We did it! We survived the 3-day, 2-night train ride from
Kapiri Mposhi, Zambia to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The trip was not without its
share of interesting stories and struggles, however.
We took a 2.5 hour bus ride from Kitwe to Kapiri Mposhi in
the morning, arriving in Kapiri at 11:45 am. The moment we stepped foot off the
bus, we were swarmed by taxi drivers. One guy tapped me (Byron) on the back and
asked if I wanted to be taken to the Tazara Train Station. He offered to take me
there for 20,000 kwacha ($4). As a general rule, I assume that locals try to
double the price on anything for musungus (white people or foreigners) so I
talked him down to 10,000 kwacha, insisting I knew it only cost that much. He
grabbed our bags and led us to his “taxi” which was a beat up Toyota Corolla
that obviously was not a legitimate taxi. We hesitated, knowing that we were
subjecting ourselves to the risk of being taken for a ride and mugged. The guy
seemed amused. “Why are you worried? I’ve never seen anyone so worried!” he
said, laughing. Those words weren’t comforting but, really, we had no other
choice. I took solace in the fact that it was broad daylight and that I know I represent
a rather imposing figure, not to be messed with, in the eyes of many. Strangely,
Diane was not as confident. Luckily, it was a short ride and we got to Tazara
Station without any hassle. Immediately, a guy tried to help us take our bags
out of the “taxi”. I said no several times but he kept trying to help with the
bags. I literally had to push him back and insist that we didn’t need his help
before he left us alone. This is Africa.
A month ago, I called the number on the Tazara website to
reserve our first class sleeper cabin on the train. The guy on the other end of
the line didn’t even so much as take my name but said I was booked and
confirmed. I prodded for an email confirmation. He told me to call him later to
remind him because he wasn’t in the office. I found it quite interesting that I
hadn’t called an office but, rather, some random guy on his cell phone. Of
course, I never received an email confirmation, despite calling the same number
back a dozen times throughout the following weeks and despite even having
Pastor Blessings speak to him in Bemba. So it was to no one’s surprise that,
when we showed up at the station and inquired about our reserved cabin, we were
told that first class was sold out and that we had to purchase second class tickets.
I was pissed and determined to let them know about it. As a result, I was tossed
around to different “managers” or “bosses” who did absolutely nothing to help
me. All they could say was, “Yeah, that’s too bad. Sorry about that.” Awesome.
Even more awesome is that purchasing an entire second class cabin is more
expensive than an entire first class cabin because you have to pay for six beds
instead of four. I demanded that, because it was their fault that they had
given away my reservation despite me showing up to the station two hours before
departure, I shouldn’t have to pay any more than what I was supposed to have
originally paid. Who was I kidding? It’s not like any of these guys cared. In
fact, I was doing nothing other than being a naïve musungu thinking that my
huffing and puffing would land me in a more beneficial situation than the one
we were already stuck in. After about an hour of stomping my feet, I gave in
and purchased an entire second class cabin (approximately $225). What a sucker
I am. This is Africa.
When it came time to board the train, chaos broke loose.
Those in third class, which is similar to unassigned airplane seating, all
rushed towards the gates. We felt the need to do the same and pushed and shoved our way through the chaos to board the train. After some searching (nothing is
clearly marked), we found our cabin. Check it out.
The narrow hallway outside our cabin |
I don’t know why we were expecting any different but we were
less than impressed. Our cabin was was no bigger than a closet, with three
sleeping boards lining each wall. However, we took a little solace in the fact
that a first class sleeper cabin was identical, with the number of beds
being the only difference. Immediately, I felt vindicated about my
decision to purchase the entire cabin. Sharing this tiny space with 4 random
strangers for 3 days would have been a huge battle. We looked for the bathroom
and found a door at the end of the train compartment. When I opened it, the
only thing inside was a hole that led out to the bottom of the train and a small
sink that didn’t work. There was no running water on the train yet the floor on
the bathroom was soaking wet. Fantastic. Maybe we shouldn’t have worn flip
flops ... What we had initially thought would be a bathroom, complete with
shower and toilet, for each cabin was actually just a hole for each compartment. This is Africa!
The train rocked back and forth on the rails, at times
enticing bouts of motion sickness. Because we were on the ordinary train, and
not the express train (which only leaves on Tuesdays), it stopped at 63
different stations along the way. Yes, 63. Some stops lasted only a couple minutes.
Others lasted a few hours. Every time we stopped, locals would run alongside
the train selling food. Little kids would spot us out through the window and
ask for soap or money. “Give me my money,” some of them would demand. We knew it
was probably more due to a lack of English skills than it was them being rude
but their lack of sweetness made it easier to ignore them. Others would just
stop and stare in awe at the musungus on the train.
Every time we stopped, we were flung forward due to the
abruptness of the braking. This was particularly fun when we were sleeping, or
at least attempting to sleep. A good night’s rest was difficult to come by,
partly due to how uncomfortable the beds were (whatever part of our bodies we
slept on would be sore after a few minutes) and partly due to the constant
noise throughout the night. It literally seemed like the train stopped every 15
minutes in the middle of the night, people would get on, and all this commotion
would start up. At one point, we were stopped for a long time and it sounded
like we were in the middle of a busy market in the middle of the day.
While on board, we were offered three meals a day, at a
price of 15,000 kwacha ($3) per person (while we were in Zambia) and 3,500
Tanzanian shillings (a little over $2) when we were in Tanzania. Breakfast
consisted of two slices of buttered bread, eggs and a couple of sausages. Lunch
and dinner was your choice of rice or nshima (mielie meal) with chicken, beef
or fish. By the end of the journey, we were so sick of rice and chicken! Before
each meal, Richard, our waiter, would come by our cabin and take our order.
After every meal, we tipped him 1,000 kwacha, which must have meant a lot to
him because he started giving us preferential treatment. He would stop in our
cabin when he wasn’t busy and sit down to chat, despite his very limited
English. On the last day, he brought us our lunch of rice and chicken, as
usual, and left to attend to others. Before we had a chance to start eating,
Richard returned with another plate that contained a giant piece of chicken. He
then swapped it with the measly piece of chicken on Diane’s plate, gave us the
thumbs up, and then left to serve her former piece of chicken to someone else.
Hilarious! For dinner that night, there was no room service because the train
was supposed to have arrived in the afternoon and there wasn’t enough food to
go around. No one knew about this. Richard, however, came into our cabin and
told us about this “secret issue”, as he termed it. He told us that he would
take our food order for dinner but that we couldn’t tell any of the other
passengers. He got busted delivering us our food and got reamed out by one of
the other passengers but he didn’t care. What a beauty.
Diane with Richard |
The entire time on the train, we didn’t shower. We could
barely even wash our hands with the lack of running water and soap. It was like
we were covered by a film of grease and dirt by the end of the third day. Literally,
we, and all of our stuff, were covered in dirt from all the dust flying through
the open windows. We didn’t help matters by wearing the exact same clothes for
all three days. Yes, I know ... we are disgusting. But we didn’t care. During
the day, the heat on the train was unbearable. Even with the windows open, we
were constantly sweating and sticky from the humidity. By day three of stewing
in our own filth, we were more than ready to get off that train! On top of all
that, we discovered cockroaches hiding out in the wall of our cabin. The
roaches decided to come out as soon as we got closer to the coast where the
humidity was significantly higher. To compound the gross feelings even more, we
hadn’t gone “number two” the entire train ride because of our reluctance to
squat on the soaking wet floor in a rocky train. Could you imagine … pants
around the ankles, squatting over the hole, trying to keep your feet from
making contact with any of wetness on the floor, when all of a sudden, the
train jolts or slams on the brakes? Not a pretty sight.
The train was scheduled to arrive at 15:46 on Sunday. It
didn’t arrive until 00:30, almost 9 hours late. This was a huge problem for us,
not only because it meant 9 extra hours on the train, but because we were wary
of arriving into Dar es Salaam in the middle of the night. When we were still
in Zambia, we had called our hotel to arrange for a shuttle but indicated that
the train would likely be very late. The hotel said that they would send a
driver at 17:00. We had no way of contacting them because our Zambian SIM cards
didn’t work in Tanzania and because the Tanzanian SIM cards we bought on the
train didn’t contain any airtime (despite the guy telling me that there was
10,000 kwacha on each of them). We were convinced that there was no chance the
driver would still be there so we asked Richard if he could help us get a taxi.
I figured that if we had a local communicating on our behalf, we were less
likely to get ripped off or mugged. He did one better and called someone to
come wait for us at the train station. It’s nice to have friends! It turns out
that the driver our hotel arranged for was waiting for us after all, creating
an awkward situation with our new friend. We apologized to Richard and thanked
him for being so helpful and decided to go with the safest option of using our
hotel transport.
Apparently, the Man upstairs was looking after us. Some guys
we met on the train (a Spanish guy and two Korean guys) had planned to travel
to Zanzibar immediately after arriving in Dar es Salaam. With the train
scheduled to arrive midday, they figured they would have plenty of time and,
thus, didn’t bother making arrangements for accommodations or transportation in
Dar es Salaam. We ended up seeing them at the airport a couple of days later on
our way to Mombasa and they explained to us that, after getting off the train
in Dar es Salaam, they got in a “taxi”, got driven somewhere far away, and then
were robbed. The Spanish guy went so far as to say, “I’m not even joking. We
were almost killed.” Unfortunately, they were extremely late for their flight
so didn’t have time to stop and give us all the details. We exchanged contact
information, however, so I hope to get the full story someday. It was a
sobering reminder of the dangers of traveling in Africa, or any other
developing nation, for that matter. It hit us particularly hard because we
couldn’t help but think how easily that could have been us.
Needless to say, we were ecstatic to get off the train after
three long days. Despite all of the inconveniences, the frustrations and the
grossness, we were glad to have gone through the experience and to have had the
chance to see the beautiful African countryside. The whole time on the train,
we kept telling ourselves that this is an experience we would look back on and
laugh about. Having said that, we will never ride an African train for that
long ever again! I can’t write this post without giving Diane some major props.
She was a trooper throughout the entire trip! Check out some of the scenery photos.
Displaced trains along the tracks. Not very reassuring! |
After we heard about those guys’ story at the airport, I
turned to Diane and asked her, “When we’re in heaven, do you think that we’ll
be able to look back on our life and see all the instances where God looked
after us and took care of us without us even realizing?” It’s easy for us to go
through the day without ever turning our minds to the times in life when God
has come through. We’re quick to question where God is in the midst of tragedy
or the truth of His existence in the face of suffering. Conversely, we rarely,
if ever, attribute daily successes or minor miracles to Him, choosing to
believe that it is of our own doing or that we just happened to stumble into
some dumb luck. Maybe I would be typing this blog post right now with or
without God’s intervention on that train ride or even over the last few months
of us being here in Africa. We’ll never know. But we can’t help but get a sense
that the Man upstairs has been looking out for us from day one. For that, we
are incredibly thankful. Please continue to pray for us along our journey. Your
prayers have undoubtedly carried us this far!