When the songs start to play the
people dance. Malawians love to dance. It doesn’t matter with who or where.
Take the bar scene for instance, where you’ll almost exclusively find males
hanging out and drinking their Carlsberg greens. Now imagine a popular song
comes on the jukebox. All of a sudden you’ll have a group of guys dancing in a
circle, often with simultaneous dance moves, just having a great time. That’s
something I really appreciate in this culture. Dancing isn’t just to impress a
girl or to show off, it’s really about having fun. It’s easy to feel
self-conscious about dancing when you’re trying to impress someone, but here
you can really let loose and have fun with it.
"Probably the best beer in the world"
Great slogan Carlsberg.
I still get laughed at
sometimes for my strange dancing, but it’s fun once you’ve had a couple beers and
you’re over the self-consciousness. Having a good dance partner is also
reassuring. Thankfully I’ve had friends that are eager to go out and introduce
me to the nightlife.
Bunda campus has a great
student community that likes to throw rallies and other engaging events. There’s been a Rasta
concert, a fashion show, outdoors concert, open-air discos, student union
election rallies and more. All of these events were nothing like I’ve known, or would have imagined them to be.
The student commons is a happening place. Somedays a football match will a attract
crowd of avid fans and other days you might come across a student rally.
The Rasta concert featured
the Ma Blacks, also known as the Black Missionaries. This is Malawi’s number
one band. You hear their music everywhere you go. I consider
myself lucky to have seen them play live. For the first half of the show I
stayed back and watched the crowd from where the merchandise stalls. Here the
vendors were selling a wide variety Rastafarian related items. Marijuana is illegal in Malawi but that didn’t stop vendors from
selling ridiculously large joints in plain sight. There isn’t any police on
campus and as far as I could tell there wasn’t even security inside the concert
hall either.
A mysterious haze covers the reggae concert. |
The concept of an open-air disco is brilliant. Let me break it down. First, you need to find a suitable dance floor. Take the cafeteria parking lot or the local basketball court as recent working examples. Two, buy a ton of beer and stock the makeshift “bar”. Three, now find a DJ to play the latest and greatest hits, keep the music going from four in the afternoon until four in the morning. With a culture that loves to dance, a great supply of beer and hit music, the evening is bound to be a huge success. The attendees are free to come and go with their liquor as they please. You don’t need to worry about any inconvenient hassle from the authorities because they virtually don’t exist on campus. Without strict liquor laws, vending licenses and food safety, anything is possible. Bunda campus is also a fair distance from any major city, police presence outside of the cities is pretty minimal, apart from the many highway checkpoints that is.
The concept of an open-air
disco is brilliant. Let me break it down. First, you need to find a suitable
dance floor. Take the cafeteria parking lot or the local basketball court as
recent working examples. Two, buy a ton of beer and stock the makeshift “bar”.
Three, now find a DJ to play the latest and greatest hits, keep the music going
from four in the afternoon until four in the morning. With a culture that loves
to dance, a great supply of beer and hit music, the evening is bound to be a
huge success. The attendees are free to come and go with their liquor as they
please. You don’t need to worry about any inconvenient hassle from the
authorities because they virtually don’t exist on campus. Without strict liquor
laws, vending licenses and food safety, anything is possible. Bunda campus is
also a fair distance from any major city, police presence outside of the cities
is pretty minimal, apart from the many highway checkpoints that is.
The fashion show takes us
back to the concert hall. The stands were comprised of four levels to maximize
viewing capacity. People in the very front were seated on the ground, directly
behind them people were standing on the floor, then there were people
standing on chairs and finally the last row were people standing on rickety
desks. There were hundreds if not a thousand people packed in this medium sized
gymnasium. Everyone wanted to see and cheer for his or her favourite contestant,
because in this fashion show the winners were named king and queen of Bunda
campus, very renowned titles in the student community.
Fashion show venue was packed. |
Turns out by fashion show
they more or less meant dance competition, and by dance competition I more or
less mean girls twerking and guys stripping. It was great fun for everyone and
at the end of the competition we received a new king and queen of Bunda, named
by the contest judges themselves. The crowd celebrated with jubilance and the
event transformed into a night of dancing and drinking. I was even introduced
to the new shirtless king of Bunda himself that night. The honour was mine.
The student union elections for
Bunda campus were being held last week and the candidates were in campaign
mode. There was a ton of enthusiasm surrounding the student elections, rallies,
canvasing, car parades, debates, really the whole deal. I wasn't invested in
the events but I would come across them from time to time, wondering what all
the noise and music was about. Sometimes these rallies were going on right outside ongoing classes, not sure how much you can absorb in class when a party is happening right next door.
I was invited to a student union meeting by my dance partner
Tchiwe but I politely declined. Little did I know that those meetings resembled a
rally more than some boring procedural assembly. After the meeting Tchiwe had
completely lost her voice. Apparently these meetings get very loud; you’re
there to cheer on your favorite contestants. It’s really something special to
see a large portion of the student community actively participating in
politics. That kind of enthusiasm was absent from my university experiences,
both in Winnipeg and Halifax.
Candidates poster stapled to a tree. Go Mr. Chidzani.
Overall, I’ve enjoyed the
social life at Bunda campus. I made a bit of a reputation for myself to the
point that students knew me before we even met. That was fun to feel like a
celebrity for a while, but now understand that it can be difficult to always
act enthusiastic or very caring when constantly being approached by new people.
After three months of living at Bunda campus I have moved to Blantyre for a
chance at working more closely with small-scale, rural tilapia farmers. Really
looking forward to living in Blantyre, it’s much more expensive but it’s
incredibly beautiful, has great recreation facilities and a larger variety of
foods.
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