Sunday, January 13, 2008

Need a door?



Driving around town, I'm impressed by the number of objects for sale in Kinshasa. Venders sell their wares right on the busy streets of Kinshasa. Everyday they peddle their merchandise by hand carrying: men's suits, socks, shoes, clocks, maps, food items, puppies, and kittens. During the Christmas season, they handled blow-up Santa Clauses. Yesterday, while I was taking a walk, a group of guards were selling a lizzard on a leash. Along the Huileries Blvd. is a medical supply store: 8 to 10 fairly decent wheelchairs are in full view, totally exposed to the dirt and rain only about 3 feet from the street. They also sell walkers, canes and handicap railings if you need them. Another shop displays a variety of toilets and a series of hand-designed mosaic sinks in their front space. Pots, pans, cutlery, trinkets of all sorts are occasionally available. And why not? What is the reason that stuff has to be purchased from inside a building? Think about it. Being 4 degrees below the equator, the weather is usually warm enough to not need protection from the cold. People have plenty of time to look at your merchandise while they sit in the traffic jams. If they see what they like and they have money to buy it, it's theirs! Note the accompanying photo of the local lumber yard, complete with a new door. Do you need a new door for your house? If so you had better grab it while it's available, or you may miss the chance to get one. Pay for it and it will be delivered on foot to your address. If you don't have enough money, a piece of fabric will work just as well. In the market for a car door? (As in your car door is missing.) You may choose from this great selection of automobile doors and windshields. If your funds are limited, tape over the open space. It might not be as convenient, but it serves the same purpose.

4 Comments:

At January 14, 2008 at 12:28 PM , Blogger david said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

 
At January 14, 2008 at 12:38 PM , Blogger david said...

Can remember when I was in Goma the different things that people would sell... One of my friends bought a suitcase so that she could transport all of the things that she had purchased in Africa back the States. The cool thing about this was that the dude made the suitcases out of like tin or some sort of metal (of course right out there on the street).

Also remember the cool phrases and saying that some of the vendors would put on their little shop/huts. A cell phone card vendor had a cool saying (Swahili): Una Toka Wapi. Which means "Where are you?" I don't think I'll ever forget Una Toka Wapi, probably just because it sounds cool and I saw it every day...

Yours and thinking of you,

David

 
At January 14, 2008 at 6:09 PM , Blogger MeJane said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

 
At January 14, 2008 at 6:20 PM , Blogger MeJane said...

Hi Dave: Not sure what's going on with the double postings and then when I deleted one, the second one disappeared, too.
What I ended up deleting is this:
Don't you just love swahili? Hear that onomatopoeia in Una Toka Wapi. And thanks for pointing out the cell phone guys behind the little tables sitting under the umbrellas. They're everywhere. What a great way to make a few bucks, eh? I'll watch out for the suitcase maker. Need a suitcase? Wish you were here! Mom

 

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