Museum, Handicrafts, and an Incredible Market
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
This was a remarkable
day. We began with a visit to the campus
of the Addis Ababa University, which has beautiful gates, topped with Ethiopian
lions:
The library here is named
for JFK—a long story:
The Ethnographic Museum is
on the campus, in Haile Selassie’s former palace:
The items on display are
wonderful, but the displays and the lighting are terrible, making things hard
to see. We began with a talk on the
history of Ethiopia, the fact that it is the only sub-Saharan country which never
was colonized, although it was occupied by Italy from 1936 to 1941. We heard of the multiple peoples who make up
the country, the amalgamation of the tribal peoples into a nation, the
splitting off of Eritrea, and more. We
learned of Haile Selassie, born Ras Tafari, who was crowned King Ras Tafari in
1928 and then Emperor Haile Selassie in 1930.
The country is still somewhat of a duality, being monotheistic in the
north and animist in the south. Here are
some highlight photos from the south where we will not be going. First, a Kaffa Kingdom crown:
A set of Konso grave
markers:
A masingo—a one-stringed
fiddle and the only Ethiopian bowed instrument:
A percussion instrument
made to be tied around the waist while dancing:
There was a display on the
“Holy of Holies,” the third, innermost portion of an Ethiopian church, which holds
a replica of the Ark of the Covenant. Each
church brings out its replica twice a year, once on the name day of the saint
for which the church is named, and once on Timkat, the festival we will see
celebrated next week.
After our visit to the
museum we went to the Trinity Cathedral:
The most remarkable
feature of this church is the series of stained glass windows on both sides of
the building. One side has
representations from the Hebrew Bible and the other from the New Testament. Here are the Queen of Sheba and Solomon:
We stopped for lunch and
then visited the Salom Handicraft Center where we saw men weaving the beautiful
fabrics which are made into shawls, pillows and more:
We also saw women weaving
baskets and mats:
We then had an incredible,
amazing intense experience. We went to
the Merkato Market, a market unlike any we have ever walked through. We love markets. We go to them whenever we travel as it is
possible to get a great feel for a place in a market, and we have been to
many. But we’ve never been to one like
this. We had been warned to leave
anything of value on the van, and we did.
I only had the camera, and it was a good thing. The crowds were astonishing, and there is no
sense of personal space; everyone is on top of one another in a giant
scrum. People are shouting, the odors
are pungent, and people push to go where they want to go. I have no photos of the most crowded part—we had
trouble just moving and trying to stay together. Here’s a place where we could find a little
space:
There were many men with
foot-powered sewing machines:
Here’s a spice lady:
Periodically extremely
heavily laden donkeys would go by in a parade:
There were many veggie
sellers:
Here’s a chicken vendor:
Many men were carrying
enormous loads, and just walked, banging into whomever was in the way:
It was exhausting and a
bit threatening! Back to the hotel for a
shower, dinner, and packing up. We fly
in the morning to Bahir Dar, where it’s unclear if I’ll have any internet, and
unlikely that I’ll have sufficient bandwith to upload photos. I’ll try.
Wow! Double shower. Lol. I’ll take that market off my bucket list thanks brother. 😘😘
ReplyDeleteIt was actually scary just reading the market piece!
ReplyDeleteInteresting name: Mercato is simply the Italian for Market. So did it get its name from Italian traders? Of course, Italy occupied Ethiopia from 1935 to 1947, acc. to Wikipedia, so maybe that's when it happened. You'll probably be learning much more about all this soon....
ReplyDelete