1. woww that is really interesting !!
    great history !!
    Any pics ??
  2. Originally posted by MacStripey[..]

    my dad was hired as railroad engineer to build new railroads in Algeria and Burkina Faso (former Haute Volta). So my parents, my brother and me moved there. While he worked, my brother and me went to school there. Part French, part German schools. Good times, looking back. Swimming in the sea with our dogs. Learning judo from a big at least seven feet tall black trainer who always made me laugh as a kid, the scents and images I memorized...learning from the poorest of the poor that money or possessions don't make a person, it's love and kindness and tolerance, they taught me that and they lived it....all that.
    And travelling the Sahara took place over a period of 2 months, with our caravan and friends with theirs, crossing some country borders, experiencing the most incredible sandstorms, seeing so many stars in the night sky you can't even begin to count, meeting Tuareg and all... yeah. that was that




    You no doubt have an amazing story

    I'm sitting here trying to get tickets to Bruce if any would like to magically appear?


  3. absolutely. we're still rock'n'roll and already wise enough to live it to the fullest
  4. Amazing story Kirsten Its worth a book
  5. YYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEESS

  6. Such a LIFE experience, Kirsten worth to write down, and to give us to read after
  7. How can someone hate Bono after that





  8. as it happens, I'm working my way through hundreds and hundreds of dias (this sort of thing), as all those old photos my parents made in the 80s are stored like that. I'm scanning them in one box after another to save them digitally.
    I'll put some up when I get to it. Maybe in a few minutes
  9. just random.

    this was our caravan, the one in front, the greenish colorful one.with that we travelled through the Sahara desert. I was 7 or 8 back then


    sitting on the edge of Gardaja looking out into the desert




    the very young me at said judo training. you can't miss the only blonde kid here


    this is A., the man who looked after us kids during our time in Burkina Faso. he did the cooking and everything else. He was a great person and we still speak of him with much respect and affection. I wished I could meet him again one day


    African sunset


    like I said, just random
  10. The karate photo is just LEGENDARY hahaha I knew about you having lived in Africa, I just didn't know the whole story was so amazing!! It's worth a book indeed
  11. Damn you heavy cold. Now I'll have to stay home... this day was gonna be fun