Sopocachi is the bohemian area of La Paz, just a short walk
from downtown.It feels a bit like Budapest´s
7th district or Prague´s Vinohrady area has been transplanted high
up in the Andes, mixed with a taste of Greenwich Village.There are interesting places on every street,
plenty of urban art on the walls, and some rather distinctive people walking
around.It is home to quite a number of
social organizations and NGOs, as well as plenty of regular small businesses.During the week it has a pleasant urban buzz
to it, with business being done and people working in offices and shops.At weekends it transforms into much more of a
community, and the feeling is special indeed.
Sopocachi
La Virgen de los Deseos
I am staying in a unique place in Sopocachi.La Virgen de los Deseos is a café restaurant with
a few rooms run by an anarcha-feminist collective, Mujeres Creando (Women Creating).The building is unmistakeable – in the midst
of regular buildings a pink mansion with rather cool artwork on the outside
walls, and various campaigning banners and noticeboards placed around the
property.Inside is similarly full of art (some bearing an uncanny resemblence to my Budapest apartment),
with slogans painted on the wall, campaign posters under glass tabletops, and unusual
sculptures hanging from the ceiling.The
atmosphere is wonderful.Everyone
smiles, everyone talks, everyone is friendly.The collective also runs a justice centre for women, a child care
centre, a bookshop, a safe haven for abused women in the same building, and
carries out spirited campaigns against poverty and discrimination.
"The voice of my desires" - art inside the cafe
Outside, the sun shines brightly on this spring like Saturday.I walk a few blocks to the local market,
stacked full of beautiful vegetables and fruits, humming with activity.Organic and bio shops offer interesting local
products., and I choose some German
bread, smoked trout pate from Lago Titicaca, and a French apple tart for lunch
later.Leaflets advertise concerts,
theatre, music, cinema.Perhaps I´ll go
to one this evening, or maybe a stop in the seductive local wine bar recently
opened by a couple of expat Australians, or the industrial styled Diesel
Nacional bar, complete with lit welding torches and tractor seats.
Illimani presiding over the city
The mix of people on the street includes local residents dressed in western clothes, traditionally dressed
cholitas with colourful shawls and bowler hats, a few obvious expats, and hardly any tourists.No one is rushing.A short walk
away on the Prado I stop at an excellent coffee shop for a mid morning café con
leche and read a few chapters of the The Log from the Sea of Cortez.Walking back the glacier-capped 6000m+ peak
of Illimani pushes through the cityscape, bright and clear in the thin air. Life is good.
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