Saturday, October 24, 2009
Aygepat Harvest Festival & Halloween Celebration
So after many date changes and frustrations the Aygepat Harvest Festival & Halloween Celebration finally happened on Wednesday and it was a huge success! All the frustrations were worth it and it was probably a good thing that they happened because they gave me a taste of what it can be like to work in Armenia and I proved to myself that I can in fact do it. I need to work on developing more patience – I always thought I was a patient person but there is definitely a difference between being patient in the States vs. being patient in Armenia. The whole experience helped me learn more about the Armenian work culture and how I can best work with my co-workers and bosses to get projects done. I learned that I need to calm down and learn to take a breath when I get frustrated because trying to explain in the moment what is frustrating me only makes it worse. I also need to have a little more faith that things will work out even without my direct supervision.
The many date changes were due to the fact that my village mayor had invited the marz petaron (the regional mayor) to come to the festival and we were operating around his schedule. Apparently it was quite a big deal that he came to the festival – there was news crew there from the regional TV station covering the festival and last night my whole family went over to our neighbor’s house to watch it. When the marz petaron arrived everyone lined up to great him and the mayor greeted him along with a girl in traditional dress. There is a ceremony here where there is a loaf of traditional braided bread that a girl in traditional dress holds and a small pile of salt is placed on the bread and you rip off a piece of the bread and dip it in the salt and eat it. All the new volunteers participated in this ceremony when we met our training host families. The bread represents the wheat that Armenians believe is the life source of their people and the salt represents…well I don’t remember exactly what that represents maybe the salt of the earth or something. Anyway the marz petaron participated in that ceremony with the mayor and then my village mayor released doves. All of that was a surprise to me because the majority of the traditional Armenian parts of the festival were planned by the mayor, his assistants, and my counterpart. Next there was a series of traditional Armenian dances performed by a group of the local children and songs performed by a local singer. Then my counterpart, Vika and some of her students performed a small play about fall. The marz petaron and the village mayor made speeches. Then the school director made a small presentation of certificates and gifts to the local students who had been accepted to university, which included a couple of my English students.
Later Vika read a small thing we translated about Halloween and introduced me to everyone. Hopefully now that I have been formally introduced to more people in the village they will no longer think that I’m some random Russian girl who has moved into the village. After the bit on what Halloween is Vika invited people over to my table to sample some Halloween treats (candy apples, caramel corn, candy corn, mellow crème pumpkins, and cookies) and then I was mobbed by all the village children, but with the help of my host mom and neighbor we regulated the kids and they all loved the treats. The deputy regional mayor really liked the candy corn.
The whole village was really involved. In a traditional Armenian harvest celebration different groups or villages create decorative tables displaying fancy craved fruits and vegetables and bountiful baskets of the harvest along with homemade wine, bread, and pastries. The post office, the policlinic, the 10th form class from the school, my counterpart’s family’s store, and the mayor’s office all had tables. At the end of the festival everyone goes around sampling the harvest and treats. There were probably 75 to 100 people there and everyone seemed to have a really great time. Everyone at the mayor’s office worked so hard to make it happen and it was a great display of the amazing community spirit of my village. After all the uncertainty we achieved what I hoped to all along – a successful first big project to help me learn how to plan and execute projects successfully in Armenia.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Weekends in Yerevan
Initiatives
A couple of weekends ago I went to Yerevan for the Peace Corps Initiatives Meeting. Peace Corps has five different initiatives: IT, PR, HIV/AIDS, Environmental Action, and Gender & Development. The purpose of these initiatives is to allow volunteers the opportunity for cross-sector work. Saturday was a meeting for all the new volunteers to find out more about these initiatives so we can decide which ones we would like to participate in. It was also the first time most of the volunteers had a chance to hang out since we finished training and moved to our sites. Despite my broken foot I hobbled my way around Yerevan with my friends and had an amazing time. On Friday we went out for Indian food then to the Irish Pub for drinks and dancing at Aftershock. We all stayed at the hostel, which is really nice and in a great location. Saturday we went to breakfast at Artbridge Bookstore Cafe where they have french toast, bacon, and lattes!!! It was amazing! Then it was off to the Peace Corps office for the meeting. After the meeting we had shwarma and hung at a cafe (a favorite past time of everyone in Yerevan) then another great night of dancing. Sunday we went back to Artbridge for more bacon and good coffee before heading back to site(where sadly there is no bacon or lattes...)
Armenia vs. Spain Game
Last weekend I went to Yerevan to see the Armenia vs. Spain soccer game with a bunch of other volunteers. Armenia was expected to lose like 4-0, so in the end the fact that they only lost 2-1 was kind of a miracle. After the game we all went out to the Irish Pub in Yerevan. Of course by Irish Pub I mean a normal bar decorated like a Bennigian’s Restaurant and playing U2 music videos. But I did get more bacon, french toast, and lattes. Yerevan is nice but it's way too easy to spend money there so I need to stay away for awhile.Yerevan can feel like a completely different country than the rest of Armenia. Armenia receives a ton of international aid money especially from the United States, but the majority of it stays in Yerevan. The disparity in development is really striking, but I guess that happens in a lot of countries. But the amount of U.S. money flowing into Armenia is crazy, but that’s what happens when your country has a powerful diaspora working for you.
Work
Work is a little frustrating at the moment. Originally my festival was supposed to be on the 20th, but all the people helping me kept saying it was too late and that the harvest would be over so we moved the date to the 16th. Over the next two weeks I kept asking my counterpart and boss what we needed to do, how we should invite people, and when we were going to buy supplies. We would make lists and I would keep asking the same questions without ever getting a clear answer. Then yesterday I show up to work (I’ve been making masks and decorations with the kids) and my co-worker comes in freaking out saying that we don’t have enough time and that the 16th is too early and we need more time. After a minor freak out on my part because I was trying to explain why I was frustrated that we weren’t ready, but no one understood me we changed the date. In the end I decided that I would just agree to change the date back to the 20th if it meant that the festival would be better. Intellectually I know that frustrations like this are part of the game and part of why you do this because eventually you hope you’ll learn to adapt and work in a new environment, but that doesn't always help in the moment. I mean these are the skills that are supposed to come with this whole crazy mess and make it all worth it.
In other news…my life includes lots of time spent watching old episodes of ‘The Office on my computer, reading, and listening to music. Although my new obsession is ‘The Wire’! And my little brother now likes to run around the house trying to rap like Jay-Z!
A couple of weekends ago I went to Yerevan for the Peace Corps Initiatives Meeting. Peace Corps has five different initiatives: IT, PR, HIV/AIDS, Environmental Action, and Gender & Development. The purpose of these initiatives is to allow volunteers the opportunity for cross-sector work. Saturday was a meeting for all the new volunteers to find out more about these initiatives so we can decide which ones we would like to participate in. It was also the first time most of the volunteers had a chance to hang out since we finished training and moved to our sites. Despite my broken foot I hobbled my way around Yerevan with my friends and had an amazing time. On Friday we went out for Indian food then to the Irish Pub for drinks and dancing at Aftershock. We all stayed at the hostel, which is really nice and in a great location. Saturday we went to breakfast at Artbridge Bookstore Cafe where they have french toast, bacon, and lattes!!! It was amazing! Then it was off to the Peace Corps office for the meeting. After the meeting we had shwarma and hung at a cafe (a favorite past time of everyone in Yerevan) then another great night of dancing. Sunday we went back to Artbridge for more bacon and good coffee before heading back to site(where sadly there is no bacon or lattes...)
Armenia vs. Spain Game
Last weekend I went to Yerevan to see the Armenia vs. Spain soccer game with a bunch of other volunteers. Armenia was expected to lose like 4-0, so in the end the fact that they only lost 2-1 was kind of a miracle. After the game we all went out to the Irish Pub in Yerevan. Of course by Irish Pub I mean a normal bar decorated like a Bennigian’s Restaurant and playing U2 music videos. But I did get more bacon, french toast, and lattes. Yerevan is nice but it's way too easy to spend money there so I need to stay away for awhile.Yerevan can feel like a completely different country than the rest of Armenia. Armenia receives a ton of international aid money especially from the United States, but the majority of it stays in Yerevan. The disparity in development is really striking, but I guess that happens in a lot of countries. But the amount of U.S. money flowing into Armenia is crazy, but that’s what happens when your country has a powerful diaspora working for you.
Work
Work is a little frustrating at the moment. Originally my festival was supposed to be on the 20th, but all the people helping me kept saying it was too late and that the harvest would be over so we moved the date to the 16th. Over the next two weeks I kept asking my counterpart and boss what we needed to do, how we should invite people, and when we were going to buy supplies. We would make lists and I would keep asking the same questions without ever getting a clear answer. Then yesterday I show up to work (I’ve been making masks and decorations with the kids) and my co-worker comes in freaking out saying that we don’t have enough time and that the 16th is too early and we need more time. After a minor freak out on my part because I was trying to explain why I was frustrated that we weren’t ready, but no one understood me we changed the date. In the end I decided that I would just agree to change the date back to the 20th if it meant that the festival would be better. Intellectually I know that frustrations like this are part of the game and part of why you do this because eventually you hope you’ll learn to adapt and work in a new environment, but that doesn't always help in the moment. I mean these are the skills that are supposed to come with this whole crazy mess and make it all worth it.
In other news…my life includes lots of time spent watching old episodes of ‘The Office on my computer, reading, and listening to music. Although my new obsession is ‘The Wire’! And my little brother now likes to run around the house trying to rap like Jay-Z!
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Some of my favorite pics
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