Sunday, May 27, 2012

For 730 days...



...I will be living in the province of Jombang, in a village called (email me for the name, Peace Corps encourages us to maintain confidentiality about our exact location on a public blog)! Look this baby up on a map, because this is my new home and where some of you will hopefully be coming to visit me! It is about 2 hours by bus from Surabaya, the nearest big town and frequent gathering place for PC events and trainings. I have also been told it is as hot as hell...we have been living in Batu, an elevated area, so it is "cool" (read: 80 degrees) and mountainous. We visited current volunteers last week to see what their sites were like, and I went east to Situbondo. I could not believe that it was true that Batu was cool, because Situbondo had to be in the upper 80s. Lord!

Anyways, some stats on my new home, where I will be moving June 15th or 16th.


Sekolah (school)

~3 English teachers, one man, two women. Not sure of their ages right now, or with whom I will work. Probably all of them, honestly.
~ School hours:
Monday- Thursday
6:40 to 1:35
Friday (most people go to the mosque at noon)
6:40 to 11
Saturday
6:40 to 1:35

That's right, folks, Indonesians go to school Monday-Saturday basically all year round. Oh my gosh! On the other hand, school gets cancelled frequently and sporadically, there is lots of testing during which I don't teach, and the whole month of Ramadan is shortened school because people are exhausted!

~ I should have acc
ess to internet at my school, meaning I can answer more emails!
~ There are only 300 students at the school, with about 28-30 students per class. A big improvement from St. Paul's student teaching classes of 40 students!
~ I am teaching at a MAN. This means "Madrasah Aliyah Negeri," or a public Islamic school run by the Minister of Religious Affairs (instead of the Minister of Education and Culture). Many schools in Indonesia are MAN, though I believe MAN schools are still the minority. So what does teaching in a MAN mean? The students still have all the same classes as a public high school, but their religion classes are only about Islam instead of about whatever religion they want to take. It is also mandatory that girls wear the hijab (not a full body covering or even veiling the face, just a headscarf that covers their hair and is closed under the chin). There are uniforms at every school that I have ever seen here, so boys, girls, and teachers wear those. Peace Corps allows the school to decide if I will wear a uniform, but Peace Corps has made sure that the schools we are working in do not mandate volunteers to wear hijabs (called "jilbab" here). My feelings on the jilbab will have to come in a later post, because I'm not sure what my feelings are on it. Even more unsure what my feelings would be on having to wear one. Interesting...

Keluarga (family)
~As I requested, another big family!
~5 host siblings, including 4 guys (ages 26, 24, 20, 15 (girl), 13). One guy is married and has a 2-yr old son! Then a host mother and father. Not sure who will live in the house with me...but maybe with me, 10 people in one house!
~ The family is "well-respected in the community and relatively well off." That translates to a 2-story house (my room will be on the second story), a western toilet and maybe even shower!
~ Host dad (I have never had a host dad before, as in Paris my host mom was divorced and here in Batu my host dad died years ago) works as a secretary for the village government, and his brother is the kepala desa (literally "head of village"). My host mom does a lot with community organizing, including health care for moms and children.

Masyarakat (community)
~This is a rural community with no public transportation. I'll have to bike to the main road (2.5-3.5 miles) to catch it.
~ My new community is close to a historic Majapahit site (not sure what that means yet...) There are Hindu temple remains where both local and international tourists come.
~Many community members are farmers and recycling home industry workers (not sure what that means...)


All in all, this sounds like a great site placement! Definitely going to take some getting used to that I'll have a really nice house, shower, and toilet. I spoke with another volunteer about how it's been a bit difficult for me to adapt to the changing times (see my post on globalization). I admittedly joined the Peace Corps with the romanticized notion that I'd be living in a small home with only a squat toilet, no shower, etc. But times are changing, and the Peace Corps is changing. The Peace Corps in Indonesia is, I will say it again, so very similar to my life back home.

At the end of the day, I have to remind myself that being here to get dirty and feel like life is hard is not what I seek to get out of the Peace Corps. I am here to teach, and share cultural, human and social capital with those around me. I am here to empower and encourage. If that comes with sweat, squat toilets, and bucket showers, all the more dramatic and good for a story! But if it doesn't, my time here is still of the same value.

Don't worry, the sweat will definitely occur.



Thursday, May 24, 2012

Snapsnot

Melanie teaching at practicum!

Just a little Hindu goddess statue outside the PUBLIC bathing houses. Haven't used those yet, don't know if I can bring myself to do so!

Mary and Ibu Anna from the practicum school. Can you believe that Anna is 42? Looking great!


This is my new, beautiful country!



Myself and 2 teachers from a middle school in Batu

Pak Hengky, my Indonesian teacher. Funniest man I've ever met! And Liz, from Kansas, Carrie!

Julie displaying the bamboo trees!

Julie, my new best friend in Indonesia. We are both on the prowl for men and chocolate!

In the botanical gardens

For Kelsea!

English camp day at a high school in Sidomulyo. Warm up: the human knot!

The boys' session is on team building/games (musical chairs above) and the girls' session was on American culture.

To an Arema game! Cultural facilitator Opi and Ellen from MI

Sidomulyo group! Typical Mike being creepy in the background...

A rainbow of pink-toned jilbabs color the room on my visit to a current volunteer's site.

Eating lunch at my extended host family's house. Yes, this is the uncle that has a undying love for bakso (a very sub-par meatball. More like gelatinous, squishy spam.)

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Thoughts on Globalization/Sarah has the sex talk


Hey everyone! Please take your time reading this post, I had fun. I included a lot of things that are cracking me up... I'm either in a really good place since I find my life hysterical right now, or I have lost it. I'm banking on the former!

Also, word to the wise. There is no way that the immediately following paragraphs are not going to be awkward for all the adults about to read this. Sorry, Mom and Dad, grandparents. On the other hand, Sam may also be shaking her and saying, "Oh Sarah, why?" And Nick, as always, will be incredulous. 
 

Sarah has the sex talk

The other night, I had one of the weirdest conversations potentially ever. I will admit, however, that the conversation was entirely the fault of my curious self. (Insert Shell Miller style question here: "Self, what were you thinking?!") But because I am not at all a participant of the lifestyle I am about to mention, I was not embarrassed to discuss it. I can't say the same for my 24-yr old host sister, who was the victim of my curiosity.

Anyways, I read this book"The Secret," about HIV/AIDS in countries around the world, for Pamela's Anthropology of Health and Illness class. And... I can't help but wonder about where young people sleep together in other countries. They live at home with their parents, so they aren't gonna want to do it there! So I proceeded to ask my host sister where young, unwed Indonesians do it. Mala was probably blushing like mad, but she is not white so I couldn't tell. I was like, "In a hotel? Isn't that too expensive?" She agreed, too expensive. Because I am persistent, I then proceeded to ask about a different place in which young people sleep together that may or may not have been culturally insensitive. "Di tempat kerja petani?" ("In the place where farmers work?" ...I didn't know the word for field!) She laughs hysterically at this idea. Okay, so maybe like 100 years ago. Whoops. She then explained that there are cheap hotels where they go. They I had to ask how many people did she think had premarital sex in Indonesia? After all, I am a curious anthropologist! I explained that most Americans did have premarital sex (I also threw in a good word for myself and my friends about how not all Americans do, my friends and I being a case in point!) Anyways, she said that most people do here, too. As a Muslim country, this is largely curious and fascinating to me. I have definitely found that more people in this particular area are culturally Muslim more than practicing Muslims.

Anyways, potentially the best part of this whole situation was when I told my language training group the next day. Mike said it sounded like I was trying to scope out spots...that's embarrassing. I should have made it more clear that that was not my goal! Anyways, Sam topped it all when he said that it sounded like I was going to start rhyming like Dr. Seuss: "Do you do it in the night? Do you do it in the light? Do you do it here or there? Do you do it everywhere?"  SOOOOOO funny!

...thus ended my ridiculous conversation with my host sister, Mala. Sorry, Mala!

Let's talk about globalization instead!

The overarching reaction I have to living in Indonesia is simply this: life here is not that different. Call me crazy for saying this when you take into account the things I do in this country: taking a bath with a bucket, wiping my booty with my hand, sleeping under a mosquito net for fear of dying of Japanese Encephalitis, putting on buy spray like perfume, , working in a classroom with no materials other than a chalkboard and chalk, and sleeping from 9 PM to approximately 4:30 AM.

Despite all of these major differences, life is surprisingly similar. I think that this realization has occurred everywhere I have traveled. At first this was a struggle for me to accept because I wanted to be a world away. I wanted to experience this remote, removed life that one reads about in old books, traveling through African or Asian countries and feeling the novelty of being in a land in which everything is unfamiliar. I wanted no phone, no internet, no English, no American culture. And instead what I have found in Senegal, Ghana, Togo, and now Indonesia is the shocking extent to which these countries have been "westernized." Colonial influences, yes. But even more so, globalization. Van will be so proud of me for discussing this!

I am not sure what validity this claim holds, but it seems that today that few places in the world exist that are not connected and plugged in to the globalization process. Countries' cultures are merging and shifting at a speed never experienced before, and few people are reflecting on the good and bad effects of this process.  

I am coming to terms with globalization, for better or for worse, as a phenomenon that is not going to stop anytime soon. Globalization brings a lot of good development and sharing of ideas across vast time and space. People in one country borrow ideas from other countries and adapt the ideas to fit their culture. This is a fascinating process about which I am learning to understand.

On the other hand, globalization brings a lot of frustration to me because cultures are being crushed around the world. Wookie and I talked once about the permeation of the English language virtually everywhere. While it brings a vast amount of human and cultural capital for me, it is disturbing to note the rate at which old, beautiful languages are being smooshed. A really good example of this is most Native American languages. Virtually no one in the U.S. speaks these languages anymore, and even among Native Americans, few are preserving the language (I actually have a source for this, a guest speaker in my student teaching seminar in the fall). Worldwide, a higher number of people are choosing -or being forced- to learn English. All of this wouldn't be a problem if the Anglophone world met this increase in English speakers abroad by committing to learning other languages while preserving cultures as well. But largely speaking, Anglophones do not see the necessity of doing so. And this is very frustrating to me.

Which leads me to brag for a moment about a really awesome realization I am having.

I am TRILINGUAL. That is probably the coolest thing I can say about myself. Sweet.

 Anyways, I think I'm losing my audience. The point is that life here in Indonesia is not that different at all. Sure, jobs Indonesians have are a bit different (In Wisconsin and Minnesota, I have not seen many meatball sellers banging a gong to advertise their product). A majority of Indonesians are bi- or trilingual (their native language, then Bahasa Indonesia, and then many know a bit of English). But just like the U.S., Indonesians are hard-working, love and care for each other so much, and are simply good people.

Oh, and they basically all have Facebook. Except my host mom Bu Mul, who refuses to even text!

So if there is one message I have for readers today, please realize that Indonesia is not a crazy jungle place where the people are so different that I feel I am living in a movie. (Clarification: Indonesia is not a jungle anyways, that was for dramatic effect!) I feel at home here, and I love it!

A pertinent quote from the book, A Singular Woman: The Untold Story of Barack Obama's Mother.

Obama comments on his mother's spirit (Ann was an anthropologist who worked in Indonesia for about 30 years):

"It was a sense that beneath our surface differences, we're all the same, and that there's more good than bad in each of us. And that, you know, we can reach across the void and touch each other and believe in each other and work together."

___________________________


Some more fun notes about this week:

~ Orang tua saya = parents. Literally, "My old people." Sorry, Mom and Dad!

~ I should no longer be surprised when totally bizarre things happen here. Why would I NOT stand up and sing "Leaving on a Jet Plane" with a student in English class?! Hey, the student asked, and she was willing to sing it with me. Why not!?


~ I went to church on Sunday morning with a few other volunteers and one of our language teachers. Then we ran some errands, including the post office, bank, and shopping for batik. Batik is a specific type of fabric that is usually very colorful and detailed in design. Definitely different than any of the African clothes you all have seen. Anyways, I really wanted to get a dress. So I'm trying on a bunch, and they are all too short (right above the knee, too short to wear around here) because I am "so tall" here! So then I tried some shirts. Which was fine, until I took too big a risk in putting it on over my big shoulders, and I couldn't get the shirt off!

TRAPPED IN BATIK!!!

Fortunately, I had no shame and marched out of the dressing room to my volunteer friends to ask for some, ahem, assistance in the dressing room! Mary, one of the other volunteers, had to come into the dressing room and undress me. Olah! (pronounced "oh-Allah," this is the Javanese expression for "oh my!" Although it's pronounced like Allah God, it doesn't mean that. Two different languages.) I am blaming this unfortunate situation on the heat, because I was sweaty so it stuck to me! After this, I think I'll stick to trying to buy a shirt with buttons. No over the head hassle. Needless to say, I haven't bought a shirt here yet...

~ Two other unfortunate incidents have included dropping my floss into the vat of water that is our bathtub. Whoops. It'll recover. But more unfortunately, I dropped the soap into the toilet. That took some skill, because I wash my hands about 3 feet away from the toilet. I will not disclose whether or not I flushed the soap or reached in and took it out. You decide.

~ I met potentially the most spazzy man ever, my new friend Dewey. I will have to film the way he speaks and dances around or something, because I can't quite capture how spazzy he is. I literally cannot understand a word he says, but I learned last night that this was because he prefers to speak Javanese. He graduated school about 3-4 years ago, and although schooling is primarily if not totally taught in Bahasa Indonesia, he is not very good at it, I guess. He said he got like a 50% or 60% on the test in Bahasa Indonesia. Anyways, Dewey is hilarious. He kept calling me bule, which means Westerner or white person. I was like, "Dewey, my name is not bule, it is Sarah!" He the proceeded to give me maybe the coolest nickname that I have ever had, "Tante Amerika!" Basically, "Aunt America." So I now call him "Pria Indonesia," meaning "Indonesian man!"

 I am starting to form friends here and it is simply hilarious!

Case in point: I basically come home each night from school and sit on the couch with my host sister or host mom and we laugh at each other and nothing for about 30 minutes. For basically no reason. It is great. Period.

..and then after I wrote this post, I told her that I think I will be sad when I leave since we laugh together so much, and I made her cry. Shoot! Nice job, tante Amerika.  









Thursday, May 10, 2012

1 month in, and still going strong!

My language training group (back left) Sam, Melanie, Tammy, Mike (front left) myself and Lea!


Hello all! I have so much to share now that I have had some down time to thing more, but alas I have not typed it up ahead of time! I will commit to doing so in the next 2 weeks and then make a blog post. Here are some pictures to peruse while you wait for my deep thoughts later!



Da boys and Pak Hengky. This captures Hengky in the best way possible, because he is always laughing like a crazy man!

Sidomulyo, always prepared for photos....

Still smiling on top of Panderman hill (mountain to me!) with mbak Opi, the cultural facilitator for Bumiaji. Her first hike EVER and she went 3.5 hours up, 1.75 hours down. Way to be Opi!

Peace Corps' cultural facilitators, who are AMAZING! Especially that guy front and center, my cultural facilitator and great friend, Teguh!

Mike on the straight climb up Panderman "Hill"

Sam, giving the typical Sam look, Mas Teguh, and myself

We made it to the top of Panderman Hill! Brian Hakk, Steve Zitzow and David Walker, remember that weird time that I made you all take a Prather family picture at the Superbowl Party since you had the same names as my family members?! GUESS WHAT these guys' names are? Brian and David. YES! (I didn't tell them about this though, I think it's still too soon to be that weird!)

Liz demonstrating how intense this hike is!

The ladies on the day of the Fun Bike with Universitas Mohammidiyah Malang! I think that we tripled the number of girls involved in this bike trip...


A shot of the bike race. Look how intensely dressed this Indo men were! That's why it was so much funnier when they would hop off their bikes to walk up every hill. That would never happen in the US! And then I almost puked from trying to bike up a hill, and was humbled to walk up the next hill with them!



Some fun quick comments:

~ To prevent mosquitoes from laying eggs in your mandi, by a guppy fish! Or "goopy" fish, as our Indonesian doctors says!

~ While asking students to describe their families, we got the following notes back:

"If I had 1 million Rupiah, I would buy a shank." Wow, watch out for thank kid! Maybe he/she meant snake?? Shark???

"My mom likes to noodle and my dad likes to vegetable." Is that a dance?? : )

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Happy May!

Breaking News from Indonesia! May 1st is Hari Bekerja Nasional (National Work Day). I haven't figured out if that means that some people have the day off or if it just equals a lot of protesting!

Here is news from Jakarta, the capital:http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/05/01/may-day-protesters-stop-constitutional-court.html

In Batu, my area, people were protesting because of a new hotel being built. The hotel's construction is polluting their water. I was visiting a school this morning (and meeting the best looking Indonesian man I have ever seen!), so I did not see any of the protest. 

I'm also in the works of trying to upload a video update from me about this ridiculous bike ride I was in on Sunday, but I have no idea how to do it, so more on that later!