Day Five
Some major drama happened today.
So I woke up this morning a little more tired than usual since I had to interpret an entire church service (oh the irony) the day before, so I was 10-15 minutes late for breakfast. I dragged myself out of bed, still tired and still wearing glasses to go to breakfast, just ate toast, eggs and two bowls of cereal and headed back to my room.
Remembering that the alarm on my cell phone didn’t ring this morning for some peculiar reason, I started looking for my cellphone all over my room but it was nowhere to be found. So as I was frantically searching for my phone I started hearing waves of panic coming from all over the floor—people in the room across from me had their wallets robbed of their money, credit cards, and whatnot; people in the room next to us had their camera and their money stolen; the one down the hall had their laptop and some perfume stolen from their travel bag, which they found with the safety lock tampered with and broken into. And at that moment, it sparked a thought in my head: maybe I’ve been robbed too.
So I ran back into my room frantically hoping that perhaps they left our room out and just passed by, but I guess happy endings never happen in real life; after 30 minutes of thoroughly searching every corner of my room I found out that my camera, my watch, my cellphone, and most importantly, MINIMALIST (lappy) was stolen. So I went through the whole five steps of dealing with grief thing except for “bargaining” and was kind of distraught all morning realizing that I’d been pretty much robbed of everything I treasured materialistically for the last two years, but then I started analyzing the facts carefully with the other victims from the floor:
1. The annex building where we’re staying in is currently inhabited only by the twelve of us from the NGO.
2. The annex building door is usually closed and locked when we’re not there.
3. The robbery took place during the 15 minute window when the last person left the annex building to go eat breakfast and the first person came back from eating breakfast;
4. Two of the three rooms that were broken into had their door locks tampered with; one room (mine) was left still locked.
We therefore concluded that the chance of someone completely unrelated to hotel personnel robbing all three rooms in that time frame is very unlikely and all unanimously agreed that someone must have received some sort of help from someone in the hotel—just the fact that the robber struck us in that fifteen minute time frame when we were gone for breakfast seems to suggest that the robber knew our daily routine/habits—either that or the robber was incredibly lucky.
We reported the incident to the police briefly who told us that they’d come back in the afternoon to give us a full report/for a follow-up so we went about our day’s schedule, which was part two of school visitations.
Instead of going to Thim primary school first like we did on Monday, we headed over to Migono first albeit an hour late; our “guide” had already called the principal in advance to tell them about what happened at the hotel this morning and that we’d be late as a result, so the principal was rather understanding of our predicament. When we arrived at Migono, we were greeted by a familiar scene of children coming out of their classrooms carrying their desks over to a shady area where we could all sit down. After everyone was properly seated, the principal greeted us (and surprise surprise, I had to interpret everything that was going on again) and told us that the children had prepared presentations for us, which turned out to be either poetry recital or some sort of singing, either in Swahili or English.
After the children were done with their show and tell, it was our turn to do “our thing”; basically the NGO’s purpose in coming to the school was to aid them through providing some necessary supplies all the while subliminally preaching Christian propaganda along with it. So they decided that in order to integrate these two things together, they’d hold some a drawing competition, where they would tell the children a bible story and ask them to draw or depict the story they heard as well as they can with those that performed admirably better than the others being rewarded with a special prize.
So the NGO group decided that they wanted to tell the story of the Prodigal son (which was first told in Korean, interpreted into English by yours truly, and then into Swahili by one of the teachers since the children aren’t completely fluent in English as opposed to Swahili or their native tongue) and would reward every child that participated in the “competition” by giving them a piece of candy, a pencil, and an exercise book each; those that performed over and beyond would be rewarded with an assorted stationery set.
After that was done and over with, we said our goodbyes and went back to the guide’s mother’s house for lunch again; lunch was pretty much the same meal that was served everyday, except this lunch was a little bit more eventful because Parent 2 got scratched/bitten (he claims that the cat bit him, whereas I saw it clearly scratch him with its claws) and he was off to kill it every time it came back into the room. I felt sorry for the cat since he pretty much deserved to get scratched after aggravating it so much, but whatevs. It was funny seeing him get so angry over a small animal either way.
After lunch, we headed over to Thim primary school (the “bush” school from Monday) where the children also brought over benches and chairs to sit down as soon as they saw us and we were given the same formal greeting plus the show and tell show. Thim’s show and tell was a little more impressive since they even prepared a traditional Bantu dance for us (for those of you who don’t know who the Bantu are, they’re the stereotypical Africans wearing war paint carrying spears and wooden shields) and even recited a poem which apparently ranked third place in some provincial poetry recital contest. But all in all, this school was a little more impressive than the one we visited in the morning.
The NGO group decided once again to follow the format of “bible story drawing competition” and I was told this time to interpret the story of Nehemiah (for those of you who don’t know either the stories of the Prodigal son or Nehemiah, either poke the nearest bible near you or google it if interested) and then tell the children this time to draw what they want to become in ten years—this went off without a hitch as well until it started raining and we had to make different arrangements.
With that all the regular scheduled events were done and completed, except now there was some more drama waiting to happen over at the police station.
So if you’d recall back to the events that I described happened earlier in the morning, the police officers told us that they’d check on us during the afternoon again to delve into the robbery a little more closely; since we were preoccupied with scheduled events during the afternoon, we told them that we’d come to them at the police station as soon as we were done with our arrangement for the day.
When we arrived at the police station, our “guide” had a brief talk with the officers there, after which we were taken into a questioning room/interview room to give our statements/testimonies/particulars regarding what happened in the morning. Because most of the victims, excluding myself, could not speak English, Parent 2 had to interpret into English one group of people whereas I’d have to interpret for the other group after I was done giving mine. But in the middle of what seemed like perfectly normal criminal procedure—writing down the name and personal information of the victim—Parent 2 started lecturing the police, telling them that this isn’t the way the police should be treating victims of a crime, and suggested that they were instead treating us like criminals. Then he went as far to say that if the police were going to treat us like this then we’d rather not receive any help at all, which left the police flabbergasted and me raging mad.
So in my viewpoint, since Kenya used to be a British colony and had inherited its system of government and bureaucracy (and kept it even after declaring her independence), the police were just simply following criminal procedure as prescribed by British Civil Law: no matter what the type or caliber of the crime may be, the reporting officer must always interview all victims and witnesses to ensure that they have all the information necessary in order to start an investigation.
But somehow, Parent 2 thought that doing the above, i.e. doing the job that they’ve been hired to do, was somehow “disrespectful” and was the same as “treating us like criminals” and even worked up the nerve to say that police shouldn’t be treating people like this and that he was “very disappointed” in the Police system of Kenya.
Of course the two officers who were trying to interview us were also somewhat annoyed and surprised that he’d react this way but they were very very polite; they continued to remind Parent 2 that Kenya was a developing country and that their system may not be on par as that of Korea or other advanced countries. Nevertheless Parent 2 continued insisting that formal criminal procedure wasn’t good enough for us and said that we’d send in our written statements tomorrow, to which the police reluctantly agreed.
I protested with the officers and Parent 2 in the same room, telling him that we’re no longer in Korea, and since the crime was committed in territory that’s under Kenyan jurisdiction (neverminding the fact that the crime was just a regular domestic felony not an international one) we need to abide to Kenyan law and Kenyan procedure if we expect any help from Kenyan authorities, and that the officers were only following their bureaucratically assigned tasks of gathering information which Parent 2 dismissed by saying that we shouldn’t have to follow this sort of bureaucracy and leaving the room.
On our walk back to the hotel (the police station is very close to the hotel) I was of course very angry at the way Parent 2 handled the situation and as I always do when I’m angry I started walking faster with a “stay the fuck away from me” look on my face. Parent 2 noted this and asked if I had a problem with him, to which I replied “of course I have a problem” and proceeded to explain to him the “errors” of his ways and also reminding him that no matter what his stance on what the police’s duty to the citizens should be, he should NEVER tell the police how to do their jobs, or tell them that they’re doing a crappy one ESPECIALLY if he’s a foreign national.
To this he gave the same “but I didn’t want to deal with that bureaucratic crap” response which made me speed off to my room to lie down and cool my head for a bit.
After I cooled down, however, I came to the conclusion that this event had happened because Parent 2 has always lived in Korea where civil workers supposedly “serve” the civilians as opposed to terrorize them and break their tail lights for no reason, and that his viewpoint on the law may be different from that of mine since I, as a student of (International) law believe that law is based on a set of ground norms which are designed to keep social order in balance, whereas he as a devout (maybe to the degree of cultism) Christian seems to think that laws and norms can be disregarded with authority from a being inapplicable to/transcending law (i.e. “God”).
So in thinking that the “misinterpretation” of the situation was merely a product of these different schools of thought, and also reminding myself that Parent 2 has no reason to not want to report this crime to the police and that he was merely doing what he thought was the best course of action in resolving this matter at hand, I felt that maybe I shouldn’t have lashed out at Parent 2, and wrote him an apology note (like a true Asian would do when apologizing to their parents) to which he told me in person that perhaps he shouldn’t have been so disrespectful to the police and that he acted this way because he thought if we had to interpret for everyone who got their stuff stolen at the police station, we’d be there until midnight ( which is totally untrue, but whatever)
So after that entire mess, we went to grab dinner as usual, and during the “reflection meeting” most everyone seemed to agree that we should be thankful that we were able to carry on with the day’s schedule most unaffected by what happened in the morning, and that the crime committed against us was only petty theft and that no one was hurt – in conclusion, being in good health and in good spirit is priceless, for everything else, there’s MasterCard.
Oh, on a concluding note, in the case that MINIMALIST is not found before I leave Kenya, I’ll probably buy myself a stronger, faster, better MINIMALIST, henceforth to be known as: MINIMALIST MK II
I’m thinking of getting me a VAIO Z series, or anything similar to it that’s 13-14in., somewhere around 2.6-3.0Ghz dual core or higher; 2-4GB of RAM; 300-500GB of HDD space with a decent video card that will let me watch videos—portability and non-macintosh-compatibility is a must. Let me know if you have any suggestions!










