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From RuralNorthwest.com Wandering with Sam
Dakar, Senegal is the westernmost point on the continent of Africa, located in a subtropical region about fifteen degrees north of the equator. The city is the capital of the country of Senegal, a former French colony that gained its independence in 1960. Dakar itself is located in an area that has been inhabited since prehistoric times and was a part of a series of prominent African kingdoms or empires over the last ten centuries, including Ghana, Mali, and Songhai. Portuguese explorers arrived in 1443 to establish a permanent colony, although ancient Phoenician and Greek explorers had already explored the region two thousand years before. The Portuguese colony flourished for about a century before it was taken over by the Dutch, then by the English, and finally by the French in the seventeenth century, and it remained a French colony until independence in 1960. The centuries of European colonial rule was largely marked by natural resource extraction and the slave trade until the mid-nineteenth century.
Today Senegal is one of several West African nations in the semi-arid Sahel region to the south of the Sahara Desert, an area marked by a rich art and musical culture, but also by poverty, political instability (although not as bad as in other parts of Africa), and a largely agricultural economy. According to the 2007 CIA Fact Book, Senegal has a per capita Gross Domestic Product of $1800, about five percent of the $40,000 per capita GDP of the United States, although this is at best a rough comparison because many Senegalese are more likely to butcher their own animals than to buy meat in a supermarket. Another interesting facet of Senegal is that probably half of the population is under the age of twenty because of high birth rates and an average life expectancy of about fifty five to sixty.
After some sort of a “deal” with the customs agents (that probably involved a passing of a handful of the local currency, the Communaute Financiere Africaine franc, or the CFA), we left the terminal toting our luggage on carts. The brief ride across town showed me a small part of Dakar, but nevertheless it was a totally exotic land. My eyes were glued to the window of the air conditioned bus as we passed dusty half constructed concrete mansions or apartment buildings, small cell phone stores, Western Union offices, tiny street side markets that sold fruit, and the occasional restaurant or night club. The edge of the road disappeared into coarse sand mixed with garbage that seemed to cover most of the city. So there were elements of modernity mixed in with a rather arid climate and traditional markets and street life. Most of the modern buildings appeared half constructed and were not illuminated, as if perhaps an overly ambitious building craze took off a couple years ago only to stagnate, leaving large numbers of half constructed buildings.
A drive through Dakar revealed a typical large city with high-rises, traffic jams, and street markets, but I could immediately tell that I was on a different continent just driving down the narrow potholed street on our way downtown. The terrain was different; dusty neighborhoods with sand and dilapidated cars along the street overlooking the cliffs of the Atlantic Ocean. Elaborate stone houses and condominiums peaked above thick walls while markets, herds of goats, and crowds filled the debris strewn area between the street and the walls. Periodically I would see a horse or ox drawn cart plodding down the street with cars dangerously swerving into the other lane to pass them. Occasionally a run down but colorful microbus would drive by, filled with passengers, even a few standing on the back bumper and hanging onto the swinging door.
The entire city of Dakar seemed to be a giant market place because every street had corner vendors selling a wide variety of products ranging from fried fish or iced drinks to used shoes. And during the afternoon rush hour, a major arterial street became a de facto market when the traffic was stalled. Hundreds of boys and young men would wander between the gridlocked cars selling just about any item imaginable, including soap, sandals, electronic goods, CD’s, phone cards - essentially the street became a drive-through Wal-Mart every afternoon during rush hour.
As we entered, the shopkeepers immediately came to life, surrounding us and tugging at us to enter their shops, sometimes two or three at once. I remember a woman grabbing my arm and pulling me towards her little stall. “Don’t you want to go into my shop? You just look around, what do you want? Do you like this, elephant?” They spoke in broken English, and doubtlessly also in broken Spanish, German, Dutch, and perhaps even Japanese to try to entice tourists to enter their shops. Once I showed even the vaguest interest in an object, they began to pressure me. “What is your price – twenty thousand CFA for this elephant, made of ebony,” which is about forty dollars. Then you had to respond with a counter offer, or you had to firmly and repeatedly tell them that you were not interested. Often I would respond with something from the other end of the spectrum like one thousand CFA (two dollars), which they would reject immediately, and even looked a bit insulted, but then they would offer a lower price like sixteen thousand. They would also play other tricks, like trying to place it in my bag or even just handing it to me and refusing to accept it back.
After bartering for a few minutes I might finally get them to drop to a price like five thousand CFA (ten dollars).
This rather small island is a dry and rocky promontory overlooking the Atlantic Ocean across the bay from the high-rises of downtown Dakar. It retained a considerable amount of its past, including eighteenth and nineteenth century colonial buildings painted pink, orange, and yellow. Most of these were inhabited by artists and poor families that made their living from selling artwork and anything else that they could find to tourists. The island also featured an exclusive girl’s school and the remains of French gun emplacements from World War II. The only vehicles on the island seemed to be colorful longboats that were pulled onto the shore between fishing excursions.
Dakar is one of the largest cities in Western Africa and it appears much like the international media images of a poor city, with horse drawn carts appearing on the streets while herds of goats were led about while dilapidated old microbuses and beat up yellow and black taxis served as the primary means of public transportation. However, this city is also a major port and distribution center, a national capital, a giant traditional market, and also a historic center for the slave trade, a three century long travesty that played a considerable role in shaping my own country. (Sam Woodbury grew up in Seattle, Spokane, and North Idaho, graduating from Bonners Ferry High School in 1988. After four years with the U.S. Navy in Florida, California and Virginia, he moved back to the Northwest to attend college in the Palouse area and graduated from Washington State University in 1996. He has traveled extensively throughout Idaho, Washington, and Oregon as well as other parts of the United States, and many foreign countries including Canada, Panama, Australia, China, England, Iceland and elsewhere around the world. Currently he is on a Navy Reserve Assignment in Germany) © Copyright 2007 by RuralNorthwest.com |








