Chasing the sunset. April 6th to April 25th

Down through Dixie. Saturday 4/6 to Monday 4/8, Mahwah, Lexington, Scottsboro, and New Orleans

America is a roadtrip country. You just can’t travel it well by bus or train like in other countries; car culture reigns supreme. The bus routes are there, but are often inefficient, indirect, and expensive, and don’t even get me started on the railway options, like AmTrak. It’s funny because it’s not like the US has always had bad public transportation, since the US had such a lead role with developing railroads in the 19th century as it completed its conquest of the West, and the trains were still pretty good into the 20th century from what I’ve heard. The US just doesn’t value public transit as much as other countries. Sure, European countries are smaller, but it’s not just about size—even in the contained Northeast of the US the railroads between Boston and DC are shit, and larger countries like Canada and especially China have incredible cross-country rail systems. There’s also the issue that once you get to any city, you definitely won’t find any public shuttles taking you to nearby attractions like national parks. The buses and subways within US cities tend to be not so great either compared to those of other industrialized countries.

So when it comes to traveling the US long term, driving your own car is the best option, being cheaper and more efficient, even with the gas. That is, if you are in the position to already have a car in the first place, considering all the expenses for loans, insurance, maintenance, and the license and registration stuff, which hey, thankfully I am. I did briefly entertain the idea of doing it by bike (a lot of people do), but I would need to set aside at least a year for that, to be able to see all the things I want to see. And I’m not badass enough to do it by motorcycle. Going by car will also mean I can sleep in the back when I’m not staying with friends or Couchsurfing hosts, like in more remote areas like national parks; the few hostels in the US aren’t that cheap, even compared to the hostels in expensive Europe. And I can carry around a good stock of groceries too, since food in the US ain’t cheap either, like I’ve been having it in the Middle East and South Africa.

I come to terms with the fact that I’ll be doing this in my car for two months, and in the couple days leading up to my trip at the beginning of April I pimp out my electric-green 2006 Subaru Outback, Josephine. I take down one of the back seats, cozy it up with a sleeping bag, pillow, and some blankets over it, with my legs stretching into the trunk and my head poking out into the backseat. In the other half of the trunk, I put in a cardboard box and a cooler filled with some ice packs that I’ll stick in the freezer whenever I’m staying somewhere with access to one. The day before I leave, I raid my parents’ kitchen and basement for any food they’re not eating and fill my car’s new mobile kitchen with it. I’ve been talking through the outline of my itinerary with my parents over dinner this past week. They warn me that I’m trying to squeeze in too much into two months, especially considering that much of my time will be spent driving. “I don’t think you realize how big this country is, Benjamin,” my dad says. Are they right? Probably. Am I going to seriously take that into account? Of course not.

They give me a send-off Saturday morning, and I set off down south into Pennsylvania, going around to the west of DC to avoid the traffic. Most of this territory is the historic land of the Lenape Indian peoples. There are still some of them around the region today, a few on small reservations, but most living in cities and towns, including my own hometown of Mahwah—the Ramapough Lenape. I’m not going to say too much about Mahwah here, since this is about me traveling beyond my home, but I should at least mention some of the struggles that have been going on just a few miles away from where I grew up. The Ramapough aren’t just a passive group of poor Indians. Even 300 years after their land was occupied by the British, they still have been resisting, pushing the town to give better roads and fire department service for their neighborhood, and taking legal action against industrial waste from the old Ford auto plant polluting their area.

Most recently, they set up a prayer camp site on their own land in protest of a planned pipeline. After they were harassed by the town and a neighboring association, the Justice Department actually sided with them a few weeks ago, and said that the town had violated the Ramapoughs’ religious rights. While the tribe is recognized at the state level by New Jersey, it still is one of the few that doesn’t have federal recognition. Some politicians have accused them of trying to get recognition only so they could open a casino, with little evidence. In 1993, an Atlantic City casino owner named Donald Trump actually brought a lawsuit against several tribes in the area for competing with his casinos, in which he accused the Ramapough of trying to do that as well. It’s a good thing that asshole never, like, became president or anyth—oh…wait.

The people living in the Ramapough community of Mahwah—not just pure Indian but many mixed race, with some white and black heritage—have been marginalized by most of everyone else in the town for two centuries now; I can tell you firsthand that I saw their children excluded in the schools when I was growing up. While I was never directly mean to any of them in person, I still consider myself to have been complicit as one of hundreds of other students in collectively excluding them. I didn’t know why they were the outcasts. I didn’t think about it in racial or class terms (consciously at least). They just were the outcasts, because enough people said they were, because their parents had said so, so I just went along with it. “Mahwah” comes from the Lenape word for “meeting place,” but there hasn’t been much real meeting going on between people from different backgrounds for most of the town’s history.

I’ll leave this lamentation of life in Mahwah at that. Back to the start of this next journey. I’m not that far south or west yet, but I know that I’m in rural America when I stop in a small town in Pennsylvania to use a bathroom, and there’s a full painted portrait of John Wayne in the bathroom above the toilet. Not just a little wrinkled poster—an actual framed painting. I cross into Virginia, and after a few more hours reach the nice country hills of Lexington, historically the lands of the Monacan people. I stop by the house of Peter Del Vecchio (who I’ll just refer to as Mr. DV, since he was my old music teacher and it’s still odd to refer to him by his first name). I have a nice reunion with Mr. DV and his wife Patti, and he shows me around the nicer parts of town before sunset, and have get some southern barbecue for dinner. They host me for the night, and I catch them in the morning for a bit. They tell me more about how Lexington is a big pilgrimage site for lots of neo-Confederates and white nationalists; Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson are both buried here, among others. Every January, mourners of the Lost Cause of the South descend on Lexington for Lee-Jackson Day, often leading to tension with the more liberal residents of the college town.

I thank the Del Vecchios for hosting me as I start my trip, and late morning I head into town to see some of these holy sites (purely out of historical interest of course, I imagine if you’ve been paying even the slightest attention this whole time you’ll guess that I’m not exactly a big Confederacy fan). There’s the cemetery with Stonewall Jackson’s grave and statue, with a few mini confederate flags people have stuck in the ground around it. By far the main attraction is of course the building where Robert E. Lee is buried on the campus of Washington-Lee University. After the war he became president here, and other than that had a pretty quiet retirement. The chapel that was built when he became president contains his tomb. There’s a family in front of me waiting to get in, and a curator at the door lets us know that confederate flags aren’t actually allowed on campus; they had to take one away from a guy earlier that day who had tried to enter with one. “Can I have it?” the father in front of me asks, only half-jokingly. I enter and walk up to see the impressive life-sized marble sculpture of him lying above his burial place, and check out a bunch of other historical items, including a stone marking where his horse was buried.

Mid-afternoon I get back into the car, but I soon hear a faint grinding scraping kind of sound from the engine. Car troubles this early in the trip! It’s hard to find a mechanic’s place that’s open on a Sunday in small town, but I see one on Google a couple miles away. It’s just a guy in the middle of the woods with a yard full of cars and trucks people have dropped off. As I drove here though the sound went away; the man’s friendly and still takes a look at it, but doesn’t see anything wrong. I thank him and continue onwards. The rest of the day I keep going southwest through Cherokee country, stopping at Scottsboro, Alabama pretty late, starting a pattern for the rest of the roadtrip of me sightseeing during the day while things are open, and driving mostly later in the day into the night. No friends or family, cheap hostels, or Couchsurfing hosts in Scottsboro for me—time for my first experience trying out my little bed in the back of my car in a Wal-Mart parking lot. There’s actually an entire website that lists all Wal-Marts in the country you’re allowed to sleep at, mostly the 24-hour ones; they really don’t care as long as you don’t cause a scene. I make a turkey sandwich for dinner, and I end up sleeping pretty well actually.

I’m woken up around 7 AM by a tornado warning buzzing on my phone, but it’s not coming too close by me, staying a couple counties away. I get some breakfast out of the back—some cold toast with cream cheese and jam, cereal with a little box of dried milk in a plastic bowl, and an apple—not gourmet, but adequate. I brush my teeth outside the car with my water bottle before realizing I can just go use the Wal-Mart bathroom. There’s not too much to see in Scottsboro. But besides being the site of the infamous 1930s trial of the Scottsboro Boys, a group of black men falsely accused of rape, Scottsboro is also of (more pleasant) interest for the national Unclaimed Baggage Center. It’s exactly what it sounds like, a giant thrift store where airports across the country send any baggage that passengers never pick up. It’s mostly clothes, but there’s also a room to other things people left behind on the conveyor belts, like electronics, sports gear, books and CDs, unused toiletries, and the like. They have some of the crazier items they’ve received over the years on the walls, like medieval weapons, instrument, animal skins, but those aren’t for sale unfortunately.

After claiming some of this unclaimed baggage for myself (some snazzy shoes and sunglasses, along with some more practical picks of discounted sunscreen and bugspray), I get back on the road and continue on through Muskogee-Creek lands of Alabama and Mississippi for the rest of the day. I don’t have time for many other stops, though I pull over to the side of one country road where a couple farmers are selling stuff, and I buy some jam. I also get out in Tuscaloosa to see the ruins of the old state capitol that burned down before continuing straight on to New Orleans New Orleans (Chitimacha and Choctaw Indian land). It’s dark by the time the city comes into view, and I pull up to the house of my Couchsurfing host for the next few days, James.

There is a house in New Orleans. Tuesday 4/9 to Thursday 4/11, New Orleans (Chitimacha/Choctaw territory) and Houston

James, a few years older than me, definitely had one of the most unique Couchsurfing situations I encountered in all my travelling. For the past six years the guy’s literally been building his own house here at the edge of the Lower Ninth Ward, and he’s had a couple hundred Couchsurfers come through over the years to help him work on it, and it’s actually close to being finished now. He had a professional company come in to drive huge thick 30-foot long stilts into the ground at the start, so most of it is one storey off the ground. Other than that, everything else built he’s gotten the material himself for, and built it with the help of the volunteers. It’s good planning ahead in a part of the city that was one of the hardest hit by Hurricane Katrina, largely because the Lower Ninth was already neglected by the city in the first place, being one of its poorest black communities.

James knows what he’s doing, and directs guests with less construction experience in how we can help. The house is close to being finished, but there are some finishing touches James is making. During the day I help him and his friend Tom, mostly with putting up beams and panels for the wall around the garage/storage area on the bottom. There’s also another guest, Sarah, who has some time off from the oil rig she’s been working on out in the Gulf. She’s now making her own Subaru trip up to her family in South Dakota, and she’s a lot better at this whole thing than me—she’s set up curtains for her car windows and a bookshelf and everything. I learn from her that what we’re doing is apparently called “rubber tramping.” I like that, not sure if my mom would. Anyway it’s cool helping James at the tail end of his huge project, and I get to improve my use of power tools while I’m at it. He doesn’t have an official name for the place, but over the years many of the guests have taken to calling it Jamestown (House of the Rising Sun was probably too easy). Tom also shows me the garden they have, including a bunch of mini kumquat trees.

In the evenings, I of course enjoy what makes New Orleans still my favorite city in the US. I’m definitely not gonna try to say that I “know” New Orleans after only a couple short visits here, but from what little I’ve seen, I still think it’s got the best food, the best architecture, and of course the best music, even if it is wicked humid. I mean the people here despite all they’ve been through literally play jazz at funerals, what more do I have to say? There’s music everywhere, every night. I don’t bother with Bourbon Street this time, but I do make a pilgrimage to French Street, where every block there’s at least one blaring brass ensemble just letting it rip. James thankfully ha some extra bikes that Sarah and I borrow. Wednesday night I get to catch up over some crawfish with Harry, one of the other delegates from the Palestine trip back in November.

I also stop by the Lower Ninth Ward’s museum, where I learn more about just how bad Katrina and its aftermath have been. I had heard just a bit about the continuing neglect for the poorer black residents of New Orleans before, how years later they still haven’t recovered, but I hadn’t realized just how much the damage has lasted even 14 years later. Areas like the Lower Ninth suffered the most flooding since they were least protected by the dysfunctional levees, and many of the destroyed houses still haven’t been repaired. Because of this, most of the refugees who still haven’t been able to return to their homes in the city are black; the population of the Lower Ninth went from 15,000 before Katrina down to less than 3,000 after the storm.

Common Ground Relief is probably one of the most prominent local organizations making sure that the communities of New Orleans are more ready for the next storm, whenever it comes. The collective was started right after Katrina to set up mutual aid for food, medical care, and rebuilding, and is now focused on sustainability and rehabilitating the city’s coastal wetlands, which have been ruined for decades by oil and gas companies’ pipeline construction, making the city more vulnerable to flooding. You can donate to Common Ground here: https://www.commongroundrelief.org/

Thursday morning I say thanks and goodbye to James and company. I drive by downtown one more time, get a catfish po’boy for the road and head west, enjoying the drive along the bridges over the swampy bayou with the Gulf coast on my left. “Mamas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys” comes on the radio as I enter Texas on the dark empty road. I had wanted to get to Austin tonight, but it’s getting late, so I settle for another Wal-Mart parking lot outside Houston, after passing by several oil refinery complexes on the road, infernal glowing iron fortresses in the night.

Lone Star. Friday 4/12 to Sunday 4/14, Houston, Austin, Fort Stockton, and Big Bend National Park (Apache lands)

I have my first Waffle House experience ever the next morning. I then waste no more time continuing to Austin, through the historic land of the now almost-extinct Tonkawa people. This is now the furthest west I’ve ever been (I don’t count that time my family flew to Alaska when I was a kid). I get to my Couchsurfing host Quinn’s place in the afternoon. Quinn’s pretty busy, so I don’t see him much over the next couple days, but he’s still glad to be able to give back as a host after he’s been a guest himself so many times.

With its unofficial motto of “Keep Austin Weird,” the city does have a quirky reputation, though how much longer it will continue to keep that weirdness in the face of ongoing development is a debate among locals. What I personally end up finding weirdest about Austin is the physical layout of downtown, the actual location of the nexus of weirdness. There’s plenty of street musicians, dive bars, and pop-art further out from the city center, but the main holdout of it all is downtown at East 6th Street. As I head there, I’m amused to find it literally tucked between the skyscrapers of the business district. There’s the main avenue with its offices, luxury stores, fancy restaurants, and more high-end bougie clubs, then just turn a corner onto Dirty Sixth, and bam, it’s anarchy—dive bars, greasy spoons, street performers, strip clubs, food trucks, crust punks, skaters, metalheads, potheads, skinheads (not of the neo-Nazi variety hopefully), deadheads, regular heads, wastoids, hippies, hipsters, some juggalos probably, pagans, Satanists, atheists, definitely not a lot of monotheists, sado-masochists, tourists, locals. The kind of place where you stand out, if you normally don’t stand out when you’re anywhere else. I had expected this kind of scene, I just hadn’t expected finding it sandwiched right in the middle of the more gentrified downtown. I don’t know what I really had pictured, but it’s great. It’s another style of decadence, a rougher, less-polished decadence than the luxurious type around the corner I had passed on my way here.

I use my short time Saturday just to wander and see more of the odd Easter eggs around the area, random things like Buddha statues on the street and carvings on trees. The main attraction I find out about is the “Cathedral of Junk,” which a guy named Vince has been building in his backyard since 1989. It’s a huge structure, with two floors, built from all sorts of stuck I can’t even begin to list, though there are definitely lot of old bicycle pieces. A lot of stuff he’s added is junk pieces people have donated. Whatever stuff Vince made the main frame from, it’s strong; it’s withstood countless storms, and city inspectors have come several times to see if it’s structurally unsafe, and have found no weak spots. The place has gotten famous enough that almost 30 other people stop by during the afternoon I’m there, and Vince has rented it out for some weddings over the years. I spend easily over an hour looking at all the random smaller decorations inside, like records, animal statues, half a dozen Mr. Incredible action figures. While some local artists hail him as a phenomenon, Vince himself is pretty unpretentious about the artistic meaning of the whole thing, saying he’s just done it because it was fun. L’art pour l’art.

I also ask around at places like music stores if anyone’s seen the Youtube-famous street performer GOAT (the God of All Texas) around recently, but they tell me he only comes out closer to the summer usually. Oh well, I’ll have to find GOAT another time. I thank Quinn that night since he’ll be gone in the morning, and the next day I get back on the road to drive across most of central Texas—if I want to spend more time around the southwest, I have to pick up the pace. Making my way through the vast expanses of  Comanche and Apache lands, I don’t see much besides some old towns with German heritage.

I don’t have many cool or funny road stories over the course of the roadtrip, but on this particular day driving across Texas I do actually have one weird encounter. Over halfway through the drive, around Sheffield, I pull into a gas station, but all the pumps are shut off—I try to get into the building, but it’s completely closed down and dark inside. I’ve still got a quarter tank, so I get ready to continue to the next station I find, when an older couple pulls in, and they make the same discovery. They’re running very low, so I drive to the other side of the highway to see if the station there is open—that one isn’t either, there’s another woman in a van trying to find one too. I go back to the couple at the first station to tell them, and accidentally walk in on the older guy squatting behind the store, with his wife holding a roll of toilet paper for him. I apologize quickly and wait for them back by the pumps, and I look up the nearest station that’s open—30 miles away near Fort Stockton. They can’t make it, so they give me some cash to buy a container so I can bring a few gallons back for them. I’ve never gotten a chance to be a hero like this before!

I zoom off on my mission, and at the station I buy a container to fill up for them, and fill my own tank. I race back the 30 miles to the other station, ready to do good and help these people out, and I pull into the station…only to find that they’re completely gone without a trace, car and all, like the Russian in the Pine Barrens episode of The Sopranos. I feel so blue-balled. I was really enthusiastic about doing some good for other humans, fellow travelers, and now I’m just stuck here with a smelly can of gas in my trunk. And that will remain the biggest mystery from my road trip—how did they get out in the end? Did someone else who happened to have extra gas stop by and give it to them? Did they manage to get towed? Was it aliens? They could’ve tried driving on to Fort Stockton and stalled, but I didn’t see them pulled over. Did they try driving back east to the last station they had seen? Hopefully they didn’t think I tried to steal the bit of money they gave me—they knew it would take me an hour, and that’s how long I took. I probably should’ve given them my number. Ah well, hopefully it went well for them.

I drive back west back to the gas station where I got the container so I can fill up myself, and I see the other woman again who had been looking for a station further back too, and I tell her about the older couple mysteriously vanishing after I brought them back a container—she commends me and says she hopes it still pays off for me somehow. I then ask someone working the store if I can return the gas can with the receipt, but since it’s already been filled up they won’t take it back. Annoyed, I look around at a place to dispose of it; I’m not gonna haul around the smelly thing in the backseat. In the end, I drive behind one of the pumps and just furtively leave the container there for someone to deal with. As the sun starts to set, I now turn south toward the Rio Grande River for the last couple hours. At one point my engine starts making that grinding sound again that I first heard back in Virginia, and I pull into a parking lot to drive slowly and examine it, but after turning my car back on again, it goes away. I’ll have to get that checked in the next city I stop in. I drive into the park and check a map for the campsites, and after some searching come to one. Sleeping in my car in the great outdoors here is much more pleasant than a floodlit Wal-Mart parking lot.

La frontera. Monday 4/15 through Wednesday 4/17, Big Bend & Terlingua, Marfa, El Paso, White Sands, and Albuquerque

Monday morning I’m woken up early by a man tapping my window—turns out I’m on a private campsite for just his family. I frantically apologize and tell him this is my first stay in a national park, but thankfully he’s cool about it, and I drive off. This land around the Big Bend was historically of the Chizo Indians, later displaced by Mescalero Apache. I have my breakfast outside the nearest visitor’s center, and when they open up I buy a national park pass that’ll let me get into any one across the country for the rest of my trip. I’ve only given myself one day to explore this one, so I set off for one of the half-day hikes up Lost Mine Peak, where according to legend Chizos revolted against the Spanish enslaving them to work the mines. It’s great finally getting to see more of the nature here, as I’ve mostly just been zipping through towns and cities this past week. The peak overlooks the eastern half of the park, along with the cliffs around the Rio Grande river in the distance, and I entertain myself and some others with my harmonica at the top of the mountain before heading back down and driving to the park’s main attraction.

I pass some abandoned buildings from the frontier period on my way through the valley, including an old store that served ranchers from both sides of the border during the Mexican Revolution years. I then reach the majestic bend of the Rio Grande, or what Mexicans call the Rio Bravo. It really is a sight—a towering sheer ridge of desert cliffs with the mostly calm water cutting between them. I wade across a shallow stream to join a clump of people gathered at the mouth of the canyon for a closer look. I notice that my water bottle is running low when someone says “Hey, there he is again”—it’s the same woman I ran into in the gas station yesterday after I tried to bring gas to the stranded couple! I guess most people driving these parts are on their way either to or from Big Bend. I ask if she maybe has some water to spare for my bottle, and she says of course, especially after she knew I had tried to help those stranded people. So I guess it was worth something trying to help them, in the end.

She heads off soon, and I continue to take in the view. Just through the cliffs and on the other side of the river are the lands of Mexico. As the afternoon gets on, I say good-bye to the river and start north again, stopping in the tiny old mining town of Terlingua. Official population is 58, though that doesn’t take into account Big Bend tourists staying there at any time, or the 10,000 people who gather here every November for the annual National Chili Cook-off. Apparently in the 1970s, the cook-off’s organizers sponsored a Mexican Fence-Climbing Contest to ridicule the US government’s plan to reinforce fences along the border. Some people I met in the park recommended I go to the Starlight, where locals sometimes gather outside to jam with their guitars and banjos. I get some chili and wait, and finally as the sun sets some of them begin to assemble on the porch, singing and plucking away. It’s a beautiful scene for the eyes and ears, but really just as they’re getting started I have to pull myself away, since I already told my Couchsurfing host I’d be arriving tonight.

I drive two hours north to the artsy town of Marfa, and my host Carrie welcomes me. We don’t talk much yet since it’s getting late, but she tells me I can still catch the famous Marfa lights nearby. I had heard a bit about this before, so I get back in the car and drive just out of town to a little observatory place that has some telescopes on a porch overlooking dark fields. The Marfa lights phenomenon is very well-known to people all around this region. For years going back to the nineteenth century, Americans as well as the local Indians of the area have described mysterious sightings of floating flickering lights in the distance at night. I don’t see much at first, but after some time staring through one of the telescopes, I see some little lights twinkling in the distance! They definitely don’t seem like cars or any electric lights or fires, from the way they’re moving and blinking. Locals have attributed them to everything from UFOs to ghoulish spirits, though most probably they’re some sort of atmospheric reflections of distant car lights and campfires in this landscape, according to the scientists. But if you ask me, The Truth Is Out There.

A couple other people are there that night too, and express their wonder at what we’re all seeing. There’s one guy in from Santa Fe, Joerael, a mural artist who actually has a pretty legit website. We talk for a bit, and he gives me some recommendations for things to see around the Southwest, including a lesser-known spot near Monument Valley called the Valley of the Gods. He also gives me some warnings about travelling through the border regions in general, warning me not to go wandering around places in the countryside at night—some paranoid ranchers might pull their guns out and shoot my silhouette from a distance if I get too close to their property. Not that I was planning on being in any such situation, but it just further shows that Josephine and I definitely aren’t in Jersey anymore.

I part ways with the Marfa lights and Joerael, and head back to rest up at Carrie’s. She’s a wonderful host, and puts together breakfast in the morning. She’s lived all over the country herself, in cities and villages, and finds herself now in Marfa because it’s Marfa. Unfortunately I happen to be there on a Tuesday, the one day of the week when pretty much anything art-related in the town is closed, and of course I’ve got my damn schedule laid out for the next couple weeks. I also ask about the “MarfaSaysNoC3” signs on a lot of people’s lawns—turns out that artsy Marfa has caught the eye of Coachella, and they’re trying to start an annual festival here. Residents have rallied against it, not just for the potential social disruption but for the environmental disruption of having thousands of people descend on the fragile desert around the area. They say they already get enough tourism for their economy, and they want to keep it sustainable. Can’t have anything good stay small and real long enough before some big company comes around trying to cash in on it.

I thank Carrie as she heads off to work, and I head west to El Paso, driving past the oil fields of the Permian Basin, historically the lands of the Sumas and Jumanos peoples. While all the art stuff in Marfa is closed today, I do get to see the semi-famous conceptual art piece of a Prada store in the middle of the desert. A few other people are there at the same time, and one British guy turns to me and comments, “It is rather a load of bollocks, isn’t it?” I get into El Paso in the evening and meet up with my host for the night, Keko, and another guest of his, Mark. Keko tells me a bit about how El Paso and Ciudad Juarez across the border in Mexico had largely been a single city of its own for decades, with people crossing over the border quite freely, before the years of stricter border controls, cartels, and drug wars. Still today, plenty of people live on one side and go to school or work on the other. Keko’s also the first one in my journey I’m able to practice some Spanish with (besides a few of the other backpackers I’ve met on the other trips), and he shares some of his own experiences traveling around Latin America.

I thank Keko Wednesday morning before he has to go, and he advises that I don’t try driving into (and especially out of) Juarez; it’ll be much quicker if I park near the crossing and just walk over. I won’t have much time, but I figure if I’m this close to the border, I might as well go over for just a few hours while I can. Crossing into Mexico isn’t too hard. I walk across a bridge over the Rio Grande—up here, it’s now more of a large stream than a full river, drying up more in recent years from climate change and overuse. I enter Ciudad Juarez without even having to flash my passport. Once one of the most violent cities in the world, Juarez these days is much safer than it was ten years ago. It has been picking up a little again in some parts this past year, so I still make sure to keep to the main downtown, even during the day. While culturally the two cities may still be very linked, and there are plenty of Spanish signs and sounds in El Paso, here the English disappears, and I can see the beaten sidewalks and pavements, their infrastructure funding probably gone to more urgent needs. Still, as with any more troubled city I’ve been in from Bethlehem to Johannesburg, the inhabitants here are just ordinary people living their lives. There’s one woman who sees me trying to use an ATM, and she tries to help me, talking rapidly in Spanish, most of which I can’t make out. I wasn’t having much of an issue with the ATM, but I still appreciate her offer to help. I’m really gonna have to brush up on my Spanish more before I go to South America later this year.

I explore around the center a bit, visiting the old railway station, now a museum with a lot of cool stuff from Pancho Villa and Juarez’s role in the Mexican Revolution in the 1910s. In the afternoon I get lunch at the Kentucky Club, founded by Americans during Prohibition to sell alcohol legally over the border, and a likely birthplace of the margarita. The tacos here are definitely some of the damn best I’ve ever had—simply ingredients, not more complicated than they need to be. It’s tempting to go back, get the car and drive further south into the vast lands of Mexico, but I’ve got my plans: I’ll get to Latin America come December. For now, I’ve still got the rest of this overly ambitious road trip.

I walk back to the bridge crossing, past a huge line of cars waiting to get inspected going to the US side. Crossing into the US as a pedestrian with a passport isn’t as hard—I show it to them, pass through some scanners pretty quickly, and I’m back. For those following the news, I also probably don’t have to mention that while crossing from Mexico into the US is easy for me, there are of course hundreds of migrants being detained nearby in ICE’s “service processing center,” and there are hundreds more asylum seekers around Juarez hoping to soon make that same walk across the bridge that I just made, a walk that was so easy for me just because of my status from being born in another part of this country, hundreds of miles away in New York. As always, I am not guilty for the privileges I have—I am just angry, angry that so many others are denied them.

As I start the car, I hear some more of that grinding sound from the engine again, and resolve to get it checked tomorrow before my week going through the desert to Grand Canyon. I head north into New Mexico and stop off at White Sands, which is exactly what it sounds like—a whole range of hills of what looks like bright white sand in the middle of the grassy plains. They’re actually a bunch of gypsum crystals that made their home here thousands of years ago, when rivers flowed to deposit them here, where they were left when the region slowly dried up. Driving further in, it really is one of the more surreal, and tranquil sights I’ve ever seen. I easily lose track of time here as I relax on the dunes. As the sun sets I get back into the car and continue north, past a giant pistachio nut for some reason, and approach Albuquerque; I’m now entering the lands of the Pueblo peoples. The host I initially had for the next two nights had to cancel, so I find my way to another Wal-Mart parking lot paradise for the night.

Indian country. Thursday 4/18 to Sunday 4/21, Albuquerque, Chaco Canyon, and Durango & Mesa Verde

Thursday morning I have my usual car breakfast, taking in that Wal-Mart parking lot morning air and checking nearby Subaru shops on my phone. I also see that another host, Tara, responded to me on Couchsurfing asking if I still need a place to stay that night—I tell her that would be great, and I keep her updated on my car situation. I drive to one of the Subaru places, and thankfully they have time to give Josephine a look. After waiting a bit, the guy comes out and tells me that the fan belt is almost shot—if I hadn’t taken it in, I could definitely have ended up stranded somewhere on my way to the Grand Canyon. It’s a pretty simple issue, thankfully there’s not a long wait; they’re only gonna have to keep the car for one night. They have a service driver who can drop me off where I’m staying, so I check in with Tara, and she says I can come on over.

I look around as he drives me through Albuquerque, and it’s definitely one of the most unique-looking cities I’ve seen in the US so far, besides New Orleans with its old French colonial architecture. A lot of the houses and other buildings here look like the traditional adobe-style buildings of the southwestern Pueblo tribes. It looks cool, though I later realize probably pretty appropriative of native culture. The style is apparently called Pueblo Deco/Revival; architects started using it around all of New Mexico in the early 20th century. Anyway, I soon meet Tara, and the half dozen dogs jumping around her house (most of them she’s sitting for). A great place to be waiting for car repairs. Tara’s a friendly woman around in her 50s, and has plenty of travel and Workaway experience herself. She’s out most of the day with family. I don’t do too much the rest of the day; Albuquerque’s not as eventful as nearby Santa Fe, but I get to check out my first Native American museum of the trip, which gives me a good primer on all the tribes in the southwest area, especially the different Pueblo groups and the Navajo. I get back in the evening and do some planning for my route the next week going through New Mexico and Arizona to LA.

In the morning, Tara and her friend Tom make sure I get to sample some of the best Southwestern food around at a nearby joint before she drops me off at the Subaru place. Josephine’s all repaired! Before leaving town I of course drive by the house they used to film Walter White’s house in Breaking Bad. The poor woman living there now used to have good relations with the people making pilgrimages to see the house from outside, but some real dumbasses over the years have ruined those good relations by tossing giant pizzas onto her roof, trying to reenact the scene from the show where an angry Walter does that very thing. She’s now put up a big black fence around the property, with a sign that says “Please just take your photos from across the street, don’t bother us.” I snap my picture quickly and go on my way.

As I leave town I stop to see a bunch of old nuclear missiles and warplanes from the Cold War years at the national nuclear museum. Much of the uranium that was (and still is) used to power these weapons was mined on Navajo land, and caused lasting damage to the air and water; the radiation especially poisoned the mostly Navajo workers in the mines. There since have been reparations to the affected workers and their communities, and the federal and Navajo EPAs have been working to clean the region up for over twenty years, but the pollution from the old mines has been extremely persistent. You can donate to the Multicultural Alliance for a Safe Environment, which supports affected communities and clean-up efforts across the Southwest, through here: https://swuraniumimpacts.org/

I head west towards Chaco Canyon, and pass by some of the Pueblo reservations, pretty regular looking rural communities from a distance; there aren’t many of their traditional adobe houses in use today. The landscape and the roads get very empty the further I go. Some sections are just dirt roads, and most of the radio stations I tune through answer me with static. I’m at the edge now of the vast continuous stretch of land that covers a quarter of Arizona, and parts of New Mexico and Utah, delegated by the US government to be the reservation of the Navajo Nation, the biggest reservation in the whole country. I continue searching for a radio station that’s not static, until suddenly I get one and hear an unfamiliar language. Not English, not Spanish: it’s the first time I’m hearing the Navajo language, Diné Bizaad (Diné being the true name for their tribe; Navajo was the name the Spanish would use, which they in turn got from the Pueblos).

The station plays some traditional-sounding music with a kind of chanting, though at some points also plays country music with the familiar choruses about trucks and cowboys, like so many other stations; the Indians down here have adopted (and contributed to) the general cultural elements of the Southwest for years. It’s nice to hear, while I’m driving through the still mostly empty land, past some farmsteads and ranches, land which must have been even more beautiful still when its original inhabitants walked and rode their horses wherever they pleased 150 years ago. But I also hear a couple of radio ads warning about drunk driving, more than I’ve heard anywhere else in the country I’ve driven, and I see some billboards as well with similar warnings. It’s all clearly part of the fight against the alcoholism, and the associated drunk driving problem, still rampant among Indians today.

Following Google Maps, I at last turn onto the dirt road leading me to Chaco Canyon. It’s a very rough half-hour stretch. I wonder why the roads going to a national park would be so bad, and later learn that it’s because the roads are still within Navajo Nation territory, which doesn’t have enough resources for maintaining good infrastructure (as is the case with many rural roads off the main highways around the country in general). Bad roads sound like just an annoyance at most, until you realize that they make it hell for the locals trying to get to school, work, and health clinics, especially when the dirt roads turn to mud roads in rain and snow.

I pull in to the park as the sun sets and can tell it’s a nice desert valley, though I can’t see the ruins themselves yet. This time, I park in a common campsite, avoiding my mistake of stumbling onto the private one in Big Bend. I get some sleep after making my turkey sandwich dinner with matzoh, for the first night of Passover. Saturday morning I drive straight to the first set of ruins and have my breakfast taking in the scenery. The canyon isn’t that deep or narrow, more of a wide valley between low ranges of cliffs on either side. And oh man, the ruins—I wouldn’t even call them ruins, with how intact so many of them still are! The Ancestral Puebloan peoples (formerly referred to as the Anasazi) started building this particular town and its surrounding villages over a thousand years ago, though indigenous humans had probably inhabited the area several thousand years before that. There’s evidence showing that they hauled in all the stone and timber far distances to this spot. Chaco remained one of the biggest cultural centers in the region for around two hundred years, connected to trade routes stretching from present-day California to the Gulf of Mexico, until people gradually abandoned the site around the year 1150, most likely due to perpetual drought. It still is a sacred ancestral site for today’s Pueblo and Hopi Indians, some of whom make pilgrimages.

I walk through the doorways and passages of the buildings—the main great house, Pueblo Bonito, is huge, with over 600 rooms. Thankfully, at least in April, the site isn’t that crowded, so I’m able to enjoy a lot of nice quiet moments around this wondrous place. It’s weird to think that I’m still in the land part of the United States of America—it sounds cliché, but I do really feel like I’ve been suddenly transported to another place, more so in a way than when I’ve seen ruins in other countries. I just don’t associate ancient ruins with being in the US, in part because how the indigenous Indian presence is largely invisible for American kids growing up, especially back East. I continue to explore, and I notice the underground foundations of the round kivas, which were covered with wood ceilings when still occupied, and were used as chambers for religious ceremony by the Pueblos.

There are also some faded rock paintings and carvings on the cliff faces next to the buildings, which I and other park visitors try to make out. They show mostly human and animal figures, as well as many spiral symbols, which symbolize the sipapu, the Hopi word for the portals that humans first climbed out of from the previous worlds below and into the current world in the cosmology of Puebloan religion.  Later in the afternoon, I get back into the car after taking one last look around, and drive out on another rough road. I can see some small oil wells further off the roads—a lot of the land surrounding Chaco has been leased to oil companies, and some New Mexicans, and Navajo, are fighting to restrict further drilling that could hurt the historical site, not to mention people’s health.

I head back to the highway and north a couple more hours. Soon, I get my first view of the Rocky Mountains in the distance as I approach the southwestern corner of Colorado. Just about a hundred miles, and I’ve gone from dusty desert to forested valleys under snowcapped mountains. The snowmelt from the peaks around here feeds into the Rio Grande I’ve seen flowing further south. I stop in the folksy town of Durango for the night, and Sunday I head to the next ancient native site, Mesa Verde. This was the other main center of the ancestral Puebloans in the region a thousand years ago, and later abandoned for similar reasons with the drought period.

While the remains of the buildings here one aren’t as big as those I saw in Chaco, these ones are cool because they’re actual cliff dwellings, and look like they’re almost carved from the sheer rock faces of the mesas; I have to drive pretty high up into the mesa to enter the site and see them. These ones definitely give me a throwback to Petra in Jordan, or the Mar Saba monastery. The park currently doesn’t let you walk through the ruins, due to concerns about erosion and collapse; one of the other visitors there mentions to me that he was able to actually walk among the buildings on the cliff face when he first visited years ago. Still, the main site of the Cliff Palace is just amazing, and there are some telescopes stationed around the mesa that give views of smaller dwellings in more distant cliffs. There are also all around great views of the surrounding mountains and valley. But once again, I’ve gotta be off on my Southwest speed-run, and I drive back down the winding roads of the mesa and head east into Utah, away from the Rockies and back into the desert.

Valleys and canyons. Sunday 4/21 to Thursday 4/25, Valley of the Gods & Monument Valley, Tuba City & Grand Canyon, Flagstaff, and Los Angeles

Late Sunday afternoon I make a quick stop at Fort Bluff, one of the remaining artifacts of westward colonialism, and a Mormon trade post from when they were moving west. Much of the public land I’m driving through here was part of the Bears Ears National Monument protected area proclaimed towards the end of the Obama administration, but Trump reduced over 80% of the monument a year later, largely to protect the uranium mining interests in the area.

As the sun starts to set, I pull off the highway onto a dirt road and cross a stream to the Valley of the Gods, the place that Joerael in Marfa told me about last week. As the name suggests, the Navajo traditionally believe the huge rocky monoliths hold the presences of gods. I know I keep saying everything around these parts is amazing, but something about the Valley of the Gods is truly special. The landscape has a way of captivating me that few others have, with its plain foreground of desert earth, and the stoic rocky monuments, gods’ presences in stone further in the distance, yielding to nothing except for the desert winds and occasional rains slowly eroding them, particle by particle, over millennia. I imagine the gods themselves don’t care that they will lose this valley and its stones to time some day; they will just find other majestic natural places to set down their presences. The loss of these divine abodes here will be a loss for any local people left, not for the gods. Since these gods, as all others, have been around since creation, they probably didn’t even start with their presences here, while the currents of the ancient ocean were forming these monuments; they chose to fill this valley with their presences after the valley was created. Or maybe they were already here in whatever the valley was before it was a valley, and they willed that the forces shaping the earth should make the valley. But of course I’m just casually speculating; I don’t even understand my own god, so it’s definitely not my business to speak with authority about other people’s gods.

The fact that barely anyone else is there helps too—after pulling over to a small hill that I sit on watching the sunset, over the course of an hour less than five cars drive behind me into the valley for the night. Probably within another 10 years, especially with tourism information available readily on the internet, this place too will be as packed as Monument Valley down the road in high season, as enough people hear about it, and then the littering will grow, and the casual drinking will start, leading to more heavy drinking and full-blown tailgating parties, and they’ll have to start getting park rangers and charging admission for the whole place. And lest I sound like I’m just grumbling about other tourists, I’m very aware that I’m one of those people, leading the way into this still mostly unspoiled halcyon. Maybe I’m earlier, not part of the later crowds to come, and I don’t leave a mess, and by myself I’m not loud, but I can’t deny that I am another tourist. I may not be directly pushing anyone off their land, but in a way, I am at least a temporary colonizer in this place, even if the valley and its gods welcome me as just another living being, a curious and wandering human from far away in eastern Turtle Island, with ancestors from a land even further away across an ocean, a soul whose intentions at least are good. So I admire and thank the valley, and hope I’m not misunderstood.

I get some pretty good views of the stars after sunset, though it’s a bit cloudy, and I sleep very peacefully in my trunk bed. Monday morning I get treated to the valley’s sunrise experience, and after my usual breakfast I leave my car and take a nice hour-long walk along the road further into the valley, passing a few other people outside their cars and trailers. I get some real nice close-ups of some of the gods’ rocky homes. As the morning heats up, I head back to the car, take another moment of gratitude for the valley, and drive out back to the highway and down to the better-known Monument Valley (Tsé Biiʼ Ndzisgaii in the Diné language, I’m not gonna pretend I know how to pronounce it). I can see the huge iconic monuments miles away before I arrive at the park’s entrance. I try to show my national parks card, but realize that the place isn’t actually part of that system—it’s run by the Navajo Nation itself, you have to pay separately (which I’m fine with). The place is packed with tourists, even in April, and I hear more foreign languages here than I have in a while.

I get out and take my first look at the three main monuments. There may not be as many here as in the Valley of the Gods, but these ones are huge, more imposing in their solitude, with the empty red-orange desert behind them, rising up in cinematic contrast with the clear blue sky. There’s a reason this place has been used for filming so many western movies. In the visitor’s center, I read some more information about the park and preservation. The attraction is a huge source of revenue for the Navajo, and the associated tourism brings in visitors to the surrounding area spending their money on food, accommodation, and souvenirs. But it’s more than just an attraction; it’s a site just as sacred and once tranquil as the Valley of the Gods I stayed at last night. It’s the common dilemma that other sites around the country and the whole world face, the benefits of tourism to a certain site versus the disturbance to the locals, often poorer indigenous peoples—empowerment or exploitation?

The many cars driving the several mile-long circuit down in the valley next to the monuments are also having the gradual effect over the years of causing the monuments to erode faster than they would just from wind and rain, the rattling in the ground from the cars shaking the cliffs ever so slightly. So in order to not contribute as much to that (and so I can brag later when writing this on the blog about how noble I am for trying to preserve natural places), I leave my car parked and just take a little walk down into the valley close to the bases of the monuments, instead of driving. There’s not that much more to say about this valley after my poetic musings on the Valley of the Gods, but seeing these ones up close, it’s pretty incredible to see how almost perfectly shaped they are, formed by the ancient ocean that once covered this whole region thousands of years ago.

I head out and drive further south in the afternoon. I soon realize that I’ve now driven from Utah into Arizona, though here more than I ever I realize how bullshit state borders are, no less than the arbitrary border between New Jersey and New York close to my home. I’m driving through the heart of the Navajo Nation right now, but besides more beautiful land, there’s not too much else to see except some of their small towns. From the outside at least they’re not too different from other non-Indian rural towns except for the occasional traditional hogan dwelling. I had known ahead of time that any Indian country I travelled through wouldn’t actually look too different in terms of houses, supermarkets, and clothes, except for whenever they have any festivals going on. Within the towns, however, I am sure the culture still is different in many ways, especially in that many do still speak Diné Bizaad.

I make for Tuba City/Tó Naneesdizí (more of a large town really) that night, a little way’s east of the Grand Canyon. To the south is the Hopi Reservation, its own enclave in the middle of Navajo territory. I had looked around on the Couchsurfing app for potential hosts, but there aren’t any around here. So beyond just giving my observations on their land, and some basic facts about their culture and status today, there’s unfortunately not much else I’m able to share about the Navajo from a first-hand account.  After sleeping at a truck stop that night, Tuesday morning I do see that there’s a small museum in Tuba City, so I check that out. I won’t bore any readers too much with talk of museums, but one interesting thing I will share is that many Navajo, as well as other tribes across the country, appear to actually be more patriotic than you’d think, despite the whole history of ethnic cleansing thing. The couple museums I’ve seen so far, while mentioning issues like public health and land rights, make it a point to say that these Indian communities still feel loyalty to the country they are now a part of—even if that country conquered them brutally. And it doesn’t seem not just a top-down narrative from tribal leadership that directs the museums, either; I have seen a lot more American flags outside people’s houses than I had expected.

There’s also the fact that more Indians per capita have served in the US military than people from any other ethnic/racial group over the past century. The museums that I’ve seen have also been proud to show this as well, especially the story of the Navajo code-talkers who helped fight the Japanese in World War II; I even pass a Burger King that has a small gallery honoring them inside. Ironic, since the US had tried to wipe out that very language which ended up helping the army win a war. I imagine that more Indians being in the military might be because poorer rural Americans in general tend to enlist more than those in suburbs and cities (though many Indians today live in urban areas, not on the rural reservations). But again, a lot of this is just my own speculation, and I just don’t get the opportunity to dig deeper while I’m here.

I do some gift shopping for friends and family back east from the town’s trading post, and have an early lunch at the restaurant next door that serves some Navajo food, so I get some hearty stew with a type of frybread, though some Indians reject frybread as being “traditional,” since they started making it from imported ingredients like flour out of necessity after being forced onto the reservations. And that’s it for the most of what I can call a “Navajo experience.” I then drive just over an hour west to the Grand Canyon at last, the climax of my week going through the Southwest. There’s good reason why it’s one of the biggest tourist destinations on the continent; it really is a breathtaking mile-deep, 20 mile-wide hole, with the Colorado River snaking through it down below. The colors are just fantastic, and change every couple hours as the sun makes its way across the sky.

There are some remains of old native sites around too; indigenous groups related to the Navajo and Hopi, who call the canyon Ongtupqa, had lived in the canyon itself over the centuries; many Puebloans like the Hopi believe that the Grand Canyon is the sipapu that the first humans emerged from, and they still make pilgrimages to it as a holy site. I take it in as much as I can at the main overlook, and walk along the main path along the southern rim (protected by a fence), though I step off the main path onto a secure area of the cliffs, and make sure to not get too close to the edge. I do see some absolute idiots getting very close to the edge, especially with selfie sticks. There are on average 12 deaths in the park each year, though to be fair only a few of those are from actually falling in; the rest are just from other causes like heat exposure and dehydration.  Anyway, to not end on a completely morbid note, from this slice of the canyon I watch the brilliant colors  morph into a golden late-afternoon early sunset, and pass the time with some other tourists, two German guys and an older couple from Oregon.

While it’d be great to stick around until the very last rays of the sun, I’ve got my host down in Flagstaff to meet. I drive a couple hours south, and meet Elliot, an immigration lawyer, and another one of those hosts who’s lived all over the country. He gives me some advice for the rest of my trip going west, recommending some more Bureau of Land Management land I can stay on tomorrow night.  Most importantly, he lets me use his TV to catch up on Game of Thrones. I thank him in the morning, and Wednesday get my kicks on Route 66, picking it up again after briefly having been on it around Albuquerque last week. I mostly drive through the lands of the Yavapai; their reservation is to the north of the road. Old Route 66 is no longer actually the main road, having been replaced in most sections, so I pull off the main highway to an old stretch of it and hit up one of the classic roadside diners, Delgadillo’s, in the afternoon before continuing into California. I stop on top of a large hill on public land overlooking the Mojave Desert for my last night going west. I casually explore a bit around here the next morning, taking in some of the Joshua trees, emblematic of the Mojave region.

Then it’s time for me to make the last leg going west, and as I wrap up my trip in the Indian country of the Southwest, I realize that I’ve always been in Indian country, and wherever I go in the US, I always will be, even if it’s not part of an official reservation. It may have happened over 200 years ago back east, and the indigenous have less of a presence there than here out west, but I myself still grew up in Indian country in New Jersey—that of the Ramapough Lenape.

After a few more hours, I roll in to the City of Angels in the afternoon. I’ve done it, in three weeks, from sea to shining sea. I squeezed in a lot in too short an amount of time, but I did it. I unfortunately don’t have any epic moment where I actually get to the Pacific Ocean and collapse on the beach or anything; I just head for my friend Stuart’s place, where I’ll be staying for the next couple nights.

Part III: Turtle Island. The United States of America (including the indigenous lands of the Navajo and Sioux)

“America is a place where even the poorest immigrant can, through hard work, achieve the American Dream for his employer. It is a nation where freedom rings from coast to coast, over and over again, until you finally decide to pick up the phone and agree to cover a coworker’s night shift. A nation where anyone can arrive with nothing more than a few cents in their pocket, the hope of a better life, a passport, two I-9 forms, proof of employment, reference letters from reliable sponsors, and through sheer persistence finally convince a border guard to let them into the country. Where a person can go from rags to riches almost overnight, from riches back to rags in even less time, then write a book about it, option the rights to a TV network or film studio, and blow all that money on cocaine.”
The Onion, Our Dumb World

In April and May 2019, Ben Berman took an overly-ambitious road trip across the United States of America. Now you may be asking, “Wait a minute Ben, what are you doing back in the US? You have the time and money to see all these cool places around the world for a year and a half, and you’re wasting two months in your boring home country, in the republic of mayonnaise?” I figured that while I have the time, it would be worth seeing some more of this country I was born into, since I haven’t been outside of the Northeast much in my life. Even if the culture isn’t as different for me, there are some incredible landscapes to see out west especially, and I have plenty of friends and family living in other places, so I’ll get to visit some of them too. And since I’ve been bashing a lot on the governments and injustices of the places I’ve visited so far, it’s only fair I apply that same self-righteous treatment to my own country, right?

Pretty much this one is just a saga of me national parks-hopping, stopping at some cities on the way to visit people, and me driving—a lot—in between it all. I unfortunately didn’t make much time for farm stuff on this trip in between everything, so instead of poetically naming this part after a crop like the others, I’m just calling it Turtle Island, the name which many Native American tribes used to refer to the lands of North America (in different languages, of course) before European colonization. And speaking of which, you won’t be spared the big history lecture for this one—if anything this one’s actually gonna be extra dense because I already know so much more about US history compared to the other countries that I get to show off! There’s also so much to cover in general because the US has this habit of always getting involved in world affairs.

Even though most friends or family reading this are American, I think it’s still important to have an overview for this one like for my other trips, just so we’re on the same page about how the US got to where it is today, especially for those of us who had boring history teachers back in school. This will be pretty easy to skim, it’s basically just a very abridged version of Howard Zinn’s A People’s History. I’ll leave out the names of characters in favor of just the overall story, and I’ll go easy on the hard dates too, but sometimes they’re helpful for letting us know where we are. As always, these overviews should not by any means be considered a complete history of a country, as so many stories and voices have to get left out in this short space; it’s just to give some context.

The indigenous

Humans first came to North America at least 15,000 years ago, probably earlier, through the old land bridge from Siberia into Alaska. From there they spread further south down to the tip of South America, and over the next many thousand years established a huge array of diverse cultures and civilizations, like anywhere else in the world. Right before Columbus’s arrival, there were some two thousand languages spoken across the Americas by at least 50 million people, possibly as many as 100 million, though it’s hard to know for sure. Some of the tribes in North America came to call all the lands they knew of beyond their own “Turtle Island,” based on their creation myths. Due to factors like geography, most of them didn’t build as many permanent buildings or large empires like the civilizations in parts of Central and South America, but some of them did build cities that still have remains today, like the Adena and Hopewell mound-builders around the Mississippi River, and especially the ancient Pueblo peoples around the Southwest who often built their adobe and stone homes in cliffs. ­

When European colonization started, some of the main players on the lands that would become the US were the Sioux/Ochéthi Sakowin on the Great Plains, the Navajo/Diné in the Southwest, the Cherokee/Tsalagi in the Southeast, and the Iroquois/Haudenosaunee in the Northeast. Some remained nomadic and less centralized, like the Sioux, while the Iroquois built more permanent longhouses and were united in a confederacy of five (later six) main nations with a form of democratic government, years before the US started its own. Among other peoples like the Cherokee, a council of women elders picked tribal leaders.

While it is important to at least mention some achievements of the indigenous peoples before the wrecking ball of colonialism hit, it would also be wrong to portray their societies in Turtle Island as perfect utopias. During the years of colonialism, the Europeans formed two simplistic images of the Indians. Sometimes whites viewed them as barbaric and violent savages, who practiced heretical witchcraft, and were perhaps agents of Satan, while other times they viewed them paternalistically as a simple and pacifist people, the “noble savage”. Both of these caricatures are wrong, because they are just that—caricatures. Native Americans were for sure more in tune with the land, and were less driven by individual profit and had more communal ownership. But from what I’ve seen most historical sources conclude, before the European invasions most native groups were merely more humans, no more or less violent than humans in Europe or other parts of the world; tribes did fight each other plenty, and to say that they didn’t is to false romanticize them (though this of course does not justify the Europeans destroying their world). Even so, there were many elements of Indian society

The invaders

In 1492, the Europeans arrive in Turtle Island. Columbus lands his ships in the Caribbean, kills and enslaves the Taino people, and everyone back across the ocean starts hearing about this New World, and we all know what happens from there. The Spanish spread out into Central and South America. While they killed many Indians with their guns and steel, and by enslaving them in silver mines, the biggest killer by far was the germs the Spanish unknowingly brought with them, especially smallpox; millions of Indians died over the next few decades. The diseases didn’t spread as much in North America at first, but with the arrival of the British and French in the 1600s diseases soon spread there too, and around ninety percent of most Indian communities were wiped out (also I’m going to keep referring to Native Americans as Indians starting now—though we know of course the term is inaccurate, most communities in the US today tend to prefer “American Indian” as the catch-all term).

In the 17th century the British and French set up their own colonies in the north and east of Turtle Island, while the Spanish were in the south (Florida and north of today’s Mexico). They brought in African slaves across the Atlantic for their new plantations of cash crops like tobacco and cotton. Relations between colonists and Indians in the Northeast started out as more cooperative, but as the British colonists showed less regard for Indian land, tensions rose, and the first major conflicts were between Virginia colonists and the Powhatan Confederacy starting in the 1610s. Over the next century, colonists gradually ate up more land, though complex relations developed among the various Indian and European groups. Sometimes there was war, sometimes peace and prosperous trade; some of the tribes got along better with some of the colonies, depending on the year. The colonial militias would often massacre entire towns when wars heated up, and Indian soldiers sometimes killed civilians in turn too. Indians adapted and learned how to play the rivalries of the British, French, and Spanish off one another, sometimes forming alliances when it was in their interests. By far the biggest Indian player around the Northeast was the Iroquois Confederacy, which grew closer with the British.

In the 1750s things finally came to a head between the French and British as they went to war. The British and their Iroquois allies won Canada from the French, but now of course the king of Britain was in debt, and we all know what happens next—he raises taxes in the colonies, the colonies revolt against taxation without representation, and the American Revolution explodes. The colonists win (with help from some tribes and France), and the United States of America is born in 1783. But the war had another effect—it tore the Iroquois apart. The Indians tried to stay neutral between the British and Americans at first but were soon dragged in, and the confused tribes took different sides, not sure which would win and continue better relations with them. With the Iroquois weakened, it was easier for the new United States to take more land from them and push them further west and onto new reservations. Many Indians were increasingly becoming alcoholic, and sold their land to dubious dealers to buy more of the drinks from the white traders. The US also went to war with the new Miami Confederacy of Indians around the Great Lakes, who allied themselves with the British in another war in 1815.

Expansion

The US also continued to strengthen its hold on Turtle Island down south. The Indians there had adapted much more to European culture and lived among American farmers, sometimes owning their own slaves. But states like Georgia were eyeing Indian land for white settlement, and the government soon passed the Indian Removal Act forcing all of the Indians east of the Mississippi to either give up their tribal identity and assimilate totally, or move west. The US army forcibly relocated most of them in the 1830s, especially thousands of Cherokee forced to march to the new “Indian Territory” on less fertile land in Oklahoma, and they faced further hostility from other tribes already living there. Some tribes resisted back east, especially the Seminole tribe in Florida (bought by the US from Spain), who were also harboring escaped slaves. The US army gained more control over the territory for settlers, and eventually the wars stopped, but they never did officially defeat the Seminole, who still call themselves the “unconquered tribe” today.

But the main story of the US in the 19th century is of course expansion into the West. The US had bought the vast territory from France, and slowly started to settle it. Relations were at first mostly peaceful with the Sioux Indians as settlers moved across the plains to the more fertile Oregon territory. Trade was beneficial to both sides. Things got more heated in Texas, then part of the newly independent Mexico, where more Americans farmers started moving and bringing slaves to in the 1830s. But the Mexican government had outlawed slavery, and annoyed at being ruled by Mexico, the Americans there revolted and started their own Republic of Texas. Texas joined the US, and in 1846 the US then sent troops over the border to provoke the Mexican army into a war, which the US won, taking the Southwest and California with the treaty. The flow of settlers westward intensified, occupying more Indian land for gold as well as routes for their new railroads, and more Indians found it was now their turn to be pushed off their land, and conflict started. Most tribes agreed to treaties with the US, which were soon broken by the far away government in Washington, DC, and usually not strongly enforced by the small army presence out west to curtail settlers’ violations.

Meanwhile, that government back in DC was also dealing with rising tensions over slavery in the 1850s as the abolition movement grew. There had also been more attempted revolts by slaves over the years. In 1860 the southern states, afraid that President Lincoln would end slavery, seceded and formed the Confederate States of America. The Civil War broke out, the northern Union won, and in 1865 slavery was abolished (except for people serving prison time, conveniently). A process of national Reconstruction started to bring the country back together and enforce protection of newly freed black citizens’ rights. In the first years after the war, blacks were actually able to vote across the South and some black representatives were even elected to Congress. While many were still stuck in poverty as sharecropper workers on white-owned plantations, blacks were gaining more opportunity, but support for Reconstruction soon faded. Southern states reacted by passing the first Jim Crow laws, starting a century of legal racial segregation, and the Ku Klux Klan formed to terrorize anyone opposed to this racial order.

With the conflict over slavery now “resolved,” the US moved to finish winning the west. Many Americans by now completely believed that it was their God-given destiny to rule over the whole continent (sound familiar?). Conflict between the Indians and settlers continued to escalate, and the US sent more troops to move the last free tribes to reservations. The army put down tribes in California more easily, while the Sioux, Cheyenne, and Comanche of the plains and the Navajo and Apache of the Southwest scored some victories through the 1870s. But with the last major battles and outright massacres by US troops, they too were forced onto reservations. With their traditional ways of life ruined, the Indians left there were forced into dependency, and the government abducted many of their children to bring to “civilizing schools” to forcibly adapt them to white American society and complete the destruction of native cultures. Though there were small local battles up to as late as the 1920s, by the end of the century the frontier period had ended; the United States had completed its long ethnic cleansing of Turtle Island.

Empire

As the Europeans imperialized Africa and Asia, the US too turned its focus overseas; the industrial revolution required more raw materials to feed production, and markets to sell those new products abroad. The US bought Alaska from Russia, annexed Hawaii after American businessmen there overthrew its queen, and went to war with Spain in the 1890s, winning Puerto Rico, Cuba, and the Philippines, though it took yet another war and occupation to completely win that last one. The US also went on some other fun adventures to expand its power abroad, sending troops to join European armies crushing a Chinese rebellion against foreign influence, and supporting various dictators across Central America who were friendly to US mining and agricultural interests, sometimes actually sending warships to take control of smaller countries’ ports and customs houses. With the US joining the winning side in World War I in 1917, its status as a world power was cemented.

It was on this foundation that the US boomed at home during these years, becoming a huge biggest draw for immigrants, the land of opportunity. There was still major inequality, and intense xenophobia against immigrants of all backgrounds, as well as continuing racial segregation. Thousands of workers (men, women, and children) went on strike against the new huge industrial companies in these years, demanding better pay and safer conditions, and police and military response was brutal. Gradually some progressive reforms were passed, and there still undeniably were much better chances for people in the US than in other countries. The prosperity of the 1920s was shown to be largely illusory when the stock market crashed however, drawing much of the rest of the world into the Great Depression as well, and the US didn’t really recover until the World War II years.

Imperial Japan attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, bringing the US into the war, finally won against Nazi Germany and Japan in 1945. I haven’t gone into the human costs of all these wars I’ve mentioned so far due to space, but because WWII is more recent and so catastrophic, I should add that over 400,000 American soldiers were killed in this one, along with millions more soldiers and civilians across Europe and Asia. And while I personally will always be grateful that they saved the world from Nazi domination, there were other traumas that need to be counted as well, like the US interning 100,000 of its own citizens of Japanese descent.

*pauses to take a breath and sip of water* So, with all other countries weakened by the war, the US and the Russian-led Soviet Union (USSR) were now the two main global powers. The capitalist US and communist USSR started stockpiling nuclear weapons and competing for influence around the world, and since they couldn’t directly fight each other without completely blowing each other up in a nuclear war, they tried to use other countries to fight it out in proxy conflicts in what became known as the Cold War. In wars like in Korea and Vietnam, the USSR would back communist factions and the US would back the capitalists. The US gave support and weapons to anti-communist leaders and militias around the world, even when those leaders were often brutally authoritarian themselves, including the apartheid South African state. The US aided dictatorships across Latin America especially. This Cold War continued through around 1990, when the weakened USSR collapsed.

During these years at home, the US government also cracked down on anyone suspected of being a communist. In the ‘50s and ‘60s, Americans frustrated with the repressive social order launched movements for racial civil rights, women’s rights, immigrants’ rights, and against the destructive Vietnam War. There were some triumphs, but it is hard to say just how victorious some of these movements were. The civil rights movement for example did end legal segregation, and led to new laws protecting the rights of all races, but it’s no secret that segregation and institutional racism still persist in many ways today, and in some ways are actually worse.

Today

And what of the American Indians, the indigenous peoples of Turtle Island? They didn’t just disappear after being forced onto the reservations. All Indians were given citizenship in 1924 while being allowed to keep their tribal membership, though many still weren’t able to vote until the 1940s. The government moved to break up the reservation system in the ‘50s and ‘60s so tribes would finish assimilating into general American society, and encouraged many to move once more to cities, but Indians and their advocates resisted this, and the reservations remained in place. The government passed some New Deal and civil rights laws to give Indians more economic and political autonomy, but they still faced severe inequality, and so an American Indian Movement rose along with all the other social movements of the 1960s. Indians from many tribes banded together more than they ever had in years to demand real self-determination as peoples native to the land, not content to be just marginalized citizens cut off from their roots and heritage.

The militancy and radicalism of the decentralized movement’s early years faded in the ‘70s, as did that of other movements, but up through the present day they still have continued to fight. They now fight in courtrooms, on picket lines, and in congress chambers, against companies and state governments still trying to take away the economic and political rights they have regained—rights to waters, to forests, to representation, to their autonomy. Their victories and defeats vary from tribe to tribe, state to state.  After some groups neared extermination over a hundred years ago, there are now over 6 million Indians part of tribes in the US, over 1 percent of a total population of 330 million.

I’m going to avoid getting sucked into writing about current events and politics in the US here, like I did a little for the intros for Palestine and South Africa. All of us living in the US get bombarded with enough constant news 24/7 through social media these days as it is, and those of us living abroad probably get more news about the US than they’d like as well. Hopefully now it’s a bit more clear why I wanted to have the crash course in US history here before my trip; like I said at the start, it’s just such an influential country in the world, for better or worse, that it’s hard to fully wrap one’s head around it without knowing a bit about the context. You’ll see in my entries here that when possible, I include indigenous names for some places, and I also mention which Indian nations historically have lived in particular areas. It’s very limited, and I grappled with the best way to incorporate something like that, but it’s the least I can do here, on a symbolic level. As always, I do not mean to try to sound like an authority on things, as it’s all just based on some very light research I’ve done.

Well, I think I’ve set the stage for my upcoming road trip as well as I can—next stop, Turtle Island.

Pictures from 2/26 to 3/18

Full Circle (or triangle). February 26th to March 18th

Durbs. Tuesday 2/26—Friday 3/1, Durban/eThekwini

Glancing at the map, I had thought the bus would go straight east across the country, passing south of Lesotho, but it actually retraces the same route I took from outside Maseru a few weeks ago, passing through the metro area of Bloemfontein late at night/early morning before going around north of Lesotho, then southeast towards Durban. I’m sleeping on and off during most of this; we roll into Durban Tuesday evening.

After my travels through Palestine and Israel into Jordan, and so far from Joburg to Lesotho to Capetown and now here, I’ve gotten pretty used to this whole backpacking thing, so I’ll take a moment to talk about what it’s like in general. It’s not always as glamorous as it might sound, freely going from place to place by bus, seeing new cities, beautiful lands, and staying on farms, not worrying about possessions besides what’s in my backpack, meeting locals and other travels in hostels, trying new foods. That’s what I show here, but it can be pretty draining in between all that, hauling around my backpack in the heat or rain, budgeting myself on food and hostel dorm rooms, figuring out buses ahead of time and waiting at a lot of bus stations, and having to do research on where to go, how to get there, and how to do it safely, especially in some parts of South Africa.

Thankfully it’s easy to get by with English in most places in South Africa, as it was in the touristy parts of the Middle East. Sometimes a bottle of shampoo or a jar of jam will break open in my backpack, and leak through its plastic bag and get all over my clothes that I just finally washed yesterday. Or I’ll get lost trying to get somewhere in a city, and spend half a day trying to get there, or back to wherever I’m staying. And a lot of the time I’m just plain tired, with how much I’m trying to see in a short time. But hey, most of the time, what I’m doing is amazing, and the little challenges most of the time are a part of the story. Even getting mugged in Joburg.

Anyway, from the bus station in Durban, I take a Taxify to a hostel in a quieter suburb. It’s a smaller hostel than I’ve been in, with a more closely knit community of staff along with guests. It’s run by Catherine, a white woman in her 50s originally from Zimbabwe. She was born there back when it was Rhodesia, another white supremacist state after British colonial rule, not unlike South Africa, and she has some stories about how she and other whites who had black friends were mocked as the “white kaffirs” (kaffir being a slur used by whites against the black native Africans). The hostel’s colorful crew also includes Jessie from Germany, who helps Catherine with the hostel, and the legendary Nacho. Nacho is a crazy Spaniard with dreads in his late 30s now who’s been bouncing all over Africa for the past seven years, all the way up north to Ghana and back south again. A real Don Quixote. He says he’s almost died of malaria twice, and never takes any preventative pills (“I don’t need to take that sheet,” he says defiantly). He’s a nice fellow though, and a good cook. I also meet another American guy who’s been travelling for almost the past 15 years, with only occasional visits back home. It’s pretty much his way of life now. He’s not constantly on the move though, going at a steadier pace in each place, and he supports himself doing photography work.

Getting around Durban for me is more like being in Joburg—you can’t really walk around by yourself as a tourist in the middle of the city like in Cape Town. It would’ve been even more useful here than in Cape Town to have a real local like Steve to guide me. It’s still an interesting place to see—Durban has the biggest population of Indian descent in the world, outside of India itself. I already mentioned when I arrived how the British brought Indian laborers since they were having trouble getting the indigenous Zulu Africans to work plantations for sugar and other cash crops over a hundred years ago. Since the end of apartheid, more recent immigrants have come from India as well as Bangladesh and Pakistan. This can all be seen in the people themselves, the mosques and Hindu mandirs, and especially the food; curry houses dominate entire streets. One of the most iconic dishes they have is called bunny chow—a loaf of white bread hollowed out and filled with any sort of curry stew. It originated among the Indian colonial workers who needed a way to carry their lunch to work, so their wives just started stuffing it in the bread. The “bunny” is short for bania, slang for Indians from the Gujarat region.

Beyond exploring the food and a couple museums, I don’t really have the time to fully immerse myself in Durban, but I do get to see a slice of it. Most of the time, even during the day, I take a Taxify to get around anywhere. I should give a proper shoutout to all the drivers I had, not just in Durban but throughout my time in the other cities as well. It’s one of the ways I was able to interact with locals more. Most of them were black African, and probably of a similar social class to rideshare drivers in the US—middle class guys who could own a car, and a few of them were university students. Some of them drove both for Uber (used more by tourists) as well as Taxify. As with anywhere, some drivers were more talkative, some more silent.

I tried not to go full Thomas Friedman and constantly interrogate them about current events and South African politics, but when it did come up, they usually had the same pessimism I heard from others. They were sometimes interested to hear about what it was like for me traveling around, and if I mentioned getting mugged, they’d openly share some of their own stories. “Eish,” they’ll say, a common expression of shock or despair, pretty much the South African “oy vey.” One driver named Manlord had his car stolen at gunpoint after being set up by a “passenger” ordering a ride, only to be attacked by the customer’s friends. I hear more of those odd stories of the occasional “polite” mugger; one guy tells me how a thief, after mugging him, actually asked him how much money he needed for the bus to get home, and gave him a few rands back. The drivers would sometimes give me advice on places to see (and where to stay away from) too.

Some of them would use the chance to ask me about politics back in my own country, the US; some of the students had copies of books on Obama, the war on terror, or the 2016 election. I continue to realize that I only have limited experience as one person living in the US, and tell them this whenever I answer any questions. One driver I had later in Pretoria also really wanted to ask me about the whole situation with R. Kelly, and I was sorry to tell him that I probably knew less than he did. I also had an Egyptian driver in Cape Town, currently a student getting his piloting license, so we talked a bit about my time in Palestine, and how all the governments around the Middle East suck. And one of my Zulu drivers in Durban, Sabelo, tells me that he was a cousin of Lucky Dube, a huge South African reggae/hip hop artist, killed over ten years ago by muggers in Joburg.

I get to go with a few people from the hostel to take my first dip ever in the warm Indian Ocean. A Brazilian guy, Francisco, and I explore more around the coastal area. He sees a bunch of local guys playing soccer, and being a soccer-obsessed Brazilian has no reservation in having us randomly go up to them and ask if we can join, and they let us in. Soccer is a universal language, but one that I don’t speak well, at all—I roundly get my ass kicked and contribute very little to my team. My foot probably makes contact with the ball twice. Besides that, my time in Durban is relaxing after my busy weeks around the Cape; I just walk among some of the old ships at the port, and watch the antics of some little monkeys as they jump all over each other and dig through trashcans in a park near the hostel. We’ve got squirrels in our parks, they’ve got monkey in theirs. There’s a lot to potentially see in the areas further from the city, like Gandhi’s old headquarters, but without knowing my way around the transportation it’s tricky. Friday evening I stock up on groceries for the next few days in the Drakensberg (what I’m starting to call my mobile kitchen), and hang out with people at the hostel one more night before moving on.

The dragon mountains. Saturday 3/2—Thursday 3/7, the Drakensberg/uKhahlamba Mountains, Joburg/Egoli, and Pretoria/Tshwane

I get up early Saturday morning in the quiet little hostel and say goodbye to the dogs before heading out. There are no main bus companies running from Durban to the Drakensberg Mountains (there are always minibus taxis, but I would need a local to figure out the routes like in Joburg), so I walk to a nearby rendezvous with a BazBus, a hop on/hop off service that runs tourist routes across the country. We pass through the lush green hills of the Zulu lands for three hours as the peaks of the Drakensberg (uKhahlamba, in Zulu) start to rise up, and we get dropped off at one of the only hostels in the area. The hostel is surrounded by the Ampitheatre, literally an amphitheater of mountains in the distance, the main starting point for any trip into the mountains. We’re just northeast of the border with eastern Lesotho actually, where the Drakensberg meets with the Lesotho Highlands. I book one of the main guided day hikes the hostel offers for Monday, since I have no transportation of my own to get to the main destinations. Sunday I a German and Dutch trio in the car they’ve rented for some hiking in a nearby gorge. We pass by some local towns on the way, even more spread out and calm than places like Clocolan, a different world to me. I also meet up with Maria and Karsten here, two Germans I contacted online when I saw they were renting a car next week to Kruger Park.

Monday morning I get into one of the hostel’s kombis with a dozen other guests, Maria and Karsten among them, and we take an hour-long ride flat and then up to the start of the trail to Sentinel Peak. The pavement gives way to very rocky dirt road toward the end of the road. We all gather around our guide Adrien, white, in his 40s. He’s a pretty wild guy, always singing and quipping weird stuff as we go along. Karsten and especially Maria aren’t huge fans of him; I personally love his style, though I could see how going on a multi-day hike with him could definitely get to be a bit much. Our pack is surrounded by fog as we start, sometimes only seeing the path a few meters in front of us, and everyone’s hair (including my beard) gets wet from the mist within minutes. It adds to the mystery though as we move forward. After a couple of hours of gradually rising paths, we come to the foot of a giant crevasse ascending 70 degrees up. Adrien rouses us with a pep talk, and we start up. It’s way steeper than say Table Mountain, but after an hour of pacing myself I make it, and slowly everyone else arrives and we catch our breath. We can see further up here, and there’s plenty of space to walk around. Adrien leads us to the edge, and we look out at the valley that’s still very cloudy. We can partially see a couple other nearby slopes behind the mist.

Then, as if on cue, all the clouds clear and we can see the huge sweeping green and rocky valley, with the rest of our mountain’s cliffs stretching further out to join the Ampitheatre Ridge before plunging sharply into the valley. It really is one of the best sights I’ve ever had from high up. We all take it in for a while before continuing with a more leisurely walk along the flat top of the mountain to the Tugela River, which feeds the Tugela Falls, not very wide but over 3,000 feet high. It’s debated whether this or Angel Falls in Venezuela is the highest in the world. Whichever it is, it’s still an awesome sight, and since the water’s completely clean we can drink it and swim in its small pools. We start walking away from the valley along the river past a flock of hundreds of shaggy sheep, and we come to the other edge of the mountaintop, the side we climbed up.

This time though where at a spot where we have to climb a bunch of chain ladders some 100 feet straight down the side of the cliff. I love it, though some others don’t. Two local men (probably Zulu or Basotho, and presumably the shepherds), watch with mild amusement as we all slowly go down from rung to rung, while they effortlessly hop down the steep rocks next to the ladders. We walk the trail back to where we started on this morning, and now we can see everything around us that had been hidden.  We head back on the kombis, though ours gets a part snagged on the bottom by the terrible road, and Nklankleh, the driver, has to stop and fix the piece. Not much the rest of us can do beside give moral support, but we soon get going again. Back at the hostel we thank Adrien and Nklankleh, and I get ready to continue north the next morning; Maria and Karsten are staying a couple more days, and I’ll meet them on Friday in Joburg for the road trip to Kruger.

Tuesday at noon it’s back on the BazBus, and after another four hours I find myself pulling into Johannesburg again—but I’m not at the end yet. I’m going to be staying in Pretoria for the next few nights with a Couchsurfing host, and I’ll get to see Joburg (and Steve) again next week. Pretoria is the executive capital city less than an hour north of Joburg. I get dropped off near the good old Gautrain and take it to the Pretoria station, and I call up a Taxify. My driver, Karabo, is extremely helpful—rideshare drivers aren’t allowed to pull up directly next to the station, it’s only for regular taxi drivers, who Karabo says sometimes throw rocks at Taxify and Uber drivers because they’re angry about the competition. So Karabo parks a couple streets over, and he actually walks to the station to escort me back to his car and carries my side-bag, since he says it’s not safe for a foreigner to walk by themselves here. He’s delightedly surprised to hear about my traveling, especially that there’s a thing called Couchsurfing. I thank him as he drops me off at the condo of my host, Tshepo, who gives me a very warm welcome, though we don’t have much time to talk just yet.

The next day I have a little family reunion. I take the train down towards the wealthy neighborhoods northwest of Joburg and go to meet a very distant cousin on my mom’s side, Barbara. My mom let me know of the connection, as some of her cousins had visited Barbara some years ago too, so I figured I might as well say hi if I was around. She’s a widow, about 70, and practically lives in a palace with art and sculptures filling the place. The art collection alone could be worth more than the mansion itself. She’s welcoming though, and drives me around and takes me out to lunch. We talk about our respective families, and how her branch of the family ended up in South Africa. She teaches me “yawk,” a term for non-Jews in South Africa, though she doesn’t know its origins. I also briefly meet one of her kids and grandchildren. After saying goodbye, I spend the afternoon at Liliesleaf Farm, the secret headquarters of top ANC leaders organizing against apartheid in the early 1960s before they were raided and arrested.

Thursday I take the day off, resting before the safari trip starting tomorrow. In the end I don’t end up seeing much of Pretoria, not that there’s much to see besides some government buildings and museums. I take advantage of my host Tshepo’s library with lots of books on African history and politics during the day, and in the evening I hang out and have dinner with him. Tshepo’s originally from the northern province close to Botswana (he’s an ethnic Tswana), though he moved here for work. He grew up in a more rural area; his family had many sheep, but a few years ago much of his mother’s flock was stolen, and she died some time after in distress. It again shows that those who suffer the most in the violence in the country’s farmlands aren’t just the rich white landowners, but black African farmers as well. Tshepo also has another apartment in Joburg he rents out, and someone broke into it recently.

“This country could have been something great,” he says after a while, referring to the post-apartheid era. He didn’t give a certain answer on the likelihood of the country still becoming something great; I didn’t get a certain answer from most people on that question. Can anyone really have a certain answer about anything regarding the future, if things will get better or worse anywhere? And still I can tell from the fondness he speaks of his culture, and the real joy I’ve heard in the voices and seen on the faces of many people I’ve met over my past two months here, that there still are plenty of great things about South Africa, despite all the continuing challenges.

The safari of the Barba Rosa. Friday 3/8 to Wednesday 3/13, Joburg/Egoli, Blyde River/Motlatse River, Kruger Park, and Mbabane (Eswatini/Swaziland)

I’m now off on my last adventure of this trip: to see one the wonder of South Africa’its wildlife. I start taking one anti-malaria pill each day as prescribed, since there’s a small risk of malaria in the northeastern part of the country and around Swaziland. Hopefully I don’t get any of the bad side effects. Tshepo generously drops me off at the Pretoria station in the morning, I thank him for everything, and I speed off towards the airport outside of Joburg—not for a plane yet, but for a car. I meet Maria and Karsten at the rentals area, where they being my heroes have taken care of everything; all I have to do is chip in for the costs, made cheaper by our two other companions: Paola, a Spanish friend of Karsten’s from when they traveled together around the Cape a few weeks before, and William, another German who also found the crew over Facebook. Maria and Karsten first became friends renting a car together in Namibia a month ago, so they’re thankfully pretty experienced with this whole thing. We name our car the Barba Rosa (I proposed Barbarossa in honor of the medieval Germanic emperor, since we had so many Germans, and the others jazzed it up to Barba Rosa).

We start out on Friday driving almost five hours northeast towards the Blyde River Canyon (indigenous name Motlatse River), and we stop off at the cliffs of God’s Window on the way to get our first view of the valleys around here. The whole area is still part of the Drakensberg Range, though not as high. For the night we stay at a nice outdoors guesthouse in the village of Moremela close to the canyon, and we put together a barbecue dinner on the large grill outside. Most people in this region are ethnically Pedi (or Northern Sotho, as opposed to the Southern Sotho/Basotho). Saturday morning we start at Bourke’s Luck Potholes, named for a hapless prospector who thought he’d find gold here but failed. Water erosion has made some cool really deep potholes, kinda hard to describe, you have to see the pictures to really see how unique they look. Like if you stuck your fingers down a big wad of playdough or something, and then they filled with water. From there we go to the canyon, one of the largest in the world. The already impressive canyon is made more beautiful by the wide Motlatse River sweeping around the bottom, and the three huge peaks shaped like rondavels (traditional-style homes) rising up in the center of it all, sitting like a royal family in the middle of their majestic court. We do some hiking down into the canyon, and swim in one of its natural pools.

We go to stay in some tents at the edge of the park that night, and Sunday we finally get to the main event—the animals. Maria, Karsten, Paola, William, and I wake up very early in the dark, as many of the creatures are most active in the early morning and at night. We drive into the park and start off in the Barba Rosa, not sure of what we’ll see and when, and all of a sudden in the still quiet of the dawn a full-grown African elephant just casually walks out of the bush and crosses the road in front of us. They’re of course not afraid of the car, as they’re used to seeing them all the time. We keep going as the sun begins to rise, and we start seeing giraffes’ heads pop up in the distance from the road, and soon find some closer to the road near some trees. It really is something incredible to see these animals roaming around their natural habitat and not in a zoo. A couple hyenas trot on the road alongside the cars, and there are plenty of families of impalas skipping in the fields too.

Later in the day we go on one of the official park tours on the safari vans, and get to see bigger groups of giraffes and elephants bathing, huge herds of African buffalo with their powdered wig-like horns, and the rare treat of a couple of rhinoceroses. We join a cluster of a dozen other parked cars and trucks starting at clump of trees some twenty feet off the road at one point, where someone had spotted a leopard, but can’t get a look. Seeing one during the day is extremely rare. At night we take another ride to try spotting some predators on the hunt, but just see some of the usual suspects out and about. There are also some warthogs strutting around outside our lodge.

The total area of Kruger Park is huge, over 7,000 square miles, and part of a larger transnational conservation area with Mozambique and Zimbabwe. It was first set up in 1898 as a game reserve to control overhunting, not open to tourists until thirty years later. The government started to forcibly relocate Tsonga tribes living on the land, their last village being displaced in the 1960s. The post-apartheid restitution process gave them back title to their land in the ‘90s, though how they’ve fared in their relationship with the national parks service since then I don’t know. Even so, it is always good to see societies trying to conserve environments with the animals and plants living in them, despite all the harm our industrialized world does.

Still there are those who try to kill just for a profit; the guide for our van points out that some of the rhinos have bullet holes in their hide, having escaped attacks by poachers after their horns. The elephants thankfully aren’t targeted as much these days (there’s actually an overpopulation of them in the park right now). Our guide tells us that poachers these days aren’t just some random bandits sneaking into the enclosed park’s land—some actually enter pretending to just be tourists, smuggling in their weapons. The financial reward is huge for men who don’t have many other opportunities in the region.

Things get ugly, with park staff sometimes getting intimidated or bribed by poachers, and gunfights can break out between park police and poachers working at night. The national parks have in recent years been applying chemicals to rhino horns and elephant tusks, harmless to the animals but toxic to poachers handling them, and ruining the black market value of the trophies. One of the best groups combatting poaching in the area is the Black Mambas, a mostly women force of locals. Besides tracking and apprehending poachers, they also lead conservation education in nearby communities to try discouraging people from becoming poachers in the first place. You can donate to them at https://www.blackmambas.org/donate.html

Monday morning we go for one more round, and are lucky to find a thickly-maned lion casually strolling along the road next to our van, like he’s on his way to work, and we also see our first herd of zebras up close. On our way out of the park we’re given the parting shot of some hippos’ heads poking out of a lake, and we say goodbye to a few more of the elephants and giraffes before heading south, making our way to explore some of Swaziland. Maria and Carsten drive the Barba Rosa over 5 hours throughout the day, and after we go through the border we get some great views of the mountains as the sun sets. The roads get very twisty here, which I’m normally fine with, but I find myself starting to get nauseous. Thankfully we soon get to our hostel in Mbabane, the capital, and I rest a bit. We go to grab some dinner nearby, and my body gets worse even before we start eating. I start getting chills and actually go into semi-shock with my hands freezing up and shaking. It’s definitely side effects from the malaria pills. Carsten helps me out, and when I’m good enough to walk again after a while I go back to the hostel.

I hadn’t been showing any of these signs the past few days, but maybe the windy mountain roads set it off. So I take another pill the next morning—that’s what you’re supposed to do even if you have bad side effects. I’m fine for a bit, and we head off to a nearby museum after breakfast, but there I start getting nauseous again, and have to rest. My companions drop me off at the hostel where I rest for the rest of the day while they go on a hike. I don’t throw up, which I’ve heard happens to some people. Overall it’s not as bad as last night, but it’s more drawn out, and I’m just lying in a malaise, a torpor. At least I’m in a relaxing place, but whoever put the playlist on in the hostel’s common area just has the same five dumb pop songs on repeat, including that stupid “dancing in the dark” Ed Sheeran song. I already hated Ed Sheeran’s music before this, and sitting there in a miserable daze under the malaria pills hearing his shitty songs play again every eighteen minutes makes me hate it even more, and now whenever I hear that song I think back to when I was dying from malaria pills in a hostel in Swaziland.

So unfortunately, I can’t tell you much of what I learned about Swaziland (though I do learn it was renamed “Eswatini” last year) during my already short time there, as most of my time there I was being tortured by the effects of atovaquone/proguanil pills and Ed Sheeran music. I stop taking the damn pills on Wednesday—my companions (half-jokingly) threaten to leave me behind if I take them again, since we’ve got a long drive back to Joburg. It’s not likely many of the mosquitos here carry malaria anyway, I’ve got bugspray, and I can always use the pills again if I do get sick (the others have pills with them too for that scenario; they opted out of taking them ahead of time, and they have my suffering as validation that they made the right decision).

On our way back to the border with South Africa we stop at some more trails, and I’m feeling good again so I join William for one more short hike down some hills to find a waterfall while the others rest at the entrance café, tired from yesterday. Down in this valley we race past some warthogs and zebras prancing in the fields, and as we climb some rocky paths we can see a stream further down which is probably near the waterfall, but after over an hour we realize we’re running low on time and have to climb back up the steep slopes. We reunite with the crew and take off west back through the border and on to Joburg, just another 4 hours, and return the Barba Rosa that night. We say goodbye to William, who’s already got a place to stay and is continuing his journey to Durban soon, and the rest of us take a cab to a hostel in the Maboneng district. Our driver gets a bit pissed that we’re driving through a dangerous area, but we make it. I get to reunite with good old Alex from Cape Town at this hostel, too. I’ve come full circle (though the shape of my trip from Joburg to Lesotho, Cape Town, Durban, and back to Joburg has been really more like a distorted triangle).

Reunion and return. Thursday 3/14 to Monday 3/18, Johannesburg, Cradle of Humankind, Atlanta, New York City, and Mahwah

The next morning Alex and I catch up more. He made his own way across the scenic southern coast to Durban and the Drakensberg, and he stayed with the folks in the Aweh hostel in Durban too. We make plans to visit the Cradle of Humankind today, an hour outside of the city. There are no buses, so we find a Greek guy, Angelo, to split a cab with us. I take all my stuff with me, since Steve called me and insisted I stay with him my last few days. I say goodbye and thanks to Maria and Carsten for putting the whole safari together (Paola already left early morning for a plane), and I head out with Alex and Angelo. We first see the actual fossils from the Cradle of Humankind area, removed from their resting places in the caves, in their museum. The Sterkfontein Cave site is a few miles away, so we get a lift from a tour van with some guests from the Maboneng hostel outside the museum, but I leave my food bag and cowboy hat on the seat next to me, and only realize as it drives away. Alex says he’ll find my hat for me when he gets back to the hostel so I can go pick it up this weekend before I fly home. It’s an important hat—that’s THE hat that one of the guys mugging me picked up and gave back to me two months ago.

We go down into the cave with a guide. The caves around here contain some of the oldest hominin fossils found in the world, some dated as far back as three and a half million years, evolutionary links between primates and early humans (sorry to offend any anti-evolution creationists reading this). The scientists don’t know the exact spot in Africa where the first modern humans evolved, but walking around in the earth here, where the remains of people related to my (to our) great-great-great x100 grandparents lay for hundreds of thousands of years, it’s almost kind of homecoming. After all, Zionism says that Israel is my home after my ancestors were there two thousand years ago; is it that much of a stretch for me to claim that this place is my home after my ancestors were here three million years ago?

Alex, Angelo, and I order another cab back into Joburg, and I say goodbye once more to Alex as I get dropped off once again in good old Melville, and after reunions with Alex and my ancient ancestors, I’m reunited with Steve Appiah, the god-fearing kente-weaving shoe doctor, and his kids. We put together some dinner and catch up; he’s been doing the same the past few couple months, working and weaving. We walk across town to his weaving studio, where he’s got a couple guests rooms and a spare room for himself.

It’s a great way to spend my last few days here, though short power outages become common throughout this week, rotating through different neighborhoods. There was some of this “load-shedding” of the country’s power grid for a few days when I was around Cape Town, but it wasn’t as severe then. Over the past decade there’s been an on-and-off energy crisis in South Africa (no pun intended). It’s a long complex story, but the most recent shortage is definitely tied to corruption involving deals between ESKOM (the main power company) and the notorious Gupta family, who were very connected to Zuma, the previous president; this has caused debt and cost spikes, and delays in construction of new power plants. There have also been growing issues with obtaining good quality coal. So now load-shedding is used to spread the energy supply from district to district throughout the day, and ESKOM is also scheduled to be broken up into three smaller companies, each new one to manage different aspects of the supply chain.

Still it’s great to be back where I started for my last short few days before going home. The next couple days go quick. Steve and I hit up familiar spots like Paul’s Tavern and the Nigerian food joint, hang out with his friends Philip and Gary again, and go to the all-encompassing Apartheid Museum. We also visit the Victoria Yards community center again, where I see more renovation has been done. Steve has found an ideal space where he hopes to open another studio there, more in the center of things than Melville. My last day he picks up a bunch of severed pineapple tops from a fruit vendor on the street before we head home, and he has the idea of planting them next to his studio building. Saturday night we have a farewell feast, and in the morning before I leave I help dig up the old plants in the garden, and we plant the pineapple tops in hopes that they’ll soon take root and give new fruit. As of now (publishing this in September 2020), I am organizing a fundraiser for Steve’s project, as a way of giving back for how he and others in Joburg welcomed me, to help him reach more people in the community. You can donate to it here: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/appiah-s-kente-weaving–2#/

I pack and get ready to order one more Taxify in the afternoon for the airport, but Steve will have none of it—he insists that we go together in his neighbor Louis’s car, so he can see me off. I pay for the gas. It’s a pickup truck though, so Steve squeezes in to the front seat with me with his son Blessed on his lap. On the way we stop off at the hostel in Maboneng, where Alex had tracked down my hat from Thursday and labeled it before he left, and like Indiana Jones I grab my hat at the last second before my escape. At the airport though some low-level security guys stop us—they tell off Louis for driving with three people in the passenger seat. He has to bribe them to not get penalized, so I take care of it with some of my last rands. Steve and company  hang out with me a bit as I’ve still got time before going to the gate. The time comes for me to get going, and we say our final goodbyes and thank yous.

Steve of course calls me a couple hours later while I’m waiting at the gate. The sun has set by the time we board, and as we take off I can see some dark blocks down in the city without power from the load-shedding. In the seats next to me are yet another Malawian businessman and a young white South African woman who’s on her way to Tennessee, to work in a circus or something. “Dodgy place, isn’t it?” she remarks when I tell her this was my first time visiting. I just slightly nod and smile back. Overnight as I sleep, I cross once more over the equator into the northern hemisphere, from late summer into late winter. I land in the Atlanta airport the next morning, and pass the Zimbabwean sculptures again as I transfer in the tunnels. I take off for New York, and in the afternoon am blessed with some of the best aerial views I’ve ever had of the city. Then it’s the subway to Port Authority, the bus out to Mahwah, and the tired but triumphant walk up the hill to my parents’ house.

A quick note

I don’t run any ads on this blog, or do anything to make money off it for myself; I just try as best as I can to share my travels and photos for anyone interested. If you’re getting some enjoyment out of following me along here (though I am writing most of this now in the year of the pandemic, way after my trips have ended), consider donating a little to some of the funds and charities I include that are connected to the people in the places I’ve been to. I know that right now during the lockdowns and the pandemic money is even tighter than usual for most of us–no pressure. Obviously I didn’t encounter lots of social organizations on this trip like I did with the delegation in Palestine, but there are still a few relevant groups to put here again:

Abalimi Bezekhaya, “Farmers of the Home,” a network that supports micro-farming and community gardening run by residents of the impoverished townships around Cape Town

Donate

The Black Mambas, an anti-poaching and environmental education campaign led by local women around Kruger Park:
https://www.blackmambas.org/donate.html

And of course, the fundraiser I’ve put together for Steve’s activities teaching kente weaving to youth and unemployed around Johannesburg:
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/appiah-s-kente-weaving–2#/

Final thoughts

I can’t say enough how hard it is in general to write about foreign countries in a way that’s accurate, and that doesn’t either cheerfully ignore a country’s problems or focuses too much on a country’s problems, making the country and its people into a spectacle. That’s even truer for talking about travel in many African countries, with me being a relatively privileged white outsider, and especially for South Africa (and nearby Lesotho & Swaziland) in particular. My traveling in South Africa was of course less personal than my traveling in say Palestine & Israel, since there I had the connection of being a Jew and an American citizen, but I’ll still add a little something about how I felt looking back on my almost ten weeks here. Most of what I say here has probably been expressed far more articulately and personally by South Africans themselves; this is just in my own words as an outsider.

It is easy to go to parts of South Africa–especially around Cape Town, with its seductively prosperous and cosmopolitan center, the beaches, the vineyards, and the scenic areas of the peninsula–and come away with a sense that things are a paradise here in the rainbow nation. Throw in a token visit to Soweto and Robben Island to believe that the fall of apartheid was a total victory. You can see some people from different backgrounds fraternizing with each other—Xhosa, white, South Asian, Coloured.

But while I got this sense myself several times, we know it’s not that simple. No place can be expected to become perfect; especially in a place like South Africa, after hundreds of years of racial oppression, positive change to a truly united and equal society unfortunately takes time. Anywhere in the world you can see division and inequality if you look closer, but here the line is just so stark–the racial divide and the economic divide reinforce each other very strongly.

It’s also easy to look at the worst aspects of South Africa and come away thinking it’s an unsalvageable wreck, that all Africa is criminal-infested, and that Africans are incapable of running their own countries. But as I mentioned, plenty of South Africans as well as other tourists I met said from experience that while many other sub-Saharan African countries do have their own poverty, civil wars, and other problems, some of them are run very well, without corruption, high crime, or energy crises. And interestingly, even the other countries that do have extreme poverty with desperate populations don’t have the same major crime problem as South Africa. From what I’ve heard, it’s not really clear why this is, but one of the common answers is just the particular legacy of systemic violence in South Africa. After decades of the brutal everyday racial subjugation of apartheid, that was all that most South Africans had ever known, so a culture of resentment led to that violence they had learned being socially reproduced in the form of crime.

So South Africa is not inevitably doomed; that people of other countries have overcome similar difficulties from colonialism shows there is hope. I’ll reiterate that South Africans, like people anywhere, don’t passively resign themselves to their hardships–every day many of them do what they can to support their families and communities, and demand accountability for their leaders so they’ll finally have a country that works for all of them.  But while I point this all out, it’s not for me to say here how likely or unlikely that hope is of being fulfilled. I didn’t get any certain answers from the few South Africans I did ask about it. For now, they’ll just keep doing what they can, hope or not.

Photos from the Cape