On Wednesday I had to get up early to drive to the
office. It was dark outside, and cold in
the bathroom because the heating hadn’t started. I switched on the lights downstairs and
started to make breakfast, I was still cold. I tried to remember the last
morning when it was this dark, quiet and cold. It came flooding back… Kisiizi hospital!
I’m feeling
cold as bright lights appear through the darkness and the car slowly approaches
our hotel
It is cold
as we pull up at the side of the road and Arnold struggles to climb into the
high car
Hats,
scarves and coats have appeared but still we shiver as cold air comes in
through the open door.
The car has
heating, it doesn’t reach beyond the first row of seats. I don’t have a coat,
or a hat.
The road is
rough, the car bounces along and veers from side to side dodging potholes and oncoming
traffic.
I realise we’re
avoiding people and animals and bicycles – out on the road, no lights, no
protection
Notice
Arnold, pain on his face. Each bump jars his sensitive joints and skin.
Hungry, I remember
the chapattis the hotel made last night so I could have breakfast.
Two
chapatis, 5 people. We try to eat slowly
to make our allotted portion last.
The hospital
appears, people milling round the fence, climbing out of cars, lorries, buses,
taxis, motorbikes
We join the
ragged group going through the gate and see a queue of people already waiting
patiently on benches
In the cold.
At 7am.
I can see my
breath in the air. I flap my arms and
stamp my feet. I’m so cold
I look at
the weary bunch of people struggling with pain and sickness, and the cold.
Not everyone
has a blanket or a coat.
More people arrive,
shivering, but not complaining, to sit, waiting patiently.
Can’t move
or you’ll lose your place.
At last the
sun began to warm up the air. We’ve only been waiting for 2 hours.
Slowly the
queue of people are registered, and moved to another queue
Then
assessed, and moved to another queue
Now it’s too
hot to stand outside the shade.
Sun,
blistering down, burning skin and making the metal poles supporting the roof
too hot to touch
Overpowering
heat. Makes the ill feel worse.
People
carrying their sick family stagger under the weight and heat
Relatives bearing
stretchers from one ward to another stumble as rivers of sweat pour down their
faces and necks
I walk
outside for a break.
Humanity has
gathered to profit from sickness and those who have to care for the patients: food and clothes stalls, raw meat hung on a
tree
The smells
and dirt and flies and heat threaten to over-power me.
I stop.
Come back to
my journey to work in my comfy hire car.
Don’t want
to remember, don’t want to forget.
Eyes on the
road ahead, car heater on, lunch in a plastic box alongside the thick coat in the
boot
Pass an
accident, ambulances, paramedics, fire-engine, police cars, tow truck
Don’t want
to remember, don’t want to forget