The last episode of the BBC's Welcome To Lagos looks to the future, while focusing on a slum under constant threat of demolition. It is located on a beachy patch right across from Victoria Island, where everyone aspires to live in its big houses one day. You can't help but like Esther, she had me at "Chelsea for Life"! Anyone who bleeds blue is good with me he he he...
As we watch Esther keep house at the beach, her hair changes from weave, to braids, to gelled with a hair piece to unkempt and in equal measure we witness the twists and turns in her tale. She is there to dig a ditch to protect the homestead when the rains come and the sea swells up and takes up more of the slums space, destroying anything in its path. She dreams of a better life without needing a man to help her get there. She tries the best she can with the circumstances she has been dealt with the pride, dignity and resourcefulness of a strong African woman. And with a little silliness too :). All with a smile and an unfazed optimism, even though she lives with constant uncertainty.
We also see a traffic cop turned beautification squad leader and traditional dance instructor (! ;}) romp through the streets tearing down any illegal construction. He is a Lagos native whose pride in his roots has led him to clean up his city during the day and teach they young their culture in his free time. Although his tactics may be a rather crude and rough, ultimately he is carrying out his orders. However, one cannot help but wonder about how there is no care for people's belongings and goods as this "beautification" is being carried out, and where they are to go as the better places the Government are planning to build have not been created yet. Progress is a double-edged sword. While it is clear that chasing away the area boys to clean up the patches they trolled is creating Green spaces that both benefit the people and the environment, the guerrilla-style slum destruction seems a little too chaotic and callous.
Either way it is clear that Lagos is moving forward and there is nothing to stop the city from thriving and becoming a megacity rivaling any around the world. We will have wait to see the social costs borne from all of Lagos' economic development.
All in all this was a well crafted docu-series that I felt gave me insight into a part of Lagos life.
Showing posts with label Slum Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slum Life. Show all posts
Friday, 30 July 2010
Thursday, 29 July 2010
"Welcome To Lagos" Continued
The second episode contains more of the first, except the setting is the Makoko slum. Likened to Venice (hmmmmm really?!), it is a place where people have taken matters into their own hands and have built their own houses in the lagoon that surrounds Lagos and get from here to there in boats. Their story is linked to the sawmills, as that is where the timber that is the primary material for slum houses is processed.
Once again the resourcefulness and entrepreneurial spirit is displayed. However, with the man we follow this episode, there is something more. You can really see a pride in this man. A pride bourne from being able to retain his customs while moving into the future by being a part of the megacity. A pride of thinking of innovative ways to make sure that his children and grandchildren are able to go to school and university. A pride that allows him to gather all his family for a meal every day to teach them his ways. A pride from knowing that even if the Government seeks to destroy rather than help to build his community, he and his neighbours have found ways to reclaim land, erect their houses and make their own expansion plans. Combining the old with the new. That is Africa in a nutshell really.
This sense of community is also shown when the workers at the sawmills gather money together to pay for a fellow worker's funeral and for his family to be taken back to the village. People are not waiting around for someone to take care of them, they are finding ways to take care of each other. It was also nice to see a woman running one of the sawmills. With many a story about how women are subjugated on the continent, I thought it was refreshing to see the other side being told. There are many a businesswoman and entrepreneuress about too. However the two children who had run away from home and lied about their age and were fighting to work at the woman's sawmill is disturbing. But which society in the world has never profitted from child labour at some point in its transition to being fully modern? At least it didn't look like they were being worked to the bone. And they did have time to be able to be children and make kites and fly them. With modernity come its ills unfortunately.
Here are links to Episode 2:
Once again the resourcefulness and entrepreneurial spirit is displayed. However, with the man we follow this episode, there is something more. You can really see a pride in this man. A pride bourne from being able to retain his customs while moving into the future by being a part of the megacity. A pride of thinking of innovative ways to make sure that his children and grandchildren are able to go to school and university. A pride that allows him to gather all his family for a meal every day to teach them his ways. A pride from knowing that even if the Government seeks to destroy rather than help to build his community, he and his neighbours have found ways to reclaim land, erect their houses and make their own expansion plans. Combining the old with the new. That is Africa in a nutshell really.
This sense of community is also shown when the workers at the sawmills gather money together to pay for a fellow worker's funeral and for his family to be taken back to the village. People are not waiting around for someone to take care of them, they are finding ways to take care of each other. It was also nice to see a woman running one of the sawmills. With many a story about how women are subjugated on the continent, I thought it was refreshing to see the other side being told. There are many a businesswoman and entrepreneuress about too. However the two children who had run away from home and lied about their age and were fighting to work at the woman's sawmill is disturbing. But which society in the world has never profitted from child labour at some point in its transition to being fully modern? At least it didn't look like they were being worked to the bone. And they did have time to be able to be children and make kites and fly them. With modernity come its ills unfortunately.
Here are links to Episode 2:
Wednesday, 28 July 2010
"Welcome To Lagos"
Finally started watching the BBC Docu-miniseries Welcome to Lagos that BIMBO had told me about a coupla months back. Was a little apprehensive going in, wondering how the Western Eye was going to interpret the images and the lives of the people in the slums. I was pleasantly surprised though. They really highlighted the ingenuity, resourcefulness, entrepreneurial spirit, camaraderie and optimism of the Nigerians who are moving from the rural areas at a rate of 600,000 a year, to one of the world's megacities, Lagos. Felt that the documentary kept riding the comparisons to the Western world a little - we get it, there is more that meets the eye, these people are diamonds in the rough once you get over the superficial.
I was happy to see that even though the focus was on the slums, images of the developed areas of the city were interspersed throughout the episode so as not to make Lagos seem like one big ghetto, as was done with Lusaka in the RED documentary. I also like how everything wasn't romanticised - we witnessed the daily city-wide power cuts and the lawlessness that happens in the dumps. I also liked how the man with the family found a way to give his wife and children what they needed either by fixing things or finding a way to refurbish what the rich threw away. It also shed light on how wasteful people get once they are not living from day to day and how many things that still have use get thrown away. It showed how recycling is already a way of life in Lagos. "Living Green" sometimes starts out of necessity.
I was really impressed with the cattle market. It showed how people apply their knowledge and are able to use every part of the cow, bar the hair, for something - horns for plastic, the contents of the cows digestive tract for fertiliser, blood for chicken feed and who knew you could eat the skin?! That and the fact that even in the slums there already is an transnational network with cattle herders travelling from Mali, Cameroun and Chad to come an trade. The awareness of the world around them shows how the people realise we are all interconnected, like the man said as the dollar goes up and down, life in the slum is affected. When cattle were not able to come in from Chad prices skyrocketed.
Here are links to the first episode:
I was happy to see that even though the focus was on the slums, images of the developed areas of the city were interspersed throughout the episode so as not to make Lagos seem like one big ghetto, as was done with Lusaka in the RED documentary. I also like how everything wasn't romanticised - we witnessed the daily city-wide power cuts and the lawlessness that happens in the dumps. I also liked how the man with the family found a way to give his wife and children what they needed either by fixing things or finding a way to refurbish what the rich threw away. It also shed light on how wasteful people get once they are not living from day to day and how many things that still have use get thrown away. It showed how recycling is already a way of life in Lagos. "Living Green" sometimes starts out of necessity.
I was really impressed with the cattle market. It showed how people apply their knowledge and are able to use every part of the cow, bar the hair, for something - horns for plastic, the contents of the cows digestive tract for fertiliser, blood for chicken feed and who knew you could eat the skin?! That and the fact that even in the slums there already is an transnational network with cattle herders travelling from Mali, Cameroun and Chad to come an trade. The awareness of the world around them shows how the people realise we are all interconnected, like the man said as the dollar goes up and down, life in the slum is affected. When cattle were not able to come in from Chad prices skyrocketed.
Here are links to the first episode:
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