Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Life

Love letters and tax returns: Bolivia’s sidewalk scribes prefer typewriters

Dressed in a suit, a feather in his hat, Rogelio Condori sits bent over a small table on a sidewalk in La Paz, tapping on a typewriter with his index fingers.

Rogelio Condori uses a typewriter on the street in La Paz, Bolivia to fill out paperwork for clients
Rogelio Condori uses a typewriter on the street in La Paz, Bolivia to fill out paperwork for clients - Copyright AFP ELVIS BARUKCIC
Rogelio Condori uses a typewriter on the street in La Paz, Bolivia to fill out paperwork for clients - Copyright AFP ELVIS BARUKCIC
Martín SILVA

Dressed in a suit, a feather in his hat, Rogelio Condori sits bent over a small table on a sidewalk in La Paz, tapping on a typewriter with his index fingers.

As clients line up by his desk, which is perched at an angle, 61-year-old Condori fills out a tax form here, a divorce application there, on his Brother Deluxe 1350 vintage typewriter in the Bolivian capital.

For a fee of up to seven bolivianos (about $1) per page, “we handle everything related to national taxes,” he told AFP with obvious pride from behind a full-face plastic mask.

Condori and his colleagues also dole out what advice they can.

“We can’t complain,” he said of his livelihood, which covers “the bread of the day” in a poor country with a minimum monthly wage of about $320.

Condori competes with nine other typewriter scribes on the same street, but said he has regular clients.

In Bolivia, much administrative paperwork is unavailable online and must instead be submitted in typed form.

About 60 percent of Bolivians have internet access, but connections are often slow.

“I have not had good experiences with accountants and lawyers,” said Lazario Cucho, a 56-year-old farmer who has used Condori’s services.

“And on top of that, they charge a lot.”

– Love letters –

As the sun climbs in the sky, Condori opens an umbrella to cast some shade over his workspace.

He looks up from his work to see a couple, both grim-faced, who have come for help with a divorce form.

Another client wants him to fill out a bank loan application.

“Every now and then, we do love letters,” Condori said, smiling amid the din of traffic and street vendors on the corner that has been his outdoor office for the last 37 years.

Once, a man approached him for help with a souring relationship.

“I wrote: ‘My love… let our years together not be in vain. Please reconsider our situation’,” Condori recounted the letter he composed for the man.

The man “sent the letter and came back a month later to say: ‘Mr Rogelio, we have reconciled thanks to the love letter,'” the typist said.

Condori recently set up an office complete with internet and a computer, but he much prefers his “exciting” sidewalk perch.

“Typewriters are easier to use, and they are fast,” he said.

At 3:00 pm, Condori packs his mobile desk onto a cart, which he pushes to a nearby warehouse where it will stay overnight.

“I think this typewriting thing will continue,” said Condori of his craft.

“They will always come for love letters.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

Tech CEOs are locked in an artificial intelligence "arms race" that risks wiping out humanity, said computer science researcher Stuart Russell.

World

From Donald Trump to Vladimir Putin, no one is safe when Germans celebrate carnival with floats that satirise politicians.

Business

Shares dipped and oil prices dropped back Tuesday as Tehran gave an encouraging response during talks with US officials in Geneva.

Tech & Science

How PCL is using AI to standardize complex project data across large industrial construction builds