Labor Day!

Today is Labor Day! ta-dah! and what is happening on Labor Day? Throughout all of the major cities of Morocco, labor protests! which have closed off most of the main streets of said cities. It is really rather fun, especially receiving half a dozen warnings from various government agencies telling us Americans abroad to *please* stay out of it, for gods sake.

But it seems really quite tame, and well organized. I have had a whole week’s worth of warning on the matter, and I am sure the government too has had even longer. Three officers are standing outside the cafe where I am writing just chatting jovially with one another at the moment. Clearly unconcerned that the protesters will do anything more than show their force in numbers.

More Cats...Because they are everywhere! This has nothing to do with Labor Day...

More Cats...Because they are everywhere! This has nothing to do with Labor Day...

anyways, hope all is well!

Posted in Cony Craighead '11, Morocco | Leave a comment

To the North!

For this blog, I’m going the photo journal route… we’ve been in the north of Vietnam for almost a month now, and have seen an incredible amount of scenery and all of its history. Here are some of my favorite photos of this past trip, enjoy!

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This is the Temple of the Moon at the Temple of Literature, the first University in Hanoi. If you have a 50,000 dong bill around, its printed on there as well. Our tour guide was also an American professor working at the Hanoi University, Douglas Jardine, and could not have been more stoked about the history of the temple. I had no idea how excited someone could be about Confucius and architecture. His attitude was infectious, and all of our inner-nerds were happy to come out to play.

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This is emily. Its the first night of the Cambodian new year. She is being attacked with baby powder. On of the girls on our trip, Carol, is Cambodian, and found a group of Cambodian students in Hanoi who were having a celebration of their own. Emily and I tagged along, and did not regret it. It was one of the greatest nights of the trip… there was loud tecno, beer, and, of course, baby powder. I hope that I can introduce this tradition to the US, cause it will surely make any good party into a great one.

Floating Houses

Floating Houses

Douglas Jardine, the professor who took us to the Temple of Literature, also took us to Long Bien Bridge. There is a large community living on an island on the Red River who have been marginalized, and essentially pushed here. There are houses communities which have quite literally been pushed to build their houses on the river, since you cannot a house which isn’t built on land. They have no legal documentation and are therefore have little to no rights in Vietnam . The second time we visited the island, it was the night after a huge storm, and seven of the ten houses had been destroyed. But, when we talked to the people who had lived in those houses, they were nothing but smiles. LIfe is precious, and that was a harrowing reminder. DSCN1282

Some of the most breathtaking scenery on our Vietnam trip (heck, EVER), was at Halong bay. In this photo, we’re going on an adventure to see some of the grottos in the area. They grottos were also used by the Viet Minh during the War with the French. All of the boat drivers were female because they are “lighter and don’t complain if there isn’t enough work.” I wouldn’t complain either if I got to spend my time surrounded by such beauty… DSCN1342

more Halong…

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Our academic director, Thanh, spoiled us and took us to see the Hanoi symphony at the Opera House. I had no idea how much I missed classical music! (Don’t tell Christophe Chagnard that I haven’t played my cello for almost three months!) The opera house was built by the french in the late 1800s, and is quite the building. We saw the “reconciliation concert” where the conductor of the boston symphony came to Hanoi to conduct New World Symphony. Although many members of the audience haven’t gotten the memo on cell phone etiquette, it was a great night; the night was made even better when Ursula (in the audia) was interviewed by the local paper.

Posted in Micaela Cooley '11, Vietnam | Leave a comment

Happy Travels, Part II

Let’s see… Where did I leave off when summarizing my Spring Break adventures? Oh, yes. I think I was just about to start Vienna.

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On our first day in Vienna, after arriving by bus from Prague, checking into our fantastic hostel, and walking around a bit, we found this: a carnival! It’s actually called the Prater, and is a permanent amusement park just across the Danube from most of Vienna. We were able to ride on a roller coaster, and on a ferris wheel, where I got a shot of some of the carnival with Vienna in the background.

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One of my favorite things that we did in Vienna was to visit the Belvedere Palace and Museum. As the name suggests, it is actually a former palace (there are a lot of palaces in Vienna: Hofburg, Schönbrunn, and more) that has been turned into an art museum. It’s neat to look at beautiful art in an equally-beautiful building. My favorite paintings on display were probably by Klimt, Van Gogh, and Monet; most notable was probably Klimt’s “The Kiss”, which is full of amazing colors and texture.

On April 12th, we took a train from Vienna to Munich. The train was so enjoyable and perfectly efficient… a great representation of the German/Austrian rail system!

IMG_8039This is probably my favorite picture from my time in Munich, and captures two of the city’s most iconic sights. It is taken from Alter Peter Kirche (Old Peter Church), and in the foreground you can see Marienplatz and the New Town Hall (including the famous Glockenspiel). In the background is Frauenkirche (Mary’s Church), which was (sort of) saved by the Nazis during World War II because the two towers were such a distinctive landmark to orient planes. In the very, very back (which you can’t really see when the picture is this small) is the Olympic Plaza, where the 1972 Summer Olympics were held. It’s a beautiful city that has done a remarkable job of coming back after the destruction it experienced in World War II.

IMG_8099On Wednesday the 14th, we took the train out to Füssen (about 2 hours), where we took a horse-drawn carriage up to Neuschwanstein castle. It was built by King Ludwig II in 1869, and was actually the castle that inspired the Disneyland/Disneyworld Castle. The building itself was gorgeous, but the surrounding scenery was arguably just as enjoyable… and totally worth the trek on a rainy German day.

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On Thursday, while the Eyjafjallajokull volcano was busy erupting, we took a much more serious trip to Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial Site, just outside of Munich. Dachau was the very first concentration camp to be opened by Hitler, and was one of the few that remained open during the entirety of World War II. This picture is in the bunker, which was where the “worst” of the prisoners were tortured, often until they died or committed suicide. The entire experience at Dachau was one that I cannot really put into words here. All I can say is that, to really experience this dark facet of our world’s history, you must experience a concentration camp on your own. I would encourage any person who is in Germany, Poland, or even France to take time to visit one. It’s not an easy or enjoyable activity, but I think it is necessary to pay homage to those people who died during World War II, and to understand why it is that we must work to prevent this same sort of behaviour in our modern world.

On Thursday night, we took a night train from Munich to Paris. As I mentioned, the volcano had erupted during the day, so although Europe was not in a total state of chaos yet, people were starting to experience flight cancellations, so our train was definitely full. I can’t say that I slept very well on the train, but it’s still neat to say that I rode a night train through Europe!

IMG_8209On our first night, we took advantage of the Louvre’s late opening hours (open until 10:00pm) and free entry for guests under 26-years-old! We were all tired from the not-so-great sleep on the train before, but you can’t pass up free entry to the Louvre on a Friday night! The sheer number of paintings in the museum was overwhelming, and so we really just hit the highlights… including the Mona Lisa (in the background of this pi! I also really enjoyed seeing some of the pieces that we have talked about in my History of Art class.

IMG_8284What would a trip to Paris be without a picture of the Eiffel Tower? Here it is, at nighttime! The tower “sparkles” at the top of every hour, and so this is a picture as we sat underneath it on Saturday evening. We were surrounded by people trying to sell cheap souvenirs, and the smell of overpriced snack food, but it was such a quintessentially Parisian moment!

IMG_8286On our final day in Paris – and our final day on Spring Break – we got groceries to make a picnic in front of Basilique du Sacré-Cœur (in the Montmartre district). The cheese, bread, apples, and wine… plus the sunshine and people watching of Paris made for a perfectly relaxing last day. I was lucky enough to travel with three friends from Edinburgh who couldn’t have been better travel companions!!

On Monday morning (April 19th), we got on the Eurostar from Paris to London, and then another train from London to Edinburgh. Because of the continued travel crisis, the trains were PACKED, but we were able to make it back to Edinburgh without any snafus. It was so good to return to a familiar city, my own bed, and the English language!

Since getting back on April 19th, my life has been admittedly lame. I have two finals to take on May 13th and May 18th, so I’ve been studying (and procrastinating) for those. One month from now, on May 30th, I fly home to Portland. It’s crazy how quickly my time in Scotland has flown by!! I’ll update again soon, since I am going to the Beltane Fire Festival tonight, which should prove to be an adventure. To everyone reading this from Tacoma… Best of luck with the last week of classes, and with all of your finals. I will be returning to Tacoma on June 6th for my summer research with Amanda Mifflin in the Chemistry Department (I was officially given the grant!!), so to my professors and friends spending the summer in Tacoma… I look forward to seeing you then. 🙂

Posted in Alayna Schoblaske '10, Scotland | Leave a comment

Random Thoughts and Plans

Hello My dear Blog Followers!

I know in my last post I promised to continue my English-teaching story, but when I sat down to write about it today, I just couldn’t keep my attention focused. It was an unbearably hot day, the kind of hot where you would really like to just take a nap in the shade, but even there, the heat prevents you from ever really nodding off. I ended up spending the majority of my day hiding in the shadows of my house trying to become intimate friends with the cold cement wall and floor, ha ha ha. Though at my host sister’s suggestion, I did take a scalding shower which rather strangely cooled me off later, though it felt unbearable at the time.

Anyways. This is all to say that my promised blog on teaching English is still to come, but in the mean time, I want to send along a little note updating my life. I am dead center in the middle of my Independent Study Project for the SIT program, and have been interviewing lots of Moroccans/spending a great deal of time reading sociolinguistics papers. Ha ha ha, and now that the majority of my research is actually completed, I am staring down the prospect of writing the whole paper. Which I am happily procrastinating for. Because as the paper deadline approaches, so too does the date of my departure from Morocco, and the friends I have made here. To compromise, I spend my evenings attempting to read and write for the ISP, my mornings are used for sending e-mails home and in general, keeping up to date with the world (ha ha, even if I, er, am not keeping the world up to date with me)  and my days are spent doing random activities I either have not had a chance yet to do (such as visiting the Roman ruins just outside of the city walls), or that I have enjoyed and wish to do a few more times before I leave (walking through the exotic gardens or visiting the culture and arts center).

For example, tomorrow morning I am going to go swimming in the ocean with my sister, as we both agreed that another day of heat like today would simply be suicide to try and sit through. And on Saturday I might venture out with a few friends from the Association where I volunteer and go explore the Moroccan night scene. I have neglected to join any of my American peers for this particular adventure as of yet, feeling that a group of three American girls would just provoke…eh, more interesting nights that I am willing to encourage. However, going with a pack of Moroccan guys I have come to know and love really well, as well as (what seems to be) the only female member of the association, I feel much safer and relaxed. Ha ha, perhaps I question more fundamentally the intentions of my American peers, seeking to go out drinking or clubbing in Morocco, than I do Moroccans seeking to go out and dance with a group of friends.

The ruins of a mosque built on top of the ruins of a Roman city, crowned by African storks; it was great!

The ruins of a mosque built on top of the ruins of a Roman city, crowned by African storks; it was great!

Anyways, this is all to say that second entry on teaching English is yet to come, I have not forgotten it, and I have a dozen other stories that I should be telling, but have not (and if I am honest with myself and my readers, probably won’t, because I am too busy living them!).

Posted in Cony Craighead '11, Morocco | Leave a comment

Happy Travels, Part I

Well, I got back from my 3-week Easter Break vacation on Monday, and it’s taken a few days of down time to really get back into the swing of things. Let me tell you… 24 days of constant walking, sleeping in hostels, re-packing every 3 days, not-so-healthy restaurant food, and a new climate every 3 days really tires you out! But, it was the most amazing experience EVER!

I am not even going to try to recap every moment of my travels because that would take me the rest of my time in Scotland! But will choose one or two of my favorite pictures from each each (London, Rome, Prague, Vienna, Munich, and Paris) and share the related story. Here we go:

IMG_7198We found this Chocolate Festival on the South Bank of London on our first day of exploring. What a wonderful way to start our travels! It was fun to pick out brownies, cupcakes, churros (with chocolate dipping sauce), fudge, and more against the backdrop of London (you could easily see the London Eye from the festival).

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This is the Tower Bridge in London (…and that’s me standing on the boardwalk!). It was definitely tied with the Millennium Bridge for my favorite bridge in London, but it makes a MUCH more impressive photo. I loved how bright the blue color on the bridge was. It was crazy that, walking along the South Bank you could see this, the London Bridge (which is actually quite ugly), Shakespeare’s Globe, St Paul’s Cathedral, Tate Modern, Big Ben/Parliament/Westminster, and more!

We flew to Rome on March 30th, and spent a week there. Because our only two flights (London to Rome, and Rome to Prague) were well before the volcanic eruption in Iceland, our travel plans were not affected by the ash. The trains that we rode after the eruption, though, were packed!

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Our hostel in Rome was about 5 minutes from the Colosseum, so we walked past it every day. My favorite part of Rome was probably all of the history. For example, the Colosseum was built around 70 AD (or CE, depending on which convention you use), and this is considered relatively ‘new’ for Roman architecture. Amazing, huh?

IMG_7600This is the Trevi Fountain. Legend has it that, if you toss a coin into the fountain, you will return to Rome. Of course, I threw a few of my Euro cents in! The Romans loved to build fountains to showcase their ability to bring water into the city via aqueducts.

IMG_7628I was in Rome during Holy Week, which meant that the crowds were VERY large… but it also meant that I was able to attend Easter Mass at the Vatican (in St Peter’s Square). It was, unfortunately, raining the entire time, but I kept reminding myself that this was an incredible once-in-a-lifetime experience, and the Mass itself was great.

IMG_7503We took a couple of day trips outside of Rome, too. The first was to Orvieto, which is a beautiful hilltop village. The scenery is amazing, and this Duomo (cathedral) was one of the coolest churches I saw during my whole trip. I loved the striped stone effect, and every detail was so very intricate.

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This is Tivoli, another small city outside of Rome. We visited Villa D’Este, which is a beautiful garden… it also happens to be where some scenes of “The Lizzy McGuire Movie” were filmed. Yes, I know, I’m ashamed to admit that I have indeed seen the movie. 🙂

A week later, on April 6th, we flew to Prague on a cheap airline, Wizz Air. The experience was actually great, though, since we got randomly placed in the Emergency Exit row!

IMG_7730This is the view that we got after climbing up a clock tower just off of Old Town Square in Prague. It was probably my favorite city of the whole trip, and I hope that you can see why in this picture. It was charming, beautiful, old, and the weather was fantastic!!

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Sorry if this weirds anyone out… but we took a quick trip from Prague (on the train) to Kutna Hora. It is home to an ossuary, which is a cemetery where the bones of the people buried there are used to decorate the church. In this case, all of the bones belonged to monks. This chandelier actually includes every bone of the human body!

On April 9th, we rode a bus from Prague to Vienna. The landscape on the bus ride was surprisingly like that of the Pacific Northwest! Sometimes, I thought I was actually driving on I-5 instead of on whatever Czech highway we were actually on. 🙂

The blogging software is being picky about uploading photos right now, so I will continue with Vienna, Munich and Paris a little bit later today. Until then, I hope you enjoy the pictures I have shared so far.

Posted in Alayna Schoblaske '10, Scotland | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

War Remnants

There seems to be this very large, war shaped elephant in the room when I talk about my experience in Vietnam. For many Americans, Vietnam is imbedded in our collective memory as the war and not a people, country, or culture. Vietnam will often conjure up black and white photographs from “LIFE” magazine, or from the dozens of Hollywood movies America seems to love. What is tragic to me is how these movies hardly portray Vietnam, but instead the American experience in Vietnam. We are still left with a hollow space of what Vietnam really is.

If it looks like I have been avoiding the war in my blogs, I don’t think that’s the case. To be completely honest, a lot of the Vietnamese people we interact with don’t talk about the war, even when asked. Part of the reason is because most of the people we interact with are under the age of 35, and that’s 60% of the population. But, we’ve also been told that the Vietnamese would rather look forward into a bright future, and not into a painful past. Even our academic director will often skirt around the war believing that it’s not something any of us really want to remember. The truth is that we still have a lot of processing to do about the war. Even though my generation still hasn’t been directly effected by it, the war really tore apart the social fabric of America and has left a dark memory in our collective conscious.

It’s important to remember that the American and French Wars have been remembered in completely different ways for Americans and Vietnamese. First of all, I’ve gotten myself into the habit of calling the “American War” or the “War with America” since its how the Vietnamese refer to it. Whereas I look back at the American War as a time of tremendous pain and loss and still have so much to heal from it, many Vietnamese remember it for the much-needed independence they fought for.  As absolutely destructive and terrible the war was to Vietnam, they “won.” I say “won” because no country should ever have to endure what Vietnam did to gain their Independence.

There is one particular day that I think best exemplifies the American experience in modern day Vietnam. In Danang, we visited Danang Association for Victims of Agent Orange (DAVA) and their center for children who have birth defects related to the effects of Agent Orange. Agent Orange was a chemical used by the American military to burn the foliage around suspected VC hideouts. The chemical, which was produced by companies such as Dow Chemical (to view a brief statement of their position read http://www.dow.com/commitments/debates/agentorange/), caused more damage than anyone had ever anticipated. There is extensive evidence that the dioxin in Agent Orange that leaked into the soil and water has caused major birth defects, both mental and physical, and continues to be a major problem. Both the companies which supplied the chemical as well as the US government have taken little responsibility. This is largely because there hasn’t been any significant research on Agent Orange until recently. However, as painful and seemingly endless as this situation is for Vietnamese, the children and staff of DAVA were some of the happiest, warmest people I have been around. I felt no resentment, no frustration—only gratitude and open hearts. They deserve so much more than they have been given, and I certainly hope that the US government as well as the chemical companies own up to their grave mistake. But in the mean-time, I was blessed with a lesson that I will never forget in forgiveness and living joyfully.

war remnants

war remnants

Posted in Micaela Cooley '11, Vietnam | Leave a comment

Tangier to Marrakech

Part I of my trip to Morocco and Portugal

I must say, it was a very sandy trip.  If you were to empty my backpack after my return, you would find sand from the Sahara, the Algarve (Portugal), and the endlessly flat beaches in Tangier.  Sand in my socks, sand in my shirts, sand in my shampoo.  I took a little bit (by accident) from each place I visited, coming home to Granada with a sandy mix of Morocco and Portugal, safely stowed in every article of clothing that I brought.

Two of my goals when I came to Spain were to visit Morocco and Portugal–check, check. In eleven days I went to two continents, three countries and ten cities.  Yes, I will shamelessly use the line ¨trip of a lifetime¨here because, well, it was. For goodness sake I saw camels sleeping on the beach in Tangier, I stayed in a Berber camp in the Sahara, I walked along a never-ending coastline in Portugal that was so peaceful I expected to  come upon the Pearly White gates.  So, I guess one could say that I had, you know, an okay time.

Where do I even begin? Shall we do this chronologically?  That means we must start in Granada, where I met my friend Jake who flew in from Milan, Italy where he is currently studying abroad.  We caught a bus from Granada to Algeciras, a port town in the south of Spain.  We were there for less than ten hours, just long enough to find our hostel, find a bar, and catch a ferry the next morning to Tangier.

To me, the ferry from Algeciras to Tangier signified an interesting passage from affluent Europe to Africa which is, in some places, less than fifteen kilometers away.  On the ferry there was a mix of travelers, europeans, Moroccans, children, mothers, and grandfathers, all speaking either French, Spanish, English or Arabic.  (I´m sure other languages were represented as well but those are the ones that I heard.)  We were all leaving and arriving together, but for so many different reasons.  The ferry ride is a beautiful crossing of  the Mediterranean, from one world to another with the diversity of so many on a single boat.

The first thing Jake and I did when we arrived in Tangier (after we shed ourselves of the persistent ¨tour guide¨who insisted on showing us around the city) was have the most amazing meal of our entire Moroccan experience.  We sat atop the roof of a restaurant where we looked at the remarkable contrast between the stunning Tangier coast and the diry, stacked city, with its countless satellite dishes perched on the roofs of nearly every building, like baby birds waiting to be fed.

We knew we wanted couscous.  We didn´t see it on the menu, but all we had to do was say ¨couscous?¨ and the server took it from there.  An older gentleman, our waiter climbed about six flights of steep and spiralling stairs to brings us the biggest plate of couscous I had ever seen.  It was like a treasure hunt as we dug through it finding chicken and and array of different veggies hidden in the pile (or shall I use the word ¨mountain¨?) of couscous.  (Oh no.  I need to stop writing about this.  Right now I´m in my room in Granada and I can hear my Señora cooking dinner and if I muse over this amazing meal any longer I just won´t be able to eat the chicken noodle soup that we have every night).  Let´s just say that our first meal in Morocco is representative of the rest of the trip: a surprising, delicious and exciting exploration.

Suggested Soundtrack before continuing: ¨Marrakech Express¨ by Crosby, Stills and Nash.  Go ahead, type it into YouTube or play it on your iTunes if you have it.

We took the overnight train from Tangier to Marrakech and who knew that being on a train for ten hours could actually be so fun? We boarded the train around 10:00 p.m. and arrived in Marrakech at 8:00 the next morning. I shared a couchette with four other women, one of whom had a little daughter named Wiram.  Wiram taught me the French names of different animals and drew pictures of her house in my journal while the train vibrated along the tracks beneath us.

Eventually we went to sleep to the soothing movement of the train rocking us in our small beds as we cut through the desert.  I drifted off so content in my dreams, knowing that when I awoke i would be in the red city of Marrakech, somewhere unlike any place I had ever been.

Our hostel was situated within the Medina, the old part of the city that is surrounded by a wall, red like the earth with which it was built.  The Medina sits under the watchful eye of a Mosque, whose tall minaret gazes down on the city like a pine tree might watch  the shrubbery below.  Five times each day the prayer is anounced, and one can hear the voice of the announcer echoe  throughout every part of the Medina.

When we arrived in Marrakech that morning, the huge open market in the center of the Medina was bustling with a fair number of people, but at this hour there weren´t too many dried fruit stands, mopeds, or monkies on leashes.  Jake and I had no idea how the night transformed this plaza.

We settled into our beautiful hostel, and before heading out to get lost in the complicated streets of the Medina, Jake and I relaxed on the terrace of our hostel, chatting with the owner, a younger woman from the UK named Francesca, who had moved to Morocco two years ago to be with her husband Abdullah.  We listened to her explain th ecity and suggest places to visist, as th esounds of the city hummed in the background.  If you stood on your tip toes you could look across the satellite dishes and crowded rooftops and into the market place that grew busier and louder as the day went on.

We drank cups of tea that tasted like liquid candy with mint leaves swimming like Beta fish inside the glasses.  While we sat on the terrace, Echo, a local magician, musician and entertainer (a man of many talents) made us traditional Berber coffee.  He stood there for 20 minutes or more mixing, and whipping what looked like peanut butter, when he finally scraped it into a cup and poured warm milk into the curious mixture.  I had my doubts.  Coffee the consistency of peanut butter? I´ve definitely heard of more appetizing things.  But, as you can probably guess it turned out to be some of the greatest cofee I´d ever tatsed.  It was sweet, and latte-like, and smoothe in the way that coffee should be, not at all peanut buttery!  I couldn´t get enough of this peanut butter-looking, coffee-tasting goodness.  I could have sat up on that terrace for hours drinking that Berber coffee.  But alas, there was the rest of Marrakech to explore and I couldn´t well justify spending the entire afternoon on the terrace sipping coffee.

Echo invited Jake and I to his house where we were able to indulge in our respective passions: music and children.  Jake and Echo played the drums while I played with Echo´s eight month old sister.  She bobbed along to the rhythm of the drums as she attempted to yank out my hair with her remarkably strong miniature hands.

The house was located just off the main streets in the Medina. When we entered we greeted the women who were cooking in the kitchen, removed our shoes and went past what seemed to be the dining/livingroom and into another part of the house.

The house was crowded, but comfortable.  When I say comfortable I mean comfortable in the physical but also in the intangible sense.  There were large pillows sprawled on the floor that were, in fact, very comfortable.  But more importantly I felt comfortable being in the house as a guest, as a foreigner, and as an absolute stranger.  I had no way of conversing with anyone (Echo spoke French, so he and Jake could talk, but the women only spoke Arabic).  When they served us lunch I did my best to ¨look¨as grateful as possible, which pretty much consisted of over-smiling constantly.  They pushed us to eat more olives, more bread and continued to refill our cups with the sinfully delicious and beautiful Moroccan tea.  (Let me just explain why I say that the tea was beautiful: as some of you know, I love leaves.  I have been known to crawl around in them during Fall, or to stop mid sentence, or mid stride to croon over a particular leaf.  The way the mint leaves floated in the tea, limp but brilliantly green was, however mundane it may seem, beautiful to a leaf-lover.  Cheesey, nerdy, but so very true.)

We sat on the (comfotable ) pillows around a plastic table while the baby nursed, and we ate.  The door to the home opened and closed as a little girl of about seven ran in and out.  Each opening of the door brought something new.  Sometimes a donkey would be pearing inside, and other times it was just the little girl, running in with newly bought candy to give Jake and me. One opening of th edoor brought an old man, clad in what many Moroccan men wear: a tactful robe and a round cap. No, not a bath robe, a nice robe.  One that you might expect Dumbledore to wear.  This man was, as Echo informed us, a man of few words.  He sat next to me, and I felt a sort of tranquility as you might feel, again, if Dumbledore were to sit down next to you: calm, but in the presence of great power.  Not threatening power, rather the power of knowledge.  I hardly exchanged one word with this man (at least as far as I know), but I could tell that he understood.  Understood what? you may ask.  Honestly, I´m not sure what, but it was something important.  Here, I could throw in words like ¨life¨, ¨love¨, ¨peace¨or ¨self¨, in an attempt to describe this man´s deep and inmeasurable understanding but those would just be inadequate and superficial guesses.  So I won´t use those words.  I won´t use any words, in fact, to help you or me understand this man´s understanding. Okay, let´s just say, he´s got it down.  A real-life Dumbledore, if you will.

We left this comfortable home and I gave my ¨thank-you-so-much-for-hosting-us-and-feeding-us-and-being-so-hospitable¨look as clearly and forcefully as I could.  The little girl leaped into my arms, giving Jake and me good-bye kisses on the cheek (she may have bruised my face with her enthusiasm) and we spent the rest of the day smelling rare spices, trying on Moroccan dresses (Not Jake, just me. And not by choice, but by the insistence of the shopkeeper), nearly being mauled by mopeds, and simply getting lost in the streets of the Medina.

Note: Given that we are only on day two of my journey, I will have to write about this trip in parts.  Stay tuned for the rest, I promise it will come shortly! Thank you for reading.

Posted in Mikayla Hafner '11, Spain | Leave a comment

Teaching English as A Second Language, Part I: next week…

So this blog will be a bit of a revelation to my audience, a little secret that I have kept brewing on the back burner in all of my notes home. I have been teaching English two nights a week in the adjoining city of Sale, across the river from Rabat. I wanted to save this story for when I would have something substantial to say for it, and now I realize I have far too many things to say. It has been one of the most rewarding and unique experiences for me here in Morocco, and has provided me with an understanding of life here in a way that I know I could not have otherwise have accomplished. For this reason, I have decided to divide my little blog into two parts. This first entry is of how I got myself into volunteering. The second blog (hopefully, if all goes to plan) will detail some of the ups and downs of actually doing so.

During orientation week here in Morocco, waaaaay back the first week of February, I ran into a little hand-written note tacked to the CCCL’s notice board. The small, indifferent piece of paper politely called out for a female volunteer to teach English to a group of women a few days a week at the German cultural center here in Rabat. I thought to myself, well, this could be interesting. So I wrote down the e-mail and resolved to look it up. I have already given some thought to the idea of teaching English as a second language as a possible break before perusing more academics or a career after college. If nothing else, going out two nights a week to teach English would give me an opportunity to talk to and befriend Moroccans outside of my activities with the CCCL and my home-stay family.

I sent off my first e-mail politely requesting a bit more information, such as how many students, what level of English, their expectations for myself, and how I would be expected to organize the sessions, etc. I really have no idea how to teach, and English of all things is not particularly my strong point (my parents might remember my spelling tests from grade school).  This all being said, the fact remains that I am a native speaker, and for that fact alone I am in some ways over-qualified to some eyes. I don’t know about that so much, but, if nothing else I would be a volunteer, and whatever I can give is a plus, I suppose.

Anyways. I sent off my e-mail, spent a week going through orientation (and being sick, etc) when I receive my first reply. The e-mail I had been directed towards was actually one of the secretaries at the CCCL. Turns out the position I had seen advertised had long since been filled up, and unfortunately no one had bothered to take down the sign just yet. However, if I was still interested, there were dozens of other organizations looking for English volunteers, and if I was still interested, I could work with any number of them. Of course I was still interested!

I promptly replied, and again, waited another week for a reply. There was an organization based in Sale (across the river, as I said before. you can Googlemaps it and see for yourself. It is kind of the poorer stepsister of Rabat) that was very interested in having a volunteer, if I didn’t mind the commute. Sure. But I really wanted my initial questions answered still, about what I should expect, what they should expect. These questions, however, were for the most part  waved aside with the promise of a meeting in a weeks time to be able to sit down and ask any questions more directly with members from the association.

Ok, sounds good. Where? What time?

O, how about we meet at the CCCL library at noon next week?

(Has anyone noticed, every development seems to happen next week? Anyone? Or am I just crazy?)

So next week I skip lunch (always at noon) and come to the library to meet the association members, ask questions, etc. However, this is now getting into the fourth week of my time here in Morocco. I am beginning to settle into a pattern of life that I am not yet so comfortable in that I want to start disrupting it suddenly. Further, some culture shock, bureaucratic frustrations and a general consensus of homesickness has been settling on my peers and myself. Do I really want to add teaching English now on to my pile of worries? I am having more and more doubts, somewhat increased by the fact that I don’t seem to ever get a strait answer regarding what exactly I would be doing! However, I go to the meeting. Never turn down opportunities, even if you really don’t think you will take them up.

I arrive at the library and find myself face to face with the very same secretary I have been corresponding with the entire time. She sat me down at a table and began to reiterate everything she had told me in the e-mails, fully confident in my abilities, enthusiasm, and capacity to teach. Further, she spoke as though the arrangement was already set in stone, telling me that I could begin teaching that Friday, and that someone from the association would come pick me up at the CCCL to show me how to get there the first time.

Woah woah woah slow down! First off, I am not nearly so confident about this as myself. Second of all, where are these association members? I really feel I need answers to my questions before I launch into this blindly, and I was told that I could meet them today.

O they are great guys, you will get along with them fine! It will be great!

I’m sure they are great guys, but really. I don’t want to be wasting anyone’s time floundering around muddying the English language for these individuals who sincerely want to learn it. I need to be able to prepare myself, and so far, I have no idea how to do so.

It will be fine, there is another American there also volunteering.

Really? Well can I have this american’s number or e-mail, and maybe shoot off some of my questions to them? (Because really, this is getting ridiculous, a whole month of dialogue which just completely ignores all and any of my requests for information, never addressing once my own concerns, ah! Culture shock! Ah! Home-sickness! I really don’t know if I want to do this anymore!)

Ah, well, I am sorry, but I don’t have any of that information. But the guys from the association do!

That’s great. When can I meet them, since they seem to be the only ones who know what is going on?

Umm, how about next week?

*rolls eyes*

One week later, I find myself in the same seat in the CCCL Library once more, again with the secretary, but this time also joined by two young men, both of whom speak about as much English as I speak Darija. Ha haha. But that is why the secretary is finally here to translate for us. Deep sigh of relief. Maybe now I will have some of my questions answered.

Twenty minutes later, I realize that my questions are simply irrelevant. The best I learn is that next week I can come into the association and sit in on one of the lessons from the other American volunteer to get a feel for things, and then the following week, I will start up on my own classes. O for the love of God. I am now defeated. I simply bow my head to the inevitable and just take the situation as it stands. I will just go with it. I will throw all of my reservations aside and just simply launch myself into the unknown. My own personal taste for mentally preparing myself, to feeling out all of the edges of my situation before taking action, to know the ins and outs before coming to a decision or settling on a course of action, all of this will just be thrown out the window. I will just go with it, and for better or worse, find out what happens in the end.

Though I did not realize it at the time, it was this moment of bowing to the inevitable, of surrendering, that was in fact the greatest experience of my stay in Morocco. It was when I learned to bend and sway, and become flexible. It was when I learned to just accept what came my way, instead of struggling to understand everything as it came hurtling towards me. It was after this point that I became light as air. The point where I felt all of my (until then, unconscious) pressure suddenly relieved. It was a remarkable transformation. And it is only now, a month and half later, that I can look back and see so much clarity the value of that moment.

It is a lesson I have learned before, and I think it is a lesson I may learn again. But it can be made so much more real and true to me any number of times. The value of saying “yes” to whatever comes. Of accepting it, perhaps embracing it, and then sitting back and watching just where it may go. It is the ability to shrug and say “what the Hell, I might as well!”

and here are some photos for your viewing pleasure: Just random pics of my time here

Posted in Cony Craighead '11, Morocco | Leave a comment

Graffiti

For some inexplicable reason, Google insists that I want to conduct all of my searches off of their Italian site. I could understand if they insisted upon either France or Morocco, but really, Itally? Where on earth did they get it into their heads that I wanted to conduct my search in Itallian? This is even after I have selected my search preferences for English only… eah! Alright, this all aside. I realize I have been really quite slow on the updates, however, please forgive me, I have two major excuses. One: I was in Spain. Two: Upon returning from Spain, I got sick. Now, I am both well and no longer running around Southern Europe. So I should have a blog ready for you all, right? Right. Ah ha ha ha. So. This may feel like the most scattered post yet, but I will tell you about Spain first! And then, hopefully, I will get around to a second blog…

We spent an entire week traveling, but half of that time was spent traveling through northern Morocco. One evening before dinner I found myself exploring a woodshop on my own while a few of my classmates were next door haggling over a few rugs. I was examining a beautifully inlaid jewelry box when, as is usual, the shop owner approached me to strike up a conversation. In Rabat, most Moroccans will first try to use French with tourists, however, this man used Spanish. Northern Morocco has much stronger ties to Spain than it does France, and so Spanish is the most logical second language for most individuals. I was a bit surprised at first, since I have grown used to broken conversations of butchered Darija and French.

Happily, when the need called for it, my three years of high school Spanish (which seems to be centuries ago) came back to me fairly easily. I was actually quite surprised at how much of the language I have retained, though it has remained dormant in my brain for so long. Though I am certainly not fluent, I was able to spend a happy twenty minutes talking in a broken conglomeration of English, Spanish and Darija. I was amazed at how easily and readily basic facts and meaning can be conveyed using whatever tools are available to the speakers, in whatever languages are available to them.

Not to change the subject completely, but, I am going to change the subject completely. Ha ha. During our four(ish) days in Spain, one was spent taking a bus from the city of Malaga to Granada. My peers and I originally started out together as a large group, but as the day progressed, we all separated into ever-smaller groups. One girl, Athena, was actually quite sick, and I volunteered to spend a quiet and restful day with her instead of heading off with others for more aggressive adventures in the city. We parted ways with the rest of the group at a small park near a crossroads with some of the most fantastic graffiti art I have ever seen. While Athena lay down in the shade of a tree to keep her head from spinning and her stomach from lurching, I took my camera out and documented as best I could the magnificent flurry of color and form bedecking every walled surface of the park.  Needless to say, I have attached several photos for your viewing pleasure.

As to the rest of our day together, we had a glorious time. Athena and I both recall our quiet, slow outing together as one of the highlights of our excursion, even though on paper, it does not seem that we did all that much. We walked through a second park, we visited a small café, we got lost on bus route 33 and missed our bus back to Malaga, so we had to catch another one at a much later hour.

We both got to practice our latent Spanish, and surprised ourselves with what we could and could not understand. Athena had spent a summer in Peru, and had apparently become fairly competent in the language. However, she was entirely unused to the accent and flow of Spain’s Spanish, and so often times found herself misunderstanding individuals on the street. I, on the other hand, though certainly not as competent in the language, was able glean a great deal of information and directions. However, I was also not distracted by trying to reconcile what I knew, what I was accustomed to, and what I was hearing. I was listening and understanding as best I could with the assumption and knowledge that I had only a very rudimentary ability to communicate.

My final commentary or concluding statement? My desire to become fluent in Spanish, long since dropped after graduating high school, has re-emerged with a powerful force. After struggling so long and hard to learn and use Darija, it was remarkably easy to slip back into Spanish, and recall much of what I had learned in high school. I have a newfound appreciation and gratitude for Profe Thompson. I found a new hope for myself that perhaps learning a second language is not such an impossible task as it sometimes feels to be, and a reassurance that it will not be so easily forgotten once I stop using it.

Posted in Cony Craighead '11, Morocco | Leave a comment

Central Vietnam? Hue Cool!

After our homestay had come to an end, we then got on a plane to have a week long excursion to Central Vietnam to visit Danang, Hue, and Hoi An. My homestay family is originally from Danang, and still have many relatives still living there. They’ve only driven there once, but they said they left at 8 in the morning and arrived at 5 am the next day. Vietnamese roads, I will not miss you… We arrived in Danang just in time to see the international fireworks competition where we saw Portugal, Vietnam, and Japan’s pyrotechnics. I believe that starting the trip out with fireworks was appropriate, since the entire week was bing bang BOOM full of activities. I also believe that “bing bang BOOM” is an appropriate way to describe much of central Vietnam as it is developing at mach speed. So, central Vietnam? “Bing bang BOOM.” I can’t believe I’m trying to pack everything we did into one blog, because I know that I will fail to give the place the justice it deserves.

We first spent a spoiled couple of days in Hoi An at a luxurious hotel with an all-you-can-eat buffet (a nice change from our usual cockroach mating grounds), walking around the stunningly gorgeous streets. Activities in Hoi An include getting clothes tailored, buying endless array of kitschy souvenirs, and eating cau lau (another soup with crunchy crackers and ginger! my favorite). At some nights, they turn off all of the lights and one can set candles lanterns into the river, ride in a romantic boat ride, and listen to musicians who are set up all along the streets. It did slightly kill the mood when you bought your lantern and found a square of Styrofoam in the bottom… It was still a dream tourist spot, and ridiculously stunning. And what other place can you buy knee length, tailor made, purple leather boots?

On our way to Danang, we stopped at this place called “Marble Mountain” off of China Beach. There have been a few extraordinarily magical places that we’ve come to, and that was one of them. It was a series of temples tucked into the caves found in the sandstone hill that had been there for centuries. It had both Champa and Buddhist influence, and was made entirely from stone, painted with moss, decorated with carvings and red sticks of incense, lighted with sun pouring in from holes and cracks in the ceiling –the walls spoke of all the people that had been there. There is poetry, both old and new, carved onto the stone; people’s names scratched into the moss. We found out that the place had been key for the VC and the GIs during the war. I am desperately curious to know what it was like to be a GI, and in a place like Marble Mountain, and to have your war be so starkly contrasted with one of the more spiritual places I’ve been too. Our guide had us climb to the top, which was referred to as “heaven,” and to then tell us that this was where many VC snipers were stationed until Americans used it as their helicopter landing pad. Sounds more like hell to me.

Danang itself is really where BOOM was obvious—for the 20 km into town from marble mountain, dozens and dozens of hoity toity hotels and resorts were popping up on the beach, a stark contrast from the humble houses with corrugated tin roofs that we saw on the way. Central Vietnam used to be one of the poorest areas of the country, and was also one of the hardest hit during the war, and will soon be one of the more wealthy destination spots. Its safe to say, that in 10, maybe even 5 years, Danang will be a completely different place. However, if they plan on being a destination spot, they’re going to have to get used to women swimming in more scandalous outfits than jeans.

And then to Hue! the imperial city of Hue… Stunning and touristy beyond belief—my favorite was the tomb of Minh Mang. We went right before sunset when the place was practically empty, and stumbled upon the filming of a popular Vietnamese TV show; surreal to say the least.  On our last evening, we floated down the perfume river on a decorated boat with our own private concert of talented musicians trained in traditional music of the area. There is a non-definitive quality to the music here: it waivers and dances, yet everyone there knows exactly how and where the notes will go. All I can do is let myself succumb to the sounds and enjoy the wild ride. Needles to say, it was HUE cool.

Posted in Micaela Cooley '11, Vietnam | Leave a comment