Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Fin

So I’m back! Home at last after 10 months of living and working in beautiful Bolivia. Well actually I’ve been back for about a month now. So I thought it would be a good time for one last blog entry.


My time in Bolivia was quite the experience. To try to sum up my 10 months in a blog would be impossible but here are just a couple of many highlights. The majority of these pics are posted on facebook which you can see at http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=82517&id=504288283&l=1f54cde6f7


Power to the people

Protests are a very common sight in Bolivia. I encountered hundreds of roadblocks, marches, and general demonstrations during my time there. But back in October I ran into one protest that floored me; it was one of the most amazing things that I saw in Bolivia.


I was in La Paz for a couple days attending a conference. I had heard a march was taking place but I didn’t think much of it. While the conference was taking place, thousands and thousands of ordinary Bolivians had taken to the street and were marching over 200 km towards the city of La Paz to push congress to call a referendum on a new draft constitution. With every day, more and more protesters joined.


The organizers of the conference decided that on the last day of the conference they would bus people out to where the protesters were to lend support and drop off much needed supplies and food. I thought I would just check it out and I hopped on a bus and traveled about 2 hours to where the protesters were.


After a month or two of living in Bolivia, roadblocks and marches had become more than anything just major inconveniences. After getting stuck in traffic over and over and over again, they start to get pretty annoying. But just walking around and being among thousands of protesting Bolivians was something I had never experienced before. Just seeing the sheer number of people was in it of itself incredible.


When I got there, the protesters had set up camp and were resting for the night. A group had gathered at a plaza for a bit of a pep rally. This picture doesn’t do justice to the number of people that were there.

As the sun set over the rally, the temperature began to drop significantly. The Altiplano can get extremely cold, especially at night. I had about 5 layers on and was still cold. And here I was watching a bunch of these little cholita grandmas walking around in their flip-flops and skirts. No one had hiking boots, thermal socks, fancy tents or inflatable mattresses; most barely had enough food for the night. It was humbling, it was raw, it was real, it was genuine, it was hardcore.


Here are a couple shots I stole of the protest...…. passing through El Alto….

…then entering La Paz.

Señor Rogers

Before heading off to Bolivia, I was a little nervous about what my job would be. I was told that I would be working with children and youth at an arts and culture centre. I was pretty reluctant to take the job as images of guitar sing-alongs and puppet shows would go through my head. The last thing I wanted to do was spend a year as the next Bolivian Mr. Rogers, or Señor Rogers. In the end, luckily, there were no guitar sing-alongs and no puppet shows. But one of my jobs was working as the director/coordinator of an after-school program for kids from a high-risk community. It was a lot of work but at times also very chill. For part of the day, I got to hang out and just chill with kids which was a ton fun. Here are some pics from that.

Researching at 13 000 ft

I never imaged that doing research for my thesis would be a highlight but it was. The major reason for that is because I really like my topic. I spent about a month and a half traveling around doing research on the hip-hop movement in the mountainous cities of El Alto and La Paz which largely consisted of me hanging out with rappers.


The hip-hop in El Alto and La Paz is, for the most part, very social and very political. Most of the rappers are coming from the poorest, toughest, most marginalized hoods in Bolivia and are using hip-hop to give what is traditionally a silenced sector of society a voice; they are mostly young, indigenous males.


This is a picture of me with Abraham, one of the local rappers and a very cool guy. In addition to rapping, he hosts his own hip-hop radio show, the only hip-hop show in El Alto. One day he invited me to be a “special guest” and be part of one of his show. After the radio show, not going to lie, I felt pretty G. It was pretty sweet.

Travels

Bolivia is an incredibly beautiful country. The tourist industry is pretty weak in Bolivia which I actually enjoyed. Everything is so raw, so un-touristized. Here are couple pics.

I just wanted to end off by saying thanks to everyone for their support during my time in Bolivia.

Adios!

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