Sunday, October 23, 2011
Beautiful Burty
I promised an update so here it is:
I now live in Burty, Ukraine. I am
about 2 hours (by bus) south east of Kiev. My cluster mates (Drew, Sam,
Caitlin, and Anna) and I learn Ukrainian for about 4 hours per day along with
technical sessions about safety, culture, and teaching. We spend a lot of time
together with our language teacher, Sasha, and other instructors. Sasha is a
wonderful guide through a complicated yet beautiful language that I continue to
butcher. Someday, with continued encouragement and giggles from peers I know
Ukrainian and I will be on speaking terms. My dream is to be a long winded
story teller in multiple languages.
I left my parents house for the
Louisville airport just a few weeks ago. My life has transformed
into a polar opposite state. Instead of a queen size bed, my own car, private
bathroom in a two story heated home, I now live on a small farm with 7 pigs, 10
geese, 2 cats, 2 dogs, 2 rabbits, and too many chickens to count. My host
family and I have already eaten a few of our feathery animals. This past Friday
was a holy day to mark the end of harvest (and sadly the start of winter!) so
my host mother took us to church with her. It was magical. Chanting. Blessing
of candles. The church is beautiful inside and out. My host mother rushed my
camera and I around to ensure "her Cassie" got good photos. I greatly
appreciated that she could explain to the priest and others I am a photographer
not a crazy lady holding a big, black box. For the big holiday, my host father
killed one of our geese last week and I got to help while photographing. It was
a very interesting process. Since I already help him working our large
vegetable fields and feeding all our beasts it made sense I should help kill
one of them. Right? My host mother also taught me how to make a sort of bun
sandwich with meat or apples inside. While we cooked and stuffed dough and
baked, I counted or identified each ingredient in Ukrainian or identified each
object in the kitchen. Her kitchen is quite small so I nailed that vocab.
Despite some very maddening and/or awkward moments with my host parents during
my first week in their house - the heat broke, I discovered showering is an
weekly occurrence, communication was very difficult - I am swiftly loving in
love with Moms and Pops (my nicknames for them) each day.
I share Ukrainian class and teaching and living
and hanging out with Drew from Houston, Caitlin from Seattle, Sam from Miami,
and Anna from DC. Our instructor and my roommate, Sasha, is a great man. The
bond within our classroom has already grown tight and thick. We share stories
of confusion and challenges as well as our personal victories over language,
culture mishaps, our outhouses, or crazy neighbor dogs. We've established
Friday Movie Night and survived an Ukrainian cooking day together. After
spending some time with other Peace Corps training staff and clusters, we
realized - individually and in mutual agreement - we are very happy to be
together. Our combination of experience, intelligence, personalities, and
differing histories seems to be shaping up into a unstoppable force. We are
pushing through our issues with outhouses, cold weather, and being
misunderstood most every moment. After only these few weeks, our unity has been
called in play to defend each other in discussions or create solutions to
issues in our lives and our village. It's maddening to walk all over town
searching for the ingredients for dinner but wandering with each other isn't so
bad. In addition, Burty is amazingly beautiful. Most days I look forward to
finding free time to get lost with my camera or Ipod.
My internet connection is,
currently, borrowed and bad so uploading photos is impossible. For that, I am
truly sorry. I have many frames ready to share as soon as I am able. I hope my
words are enough for now! All my love to all of you!
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