
Fri Apr 13
We were picked up again at 8:15 in the morning, and drove back to Amina's house. We filmed her preparing for the day, including good interaction with her mother. Whitney and I were both continually amazed at how at-ease the family acted, not appearing nervous or edgy when we were filming, and friendly towards us when we weren't. After Amina had breakfast, we interviewed the parents separately, asking them to answer a variety of questions related to Amina's daily routine, her effect on the family, and how they perceived Special Olympics involvement as having changed or helped her. I didn't say this in the previous post, but the way we did the interviews (since we don't speak Arabic) was to have Said sit next to the camera and ask the interview questions which fed to him in English. After the response was given, Said would then give an approximate translation towards the microphone, so we could get a rough idea of if the answer was satisfactory. We later planned to go back over the interview in detail with Said, and have him give us an exact translation.
Once the parent's interviews were done, we headed into town for Amina's swimming practice at the facility we'd been at earlier in the week, and got some good footage of her swimming (duh) and interacting with friends and the coach in the pool. At one point I was holding the camera down about 1 ft. above the water to get a good angle, this was a bit scary as a) that was our only video camera, and b) this was the only time we could tape her swimming, but hey, you've got to have some excitement sometime. One mistake I made was that as Amina was about to get out of the pool (and be greeted by her father), I hit the record button thinking I was in standby, but it turned out I stopped recording. We needed her getting out the pool for a transition shot, so we asked her to swim a bit more, and then once she got out, I was sure to be recording.
Once swimming was done, all that was left to do was to interview Amina. We only had a short amount of time as she and her family were leaving for an aunt's house at 2 that day, but we were unable to find someplace quiet enough in the immediate vicinity. It would have taken too long to go back to her house, so we ended up deciding that it was going to be quietest in our hotel room. We moved furniture to set it up, but it worked out OK. I didn't like the fact that we couldn't portray her in a setting that said "Morocco", but we had to go with what we had. Amina did pretty well and sat still while being interviewed, but as a result of her disability, she would just go blank when we asked her questions related to how she felt about something. Her responses were also short and not usually in complete sentences the first time, so there was a bunch of coaching and repeating Said and Amina's father had to do to get her to give us usable answers. We'll just have to use the other 3 interviews a good deal.
After that was finished, the we said goodbye to the family, and then Mr. Attar took us to his house for a lunch of couscous, made slightly differently than the stuff we'd had the previous night, with beef instead of lamb. It was certainly just as good, if not better. His house was just as nice as Amina's house, and similar in architecture. We had been asking the previous day regarding how exactly tea was prepared, so he took the time after lunch to bring everything out and prepare it in front of us. That was pretty nice, and now I know how to make green mint tea Moroccan style! Got some nice pics of him doing so, using bounced flash.
We then were driven back to SO headquarters, were Said went in and came back out with windsuit jacket and pants for us, the same that the SO athletes wear to their competitions (inc'l the world games)! This was really cool, as we had commented earlier in the week how it'd be nice to have one, but we didn't think they'd do anything about that, cause we're not athletes, right? They're mostly read, with green accents, and say MOROCCO on the back. We've already made plans to wear them to class when we get back.
We took some pics in front of the building with Said and us in the jackets. Then back to the hotel around 6, where we worked on capturing some of the interview footage. Went back into town around 8:30, just to experience the market once more, and just walked around for a while. Took the 50mm 1.4, got some nice low-light pics. It's certainly hard to take pictures here, not just because of security, but just the people are distrustful in general. I can understand it -- how would you react if some foreign folks were walking around your supermarket -- 'wow, look at those great colors!' or 'those repeating shapes could make a cool picture' or let me take a pic of the guy who sliced our lunch meat!'? Back to the room around 10:30.



