Sunday, May 31, 2009

sorry it's been so long...

Last week I managed to get at least one of my exams out of the way. It was Making of the Modern Middle East, and I think it went pretty well. I wrote on Israel/Palestine, Egypt, and the end of the Ottomans. People sounded pretty stressed, but I think that it went ok. Which I'm sure you all know means one of two things: it went pretty well, or it went horribly. I guess that I'll just have to wait and see...
On Thursday Emily and I went to the V & A Waterfront (V&A for Victoria and Alfred). We went to the aquarium there and got to see lots of cool stuff. We were there for the penguin feeding, featuring mainly jackass penguins, a type of penguin unique to South Africa. Two things to note here: first, I'm in a hemisphere where penguins roam free, second, they really are called jackass penguins. I also got to see a cuttlefish, seahorses, and jellyfish. All in all, a very cool place. Afterward we went and saw some vaguely bizzare chick flick. Good for a rainy day I guess.
The V & A Waterfront itself is kind of a bizzare place. It's a humongous mall, one of the most visited attraction in Africa (how sad is that). It's a weird mix of African kitsch and high fashion stuff. It's way too big and just kind of overwhelming. I think that my system tolerates shopping as well as the next person's, but there's something about a bloated mall selling everything you never wanted that's just too much. I guess I do a lot better in smaller venues, or when I know what I want from a specific place. Long story short, it's way too much.
Other than that, I haven't been up to too much. My friend Hannah and I have managed to get through season six of Buffy the Vampire Slayer (if you haven't seen it, it really is much better than you think), and are hoping to get through seven as well. I have all of this coming week off. My exam schedule is pretty horrible, just the one last week, then one on the tenth, two on the eleventh, and I leave the twelfth. Gross. I pretty much have to be packing as I study and say goodbye. Sometime this week though I'm hoping to go to Stellenbosch with some friends, so that should be fun. A short road trip to go wine tasting and hiking? Count me in!

Well, love you guys loads, and I'll see most of you very soon. And I've put new pictures up, so feel free to check them out!

Friday, May 22, 2009

a marathon

So, I managed to finish and turn in all of my semester work yesterday, but it's not over yet! I have my Middle Eastern politics exam on Wednesday, and in the proud SA tradition, it's half of my grade. Stressful to say the least.
I'm hoping tomorrow to go to the Saturday morning market again, as well as to the aquarium with the girls I mentor at LEAP. I haven't been to the aquarium yet, and I'm actually really excited about it. And tonight there's an African culture night, which hopefully I won't have to pay admission for. If I do, I just might have to reconsider going... Ugh. It's so hard, because it's nearing the end and there's still so much to do, but nothing is free. I'm sure it'll all work out though, it just takes some planning!
Sorry I can't write more, but honestly nothing too scintillating has happened recently. The past however long really has just been about getting the semester wrapped up. But classes are over now, and I can't wait to fit in tons of fun things in my last couple of weeks, at least when I'm not freaking out about exams...

Lots of love!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Holy Hell

So these past two weeks have been somehow both uneventful and overwhelmingly stressful at the same time - ah the joy of the end of the semester! I've have several papers that, while interesting, were also a bit like pulling teeth. Who knew that Palestinian nationalism was not just intuitively obvious? Go figure!
Seriously though, most of my time has been spent holed up in my room, drinking obscene amounts of tea, instant coffee, and decidedly non-instant hot chocolate (think milk, a sauce pan and cocoa - aka a great way to short-term procrastinate), and reading never ending amounts of literature on the world at large. Some part of it is actually extremely liberating though. Since going to IU, I've been so focused on biology that I kind of forgot that there was in fact a larger world out there. Between Middle Eastern politics and Southern African archaeology it's been wonderful to start thinking big picture again. I remember how much I used to enjoy spending my highschool study hall hours just surfing wikipedia to learn about whatever interesting event caught my fancy at the time. It was so nice to feel somewhat broadly-based. I feel like this semester has to some degree, albeit maybe only termporarily, re-awakaed that in me. Even all of this blogging and non-science paper writing I feel has somewhat shaken me out of a sort of biology induced stupor. Mind you, that doesn't mean that I can wait until next semester. Organic, phyics, and mycology all at once? Hell yeah!
Sorry I haven't written about the Cederberg rock paintings. If you ever really want to know, just ask me when I get home and I'll give you an earful. There's so much worth saying, and I'm not sure that I could even really do it justice via this format. Fascinating stuff though, and you know you can count on me to get excited to talk about it!
That's about it for now. Hopefully it won't be so long until another post, but I warn that this particular wave of intensive academia won't be over until next Thursday...

Love and miss you all!

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

it's going to take even longer...

I just realized that I don't actually have time to say everything I want about the road trip to the Cederberg mountains, but I'll try to before the end of the week. That should give you some indication of how much school work I have, which has unfortunately dovetailed into a serious lack of motivation about school / over motivation about knitting and crocheting.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

ninjas, townships, muggings and cheese

So, yet another crazy week. First, some more comments on the elections. We went around and saw the polling stations and things seemed generally pretty laid back but organized. After you vote you get the top of your thumb marked with an ink that stains like henna, only faster. I heard about people trying to wash it off right after it was put on, and it would re-appear rather quickly. People are still walking around with thumbs that look like they were maimed by car doors...
As for parties, some of my favorites I saw were the Cape Separatist Party, the plethora of Muslim and Christian parties, and the party founded on the basis of bringing back the death penalty. Especially the Separatist one. But in the end it happened just like everyone thought it would, and by Saturday we had found out that Jay Z was in fact the new president and the ANC had won in a landslide, but just below 2/3 majority, which is good. So no constitution changing. In the western cape (where I am) the Democratic Alliance (aka DA, aka generally white middle class) won the regional parliament and premier (like a governor). Last election they just got the premier but the ANC got the parliament so they were both basically deadlocked. Throughout the rest of the country the main opposition came from the Congress of the People (Cope), which is an offshoot of the ANC. Cope Leaders were generally in Robben Island along with Mandela, Zuma and the like, but either quit or were kicked out of the ANC due to their non-support for Zuma. As a side note, I think it's interesting that I've seen newspaper headlines calling Jay-Z SA's sexiest politician, which is horrifying. Here's some context: after purportedly raping a girl he was asked if he was afraid of getting HIV/AIDs, and he said no, he'd taken a shower. Awesome. He also has hundreds of counts of corruption and fraud against him that will basically just never be brought to trial probably. One of the minor parties that will be lucky to get even one seat in the national parliament, the Independent Democrats (ID), had as one of their slogans, "Put criminals in jail, not in government." Pretty telling if you ask me.
Aside from that, the week was interesting in and of itself. Emily and I went to see Elections and Erections on Thursday at the Baxter Theatre, which is right on campus. (I know that I'm probably mis-using "which," but I can't help it. I apologize to the proof readers and English buffs out there). It's a one man show by Peter Dirk-Uys, a political satirist who also wrote Macbecki. It was in two acts and really good, but I fell asleep during the second act and couldn't seem to stay awake. In the first act he dressed up as different (female) characters in order to speak as different voices commenting on the elections and politics in general. In the second half he dressed as his alter-ego, Evita Bezedenhuit (or something like that) and interviewed some local political figure. His fame basically comes from being an anti-apartheid activist as well as being openly gay. He's spoken to both Mandela and the national assembly while dressed as Evita, which definitely takes some balls.
Friday I went to a house party that my friend Sebastian was putting on at the house he considers himself an honorary member of. The theme was "Ninjas For the Advancement of the Space Program," and it was loads of fun. Emily and Maggie went as well, and we met loads of cool people and generally had a great time. It was nice to be able to go to a house party especially, because so much of the going out here is clubs, which never feels quite as comfortable. Sebastian had done some really cool art for the walls, and they had (for a reason I never picked up, but wholly agreed with) decided to fill the bathtub with fake blood and a disembodied arm. Walking to get a cab we got mugged, but we were carrying barely anything and the muggers definitely weren't too pushy, so it was not nearly as bad as it could have been. Somewhat scary, but we were intact and even got to keep a few things, so it could always have been much much worse. The only annoyance is having to figure out how to get a new phone, my task for later today...
Saturday I went to Yzerfontein to see some archaeological sites that had been discovered when building excavations had disturbed them. The sites were about an hour from Cape Town and we went for a class field trip. They were mostly shell middens, which are sites with tons of ancient shells that were eaten by ancient people (probably about 120 thousand years). It's amazing especially because they think that modern humans actually evolved here, partially because of the high amount of marine food intake which supplied ancient brains with the omega fatty acids necessary to encephalize (get bigger and more interconnected). Sadly we had to leave everything we found behind. Damn Monument Protection Act!
Sunday (sorry, I know this is a long post!) we went to Gugulethu to go to a really popular restaurant there calls Mzoli's. Shannon has a flatmate name Sia who's married to a girl named Zola (who's about our age) from Gugulethu, so she took us. Gugulethu is a black township, which means it's generally very poor, a little bit rough, and it's likely that some percentage of the population lives in handmade tin shacks. Lots of the townships started when black or colored populations were forcibly removed from where they were an put into these makeshift settlements. We walked around a bit during the day and some sites, including a place where they make Umqoboti, a traditional African beer made from fermented maize meal, among other things. We paid 5 rand to get a big coffee container full of it, and it was pretty good. It tasted really metallic, we think because of the metal container it was served in. I'll post pictures soon, it was quite an experience. We also saw some old hostels where men from the Eastern Cape would stay when they came to this area to make money. No women were allowed in the hostels, but often men would have a wife at home and a girlfriend here. Generally polygamy is widely accepted here. The idea of a "white wedding" - one were the marriage in monogamous - is pretty recent, and even Zuma has multiple wives. In the evening we made it to Mzoli's after buying some alcohol at a shabeen, which is an illegal liquor store (illegal because it doesn't have a license, tends to stay open later than others and will do things like sell you alcohol on a Sunday). Mzoli's is actually the freshest butcher in Gugulethu, so what you do is buy fresh meat then take it back and they grill it up for you. It takes forever, but we had brought salad and bought some dumplings and pap (it's like polenta), so it was a good time even for the vegetarians.
Yesterday was a day off, so we rented a car and went to wine country for a cheese festival. Basically the whole day can be summed up as wine, cheese, chocolate, olives and sun. I was driving so I did a bit of wine tasting early on, but then stuck to juice and water tasting. I think Maggie got sick off of all the cheese, which means we definitely got our money's worth on the entrance ticket. It was so much fun, and I'm already getting excited about the gourmet food festival in May!
So that's about it. I'll post pictures when I can. And kudos to any of you who were dedicated enough to make it all the way through! Love ya all loads!

Monday, April 20, 2009

election week!

So this Wednesday is of particular note, seeing as it is election day here in SA. Everyone generally expects that the ANC will win and that Jacob Zuma (referred to here as Jay Z - I'm not kidding) will become president. Elections here are party based, not people based, so you vote in the party and they pick the person for each individual seat. I'm not sure if it's still on going, but for a while there was also this kind of goofy period of floor crossing. What would happen is that a party would win a seat, and they would in turn put someone in. But then there's this one magical day where the people put into the seats can defect to whatever party they please, so there's no assurance that the party voted in will actually have that seat. I'm not sure if they still do that, I think there were concerns as to its constitutionality. Oh, also, it only takes a 2/3 majority to change the constitution, which from an American perspective is a little scary. On some level I'm really glad that it's so hard to mess with our constitution. I'm excited about the election, but let's not kid ourselves, I'm also just really happy I get the day off. I also get next Monday (Freedom Day) and next Friday (Worker's Day). Exciting! Hopefully next weekend we're taking advantage of the long break to road trip to Cederberg to see the rock art...
This past week I didn't do much other than go to a little art thing at someone's house with my friend Sebastian (a real live South African!). There was pottery this man did that was absolutely beautiful. It was really delicate in a way, which isn't normally my style, but he used these really gorgeous glazes and put textures in with lace, so it was really cool. There were also paintings by a woman. They were good, but nothing too special. There was also an old Argentinian man dressed all in shades of white and creme except for his red tie with white polka dots, which looked like it was painted onto paper. He was certainly older, but still taking art classes and loving life. I'm always so extremely happy to know there are people like that in the world.
Over the weekend Emily and I discovered this amazing market in another south suburb called Woodstock. The market is full of foods, designer clothes and jewelry, and set amongst all of these really cute little boutique-y shops offering just about everything you could want. The market goes on year round, which is even better, so hopefully we're going to make it a Saturday morning fixture. I got a pretty necklace with a ship on it, some shiitake mushrooms, sourdough bread, a gingerbread man, and this amazing preserve made of olive and chilis. In short, I'm in love!
Afterward we went to the Iziko slave lodge (Iziko just is what all of the museums in one group in Cape Town are called). It's the oldest slave lodge in the area and was used to house the slaves of the Dutch East Indies Company. Slavery wasn't abolished here until 1834 under the British, and for a while there were more slaves in the area than white people. Most of the slaves came from northern Africa, India, Malaysia, and the surrounding areas. The local people, the KhoeSan, were largely not enslaved because the colonialists wanted to keep at least somewhat friendly relations with them. The building itself was later converted into the parliament and supreme court buildings, so it's hard to see the infrastructured that allowed for it to be a horrid, dank slave lodge. It wasn't renamed until 1998 and is still under rennovation to properly showcase its history.
Sunday I went to the planetarium with my friend Sebastian. Afterward we walked around the Iziko South Africa Museum, which is basically just a natural history museum. First things first: SA'a dinosaurs are ugly. They look like mutant monitor lizards with dents in their heads and weird fangs. They really got not of the attractive ones. They were so interesting to look at though, mainly becuase probably due to their ugliness they weren't well publicized and therefore I've never seen anything like them. We also saw lots of random animal skeletons, some mineral, and an exhibit on some of the native groups. The planetarium show fell kind of flat because it was all just about the SA Large Telescope (SALT). I guess SALT used to be the biggest in the world, but within the past year or so it was overshadowed by a telescope in the US. As Sebastian puts it, SA realized that it really only had the money to invest in one science, and the one it picked was astronomy. Most of SA is karoo, a sort of scrubby vegetative area with low rainfall, which means that it's dry and flat and visibility is high. I've also been told that we're basically under one of the holes in the atmosphere, which also makes visibility good. Seems like pretty pristine location...
Afterward we went to the Mount Nelson Hotel (not named after Nelson Mandela, but something Nelson, who sounds like a big colonialist). It's basically the fanciest hotel in the area, but we managed to wander in and get some hot chocolate. It was definitely fancier than we were, but lots of fun. You know it's nice when you can finish the salty snacks and they just bring more without asking or charging. That's right, I'm living the good life!
That's about it though, other than the ongoing saga of trying to have good internet access. I was down at the coffee shop earlier and it kept kicking in and out, which is just infinitely frustrating. I've never been so tempted to believe in the gods as when I'm starting at a blank screen trying to figure out what sacred ritual or divine slaughter I need to commit to appease the masters of the interweb. We really don't realize how spoiled we are in the States, and I certainly can't wait to go back to being so!
Love and miss you all, and if any one actually knows what souvenir they want, then I would greatly appreciate the information. Otherwise if you're not careful you'll end up with cowhide house slippers and ugly jade statues of elephants. Consider yourselves warned!

Monday, April 13, 2009

pictures!

I can't put all of the details up right now, but I put a bunch of pictures up on picasa from the trip!

Monday, March 30, 2009

she left me roses by the stairs, surprises let me know she cares

the lighter side of Robben Island

So, last week was pretty awesome - mainly because of my birthday! I worked all week to finish up a paper for archaeology, and I think that it really turned out very well. The subject matter was pretty intense, and the paper was ten pages, but everyone I had proof read it said it was really pretty good, so that's exciting.
Friday was my birthday. I received three really nice cards in the mail, and a girl named Zandile at LEAP had made me a nice card as well. I actually teared up a little bit when I read the cards from home. It's so nice to know that people really are thinking of you and that "out of sight out of mind" doesn't apply to you too. Of course one of the cards from my uncle John and aunt Carol said "you'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll kiss your youth good bye!" It was certainly a bit shocking, but god bless their dark humor...
Friday night my friends organized a really awesome surprise birthday for me. We went to Camp's Bay, on the other side of the mountain. They wanted to do something that I couldn't do at home, so we had dinner at this really nice restaurant and had sundowners as we watched the sun set over the ocean. It was absolutely beautiful. They made sure to make it an american-style 21st as well. Inevitably our friend Annette had to point out the South African 21st tradition - something called a "flaming lamborghini." It was ok though, seeing as I remember the whole evening to be able to recount it! We all shared a bunch of desserts, but Shannon got a little something extra as a gift from the manager. We always give her a hard time and basically threaten to sell her for free drinks, so finally someone helped us prove our point that long legs and a short dress really do get extra attention for the wearer...
Afterward we went to a local bar in Camp's Bay call Dizzy's. This cop came and checked out IDs, which we thought was weird, but it got even weirder when by the end of the night the same undercover cop was dancing drunkenly on a table. In general it was a good place. They played all of the music from jackfm basically, with other selections from your 6th grade school dances. You might have noticed the post title from that annoying Blink 182 song that was so popular for a while. Yeah, we definitely rocked out to that as well. Awesome!
We went to one more club that kind of stunk, but we were all in pretty high spirits, so it was fun anyway. We had an "early night" and were in by 2:30 after only eight straight hours of birthday fun. I was just so touched that people would organize all of that for me. It was definitely one of the best birthdays I've had.
Saturday we went to Robben Island. It was a half hour ferry, then a 45 minute bus tour, then 45 minutes of an ex prisoner showing us around, then the ferry back. We went on the last trip of the day, but it would have been nice to go earlier and look around. The island was host to a leper colony, and maximum security prisons for political prisoners and convicts. So much of the current leadership of this country were in Robben Island together. Basically all of the top member of the ANC were in at one point or another. It was fascinating to hear our guide talking about the intricate smuggling systems they set up for political information. They led classes for themselves and also did general education and cultural activities. The ANC candidate for president right now, Jacob Zuma, took himself from a grade three education to a highschool diploma by doing correspondence courses while he was imprisoned in Robben Island.
I was reading a book when I was staying in Ocean View where they interviewed all of these people who had been affected in one way or another by the island, and one interview was with a former guard. He talked about how with the political prisoners if you left money and a newspaper laying on the table, they would return the money to you, but you'd never see the paper again. The political prisoners were apparently very disciplined and guards had to be switched out regularly because they so quickly became sympathetic. All of the political prisoners who were leaders were confined to cell block B. It seems to idiotic to think that it would in any way by effective to put all of these extremely intelligent disciplined people together so that even if they were against each other's organizations they would eventually work out a way to have them get along. The prison was eventually referred to as "the University" because of the intellectual and political influence it had on the prisoners.
So tonight we're planning to meet to plan our trip next week. We're going to Mozambique, Swaziland and parts of northern SA. It should be absolutely amazing, if we get it planned that is. On that note, I probably won't be posting next week...
That's about it though, hope everything is going well at home. Fall is beginning to peak its head in here, but it gets hot and cold by the week. I can't wait until I can just count on being able to wear boots and sweaters!
Love you all!

Monday, March 23, 2009

river rafting and a mountain on fire

Though this past week was mostly studying as well, a few interesting things did manage to happen. We've hit that point in the semester where first papers are due in almost every class, in about a two week span. For someone who's not used to writing this style of paper, it's pretty intense. I think it'll be ok though... (well, it has to be!)
Last week the mountain caught on fire one night. I know that sounds crazy, but there were lines of fire all along the mountain and it was still smoking and sizzling the next morning. They had four helicopters picking up water from near UCT to drop on the fire. My friend Shannon pointed out that it was probably largely ineffective and more for show than anything else, which I believe. I didn't get to see it at night when it was ablaze, but even just seeing the aftermath the next morning was insane. The whole thing was just kind of smoking and sputtering.
Friday night we went to see a play called Macbeki, which was a political farce with former-president Mbeki as some sort of Macbeth. It was pretty good, but a lot of it was definitely over our heads. The one point that did make it to us was when the porter, who was dressed in all white and had his face painted white and was always somewhat harrangued asked why he couldn't stay for an important conversation. He basically was reduced to actually saying, "Why can't I be here? Is it because I'm white?" I thought it was pretty interesting. I wish that I had gotten all of it, not just the really blatant stuff.
Saturday we went rafting on the Breede River (I think that was the name of it anyway). It was basically a pleasant float for the most part, although there was a fair bit of rowing toward the end. It was really pretty and it felt good to actually use my muscles and get a little worn out. I wish I could have taken pictures, but obviously water and digital cameras don't mix happily.
I guess that's about it for now. I'm hoping to finish up two papers today and tomorrow, but we'll see I guess. My friend Sebastian introduced me to this really great music by these two bands from Maine. One is Big Blood and the Bleedin' Hearts, which is a husband and wife who are both in the other band, Fire on Fire. They're really nice kind of folksy stuff, so I've been listening to that a lot. It's funny that I have to know a Capetonian to get properly acquainted with good American music!
That's about it, but know that I love and am missing you all!

Monday, March 16, 2009

a slow week

This past week has largely seen the beginning of the worst part of study abroad: the studying. A paper due this week, next week, and the week after that. How much fun! Not to mention that none are biology papers, so the lack of a hypothesis and methods sections gives me more than a few heart palpitations. Hopefully by the end of this semester my non-analytical brain will have had quite a rigorous workout...
Other than that, not much to report. The week consisted mainly of quiet nights and trying to keep up on readings. The weekend was either me studying or "studying" (aka staring out the window, eating a cookie very slowly or falling asleep in the grass). Somehow I managed to stay vaguely on top of things, but it's more like a marathon than a sprint. This coming weekend I'm going white water rafting Saturday, so I need to work on a paper all day Sunday.
I put up more pictures on Picasa. Because nothing super interesting happened, it's a short survey of things around where I live and go to school. And you all should know that I'm very jealous of what sounds like the beautiful spring weather. It gets to be roughly a million degrees (and that's in Celsius!) here a lot of days. Yuck!

Thursday, March 12, 2009

a better place for pictures!

So, I think that I've managed to set up an account on Picasa, another google thing. I'll be able to put up more pictures, so that should be good...
Check out picasaweb.google.com/aatinafrica for that!

...and please let me know if it isn't working.

Love you all!

Monday, March 9, 2009

making the Monday posts a tradition

A picture from last weekend: Emily, Shannon and I at Neethlingshof Wine Estate
A good looking bird at the ostrich farm (I feel like every post will eventually contain one good looking bird or another)

Coming back from the ostrich farm they let me sit in the bed of the truck. What a beautiful view!
My favorite picture from the weekend (although I swear I can't take a picture with a perfectly flat horizon to save my life)

The past week was pretty calm, in an eventful sort of way. During the week I attended a presentation given by UCT Student Workers Alliance (UCTSWA) on globalization and outsourcing as it pertains to a university setting. It was pretty interesting, but a little too communist for my taste. I also volunteered for the first time at the LEAP school, which tries to encourage maths and sciences to its students. That was pretty cool, but we'll see how it pans out.
In a weird way, the most exciting part of my school week was when I walked into my room at home, only to find a Cape Morning Dove sitting in the corner, bleeding from the head and staring at me. Surprising to say the least! Michelle, the Congolese man who lives in the house and is very nice, and I tried to capture it with a laundry basket. After leaving some blood stains on my ceiling it finally gave itself up and I got to teach Michelle the proper way to handle a bird. We put it outside in a protected spot, and it wasn't there the next day, so I feel at least ok about it.
This past weekend was the really fun part of the week. The program I'm on organized a home stay for us in a colored township called Ocean View. It was amazing. I stayed with a woman named Myrtle, her husband Patrick and their two children, Robin and Zoe. The family was so nice and open and loving. Both nights they made us big dinners and lots of people came over. One night they served fried abalone which apparently is illegal because it's endangered.
Saturday we went to help at a cancer benefit in the morning, then to an ostrich farm in the afternoon. Sunday we went to see the big bike race drive by. People who were there earlier apparently got to see Matt Damon drive by because he's in the area filming a movie and a big cyclist.
The story of Ocean View itself is pretty fascinating. The community was created in the early '70s by the forced relocation of the colored populations of nearby Simons Town. Many of the people lived where the apartheid government wanted to build a naval base so they were simply forced into moving. Despite the extremely unfair circumstances that their community was founded on, the people seem to have little residual animosity. When asked if they would move back if they could, my family said no. Though some areas of the community are poorer (tin shacks), generally people seemed comfortable. The family I stayed with had a working shower, good food, a flat screen TV, and had just redone their kitchen. Mainly though, the family was so full of love, and that's what made the difference. I felt more comfortable with Myrtle and the family than I had since I've gotten here. My family in Mowbray may think that they're living in much better circumstances, but it doesn't matter if there isn't good home cooked food and love enough to spare.
Something interesting they told us about was how in '94 when the new government came into being apparently there was a mass exodus of white people from the country. A lot of white people, if they didn't leave, stocked up on all sorts of stuff because they thought there would be a civil war. To think about the type of ingrained and institutionalized racism and white power structures that were here, it really is amazing that there wasn't more tumult. It really can't be over stressed what people like Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela did to keep South Africa together. (On a lighter side note, one of the waitresses at the restaurant I'm at keeps popping in an out her partial denture with a loud sucking noise. Those are the things that really do make me love people!)
I guess that the main point to take away is that though it's easy to view people as "other," a weekend in someone's house brings the point home that it's all the same thing, just a slightly different context. The differences make things interesting, but it's the similarities that are the real take home point. It may sound cheesy, but it really is profound to experience it in a new context. And let's be real, it's always nice to be around a loving mama who cooks you good food. Definitely helps with the homesickness, even if I'd prefer that it were my mama.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Sorry it's been a while...


Egyptian Goose at the Company's Gardens


Vodacom Stormers vs. the Reds (we're the Stormers - we Won!)
Hey All! So, things have been pretty busy here, and the internet's been as hard to get to as ever, but never mind the excuses...
Last weekend we went to a rugby game, which was really fun. There are guys wandering around with basically hot chocolate camel backs, and they'll sell you a cup in your seat. Pretty decadently awesome. Certainly cooler than the wander biltong (jerky) vendor. Our seats were good, and it was definitely better than the soccer game, where no one even scored. Maybe it's weird, but I just kind of enjoy watching people just wail on each other and being able to shout about it.
Culturally the soccer game we went to a while ago was very different than the rugby game. Soccer seems to have a much higher black attendance. Everything's a bit more laid back, and a little bit grimier. The stadium wasn't fully finished and there was no score board. At rugby there were various wandering vendors, nice score boards, play back screens and the vodacom stormgirls (basically your garden variety hooched-out chearleaders). Definitely different, and you just have to think about all of the reasons why.
Classes over the week were pretty good, just settling into a routine. Volunteering starts this week. I'm going to be at an organization called LEAP, which is a school that specializes in maths and sciences. It may be nerdy, but I'm already so fired up to encourage some young girls to love bio!
This past weekend we went wine tasting at a wine estate outside of Stellenbosch in the morning, and then picnicing at a place called Speir in the afternoon. I have to admit, it's pretty nice to be just a little wine tipsy at ten am in some lush wine estate, only to have it followed up by a picnic involving goat cheese. I'm not saying I could get used to it, but once was definitely great. That night we made some veg lasagna, then went out with a friend's flatmate's wife (Zola) and her friend (Crystal). It was such a good time, and it's so nice to actually feel like you know people who aren't American.
Yesterday a friend and I went to the Design Indaba fair in Cape Town. It's a huge design festival once a year. It was pretty interesting, but a lot of it was very familiar. There was a lot of screen printed fabric and bird-themed jewelry. I got a cool handmade ceramic necklace though, and lots of good ideas, so it was certainly not a bust. In the afternoon we went to Kirstenbosch botanical gardens and saw a concert in the park at night. The music was good, the mood was chill, and in general it was amazing. It's so cool to be able to look behind the stage and just see Table Mountain and Lion's Head stretching out beautifully against the sky. The crowd was pretty mixed, and it was so nice to see all of the families with small children just enjoying themselves. We might do it again, but this time remember to pack a picnic, or at least some snacks.
That's about it for now, and I'll try and be better in the future. I just feel bad posting without pictures too often. Internet here is paid for by the megabyte, not by time though, so it's hard to post pictures because they just eat up your allowance. I'm at a cute little coffee place now though that lets you have some wireless connection though, so it's all good.
Hope to hear from you all soon!

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

First Week of Classes

So things are finally beginning to fall into some semblance of a routine here, and it's certainly a welcome change. I'm taking four classes (The Making of the Modern Wold Economy, The Making of the Modern Middle East, Southern African Hunters and Herders and Logic and Epistemology), and all seem pretty good. The last one is a bit of a let down, because the two subjects are split into completely separate components, and I've already done all of the logic covered and much more in depth, but who doesn't like an easy A where you enjoy the course material? As for the others I'm always a bit concerned when I have to write a paper that doesn't include a "methods" section, but I'm sure it will work out...
As for those of you bored enough to follow this little blog, I just want to lay something out for future reference so that nobody gets the wrong idea. Race is a very very big issue here (obviously), and it's often important for explaining things to mention someone's race. Also, "colored" here isn't a derogatory term, but instead refers to someone who has mixed race parents. Just wanted to put that on the table so that when I make remarks about that kind of stuff nobody will think I've turned into some crazy Afrikaner.
Aside from that, a few observations (because I don't have pictures at the moment):
Salad dressing is almost non-existent here
Everything is wide-rule, two hole punch
Even though white people are a stark minority, most drivers seem to be white, whereas most walkers seem to be black (thank you legacy of apartheid)
People are much more into processed, prepared and frozen foods
Interracial dating is still very much a big deal here (although, after some honest conversation, most American friends (including myself) would admit that it's still somewhat of a deal at home)
Watching another people's race relations really makes you more honest and realistic about the (often messed up) nature of your own
Obama is the best thing that could've happened for people traveling abroad
Every South African seems to like a braai (huge barbecue)
Here it's referred to (at least by one of my professors) as the war ON Iraq, not the war IN Iraq (it does somehow seem more accurate, doesn't it?)

And that's about it for now, when I come up with more I'll jot them down...

Love and miss you all!

Saturday, February 14, 2009

What a trip!


The ferry to De Hoop (notice the guy literally pulling the ferry along a rope on the far right)

Sand dunes at De Hoop
Zebra!

Maggie and Andrew practicing rugby at the beach in Mossel Bay

So, we all managed to return home (rather triumphantly, at that) from our road trip along the Garden Route. A short recap:
Having rented our car from Thrifty (the only place that would rent to us youngun's), we set out for Mossel Bay the first night. The hostel was really gorgeous, and really cheap, so it was a great time. We had a lovely dinner at a local restaurant, with lots of wine, desserts and butternut squash ravioli. During dinner we got a call that some friends also in Mossel Bay had been robbed, but everything ended up being ok, and though people were short a few dollars, everyone was safe.
The next day we went for a short day at the beach in Mossel Bay, and all managed to burn the hell out of ourselves. Me especially. I was so sunburned on my legs I couldn't walk the next day. After our beach excursion and a short picnic lunch we set out for Wilderness (an actual city).
We did two days in Wilderness, which was in fact beautiful. Andrew, Shannon, Jeff and Maggie went for a hike while I loafed around the hostel, whimpered about my legs and read some South African Cosmo. An exciting day for sure.
After Wilderness we started heading back to Cape Town by way of De Hoop nature reserve. We took a ferry to get there, and it was pulled by the people working it, which was pretty interesting to see. Once we made it to De Hoop we even got to see wild zebras and antelope. It's actually really exciting to see something in the wild that you only ever see in zoos and National Geographic documentaries. We also climbed some beautiful dunes, and generally had a good time.

That's about it for the past week. The first day of classes was Friday, but things were pretty laid back, and aren't too intensive until Monday or Tuesday. But more on that later...

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Off on an Adventure!

So, just a quick little post before we set out on our road trip. Some friends and I managed to rent a car (shocking when you realize that we're all under 21), and are about to go pick it up for a 5 day tour of the garden route (think the southern coast of SA). The car's a manual, and we're not used to driving on the wrong side of the road, but I'm sure it will work out (mostly because I won't be driving - thank God!).
I finally have a bit more access to internet, so there should definitely be photos from that...
As for the past week, we did more orientation at UCT, as well as registered for classes. I'm not taking a single bio class, which will be a bit weird, but a nice change of pace. Registration was somewhat hectic. It took almost two hours to wait in line to get our IDs made, but other than that it was bearable. They still do everything here with paper forms, which was a not-so-fun part of it.
That's about it for now. The city is still beautiful, the restaurants are still great, and the weather is still amazing. Too Cool!

Monday, February 2, 2009

Almost a week in Cape Town

And what a week it's been! After some orientation in a hotel, I moved into a homestay near the University of Cape Town campus. UCT and the home I'm staying in are both in an area called Rondebosch (or something to that affect) and I've just been getting used to it. The woman I'm staying with is named Rose and she hosts events out of her house. The first night I was there there was a wedding. It was really ornate, but a little bit wierd in it's own way. Everyone there seemed to love it though, so a success! Rose also hosts other students, mostly kids in an English program. There's a Brazilian girl and French boy. It's definitely interesting!
Yesterday we went on a tour of the Cape Peninsula. We loaded into huge tour busses, and went all around the peninsula. We saw african penguins at a place called Boulder Beach, and then had lunch in a township called Oceanview. It was cool because the local kids did some breakdancing for us, as well as singing, and one kid did firedancing! Pretty neat. After that we went to the Cape of Good Hope, the south-western most point in Africa. It was completely beautiful, ocean all around. I think that I even saw two ostriches out the bus window!
My login's about to end, so I've got to go, but pictures soon, and I love and miss you all!

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Halfway There

Well, first and foremost: Welcome! Hopefully I'll manage as my brother put it to "keep it beefy" when it comes to my posts on this thing. I suppose we'll just have to wait and see...
I'm currently just king of hanging out in Heathrow airport in London. I have a ten hour layover, and just some homemade macaroni and cheese and yogurt from the plane to tide me over. I'm sure it'll be fine though. I think that there are probably other kids from my program in a similar situation, but I'm fighting the urge to go up to every lone student-looking traveler and see if they're one. There are just too many of them.
I guess that's probably about it for now. When I arrive I'll have to manhandle my over-packed luggage and go through a fair bit of orientation, but for now things are pretty quiet. Hope everything is going well for everyone, and I'll post again when I can!