Thursday, April 29, 2010

Nsenene



Nze nsenene. Nva lugendo.

Grasshoppers are a ubiquitous snack in Southern Uganda. They are lured by lights, trapped in barrels, and then fried up in a little oil with salt. Kids love them and the ones you see enjoying them here are orphans from Nazareth Children's Home in Nyendo, Masaka.

Nyendo’s a suburb that sits 45 minutes away from the Equator on a stretch of highway that curves around Lake Victoria. It’s a place where busses from as far away as Kigali, Rwanda and Mombasa, Kenya stop in the middle of the night for their passengers to relieve themselves and stock up on street foods like meat-on-a-stick and fried lungfish. Grasshoppers are plentiful too. Teenage street vendors peddle nsenene from minibus to minibus with same entrepreneurial spirit as the guys who feel obligated to squeegee your windshield in New York.

The coming of the grasshoppers coincides with the end of each rainy season. You know it’s that time of year again when you see fluorescent floodlights pop up with the glow of a car dealership lot. Overnight they are set up in unlikely places. They span over several rooftops in slum areas, deep in the middle of swamps, or in a neighbor’s backyard. Often the traps are assembled where there was previously no electricity, but someone has shimmed up a nearby power line with a cable for a free hook-up.

The traps themselves are metal barrels fitted with a 10 foot piece of corrugated iron sheeting. The lights are aimed at the metallic surface and the grasshoppers become dazzled by the display, much like moths around a porch light. The insects are drawn into the brilliant luminance and whack themselves on the metal sheeting. Stunned, they slide down into the bottom of the barrel. At the end of the night they are collected in plastic bags and sold at roadside markets.

The Ugandan varieties of these insects are not the same grasshoppers that you’d find in America or Europe. They’re actually a type of katydid that are closely related to the same migratory locusts that plagued Pharaoh in the book of Exodus. Like Egypt, Uganda also sits along the banks of the river Nile (and Moses has always been a popular name), but the grasshoppers there are too delicious to pose a threat. However, if the insects weren’t eaten they could strip the lush tropical environment of its foliage. On one acre of land, fifty live grasshoppers (or two recommended serving sizes in fried snack form) have the same grazing power as a cow. For a country where 80% of its inhabitants’ livelihood depends on agriculture the result would be devastating.

Yet most Ugandans don’t see themselves as agents in pest control. They consume grasshoppers because they’re a nutritious snack. Every 100 grams of grasshopper contains a whopping 20.6 grams of protein. That’s as much as in an equivalent weight of beef. Many people in the impoverished, rural areas of the country are malnourished. Grasshoppers provide them with a cheap, and often free, source of nutrition.

Nsenene is a perfect afternoon snack for kids. The orphans in the video tried nabbing a few hoppers even before they were done cooking. Nazareth Children’s Home was started in 1978 by a woman named Josephine. Many of the children you see were dropped off on her doorstep in the middle of the night. Today the orphanage looks after 25 orphans who range in age from 1 to 20 years old. Josephine’s still around, but one of the older orphans, Nankya Carol, has taken up most of the home’s responsibilities. Carol’s the young woman in the video frying up the grasshoppers. She makes sure that the other kids are healthy and that they go to school. She also keeps a small garden that provides food for the orphanage. Nazareth Children’s Home loves visitors so if you find yourself around Masaka visit them. Their postal address is:

PO Box 86
Masaka, Uganda

If you can’t make it out to Uganda, I’ve done my best to piece together Carol’s Nsenene recipe below.

Grasshopper recipe:

Collect grasshoppers- as many as you can catch
Peal wings and legs off
Soak in water for 15-20 minutes
Drain the water from pan
Add a couple of tablespoons of vegetable oil
Fry until golden brown over medium heat
Stir occasionally to prevent burning
Add salt to taste

I’d also like to thank Lisandro Torre, a Peace Corps volunteer, who served at Nazareth Children’s Home. He's the mysterious white hand in the movie that you see sampling the nsenene. Without his assistance, this video wouldn’t have gotten made.


Links
The Internet is well versed on eating weird foods and Ugandan grasshopper culture is no exception. Here are some other blogs and websites on the subject. Many have their own variations to the classic nsenene recipe.
  • The popular Bizarre Foods show on the Travel Channel featured grasshoppers on its Ugandan episode.


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Monday, April 26, 2010

Nvudeyo!


That's Luganda for "I'm baaaack..." I've been in Uganda for the last two years serving in the Peace Corps and this website has been on hiatus. Before I left in February of 2007 this blog got a lot of attention after I posted a video of my friend's waterboarding me. This didn't sit well well with the PC administration in Washington and I was deemed a safety and security risk. We reached an agreement that I would be allowed to serve in Uganda on the condition that I wouldn't post to this blog.

However, these last few years have been fruitful and creative. While I lived in primitive conditions in a village in Southern Uganda without electricity, I kept a thorough online account of each day's adventures using my mobile phone. My work was also recognized by the Peace Corps and the American government on numerous occasions.

I can't say that I wasn't dreaming of this moment when I was out in the bush. I'd been sitting on an ever-growing number of cache of videos. Now I've finally got access to first-world broadband that's fast enough to upload them. I'm hoping that the collection of African media will bring better exposure to the marginalized populations that collaborated with me to make them.

Awareness and advocacy are some of the ideas behind this blog. Media literacy and empowerment are equally relevant. Now that I'm back, I'd like to tackle some of the big themes of "media for social change" by creating applications and platforms for greater community interaction at a global level. Some of them, for example, are leapfrog technology, viral marketing, and social networking. Rather than follow the conventional trend of making these functions push OS land speed records for high bandwidth, I want to go lo-fi. I want to target a population that wouldn't normally have the means to access the Internet. I'm interested in emerging communications technology at the rural level.


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