Things are still going well during my time of Community Entry. There are a lot of different things to
adjust to even from Pre-Service Training. You go from having every second of your day planned to nothing at all. It is nice having more control over what you do, but it is a big adjustment. Especially because if frequent experiences with “Zam Time”.
Zam Time is what us volunteers call scheduling/timing (just time in general) in Zambia. This is definitely a cultural divide. Coming to Zambia I didn’t think I would care about this part of the culture because I’m pretty relaxed about time and can never seem to keep it. Surprisingly, it has bugged me. You set a meeting and people might show up an hour or two late for it, or you plan something out and it get canceled. Buses or drivers don’t show up on time to take you somewhere important. The Zambians don’t seem to mind, they just wait patiently. I think because so many things are done by hand, everything just takes so much longer to do, and time is not kept. Also, many people don’t have clocks. Some have phones, but they are the old brick phones where you have to go in and set the time yourself. People here often use the sun to help tell the time. My host father will look up in the sky point to the sun and be like “it’s 11:37”. I’m not sure why he always picks such an exact time … but he’s usually off.
A couple weeks ago I had a meeting with people on the schools committee, the meeting was supposed to be at 10. At 1 the meeting finally started with only half the committee present. The Zambians were totally unfazed, but I was hangry and tired and it took all my composure not to lose it. I don’t want to look like the crazy American lady just a couple months into my service, I’ll save that for later.
During training, we went to a museum where they had a Zambian professor talk about its history and culture. She described how Zambians view time like this: Zambia lives in a culture where time is seen as fluid. Because time is seen this way time can never be lost, there will always be more time. In America we live in a culture where time is fixed. Time can be seen as lost so it has more of a value put on it (the whole time is money thing). I thought this was an interesting way of describing the culture differences. It would explain why the Zambians are so patient when it comes to other people being late. I could probably work on that myself. I do think it’s a really pretty way of thinking about time.
I think one of the big contributors to Zam Time is that the Zambian culture is very polite and hospitable. Greetings are very important to Zambians. Walking along a path if you see someone you greet them, usually in several different ways. “Muli shani” is the standard “how are you”, then you can go further into greetings. How is your morning: mwashibuka shani. How is work: mwabomba shani. You can turn just about any action into a greeting. When biking you have more of a pass and can just do a quick hello. When you’re walking you are expected to stop, and talk, especially if you know the person.
Zambia has 72 different chiefdoms each with its own dialects. So across the country how you greet people is slightly different. Where I am is the Lala dialect which is part of the Bemba language so we greet people basically the same as the Bemba’s.
In Lala land when saying greetings males usually put their right hand over their heart and give a nod. Women usually do a soft clap (palms facing parallel to the ground) and do a little bend/curtesy. These are not always excluded to male/females often times people do both followed by a handshake. To show respect while you shake someone’s hand, you hold the elbow and give a little knee bend.
Another show of Zambian hospitality is if your stop by someone’s house they usually always offer you something to eat or to take home with you. The other week after I was helping a farming with site selection for fish ponds he gave me 4 heads of cabbage and about 20 “orange” (they taste more like lemons in my village, very sour). I always share these with my host father out of respect for helping with translation and it’s just way to much to eat. If you’re offered something to eat, you always have to say yes. Hints why people always being late. There has been times when I say “I should be going now” only to get protest saying I have to eat with them.
I always find this very heartwarming. People have to work so hard to grow/cook their food and often times they don’t have enough, yet they still share with me. 

