The Ukimwi Road: From Kenya to Zimbabwe

by Dervla Murphy

Paper Book, 1993

Status

Available

Call number

916

Publication

John Murray Publishers Ltd (1993), Edition: 1st ed, 228 pages

Description

In January 1992, Dervla Murphy prescribed herself several carefree months and embarked on a cycle tour (pedalling and pushing) from Kenya to Zimbabwe via Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi and Zambia on the cyclist's equivalent of a Rolls Royce called Lear. Before long, she realized that for travellers who wish to remain stress-free, Africa is the wrong continent. Inevitably she was caught up in the harrowing problems of the peoples she met; the devastating effects of AIDS (ukimwi is Swahili for AIDS), drought and economic collapse; scepticism about Western aid schemes; and corruption and incompetence, both white and black.

User reviews

LibraryThing member nandadevi
What to make of a trans-continental cyclist who apparently knows almost nothing about bicycle maintenance? Or of a 60 year old Irish woman who at times seems to measure her progress in beers consumed rather than miles? Dervla Murphy, famous for riding just about everywhere in this instance rides
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into a world of poverty, disease, ignorance and every now and then hospitality - although less than you might imagine. The Ukimwi road is the AIDS road, transmitted by truck-drivers and prostitutes. Murphy, who rides with no agenda, is frequently mistaken for an AIDS researcher and accused of withholding the knowledge of a cure of a disease that white people introduced in order to wipe out the Africans.

There's very little pleasure in this journey - the pain of the saddle, the bug infestations, the ignorance and the disease wear at the reader as much as at the rider. You wonder why she does it, but Dervla Murphy has two things going for her, the stoicism that came from an extraordinary upbringing, and the knowledge that a bicycle will take you to a place - along a road - that no other form of transport (except perhaps walking) will allow. The Ukimwi road is a real place, but very few Europeans would ever know it as Dervla Murphy has. Through her we have a glimpse of it, in all it's disturbing pestilence and hopelessness. There's no uplifting conclusion to the story, and very few bright points along the way. The best that could be said - and perhaps this is a lot - is that somehow life goes on.
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LibraryThing member danoomistmatiste
Accounts of the author's travels through Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi and Zambia in the mid 90s. One constant theme is the ever increasing poverty and the devastation of the AIDS epidemic that has wiped out entire families.
LibraryThing member kaitanya64
Murphy takes this bike ride across Africa when she is sixty years old, certainly an inspiration. This book also seems a little more thoughtful and less given to large generalizations about people and cultures than the other book I read by her, Cameroon with Egbert. A good travel/mild adventure book.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

228 p.; 9.21 inches

ISBN

0719552508 / 9780719552502
Page: 0.9411 seconds