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Published: September 11th 2008
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Well here it is.. hot off the press - article #2 from the Review! I think these work pretty well as blog entries... but all you dedicated subscribers you get the bonus of a few photos 😊
Its copied below, its available at http://www.pnwlocalnews.com/kitsap/bir/opinion/28101474.html , and its attached to this entry as a photo (thanks to my mom who scanned a copy for me)!
I already used a copy of the article for my Wednesday English Conversation Class with Elieth. These are the words that she learned tonight, thanks to some energetic charades and drawing on my part and my Peace Corps friend Joanna: eavesdropping, helmet, raincoat, invoke, spark, giggle, strengthen, glimpse. We are also watching the movie "No Reservations" with English Subtitles... which makes me yearn for all the diversity and flavors of American food because its about a chef...
Joanna Petzko is from Michigan and she arrived just a couple weeks after me here to Altagracia. She is working as a Peace Corp Volunteer here, as a English Teachers aid, and will be here for 2 years. She might move in next door to me after she is done living with her host family in a
Dorita with the door prizes
The community of San Marcos gave us each a chicken, a squash, and a bag of beans in appreciation for BOSIA funding their latrine project. Here is my coworker lugging the goods. couple weeks! She works with three teachers, and one of them is my coworker! We get along great and its fun to have someone to vent to and speak broken English with when we get worn out or culturally misunderstood. We started an unofficial Bad Day Fund the day I lost $25 dollars and Joanna bought me ice cream, cake, and a DVD with 4 Leonardo DiCaprio movies on it. I tried to pay her back, but she said to save it for when she had a bad day too. Don't worry though - the bad days are really far and few between!
Check out Joanna's photo web albums at: http://nicaraguapeszko.shutterfly.com/
She takes a whole hell of a lot more photos than me, thats for sure! And I can't thank her enough for it!
I met the local Musem curator and we went with him to see these petrogliffs on the inactive volcano side fo the island, and a ton of ceramic artefacts he had uncovered on the island - from back to 800 BC! Don Hamilton, the museum curator is a sweet old man, and he has a few books published on Ometepe's history. I'm going to
help him type up his next draft and he might put a chapter about BOSIA in his upcoming book he's publishing in October.
Well, there is bound to be more to tell, but I can't think of it right now. Ask me questions if you are curious to know something more specific about a photo you see on Joanna's photo album or if you just want to know about my life here!
This Sunday is the celebration of the Battle of Saint Jacinto and then Monday is Independence day. The school bands have been practicing for a few weeks now, daily banging their drums. There will be a big parade on Sunday and my Urbaite family is going to come watch from my house while we celebrate my Urbaite host mom's birthday, Amada.
I hope everyone is healthy and happy and enjoying the end of the summer there!
Un abrazo virtual,
Maggie
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Happy to be home again in Nicaragua
Today, 12:00 AM · NEW
Balgue, Aug. 2, 10:45 a.m.
She pulled out two plastic teal chairs and we sat there together for a few moments, just smiling and giggling, without words.
Two little chickens
the brown one came first, the reddish one came second. The reddish one is smarter than the brown one. The brown one is meaner than the reddish one. I got annoyed with them and the fact that they weren't able to give me any eggs (they have to be with a rooster here to give eggs) so I lent them out to my neighbor, Doña Terry, so her roosters could help my chickens make eggs... but then we got a rooster today as a gift from the same community again! The saga continues.... Darling was older now, a little over 30. This fact seemed obvious; more than four years had passed since we sat in this very spot in her living room, reconnecting. But something subtle inside her surprised me; those four years had given her a new confidence, one that strengthened her expressions, her presence. She carried herself much differently now than when I had first met her, on a cold January night on Bainbridge, welcoming her to my island, my home, my family.
We spoke of changes in our families, our studies, our personal lives - the conversation punctuated by laughter and tears. Our conversation did not end there. I would be welcomed to stay that night, passing through Balgue after a visit with my old host family in La Palma. Perhaps that confidence emanating from Darling was not simply new to her alone, but new between us, as peers, as friends, as family.
La Palma, Aug. 2, 2:34 p.m.
They invited me to play soccer with them. After excusing myself from saying my hellos to Doña Juana, I accepted the girls’ invitation and pulled my hair back in preparation. Boys began to gather along the edge of
the cement patio, creating the proper raucous, as us girls divided ourselves into teams of three.
Solanyi and Nulbia didn’t look like twins anymore. Fortunately, I didn’t have to glimpse awkwardly at their ears now, searching for their “S” or “N” golden earrings. Nulbia’s body language screamed “teenager,” while Solanyi stayed timidly in her older sister’s shadow. With the other neighborhood girls, I waited cautiously, observing and eavesdropping to remember their names. Faces invoked sparks in my memory; the receiving (and returning) of a ceramic artifact gift from the girl in the pink shirt, playing pick-up sticks with Tania, winning an award for my photograph of Ermedelia with Yeinor Rodrigo on her hip.
We played soccer in the rain. The deflated ball skidded through sandy puddles on the patio. We played hard - kicking and shoving, running till we couldn’t breathe anymore. The boys laughed and mocked us all along, but we didn’t care. This was our moment.
Urbaite, Aug. 3, 4:25 p.m.
I must have looked like an alien, but fortunately they welcomed my invasion. I parked my bike at the side of the house. I caught a glimpse of Thomas Adolfo, and watched him,
garden
the little green spots are cucumber plants trying not to disturb his work. He was creating a miniature city in his back yard, complete with roads, houses, pastures, and windmills, all from sticks and stones. He paused, hearing my footsteps, and looked up from his inventions. There I was, this other life form, adorned with a shiny bike helmet, pink raincoat, and splattered with mud from my journey from the other side. But he still managed to break a knowing smile.
They offered me a bucket of water to bathe myself before my meeting in town. The girls huddled on the other side of the yellow bed sheet that served as a shower curtain. Eagerly giggling, they waited for this dirty alien woman to magically transform and emerge as a clean white person they used to know.
After my transformation, I sat with Doña Amada, chatting to the andante rhythm of our rocking chairs. Her husband had gone to Costa Rica to work, her son to Managua to study law. She invited me to dinner and to stay the night the following Sunday.
I had gone to Balgue, La Palma and Urbaite on “business,” visiting various projects. But for the Sister Islands Association, we
Yep, those dates are real
artefacts dug up in peoples backyards here on the island... are in the business of friendship; the projects we do are secondary to the friendships we cultivate. These reunions of mine bring memories back to life and sweeten them with new realities. The families that welcomed me into their homes half a decade ago are now my Ometepe family - they worry about me, laugh with me, and count on me. What a beautiful world we live in; to say goodbye to one’s family and to reunite with another, in another country, another culture. I am home again.
Maggie Pettit will be writing a monthly column during her year-long stay on Ometepe Island. Please visit www.bosia.org to learn more about the sister island relationship and how to get involved.
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Kittens and Petroglyphs
You tell the story of all of it ..... the in-the-moment present with bounding kittens, scratching chickens, mouth-watering banana bread, and beautiful flowering plants. And the venerable past with stunning artifacts and petroglyphs. Thanks Maggie (and Joanna too for more great photos)!