Monday, October 26, 2009

Welcome Midnight Rain


Ayubowan! Over the past two weeks I have done a myriad of wonderful things here in Colombo. I have spent a lot of time exploring the city via its many delicious restaurants featuring South Asian cuisine. Our favorite spot, Amaravathi, is a South Indian restaurant with delicious dosai's, thali, and more masala than your belly can handle. Green Cabin and Cafe On The 5th are also great spots to eat delicious Sri Lankan food at a cheap price. Egg hoppers, pol sambol, and paratha roti are changing my appetite and life for the better. 
We have been taking Singhala classes twice a week from our amazing teacher Michael. We are having such a good time learning the language, what a difference a great teacher can make! We also get a mini lesson from our apartment's door man every time we come and go. This is quite a hilarious event to witness because his patience lasts about one minute and then he is done and motions for us to move along up to our apartment. Always ending with a friendly "go and come back" accompanied by some head waggling.
Last weekend we took a trip down to the small beach town of Weligama and enjoyed the quiet beach for a few days. We also have taken two trips to Mt. Lavinia, a beach spot only twenty minutes away from home on the train. What a life. I still can't believe I am here. I am so happy to have time to read some truly incredible books as well. I just finished reading A Thousand Splendid Suns and highly recommend it. It is officially my favorite book, Khaled Hosseini is such a beautiful writer and storyteller. 
After our meeting with Prasanna, the head of Saaraketha (the organization we will be working with for our teaching), it turns out that we will actually be living in Colombo until December. Although this means that we won't start teaching until later :(, we will get to enjoy another full month of a great variety of food as well as easy access to traveling. I'm excited to go visit our fellow fulbrighters in Kandy this weekend for Halloween!
Perhaps my favorite day since my arrival in Sri Lanka was mine and Utsha's trip to a small village 3 and a half hours outside of Colombo (I'm blanking on the name). After we expressed our desire to volunteer, Ramya put us in contact with her friend Avanti who is just beginning a program called Learning Spaces where she donates books and aids a small local library. On Thursday last week, Avanti drove us out to the village to visit the library, brainstorm with the librarian about ways to make the library more exciting for local youth, and read a story with a group of kids. We only expected to have about 15 kids in attendance, but 40 showed up! It was so exciting to be in a room full of kids who are truly excited about reading and learning English. We read Dr. Seuss' One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish and then taught the kids some vocab words from the book using flash cards, actions, and some games. The librarian and Avanti were so excited to see the kids actively participating and having a good time practicing English because kids in Sri Lanka are not taught to actively participate in their classrooms and are generally more reserved. It was so much fun and I am so excited to continue working with Learning Spaces, helping the librarian generate excitement about reading and English, and setting up a volunteer program between Learning Spaces and Peradeniya University.
Also, we took a few yoga classes from a true goddess, Mrs. Kenamen. She is an 81 year old beautiful and incredibly flexible woman with so much life. She totally did the splits all three ways, Utsha and I were in total shock and could not stop smiling the whole class. She ends the class with "the three stages of laughter" which is my fav part. 
#1: A contained laugh which is silent and private, 
#2: when you are visibly laughing but no sound is coming out, 
#3: when you cannot hold it in any longer and are laughing for all to see and hear. 
It is so much fun and leaves the whole class cracking up. Her face is priceless. 
Lastly, today we discovered this great cafe/store/gallery called Barefoot where I am certain I will be spending much of my time in the future. Yayy for peanut butter smoothies!

Love,
Jess

~Please enjoy the following photos which reflect my experiences in Sri Lanka. I want to express that the photos I share with you do not represent all of Sri Lanka's cultures, religions, policies, beliefs, people, or languages. I could not possibly express Sri Lanka's diversity through the limited photos and commentary that I include. These are simply an expression of what I have seen. I hope you like them!~

***
Busy Colombo


Viharamahadevi Park


The Pettah Fish Market



A side street of Pettah


Weligama Beach


Beautiful  Alliyah, my train buddy
on the ride to Weligama


Moo Cow


Mt. Lavinia


At the temple in Weligama


Gorgeous huge Buddha


The women of  the Lekha Batik Factory


Kids at the library


Beautiful ride home from the village 


Preparing for a ceremony at the
Buddhist temple near our house


The Stupa decorated for the ceremony
***

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Beginnings

Ayubowan! Hi everyone! This begins my Sri Lankan blog, hopefully recording much of my memories and experiences here in Sri Lanka and sharing them all with you, my beautiful friends and family! My time here thus far has been truly amazing. This country is so beautiful, with such interesting cultures, religions, politics, and people. I am living in an amazing apartment and feel so lucky to be surrounded by great people. Utsha, Dave, and I will be living in this apartment in Chelsea Gardens, Colombo (kind of like the Beverly Hills of Sri Lanka, seriously, it’s so gorgeous) for a month before we move on to Wilgamuwl, the small village where we will be teaching English for 8 months. I am so excited to be here in Colombo first where there is so much to do and experience. On our first night we (Utsha, Tom(another Fulbrighter who will be living in Colombo doing research), and I) took a tuk tuk (the small vehicles which whiz around the streets of Sri Lanka and make you feel like you are on a Disneyland ride on steroids) to the Galle Face Hotel, a beautiful place to relax, get drinks, and enjoy the ocean and sunset.  Sorry for all the parentheses. They end now. Anyways, we had a great time enjoying the view; I can’t believe I am living in such a beautiful place! Afterwards we took a walk along Galle Face Green, a large grass area where you will find families having picnics and kids flying kites by the ocean every evening. It’s pretty much the only park I’ve ever seen that isn’t filled with creepers at night and is so full of life on a daily basis.

This week, we also took a trip to Pettah, the huge market where each street is filled with something different; clothes, electronics, restaurants, jewelry, fish, spices, fruits, vegetables, the list is endless. It was so fun just getting lost in the chaos and experiencing life here. Pettah is very different than the rest of Colombo, it is very busy, a bit dirty, noisy, excited, crowded, and bursting with flavor. The dominant language spoke in Pettah is Tamil, whereas in the rest of Colombo people most commonly speak Singhala. After enjoying a delicious Sri Lankan meal, we wandered right into a puja, which is a Hindu ceremony. One of the older women, kind of the Grandmother figure in the group, invited us to come and join the ceremony. I felt pretty strange and uncomfortable the whole time, like I was intruding on a sacred event, but everyone was very nice and welcoming.  However, the older members of the group could recognize our hesitant nature and continued to pull us closer and closer to the ceremony.  They were bringing an Idol back into the temple. Regardless of the fact that I felt awkward, I am so glad that I experienced it. It was a really beautiful ceremony and there was a man there who spoke English and explained to us what was going on. All of the little girls and boys were giggling at Tom, Utsha, and I because we all look so American, different, and because Tom and I were the only white people in sight. They brought us into the temple as their guests and explained to us what each of the Gods represent. It was a beautiful, small temple. Lastly, they gave us food which they blessed and which was a delicious mixture of sweet rice and fried dough, yum J. This experience was so amazing and I can’t believe we stumbled upon it, especially because it seemed so personal since the temple was very tiny and kind of secluded down this dirt road, and because there were only about 30 people in attendance.  To say the least, I feel very lucky to have been included. Our first trip to Pettah was quite amazing.

This week we also have eaten tons of great Sri Lankan, Indian, Chinese, and Japanese food. There is such a diverse selection and everything is so cheap!

Lastly, we just completed our two-day Fulbright orientation. I have learned a lot about Sri Lankan cultures, religions, politics, art, customs, language, and people. I am excited to apply what I have learned so far and continue to gain understanding. Our Singhalese language training began today and I am so excited to continue so I can create an even stronger bond with the people here and with everyone I will meet in Wilgamuwl. Everything is so new and beautiful here, I am having a great time and it’s so exciting to wake up every day knowing that a new adventure is in store!

I hope everyone is doing well! I miss you all so much and please, keep me updated on the happenings in all of your lives!

AND…. How awesome is our President?! Go Obama! Winner of the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize! WOOT WOOT.

Love You ALL,

Jess

p.s. Giddy, I'm lovin the head bobble... everyone does it here :)