Ignacio kept his distance while I went to business, bargaining with the young
man in charge of that family's merchandise, but as we went back and forth
amicably in Portuguese, the rest of his family came out to watch.  It was
unnerving at first, and then fun, as their eyes scanned back and forth between
us and as the two of us batted numbers back and forth.

One lazy weekend afternoon in Maputo, Ignacio mentioned the Sand City.  "Have
you seen it?" he asked me enigmatically.  "Until you've been there you haven't
seen Maputo."  It was a challenge I couldn't resist, and we decided to beat the
heat by driving up to the Sand City for a look around while the rest of
Mozambique's quiet capital rested.  Maputo's streets are paved and clean, but
the pavement ends abruptly at the north end of town, and as Ignacio downshifted
to maneuver his little car onto the dirt roads, we entered a new world.

At the edge of Maputo we rumbled past the hulking remains of an old 10 story
hotel under construction in the late 1970s when the Portuguese were forced to
abandon their colony.  They did as much damage to it as they could before
leaving Mozambique, a trend they repeated elsewhere throughout their former
colony, filling toilets with concrete, ripping down wiring, carrying off
everything of value from furniture to light fixtures.  The Mozambicans decided
their most evocative response would be to leave the building standing,
incomplete, wasted.  It stands as a monument to colonial avarice and rancor,
and reminds Mozambicans to this day to treasure their independence.  From that
auspicious monument we entered the Sand City.

It's not fair to call the Sand City a slum, as the pejorative lacks any sense
of the community pride that pervaded the community, but it's true the Sand City
lacks all of the amenities that the capital just down the road makes prevalent,
from running water to sanitation and trash collection.  The locals are
fishermen and shell fish harvesters, run bustling local markets, and fabricate
things for sale elsewhere.  Ignacio took me to where a local woman was selling
mussels harvested from Maputo Bay and bargained with her for a pailful to take
home to dinner that night.  I bargained a photo out of the conversation.

Local artisans line the sides of the main road, displaying pieces of
astonishing intricacy and gorgeous workmanship.  I marvelled over tables
created from woven fiber stretched over steel frames, and carved wooden pieces
too delicate to imagine having shaped by hand from a single piece of wood.  But
what really caught my eye were the gorgeous batik fabrics.  I enjoy using the
word batik, from the Indonesian language (Bahasa).  I saw miles of delicately
died and printed batik fabric when I lived in Indonesia, but African batiks are
a world apart, even in their fabrication, and I couldn't resist taking two
home.  For one, the themes and colors are decidedly African and reflect
different subject matter.  I saw lots of bold patterns and rich shades of
brown, giraffes and tigers and stripes of all metrics.

Ignacio kept his distance while I went to business, bargaining with the young
man in charge of that family's merchandise, but as we went back and forth
amicably in Portuguese, the rest of his family came out to watch.  It was
unnerving at first, and then fun, as their eyes scanned back and forth between
us and as the two of us batted numbers back and forth.  Indonesia was where I
learned to bargain as well, though I gained experience in Central America.  But
bargaining in Latin America is decidedly different from bargaining in Africa,
and the two of us bargained and presented counter-offers for ten minutes while
the family watched.  The trick is to remember it's a friendly transaction,
almost a sport.  It's also important to remember you start with every
disadvantage in the world.  "How much is the real price?" a friend once asked
in Indonesia.  There is no real price.  It has to do with the family's need
that day, their assessment of your ability to pay, and how much energy  they
have put into their work.  I left the Sand City with two tapestries: a
gorgeous, deep blue one with an aquatic motif, and a rich brown one inset with
a happy-looking giraffe.

But I left as well with good memories of the Sand City.  Far from being any
sort of desperate, Third World hellhole, the Sand City was just that, a city
with a personality and pride of its own, whose only crime was poverty and a
lack of the services we would call fundamental rights just about anywhere else.
But faced with hard conditions, the locals have taken it upon themselves to
improve their lifestyle the only way they know how: by producing with their
hands.  This is the lesson of ground-up development: that it is most important
to provide the poor with a level playing field and training and skills to take
charge of their own destiny.  Given the freedom to improve their lifestyles,
they will.