WINDOW SEAT
Benjamin Branoff
- Challenges of urbanization in developing countries
- Over loaded van (P 62)
- Inefficient public servants-The indifferent sentry (P 63)
- Poor dusty roads (P 63)
- Noise pollution (P 64)
- Poor waste management/disposal (P 66)
- Poverty/depravation of luxuries (P 66)
- Corruption/bribery (P 68)
- Crime/The lost wallet (P 69)
Synopsis
This short story captures the journey of a mzungu traveling in an African country.
The author takes us on a bumpy ride through the roads of Dar es Salaam. Through
the narrator’s eyes, we appreciate the challenges of urbanization in developing
African countries.
The narrator has a window seat in an old Hyatt
minivan commonly referred to as daladala.
The van is overloaded; twenty four passengers are squeezed inside a van meant
to carry about ten people. The conductor stands by the sliding door. During
rush hours four more people would stand with the conductor. The old van old van
build for ten could carry twenty eight people. The greedy owner of the van
added more rows of seats not made with the van to accommodate more people
The narrator experience inefficient public service
at the gate leaving Chuo. The indifferent sentry does a poor job of checking
the van for something amiss. As the journey commences, the narrator notes, that
the roads a dusty. One cannot, however, shut the window since they need fresh
air.
At Mwenge, noise pollution is apparent. Horrible 80s
music plays from a large stereo of a man selling CDs. Apart from that,
conductor screams at the top of their voice trying to persuade people to board
their daladalas.
As the mzungu
heads toward the post buses after alighting from the old minivan, he notices
that the town is crowded. There is high population. He fails to meet and greet
a young French foreign exchange student called Monique (whom he fondly refers
to as Le Fille). The bus has to maneuver through a sea of humans who walk
dangerously close to it oblivious of the danger. This is probably due to poor infrastructure;
lack of sidewalks or pavements.
We also notice dumping of waste and poor waste
disposal; people burn rubbish and dead foliage on the roadside. The pollution
is evident by the rancid smell of garbage and human filth and decomposition.
The waste is pulled and left to rot or burnt by the road side.
After the next stop we meet a beautiful young woman the
narrator refers to as Kanga. She looks healthy and beautiful but we can tell
that she’s poor, deprived of luxuries and has to endure endless work in her
lifetime. Kanga seems amiable or sincerely friendly.
The police in Dar es Salaam are corrupt and
incompetent. They are not concerned with the safety of the passengers. To the
dismay of impatient bus drivers and conductor, they forcefully squeeze a bribe
out of them. The police man is indifferent about the overloading of the bus.
After the bumpy 45 minute ride, the narrator is shocked to find his wallet missing. In the crowded bus, anyone could have pinched it but all evidence points to Kanga. Developing African countries are riddled with crime and insecurity due to poverty.
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