DAILY PHOTO: Who Knew this was a Kudu?

Taken in May of 2016 at Chaminuka Game Reserve near Lusaka

Taken in May of 2016 at Chaminuka Game Reserve near Lusaka

DAILY PHOTO: Crocodiles in the Water

Taken in May of 2016 at Kalimba Reptile Park near Lusaka, Zambia

Taken in May of 2016 at Kalimba Reptile Park near Lusaka, Zambia

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DAILY PHOTO: Baby Elephants of Lilayi Elephant Nursery

Taken in May of 2016 at Lilayi Elephant Nursery near Lusaka, Zambia

Taken in May of 2016 at Lilayi Elephant Nursery near Lusaka, Zambia

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DAILY PHOTO: Gigantic Chicken

Taken in Lusaka, Zambia in May of 2016

Taken in Lusaka, Zambia in May of 2016

DAILY PHOTO: Bushbuck on the Trail

Taken in May of 2015 at Chaminuka Game Reserve

Taken in May of 2015 at Chaminuka Game Reserve

 

 

DAILY PHOTO: Baby Crocs at Kalimba

Taken at Kalimba Reptile Park near Lusaka, Zambia in May of 2016

Taken at Kalimba Reptile Park near Lusaka, Zambia in May of 2016

 

A close up

A closeup

 

Mass flight to water

Mass flight to water

DAILY PHOTO: Downtown Lusaka

Taken in May of 2016 in Lusaka, Zambia

Taken in May of 2016 in Lusaka, Zambia

 

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DAILY PHOTO: Tusker in the Tall Grass

Taken on May 25, 2016 at Chaminuka Game Reserve near Lusaka

Taken on May 25, 2016 at Chaminuka Game Reserve near Lusaka

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DAILY PHOTO: African Carpenter Bee on a Flower

Taken in May of 2016 at the Palmwood Lodge in Lusaka

Taken in May of 2016 at the Palmwood Lodge in Lusaka

 

I’m back from travels in Thailand, Zambia, and the UAE with lots of new photos. This is an African species of Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa caffra) hanging from a flower. Lusaka was in full bloom, despite the fact that it’s [southern hemisphere] winter there and the weather was cool.

BOOK REVIEW: Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe

Things Fall Apart (The African Trilogy, #1)Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Amazon page

Things Fall Apart is about a man who conducts his life ever trying to distance himself from his father. In the process, he sows the seeds of his own destruction. Residing in the small (fictional) Nigerian village of Umuofia in the late 19th century, Okonkwo strives to be hyper-masculine in everything he does. As a young man he becomes a village wrestling champion and, when it comes time to start farming, he’s driven to be the best farmer possible in order to pay off his debts and to be as wealthy as possible. He feels that his father, who was constantly in debt and negligent in his familial duties, was weak and effeminate. On the one hand, Okonkwo’s drive is respect worthy, but, on the other, his need to appear strong in the extreme comes off as a bit pitiful.

There are a couple of crucial events in Okonkwo’s life in which his need to appear manly results in great inner distress. The first occurs when it’s determined that a young man who’s been staying with Okonkwo’s family must be killed. (The young man was sent to Umuofia as a settlement for a wrong between the young man’s father and an Umuofia resident.) Okonkwo has been a father to the young man. Even when a village elder tells Okonkwo to have no part in the killing owing to being like a father to the boy, Okonkwo feels he must participate lest he be seen as effeminate. Of course, Okonkwo is wracked with guilt because he murdered a boy who’d been like a son to him. Later, an accidental discharge of Okonkwo’s firearm kills an innocent young man. The worst part of this for Okonkwo is that an accidental killing is seen as a “woman’s offense.” As punishment, Okonkwo and his family are sent in exile on another village for seven years. Okonkwo isn’t so much torn up by killing another innocent as by the fact that the way it happened makes him look girly in the eyes of others—or so he believes.

Besides the character portrait of Okonkwo, the book is also a commentary on the nature of colonialism and proselytizing missionaries. The first part of the book is set in a pre-colonial state, but in the latter half the rapidly developing tensions between the missionaries and the local villagers is featured. When Okonkwo and his family return to Umuofia after seven years, he finds that white men have built a church and are actively seeking to turn the villagers away from the indigenous beliefs. Of course, for Okonkwo this is just too much, and he can’t believe others are putting up with this. (Adding to his torment is the fact that his son is one of the converts—possibly because that son himself wants to distance himself from the father who murdered his best friend [the boy from the other village.]) Okonkwo is ultimately unable to tolerate that the world has become something so different from what he believes is right, and to continue living means to steer away from the path that he has locked his life into.

This short and thought-provoking book is a great window into pre-colonial Africa and the clash of worldviews that colonization brought. It’s also a cautionary tale about not having sympathy for the failings of one’s father—not to mention the weakness inherent in our own humanity.

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