
Já repararam como ela tem um braço comprido?
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Have you notice how long her arm is?
As we walked through the river mud, crabs would bite our legs and shells would tear our feet skin...
Meanwhile, Helena and the women held the fishing net, bent down, stood up, walked, grabbed the fish that got stuck in the net, balanced the basins on top of their heads and still managed to find the time to laugh along with us!
If I was asked to do what they were doing, I would surely starve! I could barely walk, let alone balance a basin with my head with fish jumping inside it!!
I still have many pictures of fishing left which I would like to publish, so I will dedicate a new photographic cycle to this activity.
However, I won’t add a long text, because although I do not believe a good picture is worth a thousand words, I also believe a thousand words can ruin quite a few good pictures!
What truly amazes me about this picture is not Franca’s pleasant look as she eats, which would be perfectly normal, since she is having the best meal of her day at the Nutritional Recuperation Centre.
What fascinates me is the fact that this picture shows the African people so well… that watery eye can’t take away her joy of another meal, the joy of her day!
That’s what the african people have that we don’t have! We are depressed because we’ve lost buying power and so we can’t satisfy our blistering consuming needs imposed by our society. The pressure to be trendy is unbelievable! The Nokia I own is the brand‘s cheapest phone and I’ve stopped counting the times I’ve heard comments about my technological dinosaur…
Thank you Franca, for that look with a tear that insists on not falling, along with your splendid smile and that happiness look!
If there is a thing i’ve learned with the guineans is to appreciate life’s little details, to be happy with little, because that “little” is actually a lot…
The “lot” we desire gets us to so little that I don’t understand how we get so easily taken by it…
DEL8 CONTEST: final results
Congratulations to the winners, which are all the participants!
Congratulations to those who won prizes, may you use them to promote these 8 goals until 2015!
Congratulations to the teachers, who plunged into this challenge following the typical enthusiasm and fascination of those who are 17 and want (which is great!) to change the world!
Congratulations to the schools, for being able to keep on educating us all, even with so many difficulties!
Congratulations to Safi, Helena and Sumai, who are going to meet 8 new portuguese people (5 students, a teacher and two of Consolata’s laywomen) and see the continuity in the projects, receiving the results of so many students who have worked here in Portugal!
Congratulations to the parents of the students who have participated, for you have wonderful children when it comes to humanitarian issues!
Early congratulations to the parents of the students who have participated and won the trip! Please let them go to Guinea-Bissau and live a unique life experience!
Congratulations to all of those whose hopes were high and were not awarded. Life is made of all of this, but there is a reward that no one can take away from you: having worked a whole year in order to reduce world’s poverty! You may not have another chance to dedicate to this theme in such an intense and long-term way…
And last, but not least, thanks to blogosfera, that allows me to write freely, with no censorship, to those who want to read, to those who want to interpret!
Today is a very happy day in my life!
That look of yours
When it meets mine
Speaks of some things I can’t even believe…
This excerpt of a song by Tom Jobim, even out of place, suits better than the words I was thinking of writing…
It is the eyes what we know better in people. It is there that our first look is directed… it is the look that tells how we feel… how the ones surrounding us feel…
… that’s why it is so important to look each other in the eye!
I only saw this boy on the day I took his picture.
His look disturbed me… he looked straight ahead, with no fear or evasions… it was always me who looked away…
He didn’t talk much, but he liked posing for the photos. While taking this one, I bent so my eyes were at the same level his were and he also bent…
This attitude makes us think… does one always bend when someone does it next to him?
Ok... I can’t keep a silent cycle...
There is so much to write that I can’t limit myself to posting pictures…
This is Tomás once again, of whom I have already written so many times. By looking at this picture I was reminded of a conversation I had with Helena – his older sister – during which I asked her who ate less at home. She replied it was Tomás. He just ate two or three spoons of rice and that was it…
I must confess that with the ending of the DEL8 contest and the ending of my classes (both the ones I teach and the ones I attend), I have been swarmed with work…
Since I still have many photos, I think I will take the advice of Ketta and make a silent cycle… (comments are, however, welcome!!)
This is a little sight of Empada’s market.
Most of the sellers that sell goods other than food are Senegalese or Mauritanians. There is a bit of everything but in August 2008, what we saw more were plastic sandals.
The trip to the market was a real adventure! Everyone wanted to sell us everything and more!!
In the beginning of May, Ana Carvalho published a text that made me nostalgic.
Back then, I had the nerve to ask her if she could send it by mail and after some email exchanges, a package coming straight from Guinea arrived to my house.
I can’t decide about the ideal moment to open and eat this delicious cashew…
This Friday, May 29th, I will be presenting the documentary we made in Empada in Linhó, Sintra. Maybe that is the right moment to share one of Guinea’s main riches!
If anyone is interested in watching the documentary, it is 30 minutes followed by a conversation/debate about Guinea, the Millennium Development Goals and the DEL8 contest. It will start at 9pm (I think it is in the salon/cultural club). It will be an enjoyable evening with the promise that I will take this delicious cashew to share!! Be there!
Ps: Thank you, Ana!
After lunch it was impossible not to take a nap. I wanted to make the most of my time there but the weather there is so strong that it messes our bodies and it is imperative to rest.
One day, during nap time, it started to pour. All the children that were playing ball on the field of the mission of the sisters of Consolata took the opportunity to stand under the exit of the water from the gutter. As soon as he realized I had gotten up and left the room with my camera, Tomás came to me and asked me to take a “postcard” of him.
I set the shutter with a high velocity to “freeze” the fastness with which the water fell and the result was this absolutely intimate moment that takes me there every time I look him in the eye.
Nowadays, in May, the rain starts to fall down in Guinea.
This boy was happily walking under the rain and only later did he open his umbrella. I think the temptation of standing in the rain is so much that no one can resist it…
Just imagine: heat and humidity before the possibility of a refreshing bath of the size of a river’s flow!!
This picture ends the cycle dedicated to Kudom.
The school in the back isn’t big enough for all the students anymore, so the population from the village had to start building a new one. Because there is a lack of “everything”, the construction has been like this for quite a while now…
Some time ago I lost a whole class because the laptop wouldn’t work. Of course I was upset with the situation!
When I look at this picture I wonder how it would be to teach there… one thing is for sure: there would be no chance I would get upset over a faulty laptop.
How would it be to teach Art in Guinea-Bissau? More, with which art do you teach in Guinea-Bissau?
The search for this answer charms and motivates me!
In this picture you can see sister Anistalda, who has spoken to dozens of Portuguese students using a mobile phone during this school year, and Patrícia, greatly responsible for the video images captured for the documentary Cuma qui bu na mansi?.
In the middle we have the main theme: the well. This is similar to the ones of Empada. There is no need to say that a great part of the Kudom’s and Empada’s inhabitants’ life revolves around the well:
- when the day begins, they go to the well;
- in the midmorning, they go to the well;
- near meal time, they go to the well;
- in the afternoon, they go to the well;
- in the late afternoon they go to the well to get water to wash themselves;
- in the evening they don’t go to the well to get water to cook because there is no dinner…
Here are the two girls I mentioned on one of the first posts about Kudom.
It is tradition that no man can see them during the week prior to the marriage, hence their covering. Since I was “white”, tradition didn’t apply, so I got to see them. They even lifted their veil … I don’t know why, but I decided to photograph that moment…
I don’t have the courage to publish that image.
If it were today, I wouldn’t even take it…
In Kudom, like in most villages in Guinea, children have umbilical hernia, a result of bad healing of the cut of the umbilical cord at birth and during the first months of life.
The swollen belly is a sign of undernourishment…
Despite all of this, the children chased me running, posed for the pictures, laughed when they saw themselves in the small camera screen. They touched my pink skin and felt my arm hair as something very strange…
Darwin was right. Survival makes us develop more accurate techniques. Even in a biological level, some are more able to endure the cold than others…
What you see in the middle is a cow corral.
Kudom is a land of cattle handlers. In the past, the cows were kept in a place out of the village, but as some robberies started to occur, the inhabitants decided to keep the cattle right in the center, among the houses. The result is kind of smelly and full of flies, which makes Kudom a land that requires some adaptation time…