Happy boys with their baskets.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
The Making of a Documentary
Happy boys with their baskets.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Making this Doc Nearly Killed Us
A house made out of earth. This village didn't see many foreigners
We took Tro-Tro's, mini-vans where they crush four people on a bench where there should be two... three max. That means fifteen people counting the two in the front seat plus the two working who somehow fit in the vehicle as well. The shock absorbers, if they exist, suck. It is close to 100 degrees, don't even think about air conditioning. Paved roads are the exception. I think we spent about 5.5 hours in the Tro-Tros, counting the hour and a half waiting for it to fill at the Tro-Tro station at Kwame Nkrumah Circle.
Step #2 Start forming the frame
Step #3 The next stage of forming the frame involves a machete
Nothing is wasted. The drum shavings are used to fuel fires back in the village.
The shoot was short, orderly and fun; a good all around experience. Jaguar and Yussif and two locals then took us on a walk through the village. I have seen many small, rural, earthen-house towns like this in East Asia, India/Sri Lanka and Africa before but Vân had not. It was fun. The villagers aren't used to seeing “oburoni,” which literally translates to “someone from over the horizon” but what really translates to “white person.” Vân (Vietnamese-American) got a big kick out of being called “white person” everywhere. They don't seem to say it in a negative way but they do say it all the time.
Jaguar explains exactly what is going on up here in "The Bush."
We then came back out to the road to get our tro-tro back to Accra. I forgot to tell you that I offered to buy the eleven workers water, food or beer for their 45 minutes of helping us. Yussif and a local convinced me to instead give them 5 Cedi (US$3.46). I don't like giving money in exchange for being in a documentary and I rarely do it but it seemed to make sense in this case. Well, when we came back out to the road from the village to get our tro-tro, the largest of the workers – and when I say large, think Bruce Lee in Enter the Dragon but six-foot-four, three times as muscular and with less body fat, if that is possible – crosses the street yelling at us. He was beyond reason, but being that I am part Vulcan, I tried to explain to him, in a rational way, that not only were we not making any money on this film, we were loosing money. He literally was not hearing a thing I was saying. Funny thing was my total absent of fear. Vân was terrified and I should have been. I walked towards the very large, sweaty, angry man (who was earlier working with a machete) but Yussif insisted I back off and that he would handle it. He also suggested we try to wave down an Accra bound tro-tro ASAP. We somehow got out of the village with all of our blood in our body (man I wish I had a picture of this guy! He avoided the camera).
Step #4 A fine-tuning shaver is used to smooth the exterior of the frame.
Step #5 A tool I have never seen before smooths out the inner drum.
The finished product.
Job is done, the drum frames head down to Accra.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Cape Coast Castle
I knew my visit to the notorious slave trading headquarters The Cape Coast Castle would be difficult, but I had no idea how difficult it would be. I have never been to the site of the Nazi Concentration camp at Auschwitz or the Killing Fields of Cambodia or any site of mass atrocities. Our very animated tour guide, Eric, was excellent at explaining the demented history that took place here (a very dark skinned Ghanaian, don't let the western name confuse you).
Tears streamed down my face as I stood at the Gate of No Return where over two million Africans exited the castle to board ships, usually bound for the USA or the Caribbean. Those who made it to this gate were the “lucky ones.” More people - and when I say people, I'm talking not only about men but women and children as well – died in the holding cells before they had a chance to be packed onto slave ships. The Africans who passed through the Gate of No Return were chained together in 'chain gangs.' Eric told us that groups of people would jump off the row boats that took them to the ships anchored off shore, preferring to drown than become slaves. The entire group of soon-to-be-slaves who were chained to these jumpers would all get pulled overboard with them. The stories were atrocious.
Africans leaving these shores today return that same day on their fishing boats
I have to say that the most disturbing stories Eric told centered around the stave traders and their religion. Located right above the men's slave quarters was the castle's church. While close to a thousand humans were chained together in dark, cold cells – urinating, defecating, vomiting and dying on each other – the slave traders were holding church ceremonies directly above them! Before the slaves went into these dark holding cells, they were baptized, given Christian names and then branded! And the names of some of the ships that took the Africans to the New World included The Good Ship Jesus and Glorious Mary. All early Portuguese slave ships had the name of a virgin or saint!
Canon balls were used to fight off pirates. The munitions with the wholes were filled with gun powder.
Barack and Michelle Obama were at this Castle July 11, 2009. The wreath they laid in one of the slave cells still looks new.
The wreath the Obamas left at the Cape Coast Castle
Neither Vân or I took this photo. Barack at the Castle just months before us.
In both our previous hotels we had air conditioning. This was going to be a hot night in Cape Coast.
Takes a community to pull in these fishing nets.
Good to be at the beach. The breeze helps in the near 100 degree heat.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Jesus Obama
Not sure who is more popular in Ghana, Jesus Christ or Barack Obama? Images and mention of the two can be found every which direction you look. References to Jesus and/or God are literally everywhere.
If the Christians are right in their predictions on the end of time and Jesus decides to save the countries who acknowledge him the most, Ghana will be the first saved. It is truly unbelievable. Just about every car, bus, tro-tro (mini-vans turned into buses) and anything else with wheels has some reference to Jesus or God. But it's the stores that are the most amazing. Here are a few store names we saw from the window of our three-hour bus ride to Kokrobite Beach:
Jesus is Alive Furniture Construction
Seek Jesus Key Customer Service
Blood of Christ Engine Repair
God Will Do Welding
If I hadn't had a haircut right before I left for Ghana...
Can you walk on water with these shoes?
These are all real names of stores we witnessed. But the Obama thing is equally amazing. Everyone down here seems to LOVE our president. It could be because he visited the country about seven months ago. People in Buenos Aires, Argentina love Guns and Roses and I believe it is because it is one of the few mega-bands that actually toured the South American city. Or maybe it is because he is African-American and seems to care about countries other than the USA. Quite a few Ghanaians mentioned they liked him better than our last president.
"Change has come" says Obama and Ghana president John Atta Mills in this billboard
Chelsea is the #1 football team and next to Chelsea on the windshield is Obama
There are not many Americans traveling around Ghana. Most locals think Van and I are Canadian. When we tell them we are from New York City, America, their faces light up, usually followed by, “I love Obama!” No joke or exaggeration. 9.5 times out of 10 it's exactly the same. There are billboards all over Southern Ghana with Obama's face. Some just have Barack, some have Barack with Ghana's president John Atta Mills and some have Barack and Michelle. There are Obama stickers, Obama flags, Obama shirts... even Obama cookies! It is insane.
No high fructose corn syrup in these cookies
We did not see a single image of a black Jesus in Ghana. I can't count how many I saw in Amsterdam, Holland