Archive Page 2
Domingos and the Kuza crew (lake Cahora Bassa)
0 Comments Published by gert August 8th, 2006 in people, Mozambique, photographersSwimming pool football at Restaurante Fatima
0 Comments Published by gert August 7th, 2006 in places, MozambiqueOne camera for Mwanyala (r), Stella (l)
0 Comments Published by gert August 6th, 2006 in people, Mozambique, photographersCross-border football: Bairro Lusaka - Luangwa Feira (1-5)
0 Comments Published by gert August 5th, 2006 in places, MozambiquePhotographs from the cross-border football competition between the teams from Zumbo, Luangwa Feira (Zambia) and two villages at the other side of the Zambezi (Zimbabwe). Bairro Lusaka, named after the Zambian capital due to the amount of Zambians living in the neighbourhoud, are supposed to be the strongest.
Philip, village butcher and his goats
0 Comments Published by gert August 5th, 2006 in people, Mozambique, photographersChildren’s movie club at Restaurante Fatima
0 Comments Published by gert August 4th, 2006 in places, MozambiqueGeorges Inocencio: artist and jack of all trades
0 Comments Published by gert August 3rd, 2006 in people, Mozambique, photographersZumbo: Jorgito and his family
0 Comments Published by gert August 2nd, 2006 in people, places, MozambiqueMy aim is to cross the border from Feira to Zumbo, and make my way further east to Tete. Transport after Zumbo is a problem: the road to Tete is in a dire condition and partly washed away by the floods of 2001. There is rarely a car making it’s way up. The alternative is a ship named Kuza traveling on Lago Cahora Bassa to Songo every fortnight, but not too many people in Luangwa Feira are up to date about the schedule. To the latest rumour from the Mozambican kids canoeing between both towns the ship is in Zumbo and will leave the next morning. If this unfolds to be untrue, I’ll be stuck in Zumbo till the next available transport. I can stay at Jorgito’s house, at least I’ll have a place to sleep.
Staying at Jorgito’s place is living in a timewarp: Jorgito’s father was a Portuguese doctor working at the hospital in Tete, his mother a local woman from Zumbo who ran a bakery when Zumbo knew better times before the civil war. It was a large family: 23 brothers and sisters. The family compound, halfway between a Portuguese colonial mansion and a traditional African home, with Faria, Jorgito’s wife, residing over the wood fired kitchen, looks much older than it is: older stones where used to build the place. There is only a few hours a day of electricity (if the Kuza brings diesel from Songo for the generator), water is coming straight from the Zambezi in a bucket, it’s hard to imagine this was once a thriving Portuguese town. Most of the destruction dates from the civil war when Zumbo was more or less destroyed by Renamo. The population fled to Zambia, Zimbabwe or Tete. When people returned after peace accords were signed, wild animals were roaming the streets.
Pamela and Dave, bus driver to Lusaka
0 Comments Published by gert July 30th, 2006 in people, Zambia, photographersSearch
Latest
Archives
Categories
- Angola (54)
- Malawi (3)
- Mozambique (16)
- Namibia (13)
- people (46)
- photographers (34)
- places (55)
- uncategorized (2)
- Zambia (7)
























