Project extension in Zimbabwe
1 June 2004
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The SRC, I believe, still hope that somehow they'll avert the crisis and that I'll end up staying longer, I don't think it'll happen.
Over the past months, I observed a couple of things. Amongst others, they are...
The smell
Zimbabweans, specifically black Zimbabweans smell. In Mongolia, the locals smelled of mutton. Here, they smell of sadza ne nyama. It's getting colder now, so people sweat less, meaning you can now occasionally smell the perfumes and after shaves people wear, but in summer... man! Traveling on a commuter can be a real challenge.
The noise
When people speak Shona, they speak much louder then when speaking English. Quite often, locals are hard to hear when they're talking English. This has nothing to do with some inferiority complex, or whatever, when these people address foreigners or white people in general: they do it amongst themselves as well. However, when they speak Shona, the volume goes up a couple of notches.
In the lodge, this sometimes startles me. The maids, sometimes talking English with each other, almost whisper but switch to a very loud voice when switching to Shona.
The social contract
It has been observed by many people that in many African cultures, it's all right to fool/steal from/harass some one, as long as the person is not part of your extended family. I believe this is because Africans, in general, don't have a 'social contract' with society as a whole, but mostly only with their extended family.
In Europe, it's mostly the other way around, you don't have a social contract with your family much more than you have with society as a whole.
Examples are rife. Here in Zimbabwe, black people, when driving a car, generally don't let pedestrians cross the road (black or white), at zebra crossings or anywhere else. At work, getting teamwork off the ground is a real challenge since people prefer, at all times, to only work on their own agenda. And don't get me started on Zimbabwean politics... land reform for the rich.
The lack of a social contract with society as a whole poses significant problems for the development of a country, or for stopping the continuous depredation of a country, as is the case in Zimbabwe. In fact, this might very well be the main reason why so many African countries have done so badly over the past decades.
Project extension in Zimbabwe 
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- Zim-Zim at Kariba (11 June 2004)
- Is that a bird in your pocket...? (9 June 2004)
- Politics? (7 June 2004)
- Typical (4 June 2004)
- Even more pecans (2 June 2004)
- Project extension in Zimbabwe (1 June 2004)
Who's been sharing the love
- extension de zimbabwe actualmente (Google)
- extencion de ZIMBABWE (Google)
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After obtaining an M. Sc in maths, Babak Fakhamzadeh started with an office job at a major blue chip company but soon realised he'd do better on his own. Babak is a traveling web guru with a penchant for doing good and a love for visual and experimental art. Together with Ismail Farouk, he won the prestigious Highway Africa new media award in 2007 for