African Railway Journey

shopping stop, originally uploaded by Matt & Polly.

I enjoyed ‘African Railway Journey’ on BBC4 last night. A documentary about the Tazara railroad, whose passenger and goods trains travel between Zambia and Tanzania through amazing scenery, including a game park. It is a journey that Polly and I made when returning from Zambia back in 2007. Unlike the journeys in this film though, ours both departed and arrived bang on time (and it was the easiest and most pleasant border crossing I have ever experienced – man comes and collects passport from your cabin, dissappears for half an hour, and then returns with you passport complete with visa stamps etc).

Tazara was built by the Chinese just after independence in the 70′s, with the aim of linking Zambia’s copper belt to the Tanzanian port of Dar es Salaam. The film says that the train service is now in crisis, with every day derailments, lack of fuel and mechanical breakdowns. Filmmaker Sean Langan meets the train crews, controllers and maintenance guys battling to keep it going – and he visits Tazara HQ to track down the Chinese railway advisors and bosses to find out why it is in such a parlous state.

It is an enjoyable documentary because it shows ‘it’ how it is, and not just from what you see. The way the film is made, with the assumptions of ‘inefficient Africa’ behind it, portray the outsider’s prejudice as well. All the characters are there. The extremely accommodating and trusting people up and down the line; the proud business women from Zambia harking back to the good old days of Kaunda; the elusive Chinese ‘experts’ sent to do a job, without seeming to know what the job is or how the culture works; the large number of Tazara offices, which often seem to be empty; the fear felt by staff speaking above their station and offending the ‘big man’, yet also wanting to please the white man by answering his questions; the friendly and creative people on the ground working day-in and day-out to keep the trains moving on a shoestring; and of course the endearing, and slightly frustrated, Brit (and viewer?) who wonders why it doesn’t work better and finds the slow progress ‘amusing’. All the plot is there as well. The great idea of a huge railway service to ‘free’ Africa and transport copper to China, along with the millions of pounds of foreign aid and loans.

The plot and all the characters are there to make a revealing documentary of life in the region, going beyond just the topic. Like the trains, the film is slow moving, but the journey is all the fuller and revealing because of it, with the final destination being slightly different from what you at first think.

‘African Railway Journey’ was on BBC4 – catch it now on the BBC iPlayer.

Bread recipe

Lunch, originally uploaded by Matt & Polly.

I’ve recently been asked for ‘my’ bread recipe by a few folk, so here it is… The recipe came from Lari at the Mutinondo Wilderness, where it is baked in a solar oven. It is best enjoyed as part of a hearty lunch (see above) whilst gazing out over mile upon mile upom mile of unbroken Miombo woodland… failing that anywhere will do… a brilliantly simply and filling bread, from an amazing place!

GRANOLA BREAD

1 CUP WHITE FLOUR
1 CUP GRANOLA (OR OATS) – we use oats
2 CUPS BROWN FLOUR
600 ML SOUR MILK – we use milk, substituting 200 ml for water
1 TSP HONEY
1 TSP BICARB
1 TSP SALT

MIX EVERYTHING TOGETHER AND PUT IN A LOAF TIN, BAKE AT 180 DEGREES C FOR 1 TO 1 AND HALF HOURS

Redesign – do be do be do


Some time back I took to start redesigning my blog, so that it reflected me better, looked more interesting and also connected people to my various online presences… quite a lot of time later here it is!

I’ve completely overhauled the way the blog looks, but more importantly than the design/theme change, is the way blog posts are now categorised. The new categories better reflect where I am coming from and who I am. In particular they indicate the pondering I’ve been doing over the past 18 months regarding the ‘doing’ nature of ‘mission’ and church, and the tension of Doing vs. Being. So the new main categories are based around Outward (the Activist in me) and Inward (the Contemplative in me), as well as Community, Creative (I think there is a creative person in me some days) and Inspiration (a place for the stuff that inspires me).

I think, and hope, these are more than just technical changes. Language plays an important part in who we are and the way we do things… that’s why I believe our talk of ‘Doing’ sometimes leads to a compulsion to ‘do’ to others, rather than ‘being’ with others. Perhaps I’ll expand on that some time soon… I’m hoping that having done a redesign, I’ll even blog more regularly and that Twitter won’t completely kill my blog!

On the technical side of things I’m still using WordPress.com (which I think is still the best and simplest, and free, blogging platform out there – it’s got an iPhone app, loads of designs/themes, and, with a new Posterous style ‘Email to post’ feature, you can write a post by just sending an email)… And did I say it’s free!

subscribe to site feed by emailWordPress.com have also developed a new ‘Subscribe by email’ service, which allows people not to just sign-up to get new blog posts by email, but also to choose when and how they get them, which has led me to ditch the similar Feedburner.com ‘Subscribe by email’ service I used to use – so now if you want to sign-up to get emails click here.

And then there’s all those online presences that have been changing the way we communicate and use the internet…

twitter facebook delicious lastfm vimeo youtube contact me

Welcome Asher…

Welcome Asher Ben Kitto Freer, who arrived on Wednesday morning.

Asher and Polly are now home from the hospital – all went well and both are doing really well. Ayla is getting used to having a brother and getting lots of attention!

Asher means ‘joy’ in Hebrew and refers to the Ash tree, Ben is a family name and is also Hebrew meaning ‘son’, and Kitto is Swahili for ‘precious’ and also Cornish for ‘bearing Christ’.

Finished Zambia Photo Book

Zambia Photobook 1, originally uploaded by mattfreer.

It’s been two years since we returned to the UK from Zambia, and I have finally finished putting our photo’s from Zambia into a photo book using Blurb… The upside to the long process is that over two years Blurb updated their software countless times and seem to have improved their printing techniques, so I’m hopeful for a good quality book, I’ve certainly been impressed with them so far. More importantly, the two years have meant that I’ve been able to reflect on lots of our time in Zambia from a distance whilst doing it, and so it has been a really helpful process in other ways… Gotta wait a few weeks now for it to arrive – really looking forward to seeing the finished product and see our photos in print!.

Zambia Photobook 2, originally uploaded by mattfreer.