Namibia:
“Africa”, sung by members of the political party SWAPO during the fight for liberation in (then) South West Africa, circa late 70s, early 80s.
So much better than the music that streams out of the shebeens now.
(via dynamicafrica)
Namibia:
“Africa”, sung by members of the political party SWAPO during the fight for liberation in (then) South West Africa, circa late 70s, early 80s.
So much better than the music that streams out of the shebeens now.
(via dynamicafrica)
CNN | The Namibian Women Who Dress Like Victorians
Their style of dressing was influence by the wives of German missionaries and colonialists who first came to the country in the early 1900s.
The long dresses are heavy and reflect the style of the Victorian period with numerous petticoats worn to add fulness to their skirts.
They are hand-sewn by the women who add their own personal style and flair.
Continue reading the story here.
(via dynamicafrica)

It has been six months since I have completed my service in the Peace Corps and returned to America, and in full disclosure this is the fourth attempt I have made at writing a final blog post to sum up my experiences, convey what I have learned, and generally distill 26 months of service into one final post.
I will tell you right now that it is impossible. There is no way for me to accurately convey all of the life changing experiences, from the mundane to the earth-shifting, that I have experienced. Nor will there ever be a way to tell how much of an impact I have might have had on the people of my communities in Namibia.
It’s time. Time for their glittering armor and their orgiastic cannibalism, their rhythmically gyrating jazz-antennas and their fearsomely acrobatic, get-Hugh-Hefner-his-smelling-salts sex. Time for the stinking green blood they squeeze from their joints, and the weaponized vomit they smear over their bodies.
What it’s time for, as autumn approaches in the Kalahari, is the armored ground cricket. Never heard of it? That’s hardly surprising. These little lookers haven’t generally made the A-list of African wildlife at which generations of Roosevelts and Hemingways have aimed their elephant guns and Leicas. But if armored ground crickets face some rather formidable marketing challenges, they’re also ridiculously, absurdly fascinating.
Like many visitors to southern Africa, my three fellow road-trippers and I first ran across these crickets literally. As in, with a car. Crunch. Well—crunch—more than one. Crunch, crunch. Woops. Crunch. Watch it there, little fellas! Crunch crunch crunch crunch crunch. All this before we’d left the parking lot of a lodge south of Windhoek (the capital of Namibia, a country that despite any recently amplified cricket-related anxieties should be at the top of every African travel itinerary).
We pulled onto the open road and this drumbeat of crunching death accelerated to a blood-curdling, Jiffy-Pop pace. Utterly revolted, we pulled over almost immediately and turned off the ignition. Wandering into the silence of the windswept highway, we came face-to-spiny-face with our victims: fat, bristling with eponymous armor, and about two inches long, plus antennas.
Hideously mangled by an earlier car, one cricket—let’s call him, oh, Chester, shall we?—struggled mightily, and with much antenna-waving, to right himself. We paused for a moment of obligatory liberal-arts-grad reflection on the trail of casual destruction that even the best-intentioned among us will leave in the world. Meanwhile, other crickets ambled over and stood in a somber arc around the grievously wounded Chester. Heads bowed, jazz antennas momentarily subdued, they seemed—somehow—to share the somber moment. Then they all, simultaneously, began to eat Chester alive.
The beauty of Namibian Nights. Amazing.
“I feel that my father’s greatest legacy was the people he inspired to get involved in public service and their communities, to join the Peace Corps, to go into space. And really that generation transformed this country in civil rights, social justice, the economy and everything.”
- Caroline Kennedy
(via travelnerd)
A fantastic artist from Namibia. You should probably watch this and pass it on!
Giraffes fighting in Namibia!
Merry Christmas and happy holidays to all my friends around the world!
Don’t tell me how educated you are, tell me how much you have traveled.
Mohammed
In a gentle way you can shake the world.
Gandhi
A video of my last morning assembly in Tsintsabis, Namibia
I just get back from a quick trip to the store to pick up the new ZzzQuil (to help me kick the residual jet-lag), and a few things for my mom. During this last-minute trip several things struck me.
First and foremost: I drove. I decided I wanted to go to the store, got into my car and drove there. This is not remarkable to anyone in America, but it is for me. Normally I would have to walk or bike to the store (when I was in Rundu), or get a ride into town at the end of the week. The miraculousness of getting there in 5 minutes cannot be understated.
I decided to go to the store at 8:40 pm. This would certainly not fly in Namibia. Everything closes at 5 or 6, even in the capitol. Namibia is like the world’s largest small town where everything closes early in the evening, and stays closed on Sundays.
I have also discovered the exact amount of time it takes to get sick of American radio; especially the commercials: One week.
Despite the radio, with its terrible commercials and music, America is really the land of wonderful convenience.
The musical stylings of the Namibian rap duo Black Powder, composed of J-Cool (the shorter one, real name George) and Hostile (the taller one, real name Noah). This was taken outside of my house a couple weeks ago. In all honesty these are two of my best and most helpful students.