Friday, May 9, 2008

A Volunteer...and Katsepy Resident!



Well, it has been so long since I've last been able to post, I'm not even sure where to begin. Last week marked the end of training, a bittersweet good-bye to my Malagasy homestay family and fellow trainees (and now after ten weeks together very close friends) and a meaningful swearing in ceremony in Tana. The transition into Volunteer life began with a quick move into my new home of Katsepy, where I have been beginning the adjustment to a new, very hot, very beachy lifestyle. :) My counterpart (main go-to person to work with at my site) is a former Malagasy senator and an amazing resource and person - very well educated and travelled and, still at 70, going strong and working hard to improve the lives of the people in Katsepy, the town his family comes from and to represent and share the Sakalava culture of the region. He knows everyone and is incredibly well respected and will be a great resource for me for the next two years. He and the community have provided me with a beautiful little home and a rather large gardening plot. Wednesday I had the tremendous experience of transplanting rice seedlings in the rice paddies near my garden plot. Listening to the chatter of the two Malagasy women who farm there and patiently taught me how to do the transplanting as I squished calf deep, pudding-like mud between my toes and tried to keep from falling face first into the newly planted rice, I couldn't help but feel in awe of the moment. Of course, this excitement was mixed with the frustration of understanding very little of the chattering going on around me, but I know that the language will improve with time...little by little I will become tamana tsara (well settled). The tremendous generousity and welcoming nature of the Malagasy people, especially in my community, is already helping me to feel at home. Every evening (all 7 of them now :) I try to make the rounds through Katsepy - hit up Mama Jackie's (taught me how to make coconut bread the other day), wander through the little market (this is easy and fun because all we talk about is food and that is about the extent of my vocab anyway) and say hello to everyone I pass (they get a huge kick out of the fact that I know how to say hello in the local dialect and ask what's up). I gave a small speech at the town meeting where my counterpart and the mayor introduced me to everyone and so they all think I'm super mahay (smart - ha! little do they know I just nod and smile) and like to tell me so, which is a huge confidence booster. I've already aquired some teenage sidekicks who help me find my way around (not hard...Katsepy has all of two main 'roads') and show me where to buy this and that. And this is were I should mention how incredibly beautiful my site is...coconut trees everywhere...it truly is a beach paradise. Things I like...picking fresh fruit off the trees as you walk by and eating it on the spot, how unnecessary shoes are, the wind that comes off the sea and provides relief from the incredibly warm climate here on the west coast, the 'siesta' time after lunch when it is too hot to do any work and instead you lay out in your yard (sand of course) on a straw mat which you occasionally have to move to keep it in the shade, the beautiful lambas (sarongs) the women wear and I like to slip into to keep cool after my evening bucket shower while I cook dinner (rice of course), and the wide open possibilities of new friends, new culture, new learning experiences, and a new outlook on life as a Peace Corps Volunteer living and working in Madagascar. I have so much to learn and discover and do, whew it is all at once overwhelming, exciting and still totally crazy.
Just a couple notes to round up training...my stage (group of trainees) was incredible...I couldn't have asked for a better group of people to share the last ten weeks and the next two year with. And now everyone is living in beautiful, interesting and unique places across Madagascar...lots of places and people to visit! Our last tech trip was to a natural park where, yes I saw lemurs in the wild (and lizards, frogs, and chamelons)! The rainforest here is incredible. If Peace Corps had let me, or at least taken their eyes off me for more than a couple minutes, I'm pretty sure I would have headed off to explore and sleep in the mossy undergrowth for a couple weeks. My birthday was very fun, despite having language class all day. We celebrated in style with Malagasy cake, awesome homemade cards, and lots of hugs. My family even gave me a new lamba. It was a great way, and place, with great people to turn 24. We held a big picnic to say good-bye to our families in Mahitsitady, but hopefully I'll be back again sometime in the next two years to see my little sister again. Swearing in (the official ceremony where we take our Volunteer oaths) was a huge success with a fantastic speech in Malagasy from one of our very own - way to represent Brendan! And the last days together were spent cramming in last minute tech knowledge and language and the last nights talking, dancing and enjoying. We even had a talent show...another former dancer in the group, Katherine and I choregraphed and performed a 'Malagasy' dance. It was all fantastic.
Hmmm...something has interrupted the uploading of my pictures. And I've already been online too long, but what is up already are some pictures of my Malagasy homestay family...very wonderful! Our stage has created a group blog at http://www.dagudiaries.blogspot.com/ which you should check out for more insight into life as a volunteer in Madagascar and pictures as well as links to the blogs of others in my stage that are better at posting pictures than I have been. Please enjoy! And write often. Sorry to be so absent, but now I should be making the trip into Majunga to bank/internet twice a month. More pictures and stories to come! I love you all very much and am looking forward to hearing more about life back state-side. Congrats again to Lindsay and Aaron! Hope married life rocks so far. Lots of love, hugs, kisses and thoughts. And as before, know that I am very happy here and really enjoying my experience thus far. With an amazing support system both from home, here in Madagascar and in my community, this will become my home in no time. Love you!

~Tara

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hi Tara. That was a wonderful post. I am so happy for you! It sounds like your time has been a dream so far. I think of what it must be like to be in your shoes...and I can't wait until I leave on my own trip. I still don't know where to yet! Soon i hope! I enjoy reading about your experiences. Keep 'em coming! Take care and have fun!

Best,
James