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Ghana is a poor country. Russian woman living in Ghana: Compared to the Russian Federation, there is poverty and backwardness. So why Africa

That Ghana is a complete ass, poverty and hopelessness. But this is certainly not the case. No wonder the British once called this territory the Gold Coast. For several centuries, gold was exported from here to Europe. Today, in addition to gold, manganese and diamonds are mined in Ghana, the country exports cocoa beans and valuable wood species. But essentially, little has changed.

The problem is that the proceeds from the sale of gold and other resources are distributed among a select group, so there is a huge property stratification in the country.

Ghana is politically stable by African standards. Here they are constitutionally electing the fourth president in a row, while the neighbors constantly have civil wars, and one life-long dictator replaces another. At the same time, Ghana is one of the richest and safest states in West Africa. The crime rate is consistently low compared to other countries in the region, although theft is quite common.

01. The secret of Ghanaian love for Chelsea Football Club has been revealed. For Chelsea, Michael Essien, one of the most famous (if not the most) Ghanaian footballers in the world, played for a long time, so people just began to root for their own. It's like there are a lot of Liverpool fans in Egypt now thanks to Salah. And in principle, Africa loves the English Premier League.

02. Arch in Accra. It is called the Arch of Independence and is located on the square of the same name. On the podium, you can read that the square is also called the Black Star Square. The English Wikipedia says that it is the second largest city square in the world after Tiananmen in Beijing. By the way, it would be a good venue for Timati's concert))

The black star is found on the flag and on the coat of arms of Ghana and is an easily recognizable symbol of the country. At first there were two black stars on the flag, then three, then only one remained, but the yellow stripe on the flag changed to white, so that we got the Hungarian flag with a black star. The current version, with one black star and returned yellow stripe (instead of white), appeared in 1966. By the way, the flag was invented by a woman named Theodosia Oko, who borrowed a black star from the Black Star Line shipping company of the early 20th century. Ghana's national football team is also politically incorrectly called "Black Stars".

Now all state flags in the country are at half-mast because of the death of the most famous Ghanaian - Kofi Annan. He was the UN Secretary General for a long time, in 2001 he became a laureate Nobel Prize world, and in Africa he is also known for spending a lot of energy on the fight against HIV. Annan died on August 18, more than a week has passed, but the flags have not been raised yet. The politician will be buried in Accra on September 13th.

04. Modern housing is similar to our PIK projects.

05. New interchanges and large roads are being built in the country for the gold of Ghana. Of course, the Chinese are building, the former Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao even came to the opening of the highway between Accra and Kumasi, the country's second largest city. For this business, China gives Ghana loans, sometimes even interest-free.

06. Sometimes in Ghana you can find a shopping center of the Russian type.

07. From a height, Accra even looks like a city.

08. Yes, there are slums along the railway - but where is there no such thing ?!

09. But as soon as you descend from heaven to earth, Africa covers you with its head.

10. Wild traffic, street trade, lack of urban environment as such. They also love fences in Ghana, just like ours!

11. Oh, again there is a breath of Russia ... Too few banners, we need more!

12. A rich man's house in an elite quarter. Prices for private houses (in the European, not in the African sense of the term) start at about $ 150,000. Such a two-story mansion will cost 350 thousand. The courtyard is protected from the plebeians with a live wire.

Wealthy Ghanaians live in fairly spacious houses with a courtyard and a fence. For poorer families, the territory may not be fenced. Even poorer families live in small one-story houses under a common roof (compounds). In general, there is no middle class in Ghana: either you are rich or you are a beggar. There are pitiful shacks next to the posh mansions, which are often striking.

13. There is a guard's booth near a high fence. Only in such an area can you meet a person jogging, and even wearing real sneakers. Poor people do not need jogging, they are already on their feet all the time.

14. Typical intersection. Loot in Ghana is felt everywhere. Even in little things like having motorcycle helmets.

15. Very beautiful coffins are made in Ghana! There is no analogue in Russian, but in English they are called fantasy coffin or proverbial coffin.

Usually these coffins correspond to who the deceased was during life. Buying such a coffin, the family tries to appease the ancestor so that he treats them well, even while in another world.

Some coffins represent a totem animal of some kind, and then the head of the family is buried in such a coffin. Others personify some proverbs or parables (therefore they are called "proverbial" or "proverb").

16. All coffins are made only by hand, without the use of power tools. One coffin can take anywhere from two to six weeks, plus a couple of days to paint. The undertaker and the artist are usually different people. For example, a carpenter can assemble a coffin, and the head of the workshop or a guest artist will already paint it.

17. In 1989, these coffins were brought to Paris and shown to large masses of the white population at an exhibition at the National Museum of Modern Art, after which Ghanaian undertakers became regulars at similar galleries around the world. Now they make coffins in the shape of pianos, ships, etc. for the amusement of Europeans. Someone even put together a coffin in the form of the Paris Center Pompidou.

18. Original or finger?

19. Drive-thru supermarket

20. In Ghana, they wear anything on their heads, including heavy crates of groceries.

21. Ours! By law, reflective tapes must be hung on the bumpers of all cars!

22. It doesn't matter what car you have, Toyota or Ferrari - there should be stickers on the bumper.

23. Most of the population of Ghana is Christian (under 70%), but there are also many Muslims (17-18%). This is the central mosque of Accra, built by the Turks a few years ago.

24. US funds are helping Ghana to fight poverty through economic growth. So far, it has not turned out very well: there is economic growth, but a quarter of the population is still below the poverty line.

Ghana's development is hindered primarily by corruption. Everybody takes bribes, from airport employees to local traffic cops. A traffic policeman can just stop the car and extort "tea", especially if he sees a white driver or passenger. If you were given a short-term visa, and you want to stay in the country longer, no problem: you come, pay and live as much as you want. We can say that bribes are a local tradition. You cannot imagine a ghanaian who would refuse a free dough. Everyone here also treats with understanding the need to give bribes to any employee on whom at least something depends.

25. A piece of homeland on African soil!

26. Parking near the Russian embassy is prohibited, and massive flower beds at the same time play the role of concrete blocks.

27. The lawn is fenced with barbed wire.

28. In general, it is quite common here. It’s strange that Russia hasn’t come up with such a thing yet. See how beautiful it is!

29. Do you want to lose weight? Ask me how!

30. Prostitution is technically prohibited in Ghana, but so many women are engaged in it that few know that it is illegal.

31. A cheap prostitute is popularly called "tutu" (from the phrases "two pence" and "two shillings" - "two pence", "two shilling"). This, of course, is a legacy of colonial times, now for two pence you can buy nothing and no one.

32. A street prostitute is a "roamer" or "vagabond". Tramps usually work in teams with taxi drivers or hotel staff.

34. Many prostitutes are minors. Although the country in last years became the center of sex tourism (for whores come here mainly from Western countries), the sex market in Ghana is not regulated in any way. So many clients unwittingly (and some intentionally) become pedophiles.

35. Girls on the street work freely. White is asked at first $ 200, then quickly drops to 100. In my opinion, you can bring down the price to $ 20 if you want.

36. Almost all prostitutes are in the body. Local men have such preferences, nothing can be done about it. Bony is not listed in Ghana.

37.

This was the last post about Ghana! And in general about Africa. I flew to Holland. Did you like the reports from Africa? Where else to go? Throw in tips!

Africa occupies a fifth of the land area of ​​the globe. Its population is approaching one and a half billion people. Today there are 57 states on the territory of the Black Continent, of which three are still not recognized. Scientists consider Africa to be the ancestral home of mankind, because it was on its land that the most ancient remains of the probable human ancestors were found. At the same time, it is Africa that is the poorest continent on Earth, where the mortality rate is not only the highest in the world, but also exceeds all the norms available to the human imagination. Africa cannot be assessed unequivocally. For some, these are the beautiful resorts of Egypt and the azure beaches of the Red Sea, Arab palaces and the luxury of oil magnates, for others - constant hunger, disease, lack of water and absolute illiteracy. Africa is heterogeneous: there are also the poorest countries in the world on its territory, at the same time there is the Republic of South Africa, which is one of the twenty world leaders in terms of economic development. Therefore, it is worth considering life on the Black Continent, dwelling in more detail on its regions and individual countries.

General overview of life in Africa

In today's globalized world, Africa is developing quite rapidly. But unfortunately, there are virtually no countries on the Black Continent that have any impact on the rest of the world. Most people associate Africa with the poorest countries in the world. And this association is not wrong, because more than half of the continent's population lives below the poverty line, spending less than one dollar a day on themselves. For many decades, African countries have experienced political instability and constant armed conflict, which greatly complicates the life of ordinary Africans. In the overwhelming majority of African countries, the foundations of civilization and culture were brought at one time by the European colonialists, who, at the same time, brought millions of the healthiest and most efficient indigenous people to Europe and America, making them slaves.

Africa occupies a fifth of the land mass on the planet

One of the main troubles of the Black Continent is that Europeans and white people in general have always treated African land as a consumer, using it as a source of minerals and practically free labor. Africa is conditionally subdivided into several regions, differing in the degree of development. Scientists and economic analysts are used to dividing Africa into five regions.

North Africa

The North African region is the most economically and culturally developed. It has been inhabited since ancient times by peoples who came to Africa from Asia and the Middle East. The Arab conquerors, who seized almost all of North Africa, left many states as a legacy to their contemporaries, which stand out very brightly and vividly against the background of other African countries.


Egypt is considered the oldest of the states

In the Northern region, Egypt is considered the most developed state, which ranks second on the continent in terms of economic development. Almost all the states of the Maghreb (a political union of the countries of North Africa, with the exception of Egypt) are Islamic, they derive their main income from their land, rich in oil and gas deposits. The Arab Spring that swept across the territory of the Maghreb and Egypt largely undermined the economic foundations of the North African states. For example, before the war Libya exported more than $ 70 billion of oil, but now its potential has dropped by almost five times. The inhabitants of North Africa are mostly Arabs, so black skin is not typical for the population of these countries. The immigration policy of the Maghreb states is aimed at creating an impenetrable wall for their much poorer neighbors on the continent in order to avoid a massive influx of illegal immigrants and their further advance into prosperous Europe.

West africa

The western region includes many relatively small states, most of them adjacent to the Atlantic Ocean.

The countries of West Africa are developed unevenly, the economic and political leader in the region is Nigeria, whose population exceeded 187 million in 2017. West Africa is home to the continent's most populous city and one of the world's largest cities in terms of population. This is Lagos, the capital of Nigeria. The number of its inhabitants reaches 21 million people, if you take into account the inhabitants of the numerous suburbs.


West Africa is made up of many small states

West Africa during the colonial period was the main supplier of black labor. The colonial legacy has left an indelible mark on the mentality of the indigenous people of this region. At the same time, the Western colonialists built many ports on the Atlantic coast, which were created as centers of the slave trade. After gaining independence, African countries began to use the economic potential brought by Europeans and Americans.

There are many minerals in West Africa, including gold and diamonds, which attracts mining companies from Europe, America, Russia and China to West African countries. The largest suppliers of gold and diamonds are Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. Most West African countries speak English, with the exception of Guinea and Senegal, which were formerly French colonies. The deadly Ebola virus had a very negative impact on the development of the region, which claimed tens of thousands of lives in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia in 2014-2015 and stopped the flow of investment in the economies of these small African states. The standard of living of the population of West Africa is catastrophically low.

Central Africa

The countries of Central Africa are landlocked, which greatly limits their economic development. The territory of part of the Central African states is occupied by the Sahara Desert.


Central Africa is considered the poorest region of the continent

Central Africa is the poorest and most undeveloped region of the continent, it is here that the standard of living of the population defies any comparison at all. Today, geological surveys are underway in the region; the region is rich in deposits of precious metals, metal ore, uranium and nickel.

Central African countries are the least controlled by international organizations. The "Great Silk Road" of drug and arms dealers runs through the southern regions of the Sahara. Drugs are grown in West Africa and thus end up in the Middle Eastern countries, and weapons are consumed by local gangs and are used in inter-tribal and inter-ethnic conflicts, in particular in Mali, Chad, South and North Sudan, where the echoes of a long bloody war are still heard. Therefore, in the Central African countries, there is practically no state power, it exists only nominally. The real power belongs to arms dealers, drug dealers and local gangs.

East africa

In the East African region, Tanzania is the undisputed economic and political leader. She also owns a kind of world tourist Mecca - the island of Zanzibar. East Africa is washed by the waters of the Indian Ocean; its development was significantly influenced by immigrants from the Middle East and India, who have colonized the East African coast from time immemorial. Living standards in East Africa are comparatively low, and the economy is based on maritime trade and the extraction of minerals, including precious metals and stones.


Tourists from all over the world go to the island of Zanzibar

South Africa

There is still no consensus on how many countries are included in the South African region. Some experts believe that there are thirteen of them, while the UN micro-zoning limits South Africa to only five countries.

Leading in the South African region of South Africa, which is not only the most developed country on the continent, but also one of the world's economic leaders. South Africa is a clear exception to the pan-African rule. Wages in this country are at the level of European, American and Australian standards, the standard of living of the population is very high. The main role in the political and economic development of the republic was played by the large white population, which only relatively recently transferred political power to the representatives of the black race. Today, hundreds of thousands of labor migrants from all over the world are looking for work in South Africa, but getting it in this country is quite difficult, because you need to be a very high-class specialist in demand in its economy.


South Africa is among the world's economic leaders

General characteristics of natural conditions and epidemiological situation

Natural conditions in Africa are extremely different. In the north of the continent is the largest desert of the Sahara land, while the main part of the continent is covered with savannas and humid equatorial forests. The equator cuts the continent almost in half. The main problems of African countries, in addition to catastrophic poverty, are the lack of an adequate level of medical care (often of any kind of medical care at all), the difficult epidemiological situation in the vast majority of regions, the lack of fresh water and incessant armed conflicts. At the same time, Africans are fighting with extreme cruelty towards their fellow tribesmen who support the other side of the conflict or belong to a different group of tribes. For example, the war between the tribes of both North and South Sudan claimed more than one and a half million lives in twenty years. A significant proportion of the Sudanese victims died as a result of ethnic cleansing and epidemics. According to some estimates, two million Sudanese died in this civil war, and four more became refugees. The eleven years' war in Sierra Leone claimed more than three hundred thousand lives. Local residents who did not want to go to serve in the armed formations of the United Revolutionary Front (RUF) were cut off their arms or legs so that they could not serve in government forces. And today in this country on the streets you can see many people who do not have an arm or a leg. In addition, the war was marked by a huge number of atrocities against the civilian population.

Africa is a huge fertile field for investment in its development. But this field can also become sand, into which the invested money will go like water. This is due to the economic, political, epidemiological and ethnic instability of African countries, which scares off Western investors. It is believed that investing money in most African states is a kind of gamble. Lack of investment significantly hinders their economic, political and cultural development.

Video story about life in Madagascar

The poorest wealthiest African countries

In 2017, according to the UN, the Central African Republic became the poorest country in the world. It leads the world in the number of AIDS patients (as a percentage of the total population), and its GDP per capita is only $ 540. The United Nations has also identified Somalia, which is even poorer, as a “competitor” in terms of poverty. But the incessant civil war does not actually allow us to speak today of Somalia as a single state.

In third place in terms of poverty is Chad, which is also part of the Central African region. 85% of Chad's population lives below the poverty line.

Liberia ranks fourth among the poorest countries in Africa, with its economy and infrastructure completely destroyed by two civil wars, followed by neighboring Sierra Leone, which is still struggling to recover from a prolonged civil war. The level of GDP per capita in these countries does not exceed 550 dollars per year, while there is a great social stratification of society.


Most of the population of poor African countries lives in slums

The three richest African countries look like this: South Africa, Egypt and Nigeria... At the same time, the Republic of South Africa somewhat slowed down the rate of economic growth, which gives Egypt the prospect of taking a leading position on the continent. As for Nigeria, its economic power is based on huge reserves of oil produced both on the continental part of its territory and on the continental shelf. But great amount population does not allow the government of the country to pursue a pragmatic and balanced social policy. Therefore, today Nigeria can in no way be considered a prosperous and developed African country. The drama of the situation is added by the armed inter-tribal conflict on its territory, a very high level of crime and a strong social stratification of Nigerian society.

Life expectancy in African countries is much lower than in the rest of the world. For example, residents of Morocco live the longest - 76.5 years, almost the same in Algeria and Libya. The average life expectancy in Sierra Leone is 57 years, while in Chad it is only 49 years. These are official UN data, but they do not take into account the fact that in backward African countries not all residents have passports, and no one takes into account the children who died in infancy, because there are simply no official ones nearby. government agencies... In the tribes, no one keeps track of the "personnel" at all, the number of which is not always known even to the leader. Therefore, in fact, the situation with life expectancy can be even more depressing.

Features of the mentality

If we look at the situation as a whole, we can distinguish two types of mentality of the inhabitants of Africa, despite its five official regions. The first type is North African. The inhabitants of North African states are overwhelmingly Orthodox Muslims, they strictly observe the traditions of their faith.


Muslim traditions are strong in North Africa

North Africa has a rich and eventful history stretching back far beyond our era. After all, it is not for nothing that Egypt is considered the most ancient state in the world, which is located precisely in North Africa, and many more ancient Roman authors have written about Carthage. The population of this part of the continent is closer in spirit to the Middle East and Europe than to people from the African jungle. The predominant language is Arabic, and the languages ​​of nomadic tribes, such as Berber, are also common. French is recognized as the second state language in Algeria and Morocco. There are many Europeans in North Africa, including immigrants from the CIS countries. Libya is still home to a large number of Russians who came to this country during the regime of Colonel Gaddafi ousted as a result of the Arab Spring. In Egypt, many Russians and their CIS neighbors are employed in the tourism business, both as employees and as its owners and co-owners.

Ghana, in comparison with its neighbors, is quite a pleasant country, people live there relatively tolerably, and the middle class is even quite decent - people respect education, are not concerned about politics, they like to dress nicely, eat tasty food and chat with friends. Ghanaians are a wise people, benevolent, with a good sense of humor. Remember the cartoon about Anansi the spider who outwitted the boa constrictor? Here he is, this Anansi - a Ghanaian from the Ashanti tribe. Well, of course, to the level of Europe and America they still have to walk, walk and walk, but they walk, and at a faster pace than you and me.

vlad_n_vanhttps://travel-africa.livejournal.com/

Some Africans still adhere to tribal traditions.

The mentality of the inhabitants of the rest of the continent is very different from that of North Africa. Representatives of the black population of Africa are very committed to tribal traditions, they, as a rule, perceive people of the white race in terms of material benefits. A significant imprint on the character of Africans living in the west, center, east and south of Africa was imposed by the colonial yoke, when the indigenous population was massively taken into slavery and the colonialists brutally imposed their policies and rules of life. Local African beliefs are widely spread in these regions; shamans, sorcerers and other representatives of the local cult have a significant role and authority in society.

Most African countries have no official religion, apart from North Africa. Here you can find Christians, Catholics, Protestants, and Sunni or Shiite Muslims. The foundations of Christianity were brought in by missionaries who built many churches in virtually every African country. Muslims predominate in East Africa, which is due to the historical trends in the development of this territory by immigrants from Arab countries.

In most African states, the attitude towards other religions is quite tolerant. An exception may be Nigeria, where inter-religious armed conflicts have repeatedly occurred, as a result of which tens of thousands of people have died.


Christianity was brought to Africa by European missionaries

A peculiar culture of violence has developed in Africa, when for several generations the violent resolution of disputes has been accepted as normal. And a boy of 8-10 years old is already a warrior and a murderer, and there are many countries where this is in the order of things. Until now, rituals of human sacrifice are practiced here, often children become victims of these rituals. There are tribes who, as a gift to the bride, must present the genitals of their enemy. Until now, there are ethnic groups that did not obey and will not obey any of the governments and do not pay taxes.

Sergey Borisovhttps://myslo.ru/club/blog/gulbarij/xHNNc0hmREix1YpD82jHBA

Separately, a few words should be said about the Republic of South Africa. Arriving in South Africa, you might at first think that you are somewhere in southern Europe. Only a large number of native Africans are striking, as well as a nature unusual for Europe. Otherwise, this country is very similar to a southern European state or, for example, Australia. More than half of all food consumed on the African continent is produced in South Africa. Also, a significant part of them are exported to other regions of the world. Industry and agriculture are developed in South Africa. The country has the largest reserves of gold and diamonds on the planet, the extraction of which plays a significant role in its economy. The abolition of the apartheid regime, which provided for the undivided domination of the whites, led to an increase in the number of the black population and its role in the political and economic life of the country. This could not but have a negative impact on the pace of economic development, as well as on the worsening of the crime situation. For example, in Johannesburg, the country's largest financial and industrial center, there are separate neighborhoods for blacks and whites. The white population tries to protect itself from the indigenous inhabitants of Africa with high fences and armed guards. But this trend in South Africa is the exception rather than a widespread phenomenon.

Video about Namibia

Myths and misconceptions: what really is

Having visited Africa in passing, you can get a not entirely objective impression of life on the Black Continent. For many compatriots, basic knowledge about him is limited to a school course in geography and a children's tale about Dr. Aibolit, which is alarming in relation to Africa. Therefore, in the minds of the average Russian or, for example, Ukrainian, life on this continent is painted in terrifying black tones, diluted with the dark green of the jungle and the blue oceans that wash the continent. So, are some of the common judgments about Africa true, or are they wrong?

Table Mountain in Cape Town is a big credit. But you need to spend not a couple of hours on it (as I did last time), but a day or two. Wander along the very top, "stick your nose" in the most distant places. The views are stunning. At the same time, there is no need to strain too much - tourists are thrown there by a funicular. They are filming them from above. And at the same time, be sure to stop by the Cape of Good Hope, feel the power of the ocean and the vastness of the vastness and ride along a very beautiful path.

Evgeny Kasperskyhttps://eugene.kaspersky.ru/2015/07/02/top-100-afrika/

Myth one: Africa is a priori dangerous for a white man

For a white man, Africa can be dangerous only in two cases: if he first set foot on its land or went unprepared into the desert, jungle or savannah. Africa really resembles a parallel reality, the locals, their homes, culture and way of life are so unusual to the European view.

For an amateur, Africa can be dangerous because a person who is accustomed to safely wandering the streets of Paris or London finds himself in a densely populated quarter of an African city and does not understand the difference. Here he is clearly not expected, although they often smile. It is unlikely that someone will cut or choke him, but you should not vouch for the integrity of the wallet. The Africans themselves call their thieves Ali Baba. No one still knows where this name came from from an old oriental tale. But Africans are quite tolerant of ali-babas, since they, as a rule, steal from whites. Initially, threats to the life of a white person simply because he has the wrong skin color practically do not exist in Africa. In the worst case, Africans can only be interested in his wallet.


In the African market, the white man is immediately targeted by local thieves.

A European should not go alone to the African jungle, savannah or desert. In order to feel relatively safe there, it is advisable to take a local guide with you. In Africa, there are indeed many wild animals that, when meeting a person (regardless of his skin color), can perceive him exclusively as food. In addition, there are many other threats: poisonous snakes, scorpions, tarantulas and other representatives of small but deadly living creatures. In Africa, you need to be careful even on city streets, since such representatives of the fauna feel calm in megacities.

Sometimes the main criterion for hiring in Africa is the ability of a foreign specialist to live and work on the Black Continent, because the statistics of surveys in Russia indicate that only a fifth of those with higher education are ready for this.

The second myth: having arrived, you can "catch" a deadly disease

If the first myth can be called such only relatively, then the risk of a fatal disease is indeed pure truth... In civilized countries, they have long forgotten what plague, cholera, typhoid fever are, they rarely remember dysentery. In Africa, however, all these deadly ailments can be found at every step. It is especially worth keeping an eye on the cleanliness of your hands, cutlery, and in no case drink water from local sources. After drinking some water from a well, in a few days you can prepare with almost one hundred percent certainty for a long and painful treatment for dysentery or jaundice.

Malaria mosquitoes are especially dangerous. There is no guaranteed vaccination against malaria, since the malaria plasmodium (virus) has more than one and a half dozen varieties and it is almost impossible to guess which of them will be infected by a mosquito that has bitten. Local residents sometimes endure several dozen cases of malaria throughout their lives, which for them is akin to the usual domestic flu. To a certain extent, Africans are immune to this disease. But for a white man from Russia, it can be fatal. Not everyone can endure the first attack of malaria. Without taking medications, a similar situation can result in death. It is even worse when a European who has visited Africa, for example, from Ukraine, comes home and a month later falls ill with malaria, and in these latitudes there is practically no medicine for it. In this case, a fatal outcome is also quite likely. It should be said that the incubation period of this insidious disease can last up to two years. Usually, after being bitten by an anopheles mosquito, a person gets sick within a week or two.


Africa has deadly epidemics

Those who have traveled in West Africa in the past few years are familiar with roadblocks on African roads with armed police and military personnel, as well as an electronic device for checking body temperature and the mandatory requirement to wash your hands with a special sanitizer. In this African region, the deadly Ebola virus was discovered in 2014, which claimed tens of thousands of lives. Among the dead were European doctors who fought a deadly epidemic as part of UN international humanitarian missions.

A prerequisite for crossing the border of any sub-Saharan African country is yellow fever vaccination. This procedure should be completed at home, the vaccination is valid for ten years.

Myth three: everything is cheap in Africa

Just the opposite. In Africa, it is customary to bargain, and even in stores. For a white foreigner, the price of food, clothing or services can sometimes be ten times higher than for the local population. Therefore, having arrived in Africa, it is advisable to immediately learn the methods of communication with sellers who initially do not take seriously any person who immediately agreed to their price. In general, prices in Africa are very high. This applies to both high-quality food products imported from abroad, as well as clothing, household appliances, and medicines. After all, practically none of this is produced on the Black Continent. Except, of course, South Africa, Morocco or Egypt. Products and clothing made in these countries are much cheaper than European or American ones, which is due to their territorial proximity.


African sellers welcome the white man: you can take more from him

Actually, yes, here to speak, meet, or just nod to an unfamiliar African - it's just in the order of things. Somehow a matter of course. Here it is so easy for the first person you come across to wave your hand, to say hello. Another question is that such immediacy is common in many regions of the world, not only in Africa.

griphonhttps://golos.io/ru—afrika/@griphon/afrikancy-negry-ili-zhiteli-afriki

The fourth myth: there are few cars in the country and very bad roads

The statement about roads and cars is only partly true. Roads in Africa can be of two types. The first are impassable trails in the jungle or savannah. There are practically no roads in the deserts. The second ones are comparable in quality to the German autobahns. Africans are attracting foreign companies, primarily Chinese and Turkish, for the construction of infrastructure, including highways. Roads are being built for a long time, but conscientiously. In addition, their good quality is due to the absence of large temperature fluctuations, unlike in Russia.


New African roads are very high quality

There are a lot of cars in Africa, but almost all of them are in a terrible, from the point of view of a European, technical condition. A typical picture for Africa: a representative of a local business / criminals who have become rich in gold or diamond mining paints a serious scratch on the side of a brand new Ferrari with a brush, another can flatten a dent in an expensive jeep with an ordinary metal hammer.

Traffic on African roads is chaotic, traffic rules practically do not apply. Therefore, it is very undesirable for an inexperienced European to drive on African highways. Locals, seeing a white man behind the wheel, will try to deliberately expose their car under attack in order to “cut down” the damage from it.

A few words about corruption

In the situation described above, the police officers who arrived at the scene of the traffic accident will do their best to prove the innocence of their compatriot. If he manages to get damage from a white foreigner, then he will definitely share part of it with his native police. It is not for nothing that African countries occupy the top third of the list of countries in the world where corruption is rife. Almost everything is possible for money in Africa. And for a lot of money, everything. The countries of the Maghreb and South Africa more or less control the level of corruption. Even in Egypt, it is quite high. Any CIS businessman who decides to open his own business in an African country will surely face the need to bribe a large army of officials. If he thought that he was tortured by corruption in his homeland, he will understand that he has fallen "out of the fire and into the fire."


Corruption in most African countries is very high

African children

Those who are not sad, simple-minded and open to communication - African children sometimes surprise with their spontaneity and credulity. Of course, one cannot talk about the same deplorable situation of children throughout the continent. Children of Egypt, South Africa, Morocco or Tunisia have the opportunity to attend school, for the most part they are well-fed, dressed and shod. In other countries, such as Liberia, Zimbabwe or the Central African Republic, the vast majority of children have never attended school.

Most African countries do not have birth control, so families can have 10-15 children. In disadvantaged states, almost every third child does not live to be three years old. Much of the African continent lacks any health care for young Africans, let alone mass vaccinations and periodic checkups. Women give birth, as a rule, at home, and the birth is taken by local healers.

Today, doctors in the UN humanitarian missions go to work in large quantities in Africa, the purpose of which is to prevent and prevent infectious diseases, curb the development of the epidemic and improve the general hygienic and medical culture of the African population. Children most often suffer from infectious diseases: typhoid, malaria, hemorrhagic fevers, rickets. The latter ailment develops in them from hunger and a chronic lack of essential vitamins. This situation, as already mentioned, is not observed everywhere. It is worst in West, Central and South Africa (with the exception of South Africa). The eastern part of the continent has the best level of medicine in Tanzania, while the rest of the countries in the region are experiencing similar problems.


African children learn to work early on an equal basis with adults

According to WHO forecasts, the situation will not change for the better in the near future. Despite the fact that thousands of doctors, teachers, volunteers are sent to Africa under the auspices of the UN, humanitarian aid is sent regularly, all these efforts are insufficient to normalize the situation. Most African children continue to experience an acute shortage of basic necessities. In addition to objective reasons (poverty, wars and epidemics), there is one more explanation for this. African parents almost always give up the upbringing of their children “to the will of fate,” therefore very few people are purposefully engaged in educating and educating the younger generation. Such is the character of Africans, nothing can be done about it ... The degree of care a Russian mother takes for her child cannot be compared with the attitude of an African woman to her child.

The trouble with humanitarian aid is that it undermines the foundations of the agricultural sector in African countries, whose workers, armed with shovels and hoes, are unable to really compete with modern food production technologies. Why work yourself in the sweat of your brow, if good white uncles from across the ocean will bring everything for nothing ...

Video about the terrible life of children on the Black Continent

The life of Russian immigrants

Quite frankly, the Black Continent is not an immigrant's dream. Russian immigrants in Africa can be divided into three categories.

The first category also includes Soviet specialists who came as part of the assistance and exchange of experience with their African colleagues. There are many doctors, teachers and engineers among them. Compared with The Soviet Union, they were paid in Africa simply fabulous (for the USSR) money. Some local governments have offered to stay, further increasing motivation. Having settled in an African country, Soviet specialists moved their families to their place, and their children had already become immigrants in the second generation.

In contrast to Russia, pharmacies have all the medicines without exceptions and queues. The prices for good European medicines are cheaper than in Russia. I suffered from malaria several times - I didn't even notice and suffered it like a common cold. A doctor is expensive - a call is about 1000 rubles. But if you do not climb the jungle and national parks, and live by the ocean - then everything is fine.

novikovskihttp://pora-valit.livejournal.com/3060236.html

The second category includes girls and women from the CIS countries who, after the collapse of the USSR, married wealthy Africans and moved to their husbands. Most of the former compatriots today are in South Africa and the Maghreb countries. There are many of them in other states of the Black Continent. Most often, the acquaintance took place at home, when future husbands studied at universities in Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. And there were many of them, because education in higher educational institutions of the CIS is famous in Africa for its quality and low price, while opening up excellent prospects at home. After all, African countries are experiencing a catastrophic shortage of their specialists in almost all sectors. And no one will force the nostrification of the CIS diploma in Africa, especially when it comes to a compatriot.


Starting a family is one of common reasons moving Russians to Africa

The third category of immigrants consists of those who have moved to Africa to work or do business. Many immigrants from the CIS moved to South Africa back in the 90s, found work and already managed to become citizens of this country. The rest of the immigrants came to Africa either to work for Western or Russian companies operating there, or they themselves opened a business, risking investing in the unpredictable economies of African countries. The largest number of immigrants from the CIS countries today is in South Africa, Egypt, Libya, Nigeria, Ghana, Tanzania and Equatorial Guinea.

There are rich neighborhoods - for white people - where renting apartments is more expensive than in Moscow. I live in a simpler area, but this is not a cesspool or a slum. It is quite safe here, everything is fenced with barbed wire fences, several guards with machine guns walk around the clock. At the same time, I know where you can run into trouble - it's not so far from my house, only two kilometers. It is better for a white man not to appear alone in the slums. Almost the only option for me to move is to order an Uber. In Nairobi, there are also unofficial taxis whose drivers periodically rob people. Among the locals, matatu is a popular minibus, where the crowd crowds.

Mikhail Lyapin, Kenyahttp://www.the-village.ru/village/business/opyt/268316-v-afrike

In the eyes of Russian immigrants, Africa looks like a different planet. After all, the realities of life, doing business, nature and the somewhat African bustle of life itself are significantly different from what they are used to at home. If a Russian immigrant is asked about how, in his opinion, life in Africa differs from life in Russia, he will say that to everyone. On the Black Continent, perhaps South Africa is a bit like Europe. Nothing at all resembles Russia.

Video about life in South Africa

How Russians work in Africa

Working conditions in Africa can be more comfortable than at home. 99% of specialists from Russia and other CIS countries come to Africa to earn money to buy housing, a car, etc. For the most part, these are doctors, civil engineers, hydroengineers, and power engineers. Several large hydroelectric power plants are under construction in Africa, for example, in Equatorial Guinea and large reservoirs in the eastern region. In this way, African countries are trying to cover the shortage of electricity and water resources, which are vital not only for the development of countries, but sometimes for the survival of their citizens themselves.

Foreign specialists who come to work on the Black Continent earn quite decent money. The average monthly salary for a doctor in Tanzania is in the region of five to six thousand dollars, and a geologist in Sierra Leone receives about seven thousand "evergreens." A hydroengineer or a power engineer can earn about five to seven thousand, depending on the construction site. Specialists come for several years under a contract, which allows them to bring home a decent amount at the end of the contract.

Only those offices that are run by Europeans or Americans are relatively tolerable, and the process of work proceeds promptly and also relatively smoothly, only when you complain to your superiors - a "pale-faced", and they, in turn, write a pendel for a negro-performer. The magic pendel has, unfortunately, a short-term temporary effect, and the pale-face must be complained about, and he has to write out the next pendel regularly. Naturally, if you want to spend a reasonable amount of time on your question. Unfortunately, so far their bodies are physically in the second decade of the 21st century, and morally and mentally they are at best in the middle of the 20th. On the plus side, being even in such a cesspool of life circumstances, they are cheerful and mostly friendly.
They also have great genetics and natural health!

Dimetrio http://www.bpclub.ru/topic/38917-%D0%B6%D0%B8%D0%B7%D0%BD%D1%8C-%D0%B2-%D1%87%D0%B5%D1 % 80% D0% BD% D0% BE% D0% B9-% D0% B0% D1% 84% D1% 80% D0% B8% D0% BA% D0% B5-% D0% BF% D0% B5% D1 % 80% D1% 81% D0% BF% D0% B5% D0% BA% D1% 82% D0% B8% D0% B2% D1% 8B /

Most often, Russians find themselves at work in Africa as temporary invited specialists.

The advantage of working in Africa for specialists will be the absence (in most cases) of the need for nostrification of higher education documents and high salaries. At the same time, you can earn much more in Africa than in Europe, and it is very difficult for a specialist with an unconfirmed CIS diploma to find a job in the EU. Well, the potential threats described above will become significant disadvantages of employment in Africa: wars, epidemics, crime. But the economic crisis continuing in the CIS is forcing an increasing number of people to think about working in Africa every year.

How white people are treated in Africa

In addition to the points already described above, the black population treats whites as a consumer, perceiving them as a big wallet that is periodically opened. But the attitude is more servile than respectful. The white man feels like a black sheep in black Africa, to which everyone pays attention. But at the same time, if he has money, everything is available to him. And no one will ask unnecessary questions. It practically does not matter in which country this happens, unless in the states of the Maghreb, Egypt or South Africa.


White people bring many benefits of civilization to Africa

Arriving at the airport of Dakar (the capital of Senegal), in the coastal zone of the Atlantic from a height of half a kilometer, white "lambs" of waves are visible. There are very, very many of them, it seems that it is storming below. But now the liner is descending, and inexperienced passengers sitting near the windows, with horror understand that these are not the crests of waves, but myriads of plastic bags and other debris, a wide strip of which stretches for several kilometers towards the ocean.

Where can you invest in Africa

Businessmen from the post-Soviet countries also slowly reached the African continent. The most promising, from their point of view, areas of investment on the Black Continent are:

  • mining industry, including mining of gold, diamonds, uranium, nickel (usually West Africa);
  • the oil industry (Nigeria, Libya, in the latter, experts predict a significant increase in black gold production in the next two to three years);
  • tourism industry (Egypt, Zanzibar island, Morocco, Tunisia);
  • infrastructure construction (most countries on the continent);
  • the development of air services and the construction of airports (in demand in most countries);
  • safari tours (southern region of Africa).
  • In addition, Africa provides excellent opportunities for the import of tropical fruits, coffee, cocoa and their transportation to European countries and the CIS. Africa itself is the largest (after Southeast Asia) consumer of rice. But on her land it grows in few places, so rice is brought from other regions of the world.


    Gemstone mining is a good investment destination

    The greatest profit is not for those who extract raw materials, but for those who have a manufacturing industry and produce a finished product from it. Diamonds from Sierra Leone are cut outside the country. For example, in Israel, where diamond processing is one of the leading economic items, despite the fact that Israel does not have its reserves at all. Or in Belgium, which is one of the world centers of the jewelry industry (jewelry production there accounts for 12% of GDP). Africans, on the other hand, practically do not have their own jewelry industry.

    Denis Kazanskyhttp://deniskazansky.com.ua/ukraina_vs_africa/

    Africa is a continent of contrasts, where luxury and terrible poverty, modern skyscrapers and huts of tribes forgotten by civilization coexist. A working trip to the Black Continent or moving for other reasons will require a very balanced and deliberate decision. For its adoption, you should first study all the information about Africa, its regions and directly about the country to which you are planning to move. This will greatly help to protect yourself from possible risks and mistakes.

    What is a modern woman for us? A beautiful, well-groomed, successful girl who plays sports, looks after herself, drives a car, drinks coffee with her friends on weekends, builds relationships and plans a family. Sometimes it is difficult for us to imagine that there is a different reality in the 21st century. Where women and girls are a kind of commodity, they are chained to a kitchen stove and cannot even pay for a purchase in a store. Born to serve food and have children with men who may not be loved.

    Today we will tell you the story of a young journalist who shot an amateur TV series and showed the whole world how her compatriots live in Ghana, a country located in West Africa.

    “I was born in Africa. But she grew up in the USA. And when I got home, I realized that the whole world is already in the 21st century, but African women will remain in the Middle Ages for a long time to come. "

    This is how Nicole Amartefio, a native of Ghana, who has lived in the United States all her life, begins to tell her story, the girl looked at her country through the prism of Western upbringing.

    “At first I thought of just writing about it, but then the idea was born to make a series,” Nicole says.

    Nicole would have thought over all the subtleties of the future film for a long time, if not for a natural disaster. The turning point was the earthquake on August 23, 2011, the magnitude of the tremors was more than 5.9. In a terrible hurry, Nicole left her office and only one thought was spinning in her head: "God, I never did my show, I didn't show an unknown African woman."

    “The earth shook, furniture fell to the floor with a terrible rattle, people left offices in a hurry, and I was terribly angry with myself that my idea would die with me,” Nicole recalls.

    “If not for the earthquake, I would still be sitting in front of the TV and complaining that I can't write like the heroine of the TV series“ Sex and the City ”. But, thanks to this natural disaster, I decided - either I return to Ghana and shoot the series, or I will have to regret until the end of my days. "- says the girl.

    Nicole, 30, flew to a country that she knew only from her mother's stories and from the media, in the hope that she would be able to establish a new life. In addition, she was interested in how millions of women cope with the absolute power of men. But the complete lack of experience and money immediately ruled out the possibility of cooperation with film studios.

    Nicole was not used to giving up so easily, so she quickly found a way out of the situation. She settled with relatives and for the first time borrowed money from friends. And I decided to publish the footage on the Internet. Is free. And thus, the TV series "African City" was released, the first episode of which received more than a million views on YouTube channel.

    All situations described in the picture are taken from life. For example, the story with the border guards.

    Welcome home?

    The adventure began right at the airport, where the border police interrogated the girl - she does not know the language, her appearance and behavior differ from the local residents - no one believes that she is a citizen of Ghana. Elegant, sophisticated, in tight jeans and a low-key T-shirt, it is very different from the puffy, brightly painted aboriginal women.
    The hairdresser asks to pay the "overseas" price, because the girl refused to straighten her hair, as they do "in Europe", they do not want to serve in the cafe, here they have never heard of food for vegetarians.

    You will not see women with large saucers in their mouths, a mother feeding in the middle of the desert, or a girl dying of hunger. These are stories about a different Africa.

    “Accra, the capital of Ghana, was full of all kinds of signs and shop windows. I wanted to go around absolutely all the establishments. At that time I did not know that a woman cannot even buy groceries - only a man has the right to pay for everything. The marriage was also considered a financial transaction. I found myself in a world where it is generally accepted that an unmarried woman is worthless, ”- says the author of the film.

    The young woman very soon had to learn a lesson, if you have your own opinion, then it can only be expressed at home. The journalist's rebellious mood was supported by her new acquaintance Sade, the daughter of a local pastor, who never left Ghana.

    But the holy father did not in any way influence the upbringing of his daughter. Sex is Sade's favorite sport. She introduces the main character with the world of forbidden joys and free sex. Bright and contradictory, she repeats all the time "If an African man says he is free, rest assured his wife is sleeping in the next room.".

    Another girlfriend, the complete opposite of Sade, young Ngozi, who hopes to find not only an ideal, but also a loving husband. Raised in a Catholic family, the girl tries to combine Western free morals with the conservative attitudes of her parents.

    “Our Ngozi demonstratively left the church in protest when the priest began a long and mournful sermon that the wife should be the shadow of her husband,”- says Nicole.

    Likewise, she dreams of a white dress and a Makena ring. A graduate of Oxford Law School, the girl returns to Accra in search of work. The ambitious Makena is struggling to gain a place in the sun in a world ruled by men.

    “Just imagine, I met with a man who demanded to cook three dishes for each meal, but I’m a lawyer, not a cook,”- complained to the girlfriends of Makena.

    The fourth girl, Zeinab, owns a firm that exports shea butter to the United States. However, this is what prevents her from establishing her personal life. All the men on her way say only one thing: "it would be better if you were a housewife than sign multimillion-dollar contracts."

    “The audience complained to me that the men were portrayed in a bad light. But this is the whole truth. Most of them cheat on their wives. Or, having come on the first date, be prepared for the fact that you will be invited to marry, because a woman for an African man is a nanny, a servant or a cook ”,- says the director of the film.

    “Enough has been said about African men. Now it's time for women, and I'm not sorry for that. " Nicole says.

    Nicole (in the series, the girl called herself Nana), Makena, Ngozi, Sade and Zeynab are smart, modern girls who know exactly what they want from this life and are not afraid to show their feminist views. They demand equal rights at work, where, apart from the proposal to get married, you don't have to wait for anything, at home and in bed.

    Nicole tells the story of a young lady who is forced to have sex. And she could not understand that this is rape, that in civilized countries they report this to the police and this is a crime. The power of men is not discussed there.

    Combat chauvinism in any form

    “In“ African City ”I want to show the whole world things that are important to me, but in a humorous way. It's difficult, but it doesn't work any other way, ” Nicole says.

    Sometimes situations in the show seem absurd, but they are all true. For example, Sade ordered a vibrator banned in Ghana in the United States, and even tried to bribe a border guard. The girl convinces the security officer that it is a neck massager, but as a result ends up behind bars for attempting to bribe an official and smuggle. The situation was resolved only with the help of an older brother who is familiar with the police officer.
    Corruption is one of the many problems in the country that the director points to.

    Of course, for a Western viewer, some of the issues raised may seem very simple, even trivial. For example, girls constantly complain about blackouts, which is also a source of comical situations when electricity goes out when they meet.

    The director of the series humorously approached human handicaps and described real life stories that can happen to anyone. For example, a new acquaintance Ngozi tried to invite her for coffee and for this he called every half hour. But to save money on the phone bill, he simply disconnected after the first ring, hoping that the girl would call him back.

    Unfortunately, hygiene issues are added to the questions about relationships. Makena just goes crazy when it turns out that her partner refuses to take a shower, explaining that half of Africa has no access to water.

    “A woman in Ghana is considered a second class man. A few years ago, my parents flew to the graduation ceremony for my girlfriend, who had just graduated from Cambridge. And on the day of the ceremony, her father asked her to cook jolof with goat meat (a traditional African dish with rice). And instead of celebrating with friends, a graduate of one of the most prestigious universities, she ran around the city in search of this goat meat. This story tells a lot about the role of women in my country, ”- concludes Nicole.

    “We need to stop pretending and start calling a spade a spade. I am telling only a small part of what is really happening in Africa. But the world needs to know about it. People came up to me on the streets and said thank you for what I am doing. Even grown women approved of the episode where the heroines of my series urge African men to use a condom. This means that we are not as conservative as it is commonly believed ",- the author of the film is convinced.

    After the success of the first season, Nicole immediately received a number of offers from TV channels that sponsored the second season. But, as the author of "African City" herself admits, the best reward for her work was a comment on YouTube under one of the series. A young woman wrote “I was born in Puerto Rico. I have lived half my life in New York, now I live in Italy. You ask, what do I and the heroines of the series have in common? I will answer you. Everything!"

    And even though the stereotype prevails in Western society that Africa is hunger, constant conflicts and disease, this amateur series tells that a woman remains a woman everywhere. Let Nicole's little story help us appreciate what we have. Despite all our problems, we still have the right to be loved, to be women.


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    RYEB (TsTBULB, TsTBFCHB)
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    OPUOS TSYOSH
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    DPVBCHYFSH UCHPK TBULB

    lpnneofbtyy rp tbuulbkh

    ) ... A girl who traded cloudy Petersburg for distant Ghana, which is located in West Africa.

    Several years ago, Natalya fell in love with a medical student named Frank. And from that moment I realized that her fate is forever linked to Africa.

    “Our family is 6 years old. It has 4 people, 3 men, 2 babies, 1 mother. Between our cities 6573 km or 10 hours of flight by plane. In the country where we live 270 days of sunshine a year, and the average temperature is 28 ° C. 12 noon and 12 noon. 0% winter, 100% summer. Here people speak 46 languages ​​and write nine. There is 1 ocean here. 3 stripes and 1 star on the flag. We are Natasha, Frank, Martin and David, and we live in Ghana (West Africa) "

    “When I was leaving hometown, moving to Ghana was as natural for me as going to school after kindergarten, to the university - after school, to the office - after the university. "

    “Why are you in Ghana and not in Russia? Where is better? Of course, it is better in Russia, where there is a good free education and health care, an established system public transport, many playgrounds and shopping malls. But I like it more in Ghana. Because my husband's house is in Ghana. And for a family it is easier and more comfortable to live in the husband's homeland. Where he is, like a fish in water. Where he can be the head of the family. "

    "Frank loves classical music! Especially the opera, especially the choral parts. Frank loves to cook, although in Ghana it is not customary for a man to be in the kitchen. Frank loves to read so much that at one time he stole books from the library. And finally, my husband is the best husband in the world! "

    “Have you been there? So how is it? Hot? Wasn't it scary to give birth? Does he have any other wives? And inside everything freezes while you open your mouth to answer the same question for the hundredth time. And you think: was I ready for such attention? Did you know that dozens of glances would accompany us down the street, that people would turn around and whisper behind our backs? I close my social media pages so as not to see malicious comments. And then I open it again to tell people that the world is not black and white. I walk into the house and hug the world's most beautiful babies, whose skin is much darker than mine. And then it seems to me that I can endure everything! "

    “In Russia, tobacco smoke has always irritated me. And in Ghana, I sometimes even miss such a "native" smell. This is because there is almost no smoking here. It's even hard for me to tell right away where cigarettes are sold in our city. Smoking in Ghana is frowned upon, as is the use of alcohol itself. The whole family looked at our rare bottle of wine for dinner with condemnation. By the way, about alcohol: here it is sold - for every taste and color. But to see a person walking down the street with a bottle of beer in his hand is unrealistic. "

    « 10 reasons to come to Ghana:

    1. Make sure Africa is not only about adobe huts, monkeys, savannahs and people in loincloths.

    2. Feel like a superstar. Prepare to constantly wave your hand to others, smile, answer questions and requests to be photographed.

    3. Feel like a rich man without the latest iPhone and expensive car. Everything is learned by comparison, right?

    4. Without eyelash extensions, a beautician and a stylist, feel like a beauty queen.

    5. Make sure that eating with your hands is sometimes more convenient and tastier than eating with devices. Even if it's soup.

    6. Make sure that a day without tap water and electricity is not the end of the world.

    7. Enjoy the power of the Atlantic Ocean, the beauty of waterfalls and pristine jungle, the brightness of dresses and the scent of blooming orange plantations.

    The most relevant and useful information for modern parents is in our mailing list.
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    8. Test yourself for strength, endurance, adventurism and sociability.

    9. Falling asleep under a mosquito net, feel like the hero of an adventure movie or a show on the Discovery Channel.

    10. To proudly tell friends, "I've been to Africa."

    “Meat is very fond of in Ghana, and they eat all the by-products, and such unusual parts as a cow's head or hoof are generally considered a delicacy. In my husband's family, goat meat is held in high esteem. Not even - a goat! Such that the goat smell is good. The skin is not removed - the fur is simply scorched and boiled with the skin. Another delicacy is Achatina snails. They are grown on special farms to impressive sizes and sold in the markets. "

    “I used to be very simple about the fact that strangers saw my one-year-old son with a bare bottom. And my husband scolded me, because here it is somehow not accepted. In general, in Ghana they dress quite chastely. Short skirts and dresses are worn with leggings. Until recently, shorts were generally taboo. Seeing a gank in a bikini is unrealistic. "

    “Sling or stroller? For Ghanaian women, this is not a question. Children are traditionally carried behind their backs, tied up with a special piece of cloth. Some people also use strollers, but mostly in the yard. It is not customary to walk with children along the streets. I brought a sling-scarf with me and wore David in it until he was six months old. Then it became difficult to walk long distances, and we moved to a stroller, with which it is more convenient for me to walk. "

    “What's the cost in Ghana? Prices are mainly from the market, in the supermarket may vary. Fruit-vegetables on the market are sold by the piece or measured in buckets, bowls, etc., so it was difficult to translate them into kilograms: 1 liter of milk - from $ 1.5; 1 white bread - $ 0.5-1.5; 1 kg of potatoes - $ 2.5; 1 kg of bananas - about $ 1; 1 kg of apples - about $ 4-5, 1 piece - $ 0.5; 10 eggs - $ 1; 1 chicken, broiler (whole carcass) - about $ 5; 1 kg of tomatoes - $ 1.25-1.5; 1 cup of coffee - $ 2.5; 1 liter of water in a bottle - $ 0.25; 1 burger - about $ 5; 1 avocado (per season) - $ 0.25; 1 bucket of mango (per season) - $ 1.25 ".

    “In Ghana, even in poor families, it is customary to keep a servant. Most often, these are young girls or guys from the village, children of distant relatives, ready to do all the housework for the opportunity to live and study in the city. "

    “In Ghana, almost all children are bilingual. From birth, they are surrounded by two languages: English and local. So my children grow up in a bilingual environment: at home we speak English and Russian. They also hear the local language, but they do not speak it at all. "

    “What I love Ghanaian children for is their patience and attention to the kids. They are always ready to mess around, play with the younger ones, do not complain, do not try to get rid of them. The boys in the neighborhood and even the older guys are always ready to stop the game so Martin can hit the ball. They are also not greedy. Most of them live extremely poor by our standards, but even what little they have, they are always ready to share among themselves. "

    “And the two will be one flesh,” says the Bible, and there are no better words to describe the unity that we can enjoy. And for this I thank God. "

    Even more fascinating stories from the life of Ghana can be found on Natalia Sakado's Instagram page -@natasakado.

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