Thursday, April 25, 2013

Site Goings On

April 24, 2013


The Saturday we got back from training also happened to be the Australian Aid volunteers’ going away party at one of the local establishments in town. I felt obligated to go even though I kind of just wanted to get back, unpack and watch a movie. Instead, I had to drop off my stuff and head straight into town. The party ended up being a lot of fun though and I got an early ride back to my village from my favorite cab driver so I was still able to make church the next morning. Their party made me think how different our experiences are even though we cross paths somewhat frequently. My going away "party" is going to be quite different.




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the volunteers giving their fakamalo from left to right: Georgie, Elana, Tria


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the little kid on my head is one of Georgie's coworker's sons- he liked to climb


At church, unbeknownst to me until minutes before, we performed the action songs that I have spent the better half of 2 months trying to learn. In case you are still wondering what an action song is, imagine an extremely religious, half spoken, half sung, song that hand gestures are put to. Now imagine 50 village kids dressed in all white and in lines from youngest to oldest performing these songs- straight up hilarity.




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an action shot of the action song- can you spot me?


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my village youth and I after our brilliant performance


Because of training I didn’t get to go to the market this week and buy food, so in an attempt to feed myself I have been asking the kids to bring me assorted ingredients. Pele is a green leaf plant that gross like wild fire here and is used similarly to how you would use spinach. Breadfruit is exactly what it sounds like and is so abundant here that you can literally just go outside and pick it off the trees- which is exactly what I did (of course by me I mean the class 4 kid I made precariously climb a tree to get me one of the only remaining fruits left in my surrounding area). The beauty of living in a village in Tonga is even without money you can always eat (even if what you are eating is pretty flavorless- thank god for onions and hot sauce!). Take yesterday for instance, we had this random Mormon volunteer day at my school where all the Mormons in my village (plus some from other places) came to mow my school's field and generally clean up, after this event the Mormon bishop invited me over to his house and fed me!




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this is the crew it took to mow the field in a day- if you cant tell there are 5 lawnmowers, 2 weed wackers and countless machetes



In-service Training

April 13, 2013


In-service Training was super great! It is always fun to get together all 15 of us and hear about everyone’s service. It seems like everyone is doing really great and having such a good time at site. It is also great to be able to get to see all of our staff, Peace Corps Tonga has such a great staff and because we are hounderds of miles away on Vava'u we only get to see them during trainings. Beside the fun of getting together, trainings are always a good time because they are on the main island (Tongatapu), which means there is a lot of good food that we can’t get at site (pretty much Chinese food and a café that serves iced coffees and cappuccinos). Basically training was six days of me gorging myself and drinking way too much caffeine. I also had a stomachache the whole time and we were all thinking that I might have a warm because of the massive quantities of food I was taking down (had the doc check me out and no worries she thinks I am fine, just over indulging).


The training was held at this beautiful and brand new catholic theological center run by a nun named Sister Katy who spoke Tongan, English and Italian on account of having to go there for nun stuff for a few years. I learned a lot during our 8 – 5 days and I am super excited to try new things in my classroom that will hopefully make me feel like my teaching is more focused and effective. We are also making a lot of head way on our project to help stream line the Tongan English curriculum and make it more user friendly for the teachers. We used the knowledge of our experience teachers in the group to get really relevant and useful information on teaching and classroom structure. Using trained professionals is not Peace Corps' strong point so I was really happy they learned from all of our previous evaluations and allowed those who know what they are doing to run the sessions.


Basically the days went like this: Chiara, Mandy and I do an early morning walk to get real coffee then we all load up the big Peace Corps van (which makes us all feel like we are a huge family going on vacation) and drive to the training site. First off, language class (which was great) followed by morning tea break- I can’t stress enough how rad tea times are; without a doubt one of the highlights of Peace Corps ( I wonder if other PC countries have tea times and if they are as good as ours?). After tea there was more training then a break for lunch cooked by the staff at the institute and it was always delicious. Back to training, second tea, more training then back to Sela’s guest house where most of us quickly dropped off stuff and changed and then hit up the café. Most of us would meet up for dinner at one of the few establishments that could accommodate a group of people and wasn’t a fried chicken place. Finally we would head back to Sela’s and discus general goings on until bed time.


By the time the second Saturday rolled around it was hard to say goodbye to everyone, especially the two on Eua, who all us Vava’u crew feel most close to, but it was also good to finally be going back to site after such a long break although the adjustment back to site isn’t a fun thing to look forward to. After spending so much time being stimulated and around people it is hard to come back to site where you are alone and not as much is going on. I am sure after a few days I will get back into the swing of things again. It is just hard to believe that we only have two more trainings left in our service, which means we will only see everyone as a group two more times before we leave Tonga.


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so you know we actually do work


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sometimes...




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Steph, Michael, Katy and me


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Chiara, me and Katy at our big night out


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Peace Corps Tonga Group 77 gentlemen: back left to right: Michael, harrison, Jeff bottom left to right: Mark, Ryan and me


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Mandy, me and Katy



Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Katy Invades Vava’u

April 11, 2013




My volunteer friend Katy, who now works on the island of Eua (which is very far away), planned to come up to Vava’u and visit before our In-service Training. We were both excited and planned the 4 days she was going to be here to be a blast! We booked a day sail and snorkel and I planned on taking her around my village and around Vava’u plus I planned amazing meals and snacks, to be prepared by yours truly... She was all booked to get in at 9 in the am on Wednesday so I arrange to meet her at the airport and come back to an awesome breakfast of breakfast burritos, hash browns and toast and coconut cream brownies- I had spent the previous night precooking. The morning of her arrival I got a call from her saying that the airline over booked her ticket and told her she could not come on the plane even though it was a connecter flight from her small island. They told her to come back for the afternoon flight. I was pissed and upset that are plans would have to be changed (and that my breakfast would go to waste) but I decided to change the breakfast burritos to regular burritos and await her arrival in the late afternoon by helping the class 6 kids build an umu in the back of the school. Side note here- it is hilarious that in the States kids can barely hold a knife without getting yelled at, here the kids are building underground ovens with machetes, chopping onions and grating coconuts. Anyway, I got another call from Katy telling me the airline told her the flight was over booked again and she wasn’t going to make it- I just kept thinking this would never happen in America, only to remember I am not in America and this is definitely something that would happen with the corrupt temporary 1-plane-airline set up by the Tongan government after the actual domestic airline left the country. After a lot of yelling at the airline and some minor lying (I told them I was a coordinator for PC and I needed my volunteer up in Vava'u) they agreed that she would definitely would get on the flight in the morning so Katy and I decided that she should still come and we would just try and rush to make the sail in the morning.




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this is the umu prepared by the 8 class 6 kids- they still have class during school breaks so this was done during class



1 day down and no more food later I picked up Katy at the airport and we had to go straight to town to get to our day sail. We were joined by Mandy and Jeff (Vava’u volunteers) and had an amazing day on the water, snorkeling, eating and doing some light drinking-some of which was fresh coffee, like actual not instant. After the day sail we got some fries at Café Aquarium then we went to quiz night at the local pub and even though we lost by a lot at quiz we had a great time.




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Katy and me


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Me, Katy and Mandy


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the sunset from the boat


The next day we met up with the rest of the Vava’u volunteers to spend the day that the beach in my village. We got back from the beach and made more tortillas from scratch (left over from my failed burritos) and made chicken tacos. It was a super awesome night and we all had a lot of fun so even though Katy’s trip started off rocky it ended up turning out pretty dang good.




Saturday, April 13, 2013

Easter Festivites in My Village

March 31, 2013



For those as religious as the Tonga people, the Easter festivities actually start the Friday before on a day know to those who follow the Lord as Good Friday. I got to celebrate this shamefully overlooked holiday by going to church and going to a feast. The feast was wonderful, as feast go, it was in town at the house of a women who used to be from my village but moved to town to work as a nurse at the hospital. Unfortunately for me, this feast was not all fun and eating, no my friends the time had come for me to get over my fear and give a fakamalo speech. Traditionally in Tonga, during a feast different people from all different statuses get up throughout the meal and give very long and slightly repetitive speeches thanking different people and the lord. Being in my community 5 months now and not being able to hide behind the veil of being lost in translation I knew that this would be the feast at which I would give my speech. So I ate fast and tried to translate everything I would need to give a short but thoughtful little speech. My time came a went and I feel like I did a decent job. I remembered everyone I wanted to thank and I didn’t screw up or fumble my words so I rewarded myself by eating more. The rest of the day was pretty good too. I stayed in town to get dinner with Sean and volunteers before he set off for his big vacation back to America for a month. We hiked Mt. Talau and went swimming by the new land bridge, which had the cool current that pulled you under the bridge.


On Saturday I returned to my village thinking I was going to have a relatively low-key long weekend. Come to find out that the big Wesleyan church in my village does an event called apitanga (camping) where the youth (youth in Tonga is anyone unmarried so essentially kids from about the age of 13 to mid 20s) sleep at the church from Friday to Monday. I spent Saturday night at action song practice and then slept in the back of the church with the other guys. The down side (beside the mosquitoes eating me) was that when you sleep at the church there is no way to avoid the 4:30 am wake up call by the church bells. I was unable to escape, eyes red with tiredness and feeling groggy I sat through 5 am mass only to go home shower make a cup of coffee and return for 10 am mass. It is frustrating that one of my goals is to see the sun rise and I haven’t been able to cross it off, not because I am not up early enough to see it but because I am trapped in a church every time! After 10 am mass we drank kava and then unbeknownst to me there was a feast (surprise feast are really the best kinds of feast)! So I got to re-feast, this time with the Wesleyans, and I gave another fakamalo- and in this one I threw in a couple of jokes.


After the feast we drank kava before going to third church and action song practice. Following action song practice we (the youth) went out to drink some kava. Apparently Easter Sunday is the one day a year that the youth can drink kava- see normally you are not supposed to drink kava unless you are finished with school. I think the reason for this is because that following Monday is also a holiday so no school. It was such a funny experience because all the men were very kava drunk and when the little kids came out they past them a shell of kava and it reminded me of dads giving their kids first sips of beer. The little kids were all so proud and tried to chugged down the shells and were encouraging each other as the drank. I ended up staying up until 3:30 drinking with some of the guys who are more around my age, which was a nice change. I let one of them give me a tattoo with marker but he was a little kava drunk and instead of some kupesi around my lower knee he gave me a full leg tattoo.


Finally we made it to bed only to be woken up an hour later by the church bells, but this time I slipped out and went home to go back to sleep. I had so much fun this weekend and it was a really big confidence booster because it was with just people in my village no one else. It is really good to know I can have such a great time without having to have another white person around, as weird as that may sound...






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surprise feast in the church! Women and kids just kept coming in with food while we were drinking kava- so sweet!


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The guy in the middle is the one who gave me the leg tattoo


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the kava band being drunk- the one in the sunglasses is my town officer


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the kids anxiously awaiting their next shell