Buenos Aires to Lima – May 16
At the airport early. We tried to change our remaining Argentinian pesos along with some Uruguay bills at a change booth, but the cashier just sniffed at Fab and told her that the amount she was trying to change wasn´t worth his time. Tired of Argentinian arrogance, Fab pressed her middle finger to the glass. The man ignored her and typed away on his computer. I laughed and gave Fab a hug, I like seeing her get worked up sometimes.
We arrived in Lima by noon and found a man, Julio, waiting for us with a sign marked “Fabiola y Jeffrey”. Pedro, a Peruvian man we met in Wadi Musa, Jordan, had followed through on his word and set us up with his family in Lima. Julio, Pedro´s brother, greeted us with a smile and a handshake and quickly whisked us off to his sister Lupe´s house, where we were due to stay.
Both Lupe and Julio live in a low income housing community on the outskirts of Lima, not far from the airport. Small, single floor interconnected houses ran around a large swath of grass, a green lake in the middle of the multi-coloured dwellings. Dogs ran rampant and kids played tag with each other.
Near the far end of the park, we saw a short woman with a long, black ponytail standing with her arms crossed in front of her house. Lupe. Her daugther, Sayam, hugged her legs and eyed us curiously as we approached the house with Julio. Lupe greeted us with kisses and then introduced us to the rest of the family: her daughter Claudia, her sister Julia and daughter Carla, her husband Daniel, and Dina, a family friend.
We lugged our bags in through the front door of Lupe´s house and were soon seated at the kitchen table and fed an absurd amount of food. Fab and I talked with Julio, me in broken Spanish, Fab in her native tongue. Julio told us about his time in the military and how he was kidnapped in the 1990´s by the Shining Path, a Maoist guerrilla group. He was taken into the jungle and, as he told it, almost executed when the members of the Shining Path got word that the military was going to bomb the area. Julio also told us about how he was almost killed by a bomb explosion in Lima. He was seated in his car when a bomb went off in the building next to him. He said he would have been killed if not for a small cement wall separating his car from the building. As a result of the explosion, he was deaf for two months. Once he regained his hearing, he returned to the spot and kissed the wall.
At night, after a nap in the afternoon, Julio took us on a sight seeing tour in his cab. He had been driving a taxi for years and had recently converted his car to run on propane due to high petrol prices. I´m not sure if people in the US and Canada are aware of this, but gasoline is more expensive in Peru, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Egypt and a whole bunch of other developing countries than it is the United States. And by a substantial amount. As one man in Ethiopia told us, “famine in Ethiopia is not created by poor crops and drought, it is created when we can no longer afford to transport goods around the country.”
Julio had wanted to take us to the Plaza de Armas, but central Lima was shut down due to an environmental conference taking place in the capital. Leaders and dignitaries from around the world were in town and all the roads were closed. Hugo Chavez garnered the most attention when he announced that he would be taking part in both the official conference as well as the anti-conference protests. Because of the blocked roads, Julio instead took us to a park filled with water fountains and lights. We circumnavigated the park, eating rice pudding and watching people run stupidly into the water before returning to the house and calling it an evening.