It’s So COLD!

4 08 2008

And so all us youth staying in French Guiana have returned home safe and soundly (some with a little more delay than others … Philip got stuck in Jamaica for a couple of days and had a blast there …).

I would like to be able to make a statement, a resume of the whole trip, to be able to articulate how I feel about returning on North American soil … but I feel like I’m still too close to the deed, and I can’t “look back” yet – it’ll take me a few weeks to settle in and then start noticing cultural differences and to see what I have really learned and how I’ve really changed, if at all (one hopes so …!).

But the first thing I’m noticing right now is that my feet are cold. COLD! Everyone in New York and Delaware are trying to make Sarah and I comfortable (and I feel spoiled rotten), and one of these comforts is to assure us a nice cool room because apparently it’s pretty hot right now … and while everyone else is fanning themselves and hiding from the sun, here I am feeling comfortable, bordering cold. I guess it really was hot in French Guiana.





Mom Gets Chocolates – I Get Pangys and Calebashes

27 06 2008

I remember, ever since I was a little kid, when my parents would come back from school at the end of the year with a few arms full of farewell gifts from their students. To my utter delight, there would be so much chocolate that they were obliged to share with the whole family. And a lot would have to be given away: we couldn’t exactly eat 30 boxes of chocolate before they went stale, and let’s just say it isn’t the healthiest thing to scarf down in the span of a week (a concept that I did not understand until my late teens).

Every so often, a student would get creative and give a nice candle, or a funny t-shirt, or a sweet trinket (like an apple out of granite). Those still sit visibly in the house, and they are the ones I remember mom and dad complimenting on their originality. Ever since then, I try to make gifts a little more creative – if possible, I make them myself (those of you who have been on the receiving end know that sometimes it works … and sometimes it doesn’t … ).

Fast-track to the present. I am now entering my last week as a teacher in St-Laurent du Maroni, French Guiana. The French lessons have been becoming more and more structured, and to my delight, some previously illiterate women can now read their ABC’s and can read syllables. That, in itself, is enough joy to bring home as a gift.

I entered my first end-of-year party, where I was to give each lady their diplomas, and we were to cook lunch together (all 16 of us). Due to an annoying bug, a few of us didn’t make it – I hauled myself out of bed long enough to go see them, as it was the last time I’d see most of these ladies before I leave. I actually sent Philip in my stead for the lesson part, and he was a hit: he played French bingo with them, taught them a few new things, revised a few things, and gave out the diplomas, while half the group was taking turns cooking.

When I finally got there after a few hours, I was greeted with something I was warned to expect as a teacher: gifts.

But no chocolates.

I got pangys and calebashes. Which are the two traditional things women make here. But a lot of them. They are, in a way, the chocolates you give to teachers back in North America. Can’t go wrong with them, but you’re guaranteed you won’t be the only one giving them. On the other hand, no two is alike, as it’s all done by hand. Which in itself is wonderful.

This is a pangy:

This is a calebash (half a gourd with handmade carving, the only carving women were traditionally allowed to do until recently – made to drink water, or to hold anything else you can think of … loose change, chalks for class … whatever you want):

And THIS … the “non-chocolate” item of the batch … is a hand-embroided hammock.

Oh yeah. How cool is that.

Now my only concern is, how many other groups are planning to do this, and how much overweight luggage costs on a plane …

Long story short, I might have to share and give away some of these “chocolates” with friends and family.

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On an unrelated note, Sarah, Philip, Caity and I drove to Kourou to visit the European Space Center and its launch pads (notably the Arianne 4 and Arianne 5). This included a swim in the ocean in the morning (yes, after 8 months, I FINALLY went to the sea shore).

But this particular beach is in the current of the Amazonian river, which discharges a hunk of a load of debris … mainly Amazonian mud.

So we swam in half-sea, half mud. (click for more)

You can see in the middle where the mud stops and the seawater starts. The mud was heavy enough that it stayed at the bottom and you could swim in reasonably clear water … but it was low tide, so you had to wad through a good chunk of mud to get in and out … which explains why we were the only ones swimming that morning.

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Back to my comment of women not carving anything but calebashes until recently. This is my youth group during the Wednesday afternoon, the Doekoe girls – or more like, these are the carvings they produced.

Hurrah for open-minded teachers!





Ke Gangadu

11 06 2008

So – the new group with whom I’m staying on the weekends. This is them. The nutty uncle that attacks people with flour and juggles babies is the drummer with the light green shirt.

I also DO have a few new pictures. We have a fun fun clothing relay race game for the lesson on the Bab (er … for those of you who sort of know the history of the Faith, and wonder how in the world a clothing relay race ties into lessons on the history: the Bab worked as a cloth merchant with His uncle as a youth … hence the clothing relay race … it’s a stretch, but it works …!)

Also: there is this particular tree here that has pretty pink puffs as flowers.

Quite a few of them, actually.

Just look at the mess. :)





Cayenne Again

25 05 2008

I love taking a weekend to travel to Cayenne. No matter how crazy it is.

First off, this time I got to drive the little Twingo the long distance because the car’s finally completely fixed (and has passed the legal technical driving test – making it legal to drive the darned thing in public). It was Philip, Caity (a friend of Philip’s from Georgia, USA) and I manning the Twingo.

On the road between St-Laurent and Cayenne. Click on picture for a few more.

And this time, we were off to Cayenne for the French Guiana Baha’i Convention. This means: election, mega consultation on stuff, and organization of stuff. Basically. I thought, when I’d taken a day to pick up the ballots of 10 different local communities (details explained in the April 24th post linked here), that I could not possibly learn more this year about Baha’i administration.

Boy, was I wrong.

Anyway, between having to translate all the consultations and discussions to an Auxiliary Board Member from French to English (and back again when he had comments to add) and having to draft a letter to the Universal House of Justice on behalf of the Convention of the Baha’is of French Guiana, I learned many many administrative nooks and crannies. Interesting ones at that.

And had a lot of fun.

Why?

1 – I learned to drum on a djembe for the first time of my life. Not only was I able to keep the beat – I learned fast enough to bring the beat to a good speed for songs and other things! Yay!

2 – There’s a theater in Cayenne. As in, movie theater. Which was playing the new Indiana Jones. In French. But who cares if it was in French. The whole story is set in the Amazon. And, I mean, come on! It’s worth it just for the Indie theme! (*cue Indiana Jones theme*)

3 – Nothing could stop us 6 youths (including said Auxiliary Board Member) to pack in the tiny Twingo and drive to the movie theater. Not even getting the car in a ditch.

Conventions can be fun.

And on a completely unrelated note, Sarah was kind enough to post some of her pictures of me and the goat. Which I shall share here.

“lula and marie-claire go head-to-hand: a fierce contest of wills ensues…”

“and the winner gets to eat the loser’s pants”

(captions courtesy of Sarah Windle)





A Goat Called Lola

12 05 2008

And so the “dynamic duo” is reunited once again, as a friend put it. Sarah has landed in French Guiana (“I bet I’m the whitest person ever to set foot in this country!” – indeed, I should get a picture comparing our arms … ).

Despite the different climate, country, culture, and surroundings, having Sarah walk through my house door on Friday night seemed like the most natural and normal thing to me. She plopped on the sofa and we chatted like we were still in our tiny snowy Montréal apartment.

Well, to me, it felt normal, anyway. Most probably because I’m much more acclimatised, apparently. Sarah pointed out that she had to take a few seconds to realize there WAS oxygen in the air, and not just humidity, when she first walked out of the plane. I guess I easily forgot how the extreme humidity was the cause of my viola’s unglueing …

She is now living a little ways out, between my house and the village I visit every weekend. A short drive really. I therefore got to visit her and her new home for the next three months on Sunday.

They have a gazilion pets at that house. Two cats (I finally got my purring-kitty fix, after six months), two big black labs, many chickens, and … a goat.

Called Lola.

And the goat’s role is really just a house pet.

I was a little weary at first, but Sarah showed me how you could lean your fist on Lola’s horns and forehead, and she’d playfully push back. I obliged.

Goats are strong. It was really amusing.

What I didn’t realize was, once I was done playing, she wouldn’t want to stop. So after I removed my fist, she contented herself with leaning on, then strongly pushing, my knee cap.

Cute. Real cute.

Now I want a goat too.





The Magic of Duct Tape

30 04 2008

So this weekend I went to the village (PK-10), as usual, where my older kids (8-10 years old) are always a highlight for me. They’re incredibly noisy and all over the place, but without a trace of mean streak in them. So it always ends up being fun despite the craziness (this is one of the few boisterous groups that don’t have a violence problem). That, and they’re hilarious together.

One boy in particular is incredibly smart. Jorghinio, nine years old, lives in this completely impoverished area and dreams of becoming a doctor. I believe he can make it if he really wants to, because he’s so incredibly smart and good-natured, and I doubt the country won’t fund his university studies if he ever applies for scholarships when he gets to that point. Again, though, he’s nine – he’s got time to decide. But this kid is, without a doubt, gifted.

Back to the story. We were working on reading comprehension stuff in the carving hut (the only enclosed space with a decent table). No one was carving at that point, nor giving lessons, so we were free to use it. This weekend, as usual, these five kids were bouncing off the walls. They were just NOT quieting down. But, lo and behold … Jorghinio (who is usually the loudest) saw my big duct tape roll, which I had brought for kite-making afterwards, and piped up: “Hey! Can I have a long piece of tape? I’ll stick it on my mouth. I know that when I talk, I get everyone else talking. So if I shut myself up by taping my mouth, we may be able to finish the work!”

So I taped his mouth shut.

The four other kids then jumped up to me and said “Me too! Tape my mouth too!”

So I taped all of their mouths.

And they also wanted me to tape their hands together like handcuffs, to add a challenge to writing their answers. So I obliged. (The strangest things can spontaneously become a game.)

And so I began reading true or false questions, where they vigorously nodded or shook their heads to answer, and scribbled away “f”s and “v”s (faux & vrai) on their worksheets.

At that precise moment, one of the French sculpting students, a 50-ish year old strict-looking lady, walked in on me, looking for the sculpting teacher.

She basically froze in the door frame. Looking at me. With five kids with their mouths taped shut and their hands tied.

You can imagine how I tried to talk myself out of that one.

Thank God the kids looked like they were enjoying themselves.





Of Lizards and Tiled Floors

19 04 2008

Yes.

I know.

I’m writing less and less these days.

It’s not for the lack of events, that’s for sure.

I even passed the five-month mark and didn’t write anything about it. Darn.

Perhaps I don’t write as much because many of the events are better said in comic form and am saving them precisely for that medium. So I’m giving a small update, comic form, and then I’ll figure out the things I want to type out on Monday.





Of Pillow Fights and Chicken Costumes

26 02 2008

Of pillow fights:

hammock.gif

Of chicken costumes:

chicken1.gifchicken2.gif





Completely off-hand …

1 02 2008

You know how you can search for websites on Google, right? Well, on my administrator page of this blog, I can see what key words people used on Google before finding my site. Guess what word has brought over 200 people here during the last week.

“armadillo”

I’m increasingly curious to know if there’s a high school project about armadillos being conducted this week, or if it’s just that information about armadillos on the net is sparse and many people are directed here. Or maybe it’s because of the picture? If anyone has searched “armadillo” and landed here, I wouldn’t mind getting to know what’s the occasion! :P





Sunday Log

21 01 2008

6h30: Wake up

6h30-8h30: Roam around, watch Scooby-Doo with the kids (as they do this every Sunday morning – I’m actually starting to like it). Then the older kids watch something called Galactik Football (cartoon lovers, click here for a description), which has pretty nifty animation.

8h30-9h00: Class preparation.

9h00-10h30: French class. My favourite French class, actually. Students: 9. Topic: different verbs and common actions. The most awesome moment: I popped a surprise syllable dictation on them. (these are ladies that can’t read and write). ALL of them got the syllables perfectly. We are making progress! HAPPINESS!

10h30-11h15: Drive BACK home because I forgot something. Crud.

11h15-11h25: Pick up Sosie (girl from PK-10) and drive to the other nearby village, Boussiman.

11h30-12h30: Younger children’s class. Students: 5. Topic: helping others. Nifty thing: one of the apparently “troublemaker” 12 year old boys helped me with discipline. He’s never been trouble to me. Just hard to get motivated. And now I think I have him motivated. Yay!

12h30-13h45: Older children’s class. Students: 6. Topic: Boudhism/Bouddha. Presented to them the Golden Rules of multiple religions (click here for more on that). Drew mandalas with a brief explanation on using mandalas as a meditative device.

13h45-14h00: Lunch (rice, spinach-kind of thing, and …. armadillo.)

sunday-lunch.jpg


But it was good!

14h00-15h00: French class. Students: 7. Topic: same as above.

15h00-16h00: Advanced French class / deepening on the Writings of the Baha’i Faith. These men are Baha’is, and we figured we can combine practicing reading and text comprehension while studying texts discussing the Faith.

16h00-17h00: Organized delegate election. Not very easy when most voters can’t read or write. Which is why I and the two men of the previous class helped. A lot.

17h00-17h15: Drive back to PK-10.

17h15-18h00: Bit of free time, and supper (banana and chicken claw soup).

18h00-18h30: Commute back home (car) with Irène, other PK-10 girl with whom I spend most of my free time.

18h30-19h00: Run around the house like a headless chicken (again) as we all try to finish organizing out multi faith prayer meeting on Unity (today was World Religions’ Day – click here for more info)

19h00-20h30: World Religion Day prayer meeting. Participants: 10.

21h00-21h45: Drove Irène back to PK-10, and came back home.

21h45-22h30: Supper (but not me – that banana chicken-claw soup was filling, thank you …). Discussed a bit of the weekend’s events all together. Got a raspberry birthday pie. I think I mentioned ONCE that raspberry was one of my favourite fruits. But Jackie had remembered.

22h30-00h30: Laundry, shower, answered to an onslaught of (wonderful) birthday emails. Thanks guys. I love you too.

00h30: Bed.