Monday, February 7, 2011

Mozambique: Former luxury hotel home to thousands of squatters

Welcome to true Africa - where nothing is looked after and everything is destroyed. The Grande Hotel, in Beira, Mozambique was abandoned by its owners in the 60's and since then it's been converted into a luxurious squatter camp. A Belgian filmmaker is using the hotel as a subject of a movie and says that it's the perfect social housing project. Wonder when she'll be moving in? This is a timely article for me as earlier today I was wondering if there are any White-run countries in the world where the Whites live in squalor (apart from the White squatter camps that have sprung up in South Africa)? Can someone help me out? Why is it always the Blacks and other third world races who manage to turn once thriving cities into squatter camps? Think of Detroit in the USA; most of South Africa; Zimbabwe and any other Black run African country. They never build up. Is it too difficult for them to better themselves or am I missing something???

before
Before
It's the hotel where many guests have lived all their lives and some may never check out.
Once one of the most luxurious hotels in southern Africa, the Grande Hotel, in Beira, Mozambique, was abandoned by its original owners five decades ago.

It's now home to between 2,000 and 3,000 people who live in squalid conditions, without running water or electricity. Yet for these people the crumbling building is a self-contained community where they sleep, eat and work.

The once-luxurious lodging is the subject of a movie by Belgian filmmaker Lotte Stoops, which has just had its world premiere at the Rotterdam Film Festival.

Stoops stayed near the Grande Hotel during a month-long trip to Mozambique six years ago and was fascinated by what she saw.

"It was like a village within a village," she said. "It looked like the perfect social housing project."

Stoops returned to Beira two years ago to begin making her first documentary-length film, titled "Grande Hotel."

Officially opened in 1955, when Mozambique was still a Portuguese colony, the Grande closed its doors as a working hotel in the mid 60s.

By 1992, when the country's 16-year civil war ended, the building was accommodating refugees from all over Mozambique.

after
After
There were originally 110 guest rooms, but Stoops says every bit of space in the building is now used as a living area.

"The telephone booths have been cut off and made into a room, the corridor is a room," said Stoops, who estimates there are currently about 350 families living there.

There is little inside the hotel to hint at its former splendor. Glass has been taken from its windows and sold, while wood from the interior has been used to build fires, said Stoops.

Some of the building's original squatters have claimed rooms as their own and now act as landlords, letting them to others.

Although there is no electricity, running water or sewage system, the residents are expert improvisers. Some access electricity by connecting to external cables, while one or two have solar panels, said Gamariel. The hotel's outdoor swimming pool is now used to wash laundry, while the pool changing room is used as a mosque.

Despite the best efforts of its residents, it's a difficult place to live.

Piles of rubbish fill the building with a pungent smell and attract rats, said Gamariel. Trees grow from the roof of the hotel, their roots penetrating the top floors, causing alarming cracks to develop in the walls. And while Gamariel said it was safe to visit during the day, he advised against going at night.

Stoops has said that the movie is her "attempt at understanding the inner life of a proud shell," and that she wanted to tell the stories of the hotel's residents.

"There were stories of murders," she said. "But I also wanted to show the positive parts and focus on the survival stories."

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