Monday, July 25, 2011

Amman Taxicab Confessions Volume 3 - Laa nuhibb al-Urdun kathiiran

Hope you enjoyed the Maha reference in the title.  

No real funny stuff this time, but a retelling of a pair of kind of sad but interesting encounters with cabbies who didn't want to be in Jordan anymore.

Both rides took place on last Saturday evening (July 23) on my way to Sweifiyeh and from Swefiyeh to meet with Aziz, my language exchange partner.

1) On the way there, I spoke to a taxi driver that had lived in Sweden for six years, and then Cape Town in South Africa.  He has been living in Jordan for a few years now, but hates it.  I think he thinks Jordan is the sticks...

2) On the way from Sweifiyeh, the cabbie instructed me that he didn't want to speak Arabic to me.  Here is his reasoning why:
  • He learned English by speaking to Indian people that he met while in Doha.
  • When he spoke Arabic to them, he knew they wouldn't know much, so he Hindi-cized certain words so they'd understand.
  • He didn't want to speak Hindi-cized Arabic to me, so he only spoke English throughout the ride.
While scratching my head in confusion, I listened to his story.  He had lived in Qatar for 35 years and was working at a pretty good job in Doha, Qatar, but due to a dispute between the Qatar and Jordan governments, Qatar began to impose a hefty monthly fee for Jordanian nationals who wished to continue working there.  Therefore, he was forced to move back to Amman.  For a year and a half, he refused to work because he didn't think the employers here treated their employees with respect.  He said that he got offered a $350/month job (which he said would cover only 1/3 or 1/2 of the living expenses for a small family), but that he refused it because the employer would ask him to do other people's work as well as his own.

So he's driving a cab...

All joking aside, a common complaint that I've heard here is the lack of decent economic opportunities.  Many people are underemployed, and some of the people that are employed don't seem to be working too hard.  For example, the many construction sites that I've seen with a lone worker just moving stuff around at a leisurely pace, or the lobby of Amideast's building, which remains full of shattered glass from what I presume was a renovation gone awry, or kaput.

2 comments:

  1. Tourism inSouth Africa is all about a positive image, but you’d better be careful there too. This guy was almost a victim of true crime. It was after dark and he was with a sick friend, stuck in a place where no taxi drivers would go. With slim choices, he accepted a lift from an illegal taxi to get back to Sandton City. It is a risk to do this in Johannesburg, South Africa because violent crime is high. What followed was a very close shave with many criminals, also involving the taxi driver. He had no choice but to take the law into his own hands to ensure his safety. Read his story, so you know what you should not do after dark in Johannesburg, South Africa.

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