A Look at "Tana"
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A
young girl sells fruits and berries along the street in
Antananarivo.
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Back in
Antananarivo or "Tana" as the adventure travel operators
like to call it, Project Manager Chris Dunston began touring
me through parts of the capital city where CARE has been concentrating
its self-help and development projects. The streets were crowded
with cars making it difficult to get around at times. There
was a plethora of street vendors selling everything from fruits
and vegetables to hand-carved toys and embroidered linens. Young
women prepared fried casava and sliced bread to sell at mealtime.
Dunston
took me to one of the health clinics that CARE has helped to
revitalize. The first clinic we visited was pleasant with bright
teal walls and new furniture. Despite a shortage of trained
medical professionals due to the closure of Madagascar's medical
schools from lack of funding, the doctors were concerned with
the availability of quality and affordable health care. They
welcomed each new patient.
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Women wash clothes in one of the community
washing areas in the poor urban settlements of Antananarivo.
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Our next
stop was one of the 30 poor urban settlements -- known as fokontanys
-- where CARE is working to improve the community's infrastructure
and access to health care. Teenaged boys sometimes greet visitors
with calls of "faza," meaning "foreigner,"
most of the Malagasy people are warm and welcoming. Young children
were intrigued with my cameras and blond hair. They followed
me around imitating my French and asking for their picture to
be taken.
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A
young man tries to clear a drainage canal on the outskirts
of Antananarivo.
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On the
outskirts of Antananarivo, neighborhoods are built on barren
land that in the past was used to cultivate rice. In those areas,
old irrigation canals have fallen into disrepair and have become
filled with uncollected garbage, sewage waste and water hyacinths.
Clogged with filth, the polluted ditches breed disease-carrying
insects and rats, and cause outbreaks of perilous illnesses,
including Bubonic Plague, the disease of the Middle Ages that
still affects the poor in Antananarivo. During our tour of one
neighborhood, two young men had volunteered to clean the drainage
canals. They waded through filth and stagnate water, clearing
the canals of plants and rubbish in the hopes of alleviating
the sanitation problem the area experiences and the diseases
that result from them.
Continue
to Day 5
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