Good Morning J
(I wrote this post over a few different days, so sorry if it’s
a little confusing J)
It’s Saturday, at about 6:45 am and the sun is up, so I
might as well be too. It’s going to be a
hot one today… I woke up sweating already, so this can’t be a good sign. But my body just has to get used to it,
that’s all. So, it’s been a big week,
and was officially my last full week of student teaching. This coming week we have a holiday on Monday,
called Heritage Day. Then the four day
school week follows, with Friday being the end of the third quarter. Then comes a week break for students and
teachers, and I leave from the airport on that Wednesday night. Wow.
Friday:
We had a short day of school, knocked off at 12pm. Since the holiday is coming on Monday, they
let students out early so they can have a long weekend in case they are going
to travel. So I headed back and was home
by 12:30. This was great, but I actually
would prefer to be at school for a full day.
Sometimes it seems that time here at home can crawl by. So when we got here, I asked Ronewa if she
wanted to head into town with me. So
despite the intense heat, she walked down with me to the taxi and we went to
Louis Trichardt for the night. When we
got there, we had a good few hours left before all the shops closed, so we went
looking around. Now, I do enjoy
shopping, but not enough to want to do it for hours on end, so by the end, I
was very tired. Ronewa had fun trying to
convince me to buy crazy things, but I again left with nothing. Most shops are fairly Americanized, and yes,
the prices are a little cheaper, but there was nothing really that I thought
was a necessity. As far as gifts go,
again, there really was nothing, so I apologize to you all. But then we headed to find a taxi, since it
was starting to get dark. But what did
we pass on the way to the taxi? That’s
right, a pizza place. So in we went, and
I bought us a tiny pizza, a triple decker, with none other than chicken. So it was actually pretty good, but chicken
is starting to turn my stomach funny, so I couldn’t eat too much of it. But it came with choice of “cold drink,” so I
picked Coca-Cola light, pretty close to Diet Coke, and I was a happy
woman. Then I sat in the taxi with
Ronewa, eating pizza, drinking pop (not to be confused with the water and
cornmeal thing we eat every single day, Pap), and listening to some traditional
African music with an accordion in it (along with a guy in the seat behind me
playing an old school Mario gameboy). It
was pretty great. Then I got off alone
at my stop and Ronewa kept going to spend the night at her aunt’s house. So I walked up the mountain in the dark
alone. And I was pretty confident. The stars were amazing and it was a nice little
walk. The neighborhood is very safe, so
I was comfortable. I found out later
from Ronewa that the 3 ladies in the front seat of the taxi were amazed that a
white girl was getting off from the taxi alone, and they couldn’t believe I had
actually said a word in Tshivenda. It
was funny to me J.
Saturday:
Well, I woke up early and then just relaxed for the
morning. Then at 9 am I bathed and
started to get ready for the day. I
actually curled my hair today, since I found out that one of the girls here has
a curling iron. I asked if they had one
and explained what it was, and they respond, “OOOH a thong! Yes, we have one.” Well, I officially had to do something I
never thought I would ever do in my entire life. I asked to borrow someone’s thong, a hot
thong, might I add. Oh dear. Then I curled my hair, put on some nice
clothes, and even a tiny bit of make-up and was ready for the day. The girls’ responses were pretty funny, they
don’t see me like this ever. But then
the parents came back from town and we headed to Joice’s sister’s 60th
birthday party. They invited me along,
and I decided it would be fun to experience something new. So we headed out about an hour away to a town
called Thohoyandou (try and sound out that one J
its toy- ahhnd- o). The drive was
breathtaking. The mountains, forests,
lakes, and the tea farm were just beautiful.
When we arrived, we pulled into the parking lot of a very nice
hotel. It’s called the 2 ten hotel, and
has a few banquet rooms in a separate building.
We headed into that room, and it looked very much like the set-up for a
wedding reception. We sat at a round
table with a good view of the head-table set up on the stage area. I was by far the youngest person there
outside of the grandkids. But people
were fairly kind in saying hello. The
biggest problem was that many of these people, because they are older, do not
know English very well. So I spent much
time looking at people, smiling, trying my best to figure out what they were
saying to me J. At least a smile crosses cultural boundaries,
right? Then the kids and the birthday
woman, with 4 of her friends, walked in the back door dancing to some
music. Then she went up to the center
seat on stage, accompanied by her best friend.
The other three friends sat a little ways down. There was a fancy cake up front, along with
lights and lots of purple fabric and flowers everywhere. The program showed about 9 different parts,
mostly consisting of people coming up and giving well wishes to the woman. Interspersed between these speeches were
times of singing, dancing, and other people coming to the front to talk. Each of the people who spoke took about 45
minutes… so after about 5 hours, the program was over! It was soooo long. Now it helped that between people they
cranked the music and danced and cheered and sang and everything, but not
understanding a single word made it hard to keep focused. But after about 3 hours, they started to let
us go out and grab food. There was a
great amount of potluck-style food for us, much of it traditional. It was very good! And I ate myself full. Then we ended with custard and fruitcake with
juice. When it was over, we went and
looked around the hotel a little. It’s
still being worked on, but has a beautiful view up top! Then came the ride
home, got back to the house around 8, and found out I have a roommate now for
the next week. Ronewa’s older sister is
here, so I’m trying to adjust to having another big personality in the room J. This is an adventure for sure!
Sunday:
We headed to church an hour early this morning. Mr. Sibadela’s brother was getting engaged at
church, so he had to help get everything in order. Now, I am glad I was able to experience this,
because marriage engagements are done a little differently around here. I wish I could just have showed you all
instead of trying to explain, but I will do my best. After about 2 hours of church, things changed
up a little. With music playing and
people cheering and dancing, the families came up to the stage; his family on
the left and hers on the right. After
some talking, he stepped forward and so did she. They still were not next to each other or
touching at all. The pastor then talked
a bit about each person; how the church has found this marriage to be a good
idea, a little bit about their pasts (pretty open), and then that the families
have things in order and agree for the wedding.
Then the man takes the ring, given to him by a boy, and then puts it on
the woman’s finger and everyone screams and cheers. I was told that if a ring can’t be afforded,
they just find something else to exchange and wait til the wedding for the
ring. But then after the service, all
family members go to the bride-to-be’s house for a potluck style dinner. Now a tent was set up in the street, no
problem that it blocked traffic J. But then the brides family was in that tent,
and the grooms family was behind the house.
The two families ate separate food and did not mix. The bride came over to say hello for a
minute, then went back. I don’t really
understand all this, but its kind of fun to see the cultural differences, as
well as the westernized ideas that are leaking into the cultural practice as
well. And while I was there, people kept
encouraging me to get more food. They
all want me fat, and they laugh whenever they tell me. Maybe it’s because they see me getting fatter
and are proud of their accomplishment, haha.
But then we got back around 4:30 and relaxed the rest of the day. I went for a short run with Hakhakhi later on
and then helped with dinner, then went to bed.
It’s now Monday morning, and I’m about to head for another
run. Today is National Heritage day, and
I would really like to get out and do something different to take advantage of
this day. But we’ll see how everything
goes. But, I hope you all have a good
start to your week, and I’ll be in touch as much as I can this coming week!
Yikes,
ReplyDeleteSound like they basically had a wedding already. Does that mean the wedding is gonna be HUGE?