Thursday, December 27, 2012

Tongan Wedding

December 19, 2012



I got to go to a Tongan wedding yesterday (by accident really). I was invited to learn how to play basketball (Tongan basketball, which is just netball with more players) with some girls- at first at 5 in the morning, then as they saw my face and it was changed to 6. I woke up and went to the field and no one was there, so I told myself there is no excuse for me not to exercise since I am already awake. On the walk back to my place to get ready for the run Suliassi’s grandma told me that I was going to a feast later with them- score! Getting up early really has its benefits.


We got into town and to the house where they were preparing the food. The amount of food being cooked was mind blowing- 12 pigs were being roasted, a cow was being chopped up, lu, sausage, crab, fish, and of course a ton of root crop! Sean was also invited so we bummed around until it started. First the couple goes to the court and signs the papers before which they get paraded around in a car with a tappa matt covering it and a line of cars behind them (basically the major players in Wesleyan church in my village) honking. After the court they go to church. The couple is accompanied by their aunt- on the bride’s side, and the uncle- on the groom’s side, and they are dressed in a tappa covering. Apparently they are the lowest rank to the person getting married. What’s interesting is that the couple is not allowed to be coupley in public and they are even separated in the cars they are driven around in, most of the pictures that were taken were of them individually.


While I was waiting for the hall to be set up, loud music was playing and I danced with so many old ladies from my village but what was even more awkward is Tongans are so obsessed with finding me a girlfriend that my principal and others would literally bring me up to girls and ask if I like them, like right there in front of them. I spent 20 minutes with my principal as she pointed out 3 sisters and asked me which one I liked, then said look and decide and she will tell them. So during the dancing portion I was brought to several women. After the wedding my principal brought one of the sisters up to me and then told her to give me her number! I totally don’t understand, it is perhaps the most awkward thing that has ever happened to me, and it happens a lot here, your older elementary school principal should never be your wingman, and never in such an aggressive way!


After what felt like forever we were finally allowed to start eating! It was awesome and I am so glad that no one will ever see me at a feast- it’s like I revert some kind of primal species, I literally attack the food- no fork or knife is used- and I eat until I almost can’t move. Of course this was a Tongan feast so you have to take leftovers and people kept telling me to bring a bag, which I laughed about but Suli’s grandma had her purse full of bags and she told me to grab one of the weaved baskets in the corner of the hall and we put a whole leftover pig in it! I felt kind of weird about it but I guess it is some unwritten rule that it is okay, except I had to carry the basket for the old women and so now everyone thinks I am that white guy who shows up to feast and steals whole pigs... A lot of people didn’t even stay until the end, they ate grabbed their food and dashed. Here the family spend so much money on the huge wedding feast and people steal all the leftovers and don’t even stay to the end…






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These are the guys who spent all morning roasting these pigs!


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Of course you got to have root crop and lu. This is going to go into the ground in the huge umu they built


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This is what they do instead of tie cans to the back of cars



the bride and her ant



the hall where the feast was- i guess it was equivalent to a wedding reception?


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crazy old women dancing



Kaitunu- Tongans at The beach

December 27, 2012



Today was the day of the Wesleyan Kaitunu. A kaitunu is a picnic on the beach normally it consist of a roast pig as well. We loaded up in a couple of trucks and a big van and all went out to a beach near by called Keitahi. Tongans love the beach! They are actually like fish and I am sure if they had the opportunity they would definitely live in the water. We spent all day at the beach from around 9 to about 4ish ( I have stop carrying any time telling device so I have no idea the exact times of anything) and the Tongans spent pretty much the whole time in the water. The men had set up a kava circle of course amoung the trees but I had a bit of a stomachache so I chose not to partake. Most of the older women sat back and ate until about midday after the big meal. We all ate basically bbq chicken and hotdogs and water ever food people brought ie chips, cookies, horse meat (that I finally got to try! It tasted like beef but also distinctly different), and fruit for the big lunch type meal. When this was done a lot of the women started entering the water. The funny thing about Tongans at the beach is the go into the water fully clothed, I am not just saying with a shirt on but I am talking jeans, shoes, hat, jacket, actually fully clothed. It is pretty hilarious watching someone run full on into the water wearing all their clothes. It is really great because after a while women will drag other older women into the water, there is some resistance at first but then the women being dragged kind of submits. Some of the women don’t have to be dragged in though, some like it so much that they were jumping off the rock and splashing around with all the kids. The men would take breaks from kava and join in too, some had a sharp piece of rod iron and they were spear fishing!   It was a pretty awesome day even though I took a few naps on the beach and got sunburned


)-:


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everyone grabbed spots under trees to set out their mats and start chowing down


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some people from my village


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that is the rock that even the older ladies jumped off of. As you see everyone is fully clothed....



Kilimasi LeLei



December 26, 2012


My first Christmas in Tonga came and went pretty quickly. Christmas is not a huge spectacle here so in all truth it didn’t really feel like Christmas at all. On Monday, Christmas Eve, I spent the day with the Mormon missionaries in my village on their day off- P-Day. We went to a Church in another village and played some volleyball and ate a big meal. It is the one day off the missionaries get a week so they all got to change out of their uniform and relax a bit. It was really interesting seeing into a completely different program and hear their stories and drama and what not. A couple of the guys were actually getting ready to leave, they had finished their 2 years. It is cool talking to them and hearing how they weren’t ready to leave- if they are that enthusiastic after two years and their program is way more strict than PC, it gives me a lot of hope for my time here. It was funny hearing how a few of them had plans to get married already; I guess they don’t waste anytime… I finally got to try ice cream bread too! It is really just what it sounds like, ice cream put on to a loaf of bread. The church we were at was doing some sort of kids program so they had this special treat and of course in Tongan fashion, they had to serve everyone who was there. Ice cream bread is where it’s at.


After P-Day I got a suto into town to spend Christmas Eve with the Australian volunteers who had invited me the previous day when they came to the beach in my village. I figured since Tongans don’t celebrate Christmas Eve I would spend it with the Australian Aid people. We put together a slip n’ slide out of tarps and had a talent show of sorts- where I performed the dance I had taught the kids for their graduation. I also got to have a really great conversation with one of their older volunteers who help me get a different perspective on my service here.


I stayed at Sean’s house because I am sort of watching it for him while he is on vacation and it was supposed to work out well because his neighbor, Mone, is related to Suliasi’s family and was going to take me to the beach where we were all going to celebrate Christmas. I was worried that this message didn’t get to him however, so I woke up at 6:30 to tell him and see when we were leaving. Turns out the beach day got canceled for some reason- either the doctor said or the rain, the whole not understanding Tongan yet makes things like this confusing. They gave me some cake and then I left to borrow Sean’s bike and head back to my village to try and make it to church at 10. The ride to my village on a bike takes maybe 40 minutes if you are making good time, I should explain Sean’s bike is a beach cruiser. My ride consisted of several hills of all sizes and I left at 9:10, basically I had quite the ride ahead of me. I started riding and the tires started flattening so about half way through the way back to was like peddling through sand. I decided to take a turn to go the back way so when I got to my village I didn’t pass people on their way to church. Well I thought I knew where I was going, turns out I was kind of lost and of course it started pouring down rain. So here I am on Christmas morning biking up hill on a beach cruiser with flat tires in the pouring rain. My white shirt was see through at the point I finally reached a familiar village and got on the road to my town. I looked at the clock and realized I made it back in enough time to get to church- it was 9:55. I quickly showered donned my Christmas tie and went to the Wesleyan church only to have my principal tell me to go to the church of Tonga. After church I got to go to a feast and then I drank kava for a few hours. I went back to my place and after watching every Christmas episode of Friends I went to eva. I said hi to a car passing, as is customary, the slammed to a halt and asked me if I wanted to go with them around. I mean I wasn’t really doing anything so I said yes and ended up going on a drive around Vava’u doing random drop-offs with the family. Got back to my place and made myself some pasta and finished the night watching the Grinch- Merry Christmas!




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Christmas kava! Yes, I am wearing a Christmas tie- that got several compliments I might add.


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this is my town officer being a big kava drunk and posing for the picture






Konoseti

December 21, 2012



They had a church fundraiser in my village last night, which consisted of a lot of dancing and kava drinking. How these work is the church sets up a dance, which is mostly the older women of the village and everyone comes and gives money. Every song women and kids get up and dance around and the people come up and give money, then the song ends and they count the money say thanks and repeat for about 3 or 4 hours. There are also tou’olungas and it gets real crazy when the women get one of the men from the kava circle- that was going on in the background- to come up and dance. It was a lot of fun and everyone died when I danced with a girl so it was pretty easy to keep the crowd entertained. I took this opportunity to mingle so I was drinking kava in the back with the men, hanging outside with some of the youth, drinking kava outside with the guys who brought the speakers from a different village, and dancing in the middle when a song came on that I liked.




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from the back where the kava circle was set up. As you can see the men are drinking kava and the women and kids are in the center dancing


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Holomesi dancing in the back, I have a video of this that is priceless!


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there are specific dances too, this is one of the ones the younger girls did. The lady walking away had just gone up to give some money- they do this by putting the money down the dancers shirts.


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one of the tou’olungas





The Best Eva Ever

December 22, 2012


I had the best Eva ever today! I just felt like I needed to get out after doing nothing really so I went on a walk around my village and shortly after I set out I got invited in to eat, I had already eaten so I just had some otai. The next house down gave me a bag full of bananas and then I ran into the guys drinking kava. After drinking kava for a bit I walked to the Church of Tonga and got a bag of candy and free ice cream! Around Christmas, each church does a day where the give out candy and small toys to the kids in the village. I just happen to be walking by at the right time- more because the men in the kava circle told me to leave so I could go and catch the free candy. After spending some time at my house I went for another eva at night and got to talking with some people and went to a house to grab someone to go drink kava. While we were waiting for the guy to get ready I was talking to the dad and had a little language mix up, instead of talking about the daughter being hungry and I would eat if food where out I just agreed that I would eat so they gave me a dinner plate and then made me some warm milk with coffee- I guess it went a long with the theme of the day…



Thursday, December 20, 2012

Overseas Family Reunions

December 20, 2012



I got to hangout with the Mormon missionaries today and we got to go to another feast! It is that time when tongans from overseas start coming back to visit and so this feast a family reunion celebration, it was in my village and they were welcoming family visiting from the Alaska (of all places...) and New Zealand- side note all the little kids have a New Zealand accent and say “heeps…” One of the missionaries is a palangi and he is really cool and his Tongan is crazy good. Before the feast he brought me the Mormon extra strength bug repellent, we used it to spray my house because the other day I was almost bit by a molokau (luckily I have cat-like reflexes and a hammer in proximity).


The family got a huge box shipped to them from the states as well and it took them about an hour to unload. Along with goods to sell in their falekoloa, there was a bike, a weed eater, a TV, and three computers! Apparently, they want to open up a faleneti, which would be computers set up in their house and connected to the internet so other people can pay to use them. It would be great because than I would have internet in my village, I just don’t think it will actually ever happen.


It was a great day that happened to be relatively busy considering, and it was nice to hangout with another white guy and not feel like such a token. I may get to hangout with them on Monday for their one day off. We may even eat dog!



Failotu

December 17, 2012



Another aspect of the Tongan funeral is called the failotu. The failotu is a three-day event that happens after the burial of the desist. The church congregation that the person belonged to meets at a house to sing hymns and say prayers. I have been going to these prayer sessions and it is really neat to watch the people gather (wearing the traditional funeral garb) and support each other. Even though there is some crying, there is also a lot of laughter and smiles. It is really powerful to sit among the group as everyone says their prayers out loud at the same time and then they slowly start to sing while some people are finishing up their prayers- it is crazy, I got chills.


Today was the last day, and on the last day of the failotu there is a feast of sorts they gave out bags of chicken and pork. I even got to watch as they got the pig out of the pickup and then started to chop it up with the machete! A large pig took maybe 15 or 20 minutes to chop into 5 – 10 oz pieces. I was happy for the food because I left my wallet in town and don’t have any meat at my place so now I am chillin’ for the week, which is nice except I feel strange because I didn’t know the person who past.



Thursday, December 13, 2012

A Pig Shaving, And Then Some....

December 13, 2012



On my eva yesterday I got to see the craziest thing- the preparation of a pig to roast. Okay so here is how it went down, I finished playing my customary couple hours of ping pong and then was on my way to the falekoloa to buy some soy sauce (I made a dank meal of rice noodles with stuff in them!) when I got to a group of guys shaving a pig. They shave it with a couple of knifes, kind using them like a straight edge. I was amazed at how they picked up the pig and moved it around with such ease, it was a small pig maybe the size of the average microwave but still the way it was flung around was surprising to me. There was a bucket of really hot water that they would dip the pig in from time to time as if they were washing their clothes. After the shaving process was done the cut of the genitals and from there, opened the pig then they dumped/ scooped out all of its organs. It was crazy seeing all of the pig’s intestines spill out on to the peace of tin like it was on the operating room table. They took the organs that they normally eat- which I think was the liver and lungs actually- and then through the rest to the dogs who had been anxiously waiting for the their share of the pig the entire time. Attached to what I think was the liver (people in medicine will have to help me out here) was the bladder I think. The reason I say this is because he was careful to remove this small sack from the liver and the waved it in front of the small puppy’s face before throwing it against the nearby umu where it burst open, much to the dog’s discontent.


I am sad to say that although this scene should have ruined my appetite I went home and made dinner and I was even a little disappointed that I would not be enjoying that roast pig.



Thursday, December 6, 2012

G.P.S. Holonga Graduation

December 4, 2012



So on Tuesday I am hanging around the school watching all the students cut the grass and “clean” the classrooms when Mele (one of my counterparts) comes up to me and asked me if I can teach the class 1 and 2 something to perform for their graduation Thursday night- Umm sure Mele let me just pull out that age appropriate Tongan dance that I know and teach it to these 6 year-olds who don’t speak English. Anyway, I said I would try and think of something- so I took the class aside and thought about teaching them to single Jingle Bell Rock because it is super short and kind of fun. Well that was a mistake, we couldn’t even get through the first 2 lines:


Jingle bell jingle bell jingle bell rock


Jingle bells chime in jingle bell time


Insert Peace Corps skill number 1- adaptation.


I decided let’s do something that doesn’t really require them to know English. So I made up some dance moves to the song and we did that instead. It worked out pretty good- these kids just love to dance!


The graduation was last night and it was a fun little ceremony where we did all the dances we did for the show we did a week ago (yes, I reprised my amazing kailao performance) and then each class did their own dance. Before their performance the teacher gets up and announces each kid's percent and place in the class, starting with group D from 0-35% and then moving up to group A 85- 100%. It was so strange to see the kid who was in the last group get up in front of everyone and then every one kind of laugh/ cheer. I guess the idea is that maybe they will all want to try hard so they can not have to be in that group in front of everyone? Either way all the kids get money put in their shirts when they dance and lays made of candy so as far as they are concerned it works out for them.


I wish I could have attached some pictures with this post but I still have not been able to get back my phone/camera. I hope to have a photo-taking device of sorts soon.



PCV Thanksgiving 2012

November 23, 2012



Our awesome PCVLs (Peace Corps Volunteer Leaders- they extend service for a year and work part time for PC and help with training) organized an amazing Thanksgiving dinner at this great house in town. We all found our ways into town and I spent the day with Sean, Dominica and our white friend Justin (his family has a business here) cooking. It was really cool to be able to share the day with people and we made sure we didn’t half-ass the menu either- we had turkey, mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, apple and pumpkin pie and the best gravy I have ever tasted (made by Mark as an after thought). There was even the lovely family turmoil that the holidays always bring out thanks to Sean and Dominica’s bickering. Yes, it was truly a wonderful spectacle. After dinner we all had some drinks and played a charades type game (idea brought to us by Mandy, who is the queen of all camp type games). We all stayed up until 4 am, mostly because Dominica caught a second wind and wanted to see the sunrise, which in hindsight was a terrible idea because it just meant we kept drinking. It was really awesome to be with people on a day that might have been really hard to get through otherwise, it gives me confidence in this whole experience and reminds me that sometimes it is nice (and necessary) to be palangi sometimes.  




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the amazing view from the house we were able to use for a feast.


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a little food prep. Sean, Dominica and Justin deciding how to make the fried onions to go on the green bean casserole




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Sean doing the honors of carving the turkey


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the feast. I should mention there was only one thing of cranberry sauce because the only place the sold them on the island was this America store (all their stuff is shipped from a Costco in the states, probably by a relative who lives there) and is outrageously over priced- 12:50 for a can of cranberries!






The Funny Thing About Tongan Sports

December 2, 2012



When I was taking a stroll in the village I happened across a netball game. I am not sure if netball has made it to the states yet, but it is a game, played among girls, that is like a cross between basketball (without a backboard) and ultimate frisbee- it is basically basketballs version of softball. Australia and New Zealand have pumped a lot of aid money into Tonga to get the game played here and there are actually village leagues. Our team was playing a village close to town on a netball field they had made a few weeks before. Now, ignoring that fact that I don’t understand the game at all, and that most of the players kicked off their shoes to play barefoot, Tongans playing sports is just strange to watch. Tongans don’t really take anything seriously and seeing that attitude during a competition is kind of strange. All the players had smiles on their faces and laughed whenever they messed up or a bad play was made. It may not seem that weird but trust me, seeing it was kind of peculiar. I am not sure I would ever make it as a coach here, competition just doesn't seem to have the same affect on their culture as it does ours- good or bad I don't know.



Village Days

December 3, 2012


I have been having a pretty solid weekend chilling in the village, I went to the beach with Suli on Saturday and I have been fai-ing kava pretending I speak Tongan. I went to Mormon church this time and had an amazing lunch at a family’s house (lu that was all the way cooked and awesome). The Missionary at the Mormon is white and speaks amazing Tongan so he has set the bar for me really high in the Mormon community (good thing there aren’t that many Mormons in my village). After church I hung out and went to kava again, which is the best way to spend a Sunday I have decided. This morning there wasn’t school because there was a holiday (yay sleeping-in!) a kid woke me up at 6:30 to get a plate (oh that’s right you can’t sleep-in in this country), shortly after that a family came to bring me a chicken, (Tonga has two types of chicken, imported that you can buy frozen or moa Tonga, which is like fresh killed chicken and it is delicious) I cooked it to perfection with the special hot sauce I got (kind of took) from a restaurant in town. Pretty much just try to adjust to slowness of life around here until school starts again in February.



Night Swimming with a Sad End

November 29, 2012


Some of us met up in the city for Harrison’s birthday, the bar (the Tongans refer to it as a night club, which is absolutely hilarious) does quiz nights on Thursdays so we were going to meet up for dinner and then do quiz night. I got a ride into town after class and met up with Sean before hand to have a drink at Aquarium. It was super nice getting to go and have a drink after class, I can imagine it is what my life would be like on the daily if I was working in the states (if only they had happy hour in every country on earth)…


Quiz night was a lot of fun and we actually ended up winning- our group had to split up into two teams and Sean and I ended up pairing up with our Australian volunteer friend and Justin (another palangi who’s family owns a cart tour business on the island). It was nice to win because you get a free drink, that drink with the free one we got for the joker round plus the ones before, I was feeling pretty under the influence. After the game we all danced a bit and then it was someone’s idea to head to the little dock behind the bar and go night swimming. It was actually awesome, the water was warm (it was extremely salty, like mouth soars salty but hey, we were drunk), it was basically a private night swim.


I woke up the next morning and went with Sean to his schools graduation. Of course the event was very Tongan and little kids would leave their seats so the parents could yell at them and fix their clothes. It was at the graduation when I went to take a picture that I realized my iPhone had been stolen. Unfortunately, our night swim resulted in the loss of the only camera I have here plus a lot of really meaningful messages from friends back home. I have been pretty bummed about that since, I am continuing to search for it (you know, small island no one really has an iPhone, plus it doesn’t even work here as a phone!) but I don’t have high hopes.



Random Church Feast

November 26, 2012


I was just wondering around the village after playing make shift ping pong for a bit when I stop to talk to a guy trying to make a sign for something. He asked if I was good at art but I didn’t want the responsibility of making the sign since I didn’t know what it was for so I said no (the responsibility thing plus I am just not good at art). The same guy who woke me up a few days before to borrow my computer came by and asked if I wanted to go to church with him, I thought I have nothing better to do, so I said yes. I got into the back of the truck and was joined shortly by some older Tongan women who were nicely dressed, I immediately started to question my decision to come along because I looked like a village kid- dressed in slightly dirty shorts and a white t-shirt. We get to the church and I guess it was some event to present a gift to the ministers. All the older ladies started dancing around in laps around the inside of the church. I was getting into it- it is what I imagine a Baptist service to be like- loud singing and everyone calling out hallelujah!


To my pleasant surprise after the event there was a feast! I used my powers as Peace Corps (or just being white) to make sure I got a seat at the table. I know I have been here for a while because I was not phased at when one of the guys brought the roast pig’s head down to our side of the table and the preceded to take the face off to get at the meat on the inside. Instead of being a bit taken a back I helped the man tear a peace off for myself. Beside the food the best part about Tongan feast is the minutes right after the meal when everyone quickly tries to snatch up all the leftovers, using anything (including the plastic wrap that originally covered the food), to bundle up the leftovers. Even during the closing prayer you can see the eyes of the elderly Tongan ladies shifting about, checking out what they are going to grab first. It is pretty awesome to watch and on the occasions they hand me a plate I am always thrilled!




Kailao! End of the Year Culture Show

November 27, 2012


At the end of every year each elementary learns cultural dances and songs, which they then perform for the community in a bag ceremony. I have already mentioned that I have been learning the war dance that the kids are learning at my school, today was the day we performed. I was told by my fellow teachers, especially my (crazy) counterpart Mele, to invite Sean and Dominca to the show so I did. Dominica said she could make it and found a ride into my village with my town offer (side note- my town officer is crazy, he is bald and really funny and always is a bit kava hung over, his kids are also pretty hilarious).


I was a little nervous but I just figured that it is just going to the village and the will probably just think it is cool that I am trying- plus I think they like when white people try and do Tongan things (they think it is absolutely hilarious). Point here is I know the dance but not amazingly so or anything. So Dominica gets dropped off at my house and my town officer offers to take us to the village, now I am confused. Dominica (who has been here for 3 years so knows how to speak Tongan) conversed with him for a few minutes. Apparently, the show is in another village and is with 2 other schools and in front of the officers from the ministry of education- now I am nervous. I guess my fellow teachers forgot to mention that this show was a bit more of a thing. After I hurriedly grabbed my stuff we met up with the teachers at the town hall (where I thought we were performing) and I chastised them for not telling the palangi what was what. We drove to the next down and I was garbed in some Tongan essentials- kahoa (lay), flowered belt and war paint. I ended up doing the dance and only messed up a few times, but hey it’s Tonga, even the official things really are not all that official.  




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getting ready, before my warpaint was applied by my counterpart with her lipgloss...


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all 3 schools lined up before the ministry officers


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Holonga's specific village song where they offered kava (the plant in the picture) and then a pig


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the kids doing one of the songs- each has accompanied hand movements


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me with my school doing their dance, to my left is 'Ela (a teacher at my school) and Lose (a teacher and the Prinicpal)






Thursday, November 22, 2012

Food and Dance Fakatonga

November 20, 2012



I am learning one of the Tongan war dances. As I have mentioned before, school as of now is pretty much over, it is just the kids learning traditional songs and dances. I take some of the kids during the day and do little English things with them while their peers finish up some test and then that is pretty much the extent of it. The dance is fun though, I get a spear type stick and I get to pretend I am intimidating.


The kids and their families are responsible for bringing me lunch everyday until december 7 so I haven't had to do any cooking yet except for recently when they started bringing me uncooked food. The brought me two large lobsters the other day, which i baked and they came out great! That's right people I actually touched the lobsters and all of the lobsteryness, I am slowly concurring my fear of sea life (watch me peel prawns now Paige!). Yesterday they brought me two big fish and I stupidly told Mele that I wanted to make 'ota ika (a typical Tongan dish that is pretty amazing but it is raw fish- like uncooked). It was perhaps the hardest thing I have had to watch- kids helped to prepare it but the water wasn't working in my house (a common thing) so it was done outside, no hands were washed and the kid cleaning the fish had so many open gashes on his legs that I knew he probably had been picking. Watching them clean the fish almost made me sick, especially the part when they gutted it and then ate the eggs inside of it- is it just me or would other people find this a bit unsettling? They also waste nothing here so we cooked the fish heads and tails in a pot with coconut milk and veggies. Of course you have to share everything here so the other teachers came over and we all ate together- which was fine by me since I was scared to eat too much anyway. In the end I survived so I am thinking this means health codes don't really account for anything...




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one of my lunches... isn't this scary to anyone else, it's like eating aliens...



Tongan Pets

November 19, 2012


Today was a challenging day to say the least. I had to burry a puppy. We had found this small puppy that didn’t really have a chance for survival because it needed a mom to feed. I didn’t know what to do so I took it home and bathed it and tried to feed it. It was seizing and foaming at the mouth so I knew it really wasn’t any use. It lasted the night and most of the next day but I had to watch it slowly die. I tried to impart on the kids that this was a serious thing but between Tongans lack of compassion for pets (dogs in particular) and the language barrier, it wasn't really working. I got one of the kids to bring me a shovel and I dug a hole for the puppy because I couldn’t watch it waste away anymore. Eventually it past and we had a little ceremony for it- hopefully that taught some of the kids a little compassion.


This was the same day that they brought me a cat. I had been telling the community that I wanted a cat to help with my cockroach issue (cats eat roaches). Today the show up at my door around 7:30 am and hold up a potato bag. Inside the bag was a cat. As if that wasn’t jarring enough, Tongans perform a ceremony when passing off cats- the cut off their whiskers and pour babyoil in its eyes; I guess the cutting of the whiskers is to make it ashamed to leave the house (without whiskers) and the oil in the eyes is so that the first thing it sees after the oil is its home.. It was hard to watch, I almost expressed my annoyance at the seeming cruelty but I kept telling myself- it’s cultural let it go. The cat is still afraid of me and wont let me come near it- I hate to be cruel but as long as it will still eat the roaches I guess we don’t have to be friends.


As if it wasn't clear, Tongans don't really do pets. They have lots of animals but they don't think of them as pets like Americans do, the animals are strictly functional. Dogs are to watch the house, cats are to eat rats, pigs are to eat everything else (and be eaten). There is anything like pet food here, they just get fed scraps. All the dogs are pretty mean and look like they all have mange and you grow to hate them. You just have to pick up a rock (or pretend to pick up a rock) and the run away because they are used to being hit with rocks by the Tongans. It is hard to get used to but after awhile the dogs become Tongan dogs and you lose your sense of compassion a little bit (either that or you get attacked).


Side note- the cat may still be living in my house. I thought it ran away but I found paw prints on my counter and crap in the corner. I don't know where it is hiding though!



Church With a Side of Church Please

November 18, 2012



Sundays in Tongan are church, mohe (sleep), eat, mohe, church, eat, mohe. I literally spent more hours at church on Sunday then I did in my entire four years in undergrad. It wasn’t too bad though, the singing is pretty good and it is not like I have much else to do. After morning church they dropped off a ton of food at my house and left (here I thought I would be having a huge Sunday dinning experience with a family, what gives?), I decided to make the most of it and put on a movie. My 13 year-old friend (who is my next door neighbor and comes to keep me company everyday) Suli came over and was taken enthralled by Ironman 2, by the time I got back from my 3rd round of church we had a small viewing party of the movie. It is nice have a house where people can congregate, hopefully after my Tongan improves my house guest will be over the age of 14...



The Lookout

November 17, 2012


I woke up thinking that this was going to be my first Friday where nothing was planned and I would have absolutely nothing to do, school was out for a holiday and nothing else was on my schedule. I decided to embrace doing nothing and even was planning on enjoying the leisure. After having a nice breakfast of pineapple, I get a text from Dominca and Sean, they wanted to go to this secrete beach which is at the end of my village- score shit to do! They came to my place to pick me up and then looked around a bit and somehow it came up that it was not Friday but in fact it was Saturday; yes that is right, I legitimately was an entire day behind the rest of the world in my head. Before you judge me too hard, there is little use for knowing the days at this venture in my life, maybe when I start officially teaching it will make since, but as of now time is irrelevant in all of its forms.


We walked to this amazing lookout point and then down to this incredible beach. I am so luckily to live within walking distance of one of the most amazing spots I have ever been too.




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The secrete beach from the lookout


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the view from the lookout


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me, Dominica and Sean


As I am writing this three days later, me going to the beach with Sean, Dominica and 2 other palangies is still the talk of my village. Everyone keeps asking me, adults included, so you went to the beach on Saturday? I feel like a celebrity almost, never have I had the insignificant (or significant for that matter) details of my life been such big news!



First Days at Site

November 16, 2012


My first few days at site have been great! The minute I got to site I dropped off my stuff and went to meet the faifekau (reverend) for a quick kava ceremony (where the shells were extra big, yum!). After the kava with the reverend I went to the classroom next door where there was a whole feast set out for me with students and PTA members and the 3 other teachers in attendance. The feast had everything- roast pig, lobster, Tongan chicken and of course root crop…


Yesterday I went to play volleyball at the Mormon church after a Peace Corps workshop with or principals and counterparts. A guy who was playing turned to me after a bit and asked me in perfect English, “so you went to Cal?” (I was wearing a Berkeley shirt). Apparently he is here on his mission and almost played football for Cal in 2010. Such a small world…


I am really enjoying my house except for the cockroach infestation… Every night I am forced to stay in the seclusion of my bedroom because after the sunsets it is the cockroaches’ house. Yesterday I went crazy with this intense bug spray called Mortien and this morning I spent 20 minutes cleaning up dead roaches…They may have won the battle but it is I who got the last laugh; tonight shall be round 2.


The bug spray also brought out the molokau. I have now killed 5 molokau in a verity of ways including the use of a hammar, a shoe, a broom, and a wooden spear that i am using to learn a traditional Tongan war dance with my school.




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my room


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shower


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main living area- the boy on the ground is Suliasi. He is my 13 year-old next door neighbor and has been made to come over and keep me company. He comes over everyday after school and we eva together and watch movies. He has become obsessed with Pokemon on the gameboy (thank you Jake, probably the best PC game).


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weird breakfast nook?


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Kitchen



I'm on a Boat!...For 24 Hours

November 13, 2012



It is finally here! The day we move to site- the catch is that it takes a 24-hour ferry ride to get to Vava’u… Before the never ending ferry all us Vava’u people got a big breakfast at the touristy Friends Café and then did some last minute shopping around town. I got to have a great conversation with one of the old volunteers who will be leaving at the end of the week. We got to talk about her service and things she learned and some information that will be helpful for me to know early on.


Eventually the moment came and we all shoved our way to the front of the line (a feat in its own because Tongans don’t believe in lines, just elbows) and got a great spot on the outdoor covered deck area. The Boat is a semi-new donation from Japan so everything is in Japanese but it is a huge improvement from the Tongan ferry before it, the last boat wasn’t Peace Corps safety approved. The boat ride was actually not bad, we got to see a South Pacific sunset on the water and we got to see an amazing view of the night sky. We actually got to sleep a bit and we woke up in enough time to walk around the main island in the Ha’apai group while the boat was docked. Being on the open water, rocking back and forth for hours was all worth it for the amazing entrance into the Vava’u island group. Seeing all the amazing islands and the natural beauty of our new home was the best motivator I have ever received.


When we finally docked, all our principals where there to meet us, mine had ka’hoa (traditional Tongan lays) and sliced fruit waiting for me. We loaded the truck with all of my stuff and set off to my new home.




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Sean, Harrison and me


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the Vava'u crew


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A Pacific sunset


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outer island in Vava'u



Saturday, November 10, 2012

Swear-in!

November 9, 2012


Our swear-in ceremony was yesterday, and it was super great. We got to take our oath and become real Peace Corps volunteers in the presence of the Prime Minister of Tonga and the US Ambassador! It was so crazy being in front of such important people who were actually there to watch us. The ceremony was in the same small beach resort we went to the older volunteer’s close of service. This time the room (over looking the ocean) was elegantly decorated and the stage was set for the distinguished guests.


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the group right before the ceremony


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a really bad shot of the Prime Minister


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getting my pin


Everyone who wanted to got to do something in the ceremony. Some people read hymns, some played songs on the guitar and ukulele, Ryan gave a wonderful speech and some of the girls did the Tau’olunga (a traditional Togan dance); I performed the tau’ovale, which means I was the back up dancers for Katy and Mandy when they were doing the tau’olunga. When I first said I would do the dance I thought I would be with one other guy and I thought that we would just dance in the back, little did I know I would have to be making a fool of myself shirtless, while wearing war paint and a skirt made out of banana leaves… Oh, I should also mention that I was also lathered in baby oil…. I was really nervous to do the dance because I didn’t know what I was supposed to do, they told me to just dance in the background but they didn’t tell me how... In the end I still didn’t know what I was doing but I got a few tips from and old volunteer and just winged it. We ended up making over 100 pa’anga from the money that the audience sticks to your baby oiled body during the performance, so I must have done something right (-;


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me, Katy and Many performing for the PM and other higher ups...




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After the performances we ate a thanksgiving type meal with our host parents, who were invited to the ceremony. It was really nice getting to see my host mom again especially since she was the one who made my outfit for the show and came up to dance with me at toward the end of my ridiculous performance… How's that for cultural integration!


All of us used our swear-in as an excuse to have a bit of a celebration. We all, including my host brothers who came to see me, went out to dinner at this pretty decent Chinese place (one of the few restaurants on the island that can accommodate a group our size), and we pooled our money to buy some alcohol for the evening. We had a nice pow-wow at Selas with drinks and sing-alongs and then we all went out. The first bar we went to was reload, my host brothers, Katy and I were running behind and by the time we got there the bar was no longer allowing any Tongans into the bar. This made me extremely angry because I hate white privilege, especially when it is so blatant and in front of people I care about. Luckily, our friends were in the other bar down the street, which turned out better anyway because it had a dance floor. We all had such a great time we didn’t leave until the bar was closing at 12:30. It was a bit nostalgic for me on our walk back to Sela’s when we stopped to get some food at a fried chicken place that was still open, I had flash backs to other intoxicated walks home- from the Celtic bar to my four flight walkup in Bologna, and from Kips to my frat house, and my frat house to my apartment during pledging… I don’t think drunken walks home are going to be quite as frequent here as they were during those times in my life, but it made me excited for what memories this time of my life will make.


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Katy with my host brothers Koni and Tonga





Wednesday, November 7, 2012

The Final Countdown



November 7, 2012


This last week of training has been a whirlwind. We have had tests, massive amounts of shopping, and we have been trying to spend the last bits of time together before we are all separated. I am also trying to figure out times to skype people from back home while I actually have internet easily accessible; once I move to Vava’u it will be hard to come by...


We have spent this last week at Sela’s Guest House, which has been a funny bookend since it is where we started the PST journey a couple of months ago. We have been having a good time hanging out with each other and exchanging movies, t.v. shows and music, getting stocked up for the next 2 years. We have had some interesting encounters at Sela’s as well, like the man in the room next to Mandy and Chiara’s room having a lady-of-the-night visitor as we were all trying to study for out Language exam. It was my first time I had ever seen one of these types of deals go down, and it wildly sketchy and pretty damn awkward… Last night the same guy asked Michael, who was playing guitar, to play a song for him. After his rendition Your Crying Eyes (which he sang to seductively to be real), he told us how the Russians have been working on a weather controlling device… These incidences have given us all a much-needed break from all the stress of finally moving to site. We have all been given 1000 pa’anga to buy everything we will need for our homes for the next 2 years, that includes fridges, stoves and any other items we think will be necessary for survival in rural villages. 1000 pa’anga seemed like a lot until the shopping started and I realized everything here is extremely expensive! Plastic bins to store food (so the rats don’t get in) cost 40 pa’anga, and forget about the cost of any silverware or washing buckets!


Along with the shopping we were all stressing over our language test that happened yesterday. We had to have an oral test to make sure we reached a certain level of language before we start service. Mine ended up going okay even though I feel like my answers where too elementary and didn’t reflect how much of the language I have actually been able to learn (thanks to Tasi and kava circles). I am sure I at least passed but I hope I did a little better than just that.


We actually got to watch the election coverage today! One of the PC staff, Kevin, had invited us all to his house and we made salsa and tortilla chips and bought pizza. It was really fun being able to get caught up on some American news, it is amazing how disconnected you can get here, I am ashamed to say that I am not sure I would have even known it was election day if we did not have such a big event for it. We are so isolated from any news out here that without making something like an election viewing such a spectacle it will be tough for us volunteers to stay informed. It was really great having one of our last palangi events for a while, even though I know I will miss everyone and our gatherings, I am ready to do what I came here for. Goodbye comfortable life hello Peace Corps life.



Saturday, November 3, 2012

Attachment Day 3: More of Vava'u and a Halloween Party

November 3rd, 2012


The last day was very chill, we went to meet the mayor (who is younger than I thought but super nice and really huge)  and the department of education officers. We all split up after that and kind of all did our own thing, I went with Sean and Jeff to the place were a Japanese volunteer has green houses and helps train Tongans on sustainable and healthy farming practices. This is the place where I will be getting the seedlings for my garden so I wanted to meet the guy and see what his operation looked like. It was a really cool place and the volunteer there is super nice. Since we couldn't really rally enough people to hit up a beach we didn't really have any plans after the gardens so Sean and I took a leisurely walk back to his place and relaxed for a bit before meeting up with everyone at the coolest restaurant in Vava’u. The restaurant s the Aquarium Café, it is owned by Americans (from SoCal) and the make both pizza and Mexican food; it was ridiculous; they even had draft beer and wifi. It is really nice that there is one place on the island that we can escape to if we are ever being overwhelmed by cultural integration… It was rad having a big dinner with everyone and after we decided to grab some drinks and go back to Dominica’s to continue the festivities. We all were hanging out and talk about our favorite movies, books and bands, it was a great feeling to know our island group jells really well together (since we are stuck with each other for 2 years). I am feeling really good about the next two years after attachment and hanging out with everyone; I am thinking this is going to be a very different experience than I expected but definitely something I can get on board with.




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From the Left: Love, me, Sean, Mandy, Abby and Ryan


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The Vava'u crew


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me and Dominica


When we all got back to Tongatapu we all debriefed each other on our different experiences once we settled in to Sela's Guest House (where it all started). Everyone seems to really like their sites especially Katy and Chiara who will be on Eua. It is good hearing about everyone placements because after this week we will be all separated and wont be able to hear from each other as much... Jack, a volunteer from the last group, and his girlfriend threw a post-halloween party and invited all of us. A lot of people ended up bailing because had been a long few days but a few of us still went. It was surreal because Jack's girlfriend has a real job working for the Australian embassy so she has an actual house. It was so strange to see a whole bunch of white people and be at a house party in the middle of Nuku'alofa. It was really fun though, and I got to have a great talk with Jack about his experience and things he wished he would have done. We even talked about different side projects that we thought could do well here. Eventually a few of our group got a little too carried away and had to go back, which was a little embarrassing for me (we are the PC and people are throwing up in bushes). Katy and I held our own for a bit longer after the bulk of our group left and I was able to try an amazing beverage called a coffee martini (phenomenal). When we got back to Sela's Katy and I decided to be roommates (since we are both without one) and Wren was still up so we all stayed for a while just shooting the shit. Sela's is a really nice bubble and it is nice to be back here for a bit.


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me, Wren and Katy at the party



Attachment Day 1: Getting to Vava'u and Leiti Shows

November 1, 2012



We just got back from attachment today. Attachment is when us trainees go to stay with an older volunteer near our sites and learn what their day to day is like and just be able to see how a volunteer lives. This means I got to actually go to see my site and where I will be living and working for the next 2 years! Even flying into Vava’u I knew I was in the right place, it’s not the Tongatapu is not beautiful but Vava’u is what everyone thinks of when they think of the south pacific. It is absolutely spectacular, there are tons of small islands and teal water and the main island itself is incredible. Mt Talau


The first day we all met our attachment volunteers. 3 of us guys were staying with Sean who is going to be or volunteer leader next year (he is extending his service an extra year and working part time with PC to help with training of new volunteers among other things). We got to see the main town of Niafu, which is tiny but fun and there are a few nice restaurants that will be fun to go to when we can’t handle Tongan food anymore. We all made a great lunch at Dominca’s house (the old volunteer leader, she will be leaving in December). Her house was really nice and big, she made it very cozy with couches and candles and what not. After lunch we met up with Mandy and Love (a volunteer from Sean's group) and went on an amazing hike up the tallest mountain in Vava'u, Mt Talau. The mountain had lookout points that had views of the whole island and some of the outer islands! When the hike was finished we were significantly sweaty (Vava’u is hotter the Tongatapu and more humid) so we headed over to Sean’s place, which was definitely more of what I expected of a PC house to look like. It was about the size of a master bedroom of a normal house and the bathroom and shower were located on the outside of the house. It was nice though and easily manageable, of course the first thing I see when I walk in is the infamous molokau! A molokau is the island’s crazest/scarest predator to us volunteers, it is a giant centipede that has pincers and its stings are incredibly painful- the damn thing was curled up right where I would be sleeping that night… After settling in and what not we got ready to go to a fakalati show. Fakaleitis are basically drag-queens but it is a bit different because there are some really interesting cultural aspects behind it- one being that make the choice to be raised as a girl at a very young age in a country where homosexuality is illegal. We met up with Mandy (who was staying with Love) and Mark and Alyissa (who were staying with Dominca) at Tongan Bobs (the only real bar on the island). It was such a crazy show; never did I think I would be watching drag-queens grind up on my fellow volunteers during my PC service!  






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our plane some of the new Vava'u crew




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some of the view flying into Vava'u


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welcome to Vava'u


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the molokau.


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on the hike up to the mountain... oh the things you find in the backs of pickup trucks here


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one of the islands next to the main island of Vava'u


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some of the main Island


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Sean, Dominica, me and Jeff over looking some of Vava'u's main island


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more lati


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me with the most convincing lati


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Harrison got all the action


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