Sunday, November 30, 2008
Friday, November 28, 2008
Say Hello to New Delhi
Namaste!
I have happily arrived in New Delhi, and neither terrorists nor pollution nor insane amounts of homework can upset my good mood.
I am living in Vasant Kunj - an area in South Delhi, with an amazing family consisting of a mother and 19 year old and 12 year old daughters. They are hilarious and find our (mis)adventures in Tanzania pretty much the funniest thing ever. Today, we are making them pie for thanksgiving and they are taking us to chinese food for lunch. Last night, 19 year old joohee (spelling?) showed us the paper mache she made in school and I thought she said paper-my-shitty and we all almost peed ourselves laughing. We went to Chandi Chowk - a beautiful market in old delhi with an awesome old mosque, and while there we thought it would be a good idea to eat sketchy candy on the street made out of milk and mcdonald's "shake shake fries" - both very bad ideas. The candy had gone bad, tasted like sour milk, but we kept trying different pieces hoping it would get better. Then we got home and showed our homestay sister, and she burst into laughter cause they tasted nasty cause they had gone bad, not because indians have bad taste. And shake shake fries are just straight up nasty - mcdonalds india is no better than the original. We are foolish Americans.
Our classes are amazing - we have amazing guest lecturers and our new ecology teacher is the former director of research for earthwatch. Smitu, our program director, had to leave class because he made a presentation to the people from the European Community negotiating the terms of a free trade agreement between India and the EU - badass. This country of contradictions is quite a mystery to me. A mall with Gucci and Diore next to slums. 70% farmers with the second largest number of billionares in the world. My mind may explode with information, but luckily there is lots of chai to compensate for sleep deprivation.
I have happily arrived in New Delhi, and neither terrorists nor pollution nor insane amounts of homework can upset my good mood.
I am living in Vasant Kunj - an area in South Delhi, with an amazing family consisting of a mother and 19 year old and 12 year old daughters. They are hilarious and find our (mis)adventures in Tanzania pretty much the funniest thing ever. Today, we are making them pie for thanksgiving and they are taking us to chinese food for lunch. Last night, 19 year old joohee (spelling?) showed us the paper mache she made in school and I thought she said paper-my-shitty and we all almost peed ourselves laughing. We went to Chandi Chowk - a beautiful market in old delhi with an awesome old mosque, and while there we thought it would be a good idea to eat sketchy candy on the street made out of milk and mcdonald's "shake shake fries" - both very bad ideas. The candy had gone bad, tasted like sour milk, but we kept trying different pieces hoping it would get better. Then we got home and showed our homestay sister, and she burst into laughter cause they tasted nasty cause they had gone bad, not because indians have bad taste. And shake shake fries are just straight up nasty - mcdonalds india is no better than the original. We are foolish Americans.
Our classes are amazing - we have amazing guest lecturers and our new ecology teacher is the former director of research for earthwatch. Smitu, our program director, had to leave class because he made a presentation to the people from the European Community negotiating the terms of a free trade agreement between India and the EU - badass. This country of contradictions is quite a mystery to me. A mall with Gucci and Diore next to slums. 70% farmers with the second largest number of billionares in the world. My mind may explode with information, but luckily there is lots of chai to compensate for sleep deprivation.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Welcome to maasailand
We drive on the most bumpy "road" I have ever seen for 3 hours. There is so much dust that it looks like we are under water- under brown brown water. it is so dry and dusty that we are all coughing and my boogers are black. we stay in a fenced in ngo overnight and finally get to walk to our homestays after a day of lectures. on the way there, the rains come! the most intense, mindblowing rain I have ever seen. everything about my entire being is wet. a river emerges in minutes that we must cross to get to the boma, out home for the next two days. as we arrive, the clouds part and i see the most beautiful sky and sunset I have ever seen in my whole live - and the barack obama song (a super popular song that its playing everywhere) plays on our portable radio. everyone - us, our translator, our warriors, the kids start singing. then my family takes off my clothes, redresses me in maasai clothes, dries my stuff over the fire, and feeds us amazing chai. in the night, it starts raining again - the roof is doing nothing but adding poop to the rain, and we feel very very icky and flea bitten. then at 330 am our mother/sister/ preggers 18 year old new bride pulls us out of bed and we dont know whats going on. then she pulls up the cowhide we were sleeping on and puts us under it! we were too stupid to get under the covers! also apparently they couldnt rethatch the roof cause in the dry season there is no grass. and they thought we were amazingly good luck cause we brought the rain. and i got to milk cows and wash dishes with charcoal. the maasai warriors taught us how to jump incredibly high, something that usually men only do in the traditional dance style but traditional gender roles and women being silenced is being broken down before our eyes - very very cool. also got some amazing maasai jewelry and plaid as gifts. some great internal conflicts regarding female circumcision and the role of traditional societies in the globalized world.
once again my post is incoherent and makes no sense, but thats literally how things sound in my head right now.
once again my post is incoherent and makes no sense, but thats literally how things sound in my head right now.
Monday, November 3, 2008
Just got back from a two day safari in Lake Manyara National Park and the Ngorongoro Crater. The nature was absolutely mindblowing. Highlight was probably the vultures and marabou storks chowing down on a newly dead water buffalo. We stayed at this campsite and there were zebras and hyenas literally right outside our tents and the last night there the biggest elephant in the entire world walked right through dinner to drink water out of the storage tank. Our guide spiro was a masai who insisted on being called jack sparrow. It was pretty frustrating to sit in a huge land cruiser and be escorted around to see nature, and see a billion other land rovers doing the same thing. Somehow it seems like nature should be able to just be and not have a bunch of fat white smokers messing it up all the time. And that $1000 a night hotels have free reign, yet the masai are allowed only very limited use of the land to make their livelihood.
In Arusha we got to go the the UN Tribunal for the Rwandan genocides and got to meet lots of big cheezes. Very insane that the UN built the fanciest building and employs over 800 international emplyees, yet has only had 60 trials in 10 years. But I still like international governance, what can I say.
In Arusha we got to go the the UN Tribunal for the Rwandan genocides and got to meet lots of big cheezes. Very insane that the UN built the fanciest building and employs over 800 international emplyees, yet has only had 60 trials in 10 years. But I still like international governance, what can I say.
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