Wow. I’m back from Malawi… what a stunning country! But most of you don’t follow this blog to read my comments, so let me show you what I mean…
Lake Malawi:
“Fishers of Men”
Yes, he is milking a cow into a Coke bottle, on the beach. Strange? Have you considered where your milk comes from?
Mending his nets before going out for the night:
On the beach, you can also buy usipa, these tiny sun-dried fish.
Usipa can be eaten dry, or reconstituted as part of a bigger meal:
Malawi’s most popular fish is chombo. It’s delicious.
The chief of the village of Gulule and his wife, in front of their home:
Like many tribal Africans, this grandmother shows facial scars she was given as a girl:
The children of Gulule are fortunate to have two wells for clean water, which were put in by either the government or some relief organization, and dramatically helps the health of the village.
Want more Malawi photos? I’ll post some in the next few days, or you can see the whole gallery!
Washington DC can be very drab in the winter.
I spent a few days there before heading to Malawi, and the first few hours out in the cold and sleet left me feeling very depressed. An idea started forming in my mind. I called it “Ichabod” (the glory has departed): lifeless monuments, bleak landscapes, and an overall feeling of a city that has grown hollow with bureaucracy, crime, and corruption…
But then the rain got so bad I hid out in the National Conservancy. And as the rain poured down on the skylights, I wandered through forests, deserts, and jungles. And slowly, my perspective changed for the rest of my time there. The glory hadn’t left Washington. It just doesn’t dwell in halls and rotundas, bills and legislations, people and their promises.
As I learned, Washington DC can be very beautiful in the winter.
Want to see more Washington? Check out the complete gallery here.
So far, the farthest I’ve ever flown to shoot a wedding is Portland, Oregon. But tomorrow morning, I’m heading out to set a new record that will be very hard to break… I’m photographing a wedding in Lilongwe, Malawi.
I first met Kondwani, the groom, in Mozambique in 2001, where we were building a hospital. We stayed in touch, and in 2005, we ended up being neighbors in a rainy little flat behind the church we were working at in South Africa. Now he’s back in his home country of Malawi, and he’s getting married, and I’m shooting his wedding!
By the way, if you are interested in hiring me to take specific photographs of Malawi, I’ll be there until December 17th. You can contact me by email, which I’ll check as often as the sporadic internet connection allows. Otherwise, watch this blog in a month or so for a glimpse into a Malawian wedding!