Tuesday, November 24, 2015

DRC Food

Fufu & Moambe
Caakiri
Main dish: Moambe
Moambe is a traditional African stew made with a red sauce from the fruit of an African Palm
Ingredients:
  • Sauce from the fruit of the African Palm
  • Marinated beef, mutton, or chicken
  • Chopped onions
  • Chopped tomatoes
  • Few cups of water
The moambe looks very appealing to me. I would most definitely want to try this. It looks sort of like a stew that would be made in America except made with more available foods that the Congolese people have at their disposal.

Dessert: Caakiri
Caakiri is a dessert similar to that of a rice pudding of the Middle East or India. It is made with couscous (which is from a wheat) today but it was traditionally made from African grains like maize and black eyed peas. It might have been a main dish of sorts originally but it has since evolved to include sugar and has become a dessert or snack.
Ingredients:
  • two cups of couscous
  • pat of butter
  • dash of sal
  • one cup evaporated milk
  • two cups plain or vanilla yogurt
  • one cup sour cream
  • one-half cup sugar
  • one-half teaspoon vanilla extract
  • dash of nutmeg
  • raisins or crushed pineapple or mint garnish
Caakiri doesn't seem like something I would enjoy. I am not at all a fan of rice pudding and sour cream doesn't tickle my taste buds in the slightest. I wouldn't be too inclined to try this dish.
Other: Fufu
Fufu is a very popular food in the Congo. It is made from a thick paste of sweet potatoes or yams and is then boiled and mashed. Fufu is usually accompanied by a peanut soup which is traditionally eaten by making a tiny bowl with a section of fufu and scooping the soup into the little bowl before eating it.
Ingredients: 
  • Sweet potato or yams paste
Fufu looks like a dish I could enjoy. It doesn't seem too out of the ordinary and I would most definitely like it if it was dipped in the peanut soup as it usually is. I am a big fan of peanut butter and I like almost all starches so I would like to try this dish.



Monday, November 16, 2015

Autobiography of a Congolese Child Soldier

Source
According to BBC, an estimate of one out of every ten child soldiers lives in the DRC. Michel Chikwanine of the Congo was abducted at the age of five to be a soldier. He managed to escape to Canada and wrote his autobiography about his experiences being a child soldier. He said it was one of the hardest things any human being ever has to go through, which is completely understandable. He was just outside playing with his friends and he, as well as some of his friends, were taken to become soldiers. Once they got to the camp, they were drugged and Michel was even forced to kill one of his best friends! He managed to flee a couple weeks later when the village was raided. In 2004, Michel and his mother moved to Ottawa, Canada. His father was a human rights activist and was poisoned while taking refuge in Uganda.
This man has unbelievable courage to be able to tell his story and let the world know of the atrocities that are going on in the DRC. All sides of the misshapen civil war conflict act like they are manly and better than the other faction when they take children soldiers that fight and do their dirty work. The ones that claim to be the most manly have children backing up their words. This is unbelievable how many children soldiers are in one country. 1 out of every 10 is from the Congo! That is an astronomically high number. Everything in the Congo has to stop. It has gone way too far. If at all possible, the country should just split to be run by the different factions that control the areas in my opinion. It should at least stop some of the displacement going on in the never-ending conflict.

Steve Bandoma, Congo Artist

Source 1
Source 2

Steve Bandoma is a very talented artist from the Congo. He appeals to the Congolese government to try to get more support for the arts and culture in the country. Mr. Bandoma's first solo exhibition in London had to go alone because he was denied a visa into the country. He was obviously rightfully upset by this. He says he wants to defeat the stereotype of African art and be able to popularize it without Western support.
I really enjoy Bandoma's works. His paintings look more modern, and I like the abstract style that he employs. He cares a lot about his work as well as other African artists'. He wants to advance the African culture and allow it to be viewed by everybody without a preexisting stereotype.