decreased: now
10 percent of the population was infected.
The disease had killed off the better part of a generation. It was a nation of two million orphans.”
(223) “They were, it turned out, the sort of podgy,
cookie-munching, Christ-bitten evangelists who pop up in places like Mwanza
with nothing but a Bible and a rucksack and the requisite provisions: cookies
and cake and a hymn book in Swahili.”
(243) [He didn’t talk to these
people but overheard snatches of conversation on the train. He was traveling in tattered clothes with
a rucksack, and was perhaps eating cookies as well. It’s easy to criticize people when you don’t know them. He rarely spoke poorly of someone with
whom he had a significant conversation, save the one on p. 431-433. Dlm] “It is for someone else, not me, to evaluate the success
or failure of charitable efforts in Africa.
Offhand, I would say the whole push has been misguided, because it has
gone on too long with negligible results.”
“Where are the Africans in all this?”
“No Africans are involved—there is not even a concept of African
volunteerism or labor-intensive projects.”
(272) “Perhaps that was why I liked rural Africa so much and
avoided towns, because in villages I saw self-sufficiency and sustainable
agriculture. In the towns and cities,
not the villages, I felt the full weight of all the broken promises and
thwarted hope and cynicism.” (273) [He was very discouraged by the larger
towns and cities – begging, crime, danger, graft, messiness, indolence, etc.
dlm] Vehicles. “The
most expensive of them, of course, were the white four-wheel drives
displaying the doorside logos of charities, every one that I had ever heard
of and some new ones….” I was not
surprised when they refused to give me a lift—I knew from experience that
they were the last people to offer
travelers assistance. Still, I was
annoyed. I analyzed my
annoyance. It was that the vehicles
were often driven by Africans, the white people riding as passengers in what
resembled ministerial seats. They had
CD players, usually with music playing loudly, and now and then I saw the
whole deal: an African or a white person driving in his white Save the
Children vehicle one-handed, talking on a cell phone with music playing—the
happiest person in the country. For
every agent of virtue I saw slogging his or her guts out in the field, I saw
two of them joy-riding.” (290-91) “I thought: in a culture where foreigners constantly
showed up, offering themselves and their time and even material help, charity
was nothing special—in fact, in Malawi it was another necessary routine, not
philanthropic but a permanent drip feed, part of a system of handouts.” (292) “I began to understand the futility of charity in
Africa. It was generally fueled by
the best of motives, but its worst aspect was that it was
noninspirational. Aliens had been helping
for so long and were so deeply entrenched that Africans lost interest—if
indeed they had ever had it—in doing the same sort of work themselves. Not only was there no spirit of
volunteerism, there was no desire to replace aid workers in paying jobs. Yet many Africans were unemployed, doing
nothing but sitting under trees.” (293) “Medical and teaching skills were not lacking in Africa,
even in distressed countries like Malawi.
But the will to use them was often nonexistent. The question was, should outsiders go on
doing jobs and taking risks that Africans refused?” (298) “I seldom saw relief workers who did not in some way
remind me of people herding animals and throwing food to them, much as
rangers did to the animals in drought-stricken game parks.” (311) The school where he taught in the 60s and the houses he
lived in were decrepit, falling apart.
The books were gone from the library.
No one maintained anything. “I
wanted to see some African volunteers caring for the place—sweeping the floors,
cutting the grass, washing windows, gluing the spines back onto the few
remaining books, scrubbing the slime off the classroom walls. Or, if that was not their choice, I wanted
to see them torch the place and burn it to the ground and dance around the flames,
then plow everything under and plant food crops.” (321) “Maybe none of these flawed schools were problems at all
but only foreign institutions like foreign contraptions….” (321) One of his former colleagues told him, “Your old students
are doing well, but the country is not doing well. People are different—much poorer, not respectful.” [I noticed that his former students and
colleagues were doing well materially.
Several had high-level government jobs and others had sent their kids
out of the country for an education.
But it wasn’t clear to me that they were any better off morally. I wondered how they would have turned out
if Theroux had given them a Christian education. Dlm] “It seemed that two million American dollars, earmarked
for education from a European donor country, had recently been embezzled by
the finance minister and two other politicians in a scam….” “A large and essential part of the
education budget had been stolen by the government official to whom it had
been entrusted.” (322) [Are Africans
unwilling to expend volunteer effort to maintain things partly because they
know the leadership is stealing it all? Dlm] “That was my Malawi epiphany. Only Africans were capable of making a difference in
Africa. Everyone else, donors and
volunteers and bankers, however idealistic, were simply agents of
subversion.” (327) “The education system was appalling, but there was no
shortage of dreary hymn-singing pietists and preachers who promised people
food if they handed over their souls.” (328) “…the agents of virtue, all white, all short-timers.” “They were saving lives—you couldn’t fault
them, but in general I despaired at the very sight of aid workers. They were no more than a maintenance crew
on a power trip, who had turned Malawians into beggars and whiners, and
development into a study in futility.” (330) “One of the
epiphanies of my trip was the realization that where the mode of life had
changed significantly in the Africa I had known, it had changed for the
worse.” (426) “The happy hunting ground of all minds that have lost
their balance is not the works of Shakespeare (as Buck Mulligan says) but the
Holy Bible.” (430) Describing a missionary.
“You just wanted to weep, not for such smug, pigheaded ignorance, but
for what made it worse: Susanna was here in Mozambique spreading
disinformation and fear.” (431) “So
this Christ-bitten nag and every other twaddler like her sought out Africans
in remote fastnesses such as Nampula, to abuse them with the notion that they
were sinners, to browbeat them into arcane forms of atonement, such as
screeching hymns and the dues-paying routine of tithes.” (433) [Pejorative
words can reveal prejudices as well as observations. Dlm] He is very scornful of the rich tourists who go to game
parks with expensive equipment. They
know nothing of the Africa that Africans live in. Theroux saw the one business that was booming throughout
much of Africa was coffin making. |