Saturday, July 7, 2007

Some Indian Friends...


Finally, I can share some photos with you - hopefully they will place me a little better for you. More to come! The saree (don't worry they made me pose like that) and cake eating scenes are from by birthday, the group of girls are the ones I am being a 'House Parent' to and generally hang out with a lot, and then the little guys are just some of the winners of this world - my friends Selvum, Dhami, Karti, Ajit and others...

Tastes like chicken??

For the random roamer of our World Wide Web, who is peeved that this blog is in fact a blog and not a list of recipes for dishes that taste like chicken, but are in fact NOT chicken...

Perhaps you are allergic to chicken, but miss its sweet sweet tasty juices?? Perhaps you are bird-flu-phobic, but are ashamed to admit this and fear being called paranoid by your guests / parents-in-law / significant other who is coming to dinner and desires chicken? Perhaps you are a parent, whose painful child refuses to eat anything that does not taste like our feathered friends...? Are you a member of the 'TLCCC' (the 'Tastes Like Chicken Cannibal Club')?

My advice to you:
- to the allergic among you: deal with it. I'm sorry, but your life is just going to have to be that little bit less exciting. Substitutes in this life suck anyway. At least you're not allergic to genuinely tasty things like profiteroles, or guavas, or red jelly.

-to the bird-flu-o-phobe: hmmmm... I admire your carefulness, and suspect your problem lies not in fact in the realm of recipes, but in the realm of your sense-of-self. Don't be so driven by other peoples opinions - sicks and stones etc.

-parents:chicken stock. That stuff totally does not taste like chicken though, it gives me the creeps. Makes me think of all these chickens having the juice and lifeblodd squeezed out of them, being ground to a pulp, dried in the sun, and then squished into tiny little yucky cubes. Better yet, read that to your child and then feed them 10 cubes of chicken stock, raw. Serves the little critter right.

-TLCCC members: EEEEEEWWWWWWWWWWWWW. gOand eat some chicken instead. I wouldn't know, but if boys and girls really do taste like chicken surely this will do the trick.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

my Indian birthday

'Like water to a thirsty soul is news from a far country...' (Proverbs 25:25, if I've remembered it right). That Solomon knew what he was on about, shame about all those wives. I love hearing about pieces of home, and now have an inkling of what the waifs girl means when she says 'I miss you like a left arm that's been lost in a war...' - you keep subconsciously expecting people to be there, to 'use' them (in a good way) like you normally would, but instead there's just this absence. Not in a tragic lonely way or anything, but an absence all the same.

I now feel like everyone should have a birthday in India at least once in their life...dagnamit, it was so cool. Photos are having problems so you'll just have to imagine.

After a day of shaking hundreds of tiny hands and giving out as many lollies, the 15-20 girls in my cottage threw me the best surprise party I've ever been to. They moved the bunks in their room, and had many countless tiny bouquets to decrate the walls and doors. They all got dressed up, and then proceeded to dress me up in a saree (sari?), beautiful marone silk with gold brocade. I cannot believe how much material they use, metres and metres of the stuff was skillfully wrapped and twisted and folded around me, until I could hardly sit down. They pinned my hair with fresh jasmine, and let me to a chair of honour they had decorated with their shawls, presented my cake ('Happy Birthday Felici'...an earlier cake got 'Pheli'), and sang for me. Then came the fun part - while I now vaguely recall that it IS an Indian custom, all of a sudden what felt like hundreds of hands were stuffing cake in my mouth, force feeding me, while someone was madly taking photos. Girls, hands, yelling, cake, photo flashes...I had already completely lost it, when the other 'custom' I discovered restrospectively began - people smearing icing on my face, while the photos kept on coming...

Pretty cool. No better way to start being 22 in my opinion.

a lame poem :-)

HOOOOOOEEEEE, boy do I feel like I could have mastered the theory of relativity just waiting for this page to load.

While there is no place I would rather be right now, just sometimes...

I miss ricotta pancakes
and I miss the ABC,
I miss being able to walk down the road
without causing World War three.

There's 200 or so hugs I would have got
from certain people that I've missed,
I miss the sound of 'Felicity'
instead of 'pheli' or'please' or 'bliss'.

I miss being able to tell a joke
without the endless fumble of translating,
and while bluntness can be a virtue,
the personal comments can get frustrating.

I miss chocolate like an old old friend,
its just not PC to miss the smell of leather,
my legs miss sunlight, my stomach thai food,
and every single hour I miss Trevor.

Saturday, June 2, 2007

Time to Kill in Bangkok airport...

hey hey all,



I write to you from Bangkok airport, from someone called 'Subho''s laptop who was sitting next to me on the plane and who has proved very friendly. Nothing else to do here for like 6 hours so...howdy do! Funny airport's, how they all manage to make you forget which country you're actually in... am hoping ridiculously much that my bag keeps our rendezvous we have planned for Mumbai at 7pm tonight, I will be very upset indeed if it stands me up.



Leaving CR and HK was insane, it crept up on me like Christmas (sudden worried thought: come back Subho! cannot mind your bags forever! what if you are dodgy and... ok silly. He's back. Feeling very guilty for doubting.). Typical me style I left packing until about 6 hours before I left, so had about 1 and a half hours sleep...not looking like sleeping for the next 2 days due to my overnight airport mumbai wait so my state of mind upon arriving in India could be interesting :) was so thankful this morning that whatever state our minds and hearts are in, they are trapped in a physical body, that has to keep eating and sleeping and walking and checking in, thus the world keeps on rolling.



Subho has to check in soon and feeling rather rude, SO I may make some more friends and write from Mumbai :)



love to all xo

Friday, June 1, 2007

HAPPY BIRTHDAY MUM!

The Father of the Fatherless...

Some people here wrote this song: Its fairly intense (another intense blog entry...I promise I am actually chilling out and doing normal things as well, they're just less interesting to write about!). I think its amazing and have for some time now, so thought I would share part of it with you...its sung to the tune of 'Danny Boy' or whatever that famous tune is called, which makes it a lot more powerful I think so try and sing it along in your head. Its called 'The Father of the Fatherless'.

Lord, give us eyes to see the needy of the world:
The countless millions suffering and in pain;
Orphans who weep, the destitute who hunger,
Oppressed where'er injustice seems to reign.

We turn to you, the father of the fatherless:
Filled with compassion, mercy, hope and grace,
You feel their wounds, you lift them from the ashes,
And on each little one bestow your loving gaze.

Lord, give us ears to hear their whispered agony,
May other noise not cause us to pass by.
Help us to name the horrors that have scarred them...

We turn to you, the father of the fatherless,
And intercede for every silent cry,
Make us a voice for all those who are voiceless,
That at the last your justice will be set on high...

Lord, give us hearts that ache with your compassion,
For those whose wounded, outstretched arms are shunned,
Invade our comfort zone, shake our indifference,
Let not our lives to apathy succumb.

We cry to you, the father of the fatherless,
Ask you to break us, let us find no rest,
Until your love is poured out to the nations,
And you are known from north to south, from east to west.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

The month of May for me...







SO here are some more photos for you to enjoy... it is painfully obvious that I am too tired to figure out how to insert 'captions', so the photos are of, from top to bottom:
1. This crazy cow we saw on our way to visit a coral beach in Sai Kung national park
2. Me enjoying some quality lilo time
3. The cutest people in the world: Sam, Sophie and Felicity, all in my class
4. The 'bun festival' parade on Cheng Chau Island, on Buddha's birthday...they construct towers of buns that people race each other to climb up (?!)
5. Georgie (who is one of my buddies in the older class here) and moi on a Cheng Chau beach... It's super hot here, but the heat is nothing on the 100% humidity!

The delightful children themselves...


Pretty cool hey! Finally, here's a photo of my class, with their old teacher because I love this picture; Sam and Jesse, Leanne, Felicity and Isaac.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Add an 'e' to refuge...

Part of the work done over here involves various poverty-education focused 'life experience' programs, which attempt to increase people's knowledge about, and compassion and empathy for, the billion in this world who live in slums, those suffering from HIV/Aids and refugees. I had the privilege of taking part in one of these programs focusing on refugees last friday night, and it moved me in a big way so I thought I'd share...

Each stage, each scene of our flight from our village to a UNHCR refugee camp was recreated for us as realistically as possible under the circumstances, with team members acting as soldiers, officials, teachers and aid representatives. A lot of research and interviews go into planning these programs, and one guy acting as a soldier in the camp was actually a refugee himself, from the Congo. I asked the Lord before the evening commenced to open me up to the experience and change me as much as possible, and boy did he answer that one. The night commenced with us all being given an identity, the person we were to become for the evening. So for a little while I was Farooqa, a 12 year old Afghani girl, malnourished, my face almost hidden under a headscarf, with strict instructions not to speak to any male not in my immediate family circle, as this was definitely not done. I was from a village that was shortly, we were to discover, to be attacked by the taliban. Sitting in a village meeting, we were told to prepare to flee our village, but before any discussion could begin the lights went out and soldiers attacked, in full army gear and brandishing their guns - they were absolutely terrifying. As I tried to imagine what this would feel like for a 12 year old girl, ordered at gunpoint to lie face down on the ground, I was reduced to a sobbing mess. We were ordered to flee across a 'mine field', where we were told a land mine could explode under us at any moment.

What followed was lining up at checkpoints, huddling in frightened groups, attempting and failing to find my family, trying to fill out incoherent forms to apply for entry into the camp as a refugee, constructing a shelter, and lining up for meagre amounts of food and water, only to have them later stolen by soldiers who had to rely on theft and intimidation to keep from starving themselves, as their pay consisted of US$10 a month. To get out of the camp, we were told we had to go to a school within the camp and learn Russian, and although my school lesson only lasted 20 minutes, I tried to imagine how difficult learning a new language must be when you're starving, sick, vulnerable, and absolutely full of fear. That night a man offered to smuggle me out of the camp to work in a garments factory - desperate to get out of the camp, to earn some money and see if my family were still alive, I imagined Farooqa would have accepted the offer. Very soon I discovered I had been sold into a brothel. Incidentally, after the 2004/5 tsunami, orphaned children being led into prostitution was very common.

The simulation ended there.

Obviously, and needless to say, we can only attempt to begin to get our heads around the trauma and grief of those millions in the world who go through the real pain and ongoing difficulties, for years and years, of life as a refugee. But the experience was invaluable in opening me up to a few things. We were treated like cattle to be stored somewhere, fed and watered, never with the dignity and respect human beings deserved. The soldiers who were there supposedly to protect us in reality were there to survive themselves, and consequently were violent and exploitative. As a child, and perhaps particularly as a female child, I was intensely vulnerable, and intensely powerless.

Those running the activity shared with us the scarily common problem many women in refugee camps have - that of blindness, not through medical problems with their eyes, but through the amount of grief and stress they have to go through without being able to process any of it. We were also told how in many refugee camps, rations are given to families according to how many members they have. So of course, if a member of your family died, you would be anxious to conceal this fact form the authorities to ensure the food kept coming. Apparently it is common in some camps to see piles of bodies in the centre of the camp, stripped of any identification.

What a good reminder, for me, never, ever to think of refugees as a troublesome group, a global faceless 'problem' that governments need to solve. What a good reminder that each refugee is an individual with a personal history and personal needs. One of the UNHCR posters I've seen quotes, 'It is not your fault if a man becomes a refugee. It is if he continues to be one.'

Wow.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

some HK excursions...




Ok you'll have to bear with me while a computer-illiterate arts student attempts to learn, laboriously, how to use this freaking thing. The photo (below? above?) of the grass/buildings/fog is the site here and where I'm living! Just to give you a visual. Its on the Gold Coast of HK, opposite schmazzy hotels, which is why you can see some green.

The photos just above are from my visit to Tai-O fishing village on the island of Lantau - constructed, you could tell, as oh-so-lonely-planet-and-off-the-beaten-track, but then again, not for all the fisherman who still live and fish there...the village still seems to survive mainly on dried fish markets, and the smell was INTENSE. Its the one with the lake. There's also a shot from our visit to Sai Kung, a national park near the border of China. It's amazing, you travel for less than 3 hours from the centre of crazy HK, and you're swimming at a beach between mountains and hiking with stunning views of coastline stretching as far as the pollution will allow (so about 100m...at least the smog makes everything a bit more mysterious). This visit was with some friends here - Kazakh Phil, German-Canadian Daniel, NZ Ben and Penny and English Steve...I'm not used to being the only Australian around, it was pretty funny. The moment that most assaulted the senses was when certain members of the group whipped out their uncooked bacon, cheese and marmite sandwiches...need I say more.

Finally...some photos from HK

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Family!

First Post

Hello there!

Welcome to my blog. Come 2:25pm tomorrow I'll be flying to Hong Kong, so stay posted...

Love!

fiz