Thursday, January 16, 2014

Death of a Bebia (or how having watched homeland got me through a funeral)

One of the reasons why I decided to join Peace Corps was to honor the legacy of my grandmother, Marietta Wright, who was a tireless worker for equality in my home state of North Carolina. After she passed away I signed up, and now here I am in Georgia, which you surely already know at this point. 

This week I had another grandmother pass away, but this one was my host grandmother. It started on Monday when Tedo (my host brother) and I were playing ping pong upstairs, and Medico (host mom) came up and said she needed an antibiotic to put on a big sore that had developed on the bebia (bebia is grandmother in georgian btw). I gave her some which I had, was showered with the normal fanfare of "you're such a good boy", and then I went back to playing ping pong. Then I went to my room to play some more of the Sims 2 where I have taken to doing horrible things to my constituents like trying to make incest babies. A good time later Tedo came up and just said "Bebia is bad". I could tell right away that this meant more than the usual bad that she has suffered through for the past 7 or 9 years following a severe stroke, so I immediately got up and went down to sit in the room with a stove in it to try and lend whatever support I could. 

Almost instantly the entire village showed up and were offering kind words to the family, and I was shocked that they even knew about it, as no messages had been dispatched. The village doctor came and there was great commotion for about 30 minutes, followed by a harrowing call of anguish by Medico which could be understood in any culture that someone had died. Instantly the whole house went into action. Tedo stopped all the clocks in the house to mark the time of death, and I went upstairs to help clear out the supra room to turn it into the body viewing room. neighbors brought over chairs and set them up, and somehow a coffin materialized. The body was brought upstairs and the doctor used a special linen to tie the hands together, and to tie her mouth shut. 

My host aunt, bebias daughter, then arrived home from a day of shopping in Batumi. No one had told her what had happened, and when the news was broke to her about the demise of her mother, she was visibly shaken and began to cry and wail. my host aunt is very near and dear to me, and seeing her suffering was probably the hardest part about the bebias death. It was truly a heartbreaking experience. I probably broke a lot of cultural norms by doing so, but I had to go up and give her a hug and try to console her. 

In Georgia, like in America, people seem to have the urge to find some role to fulfill during a moment of crisis. Here it was manifested in the men doing construction, and the women doing what they pretty much always do, cook and clean. A new balconcy was constructed in less than an hour and the outside of the house got a new coat of paint. Mind you, this was all done in a few feet of snow (oh yeah, forgot to mention, we got about 2 meters of snow a month ago and it's still around).

Me in the snow with my towns tank

The body was covered and people came to pay their condolences. Bebia was a Muslim like many people her generation in my village, so there was a lady reading the Koran next to her, and people were charged with staying with the body all night long. Unlike what I knew about Muslim traditions, the body was not buried within 24 hours, but rather stayed on display for 3 days. Unfortunately for me, my room is right next to where the body was, so I got to be woken up quite often, despite heavy doses of moonshine, to the sound of mourners throughout the night for 3 days. On the second night, after the washing of the body (also a Muslim tradition here I believe), I was allowed to go in and say a few words. My Georgian language training is mainly geared to asking directions, shopping, and expressing desires or interests, it isn't really geared to giving eulogies. So instead, fueled by the bravery that comes from drinking too much village moonshine, I instead did my best re-enactment of Agent Brody from Homeland, uttered some "Allah Akbar's", and then switched it to Latin and said the words from "Liberame Domine" which I remembered from high school chorus. When I was done I looked around and all the Bebias were nodding their heads in approval and whispering "what a good boy". Thanks Hollywood!

This Akbar.

Not this Akbar.


Most of the days were spent with me standing in my suit at the house entrance shaking hands with people who had just seen the body, and explaining to them how funerals were conducted in America.  Typically my response was just "it depends on which religion they were", but sometimes I would talk about Jewish and Muslims usually having a burial in 24 hours, how some people are cremated, and how we usually have our funerals in churches, and not so much in dining room. I felt like I did a pretty good job of cultural exchange with those interactions.

On the 4th day I got the joy of digging a grave through many feet of snow high upon the mountain where the family grave yard is. Thank god the ground wasn't frozen. Oh, I also had to do it while still wearing my suit. I found myself wondering whether or not I could put this particular skill on my resume when describing what I had gained through Peace Corps. At 2:00pm they took the body up and buried her. I didn't go on this part because frankly at that point I was all funeralled out.

We then went to near by Keda for the funeral Supra, and my buddy Communist-Boss-Georgi was leading the toasts. There was lots of wine, and I was trying actually not to drink that much, but then Communist-Boss-Georgi said that I needed to keep up. So we drank a lot, gave toasts to the dead and to the family, and it lasted about 4 hours. (note: another skill PC has given me is the ability to just sit for a very long amount of time). After everyone else had left and it was just the family and Communist-Boss-Georgi, we gathered up some leftovers, and went back to our house for an after-supra supra, where I told them I thought their tradition of helping one another out so much during funerals was really cool, and that I hoped to be able to bring a little bit of that back to America. More "what a good boy", and drinking followed.




Other random news: didn't have power for 16 days, went to a Circus that involved a monkey riding a donkey and a bear riding a scooter, got into a few law schools, went crazy, hung out with friends in Tbilisi for christmas. 

Random fact: Go to your grocery store. See all that food? in one store you have more food than my entire region has in all of its stores. Enjoy it. I miss it. 

Monday, August 19, 2013

American BBQ

The US Embassy has a program where they try to explain american culture by giving presentations about various parts of our culture, such as vacation, games, and in my case, American BBQ. A few volunteers and I put together a presentation where we explained what american BBQ's were like, and some of the games that we play at BBQs. I did a power point explaining that there were many different uses of the word barbecue, noun, verb, and adjective. it was kinda hard to do not because material was lacking, but rather because I had to put up pictures of yummy yummy food that I haven't had in a long time, nor would I have for a long time to come. 

One of our business volunteers, Tom, managed to go to the newly opened Mcdonalds and get them to donate 50 hamburgers and buns, and we set up a grill outside of the library that we were presenting at and had the georgian participants make their own burgers, with lettuce, onion, and tomato. We also had some country time lemonade made up for them to drink. All in all it was a big hit. The news even came out to do a short story about it. My host family saw it and for awhile thought I was famous. Not for volunteering, not for helping the country become more developed, but for food. I suppose there are worse ways to be known though, so I'll take it. (news video below) 

Here's some pictures from the event too. it was a good day. and for once it didn't rain! (oh, it's been raining almost every day here this summer. A stark contrast to last year, where it was hot and dry the whole time). 

Me presenting a slide about good ol' NC BBQ. 

Group picture 

Tom Ladek, Suzanne Ladek, and myself making the lemonade

Suzanne Ladek explaining condiment usage 




Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Easter in Georgia

Здравствуйте мужчины и женщины! პრივეტ კალბატინო და ბატინო! Hello ladies and gentlemen.

Well I've come down from the high of having a hotel room on my birthday a couple weeks ago, and now I'm back to the routine of village life; namely wake up, go to school, come home, nap, study something to keep my brain busy, and then watch endless hours of TV on my computer.

This past weekend was orthodox Easter here in georgia, and I thought I'd tell you a bit about it.

Normally you greet people here in georgia by saying "gamarjoba" or "privet" or something along those lines, but this week the greeting has been ქრისტე აღსდგა (christe aghdga) which means Christ is risen. They're pretty big into Jesus here so it's the greeting that is going to be carried out all week. There's also an appropriate response to this along the lines of "yes, indeed he has", but I don't know it in georgian so in my desire to say something appropriate back i've said "storia" (correct), and when that fails I bust out some latin from the Monty Pythons Holy Grail and say "Pie Jesu domine, domine is requem", and that seems to get the job done, or at least befuddle them long enough for me to make my escape.

'Tis merely a Flesh wound 

We had off  of school for about 5 days, and for most of that time I was blessed to have some crazy form of the Georgian flu, so I spent a lot of my time in bed resting, and also studying Russian, which I have taken up in my spare time in addition to studying for the GRE and the LSAT. I have a really good program for it, and I'm able to get help from my family with some of the pronunciation and practice. A problem though is that I'm learning the Moscow accent, and they have much different pronunciations where I'm at, so it can get a bit confusing.

As far as Easter is concerned, we died a whole lot of eggs Red using the roots of some tree that I couldn't identify, and we also made a whole bunch of these cakes called "Pashka", which are essentially sweet raisin bread with some powdered sugar on top of it. They were very good. My family went to church on the night before Easter from about 11:00pm to 4:00am, which is about as much time as they've spent in church combined all year. they claimed it was a good time, but I was just as happy sleeping in bed thank you very much. On the morning of easter we played a game where we took the eggs and would tap them against each other, and the one who's egg remained unshattered won. what this had to do with jesus was beyond me, but it passed the time until the Supra, so I was all for it.

We drank from the horns on this clay bull, which one of my students gave me for my birthday. 


Some of my friends spent the day hanging out at the grave yard and spending time at the graves of the dead relatives. And it wasn't a mournful thing, they were celebrating and dancing and having Easter egg hunts throughout the entire time. My guess is that perhaps if they raised enough of a racket, the dead for follow the example of Jesus and get up out of their graves too. But given that some had been dead for a long time, I don't know how pleasant an experience that would be for any party.

This week we have school on Wednesday, another day off on Thursday, and then school Friday  so I'm fully anticipating nothing getting done. Next week the Seniors and the first graders will be done with school for the year, which will drastically reduce the amount of hours I will be in school. I can't say I'm not looking forward to it.
Here are the eggs we had for Easter. They're red to symbolize the blood of Christ. 

Sunday, April 14, 2013

End of Winter, beginning of spring, stuff in between.


Hello all! 

Yeah so about my punctuality on blogging.... not the best I admit. It's not that there hasn't been a lot going on, it's just that there's only so much bandwidth that I have, and it takes forever to upload things. 

Today though I'm at a place with fast internet, so I'm taking advantage of it to update you on life here! 

Wedding: My school director got married to the dance teacher abotu 2 months ago, and I got to be a part of it. I put on nice clothes for the first time in a long time, and we went to a little village outside of Kobuleti, which is 30 minutes north of Batumi here in Adjara. I was in the wedding procession, which was a harrowing experience to be sure. basically it consisted of about 6 cars all racing each other to get to the area of the reception first, hoking their horns all the way. This extends from a old tradition here which used to involve people of the wedding party racing horses in order to arrive first, I think it's good luck or something. All I know was that we had many close encounters, and I later found out that it's common for people to know at least 2 people who have died in crashes from such a thing. Glad I did, I'll never do it again. 

"A georgian wedding without at least 3 deaths is considered a dull affair" 

There was dancing, and drinking of course. Here we see my local resource manager (and boss) durimishkani drinking a whole vase full of fine. This was one of the smaller vessels that was consumed that day. 



Mostly though, it's been pretty slow village life. School gets taught, I come home, eat, and watch weird stuff on TV via my computer, just because I crave entertainment that's in English  I try to study the language now and again, or study for graduate school tests, but usually my moaning bebia makes that impossible to do.

One thing we did recently at our school was get new chalk boards, and boy has that been nice. previously we were writing on what was essentially cardboard, and no one could ever see what was written on the board. So now we have nice, new, shiny blackboards to write on.

When the kids saw them, they decorated them nicely. This is from my 10th grade class. 

Here are the new boards before we mounted them. 7 in total. 


I was also able to get some english books for the kids... actually quite a few of them. Here's a picture of the spread, as well as one of our 3rd grade class gathered around one called "my cat likes to hide in boxes". Kinda awesome.
3rd Grade students looking at the new books. rarely do they hold attention for this long. 

Bunch of new books. 

A few weeks ago my good friend sarah's parents came into town, and we had a fun supra with them and a bunch of other volunteers. We gave them cha cha, and did friendship toasts and more, it was great. while we were waiting we made sure to do some birzha squats. This is how the men sit for hours on end in the village instead of doing anything productive.

I said something to upset Kaela I think. I was clearly pleased. 

One person here is not having a serious conversation. 

Group Birzha squat



I had a rough week with some personal issues and medical issues, so me and another volunteer decided to treat ourselves to night at the Radisson here in Batumi. I got to eat bacon for breakfast, have a very posh dinner, and even have a free massage! it was totally worth the $99 bucks. Here is a view from our hotel room.




And of course nothing makes me as happy as a plate full of bacon. 





I'm going to be doing some traveling to Holland in June, and then I'm looking forward to my family coming here in August. I do hope to update the blog in between then. 

cheers! 

Oh yeah, this happened, we have cha cha now. 




Sunday, February 24, 2013

Sri Lanka and Dubai; videos


Well since coming back from Sri Lanka I can't say that too much has happened. 

In school I started an English club (which is basically another English lesson, but more fun than reading from those tired books), and I also have an English movie club. Turns out that the attention span of Georgians isn't more than 45 minutes, so I'm probably going to change it to English TV shows like Glee and so you think you can dance. 

The weather has been okay here, not so cold as it was in December  Also the plum tree outside my window is blooming, so perhaps I've finally made it through the worst parts of winter (cue 2 feet of snow next week or some other kind of fresh hell). 

I got some fast internet at the Batumi Mcdonalds, so I decided it'd be fun to upload some of the videos from my trip to Sri Lanka, and a few from Dubai. Because yes, a month later I still wish I was in that warm place. 

Oh also two 14 year old girls from my village got married. one of them only knew the person via text message. "LOL I LUV U".... ugh. They were pretty smart too. Can someone please pass me the wine? 

Elephant playing in water 
Bruj Khalifa 
Dubai Mall Aquarium 

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Sri Lanka 2 - High lands and beaches

Buddhist Temple in Matara 


Greetings from Sri Lanka again,

We left Kandy to head to Nuwara Eliya as previously mentioned. On the second day there we went to a place called Horton Plains, which is a cloud forest about 2000m above sea level. It seems to be the only place in Sri Lanka that has frost. The forest is descended from one of the oldest forests ever known to the earth, so the Sri Lankan forest authority took great care in ensuring that it was protected, which was nice to see. The theory is that when Sri Lanka and India broke off from Antarctica and moved north towards the equator, only this forest remained unchanged over time due to its elevation, where as the lower lying areas changed in accordance to the large temperature increase.

Burning monkeys isn't cool, but it was kind of a cute sign 


We went on a 10k hike through the cloud forest and saw some incredible views of the area. One place in particular, called the "edge of the world" reminded me of something you would see in Avatar or the Last Airbender; it was really cool.

Looking down a 1000 foot cliff

Panoramic view of the worlds end cliff

It's the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine


Didn't see too much wildlife save for some wild deer. One of them had been tamed to the point of not being afraid of humans, so I got my picture taken with it. It's funny, because in the US when we see a deer we think about what a nuisance it is, where here we were all taken aback with it's beauty. It was different than American deer in that it had a much thicker coat, so that was neat.


Another part of the hike included a fairly large water fall called Baker falls. I've seen plenty of waterfalls in my life but this one was unique mainly because of the tropical vegetation around it; giant ferns and small palm trees. It was like something you see in the movies, or on that TV show "Lost" that was on a years ago.

Baker Falls

The following day we headed down to Matara and Polhoma beach. This place is great. We get served fresh fruit every day, and we walk about 5 minutes to a beach that is right on a coral reef. We spent most of our first day here snorkeling and looking at some really amazing fish.


Breakfast featuring Papaya, Mango, Pineapple, Bananas, and juice containing all of these things. 

Buddhist temple on an island near our hotel

Bird Bath at our hotel 


We were having lunch by the ocean yesterday and we saw a whole bunch of crabs crawling around the rocks near where we sat. Then out of nowhere a giant Monitor lizard came up and started chasing the crabs for his meal. It was quite a surprise, but I'm slowly getting used to the fact that big creatures will show up randomly here on this island.

Surprise lizard

Today and tomorrow we will snorkel some more (and try to avoid sunburn) and then we'll be heading back to Ngumbo (where the trip started) and staying a night to get ready to get back on the plane to head to Georgia, and back to winter. 

Monday, January 14, 2013

Sri Lanka 1 - Escape from Hoth

Coconut Palm Tree in Kandy
პრივეტ (privet, hello) from Sri Lanka!

After waiting for what seemed like eternity in the cold winter of post soviet Georgia  I finally got onto an airplane and made my way to Sri Lanka, land of milk and honey (well, papaya and sea food). It's been so wonderful to get out of the cold and finally get to eat fresh fruit and fish again.

On the 10th we went from Tbilisi to Dubai, where we had a bit of a layover. Gina (person I'm traveling with) and I ended up taking about a 3 hour nap on the floor of the Dubai airport, which was tough since the Islamic call to prayer would blare over the loud speakers and wake us up. It was really neat seeing all the different Islamic dresses in the airport. On the flight (fly Dubai) they had a safety and security video that was done with Arabic cartoons, and it was funny seeing the characters of the Islamic world doing airplane safety things like fastening their seat belts and not smoking.

View from plane flying into Dubai. It's a very large city. 

We got in at about 5:00am and changed our currency, and went outside to catch a Tuk-tuk to our hostel (a tuk-tuk is a 3 wheeled motor taxi, kinda like what you'd picture in Indiana Jones movies). It was weird to see the sun rise at 6:10am (in Georgia now it rises at about 8:30), and there were many birds and monkeys screeching. We got to the hostel in Ngumbo and I took a nap after being awake really for about 48 hours. After I woke up we went to the beach where we took a walk and saw some pretty sweet Oruwa boats on the beach.


 Later that afternoon we went along one of the boardwalks in Ngumbo and had ourselves some fresh fruit juice from one of the local vendors, made for us right on the spot (we had anoda juice). After not having real juice in almost 10 months, it was a real treat; not to mention that it was a type that we don't really get in the USA. It's also here that I found out that in Sri Lanka, everything is REALLY INEXPENSIVE.

A picture of the types of fruit we have available in Sri Lanka. 

That night I indulged myself and had a seafood platter that had 3 lobster tails, 2 crabs, calamari  shark, shrimp, and some other type of fish along with fries and salad. This is great because I'm scared to eat the seafood in Georgia given the pollution levels of the country. All for about $14 US. Did I mention that everything is very inexpensive here?

Yes please. 

The following day we set out to Kandy. We took a very crowded bus to get there from Ngumbo. Before we got there we stopped off to take a look and then ride some elephants, which was actually pretty hard to do given how wide they are. It would have helped to have done some stretching before hand, but it was still fun. The money went to helping rehabilitate and protect them from poachers, so I didn't feel too bad about exploiting them for our tourist purposes.



Finally we made it to Kandy, which is where there is a large temple devoted to the Buddha's tooth, recovered after his cremation (it's the left incisor in case you're wondering). This is a very sacred site to Buddhists, and there were many items of devotion surrounding it. There we also a lot of monkeys, but we couldn't take pictures of them because they were angry, and there were lots of them. Oh well. 

Tooth Temple

Moonstone leading to the Tooth Temple

That evening we walked about 3K around the lake at Kandy, and it finished in a nice sunset over the lake. We stopped and got fresh Mango with chili powder sprinkled on it. I had never had that before, but it was delicious. I definitely recommend it.

On the top of the right mountain you can see a large statue of Buddha. 

Today we went to Nuwara Eliya and to a tea plantation near by where we got to take a tour of the place and see how tea was made. I learned all kinds of things about the qualities of tea and how they differ depending on where they are grown, it was really neat! And of course at the end we got to try the tea for free, so that was nice. I had 3 cups, all with great satisfaction. I bought some tea for my host family and my director, so it'll be nice to have a present coming back.

Tea plantation and their own hydroelectric plant (it's an eco friendly operation)

Me drinking Tea at the end of the tour 

We're in the highlands of Sri Lanka, so they sell all kinds of fantastic rip off clothing here. I did some shopping and bartering and was able to get a 2 layer North Face Jacket for about $50 bucks, and it included a balaclava , since even though I'm warm now, I know it's gonna be cold as balls when I go back to Georgia. 

Tomorrow we go on a hike, and then we're going down to the white sand beaches of southern Sri Lanka.

If you can't tell, I highly recommend this country as a place to visit.