Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Grande Hotel, Beira Mozambique

The Grande Hotel stands as an architectural reminder of Mozambique’s colonial past, years of civil war, and the subsequent psychic and physical need for a nation and its citizens to rebuild. The years of struggle had left many Mozambicans homeless, destroyed much of the cities’ infrastructure and littered the countryside with landmines, making cross-country travel life-endangering. By 1992, when the civil war ended, the Grande Hotel was already home to many refugees. It has since grown into one of the largest squatted buildings in the world, comparable in both population and magnitude to the Torre David – an unfinished 45-story skyscraper in Caracas, Venezuela.




Grande Hotel, Beira, Mozambique

Torre David, Caracas, Venezuela

Both buildings emerged from extravagant aspirations tailored to high-income living and have been transformed into spaces that reflect the cities’ poverty, housing shortage and socio-economics. But what else do these spaces say about their inhabitants?

At the Grande Hotel, the living conditions appear, at first glance, deplorable and cramped.  The building no longer resembles a grandiose hotel for visiting VIPs and colonial elites, but rather an impoverished structure – a slum – that is now home to some 750 families, or roughly 2500 inhabitants. Anabela Saint Maurice’s documentary film, Grande Hotel, features Maria Pinto Sa, a Portuguese-Mozambican actress and artist, who shares her memories and current impressions of the Grande Hotel. Driving by the hotel, she remarks, “They say this is a den full of bandits, policemen, prostitutes, thieves, that’s who lives there now.”

This strikes me as being a rather limited perspective, based, perhaps, out of a fear that emerges from the act of peering in. There are, however, ample articles on the Grande Hotel, which paint a picture of an uninhabitable slum, where rats and insects scurry through the play-space of children. There is no water, no electricity, crime does occur (most of the building’s valuable materials have been stripped and sold), and the concept of privacy has an entirely different meaning here.  Moreover, the inhabitants face real risks to their health and safety.

But I can’t imagine that this village could survive -- that the human spirit could survive -- if all aspects of the Grande Hotel were as broken down as its structure. Is the Grande Hotel a den of crime and banditry? Or is it a place where resilience can still be found in abundance despite the poverty and accompanying health and social issues? This is, after all, a place where many family homes have been passed down for generations and most inhabitants have lived there for more than a decade. According to the cultural theorist Madan Sarup, “It is usually assumed that a sense of place, of belonging, gives a person stability. But what makes a place a home?”

The film offers a glimpse into the lives within this concrete village, as mayor Daviz Shimango chats with the community: Kita Joao talks about her children and husband’s job as a driver; a young man describes a common obstacle (no start-up cash) to starting a business; John Usseng and his wife illustrate the outcome of their ingenuity, having earned enough money from odd jobs that they are able to afford electricity. They also show soap operas from time to time, charging their neighbours a small fee for the service.
Other sources  describe the informal organisational structure governing the Grande Hotel, stating that:

“As in any occupied house [the Grande Hotel] has its living and organizational rules. There, the following representatives rule: the unity secretary and the secretary of the hallway, block and floor who meet up to solve the residents’ problems, and to conduct the residents’ court in one of the hotel’s former suites. There, discussions concerning who is more entitled to housing (a woman with children has the upper hand), or about who is throwing dirty water onto someone else’s balcony, take place. There are two fundamental rules: ‘keep the cleanliness and the respect’. The cleaning is maintained by nominating shifts; as for the respect, is has to be kept by everyone. ‘There have been cases of abuse and rape, and the people who perpetrated these actions were kicked out’, our host [Senhor Joao, Unity Secretary] tell us with a determined tone.”  (Source)
It seems that despite the substantial stressors the community faces – or rather because of these stressors -- adaptability, sociability and diplomacy are key, and extend outside of the building to relationships with police and neighbours. Neighbours are viewed as “utterly indispensable” for recycled water, help in an emergency (e.g. a ride to the hospital), or pirated electricity, for example. Inside the building, there is a mosque, church, government sponsored classes for children, and small-scale markets amongst other informal amenities that have developed. (Source)

In many ways, it seems like life as usual.  I found a quote from a 20-year-old dweller named Paito who has lived at the Grande Hotel his entire life. He has an expected attachment to his home and says, “The situation is extremely bad, but a person gets used to it. Only when someone from the outside comes here, are we reminded of the inhumane conditions we live in.” (Source)

Returning to the documentary film, John Usseng draws attention to the dilemma facing the inhabitants of the Grande Hotel, the government and the international community. Housing is unattainable for most citizens of Beira and the government cannot afford to repair the Grande Hotel or provide alternative housing for its tenants. Usseng says, “If the government or international community can’t resolve this, people will have to leave gradually. People who don’t manage to get out of here will surely end up dying here.” Similarly, Lotte Stoop’s documentary, also called Grande Hotel, conveys a sense of being trapped: Wanting to leave, but having very little resources to do so; being forced to stay knowing the situation, the building itself, will likely decline further. In light of this dilemma – what seems to be an impossible situation -- the inhabitants cope and continue to construct their lives within the crumbling walls of the Grande Hotel.

References & thought-provoking links…
On the Grande Hotel:
On squatting:


Jolene Pozniak

No comments:

Post a Comment