I love my boots. It
might seem odd to have such affection for shoes, especially for an
adult male, but I have owned these boots for five and a half years and
they have rarely left my feet. I bought them in preparation for my
first trip to Rwanda, and from the moment I put them on they fit like a
glove. Since that fall day in 1998 my hiking books have been with me to
Rwanda, Iraq, Indonesia and guided me through the rubble of the World
Trade Center. I have resoled them six or seven times at least and
unlike far too many people in my life, these boots have never failed me.
I thought it would be fitting that I retire these boots after my second
trip to Rwanda in 2004, things coming full circle and all. It was near
the end of my trip that Jimmie, the friend and writer with whom I was
traveling, and I visited Volet: Enfants de la rue, a center for street
children on the edge of Kigali run by the Presbyterian Church of
Rwanda. The center gives children, many of whom had been orphaned by
the 1994 genocide, not only a place to come but somewhere to learn a
trade and even attend school. They told us that many of the kids in the
area spent time at the dump, locally known as the dust bin, where they
search for things to sell, charcoal for cooking fires and something to
eat. The center was purposefully placed near the dust bin in an attempt
to get kids to come in. After a short ride in a 4x4 Jimmie and I found
ourselves there, searching for kids to speak to and photograph.
If you've never been to a dump, I would suggest that there are far
better places to spend your time, like anywhere else. Far more
disturbing than anything you are likely to find in the first world,
this dump was work and playground for the children who call it home.
The smell wasn't so bad, at least when the wind blew the right way, and
the dump overlooked the rolling hills outside of Kigali. There we spoke
to several children, including one small girl named Chantal, far too
tiny for her twelve years, who was supporting her mother and siblings
by collecting charcoal and food at the dust bin. Jimmie stayed on the
edges as I sank my boots into the ground which was little more than a
sponge of garbage in various states of decomposition. Liquefied refuse
spilled over the edges of my boots, instantly coating them.
|
Chantal Photo by Damaso Reyes |
As
I approached the young girl looked at me with an expression that I can
only imagine said "Why would anyone come here if they didn't have to?"
As it so happened, that was exactly what I was thinking. She moved
around trying to get rid of me, but after five or ten minutes accepted
that I was going to do what I was going to do and went about her
business, picking at the garbage, looking for food and fuel. The
squadrons of flies that I disturbed with each footstep didn't seem to
bother her in the least and after about fifteen minutes I retreated to
the edges of the dust bin, having endured just about as much as I could.
It was later that day, on the way to the UNICEF offices in Kigali for a
meeting, that I noticed it: I stank. It wasn't just an offensive odor,
my boots, and as it turned out the lower half of my pants, had been
permeated with the smell of sadness, an odor that can't be described
and definitely not forgotten. Unfortunately Kigali seemed to have a
dearth of fire hydrants or hoses that day so it wasn't until later that
evening when Jimmie and I returned to the house that we were staying at
that I could remedy the situation. I asked the women of the house for
some water and soap, and after they duly produced it, I sat on the back
stoop and washed my boots. Fifteen minutes later the smell was gone and
I put them out to dry.
As I went to sleep I thought about my boots and how easy it had been to
get them clean again. But what about the children and adults who live
at the dust bin, how would they get their boots clean? The answer of
course is simple: many of them don't wear boots, or shoes for that
matter, so it is not an issue. The smell I found so offensive was
simply part of the scenery, like the hills in the distance. What I had
been so eager to wash off these children live with day in and day out.
How often do we wash off the dirt of the world, the unpleasant smell of
the society that, if we didn't create we certainly have contributed to?
How many times do we shuck off the unpleasantness, shrug and tell
ourselves "oh that's a shame," before moving on to a nice dinner, a
warm home or loving family? Most of us know that places like the dust
bin exist, that little girls like Chantal go there every day looking
for food and fuel. And most of us wake up, get in our cars or onto a
subway or bus and live our lives as if they didn't exist, just as I
will do today. Now I wish I hadn't washed those boots, at least then
from time to time I might better remember that there are little girls
in the world looking for charcoal.
Damaso
Reyes has been a photographer and writer for over seven years. He began
his career as a stringer for the New York Amsterdam News where he
served as Southeast Asia Bureau Chief.
Born and raised in
Brooklyn, New York, Damaso attended The Department of Photography at
New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. His work has appeared
The United Nations Development Programme, The Associated Press,
Foxnews.com, The Source, New York Magazine, Time Asia, The Far Eastern
Economic Review and The Jakarta Post.
Previous assignments and projects have taken him to Indonesia, Rwanda, Iraq, Jordan and throughout the United States.