Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Laos

Here are some things you might want to know about Laos:
-Firstly most people don't even know where it is. Laos is located in South East Asia in between Vietnam and Thailand. I live in the capital Vientiane.
-Laos was a french colony and gained independence in 1953
- Laos is a communist nation despite their name Lao P.D.R (Peoples Democratic Republic)
-Laos is a Buddhist nation and only 3% of people are christian. In some places like Luang Prabuang you can be arrested for sharing the gospel
-Being Buddhist, Monks are seen everywhere. Some things I have learned about Monks: You are not suppose to look at them, you are not suppose to touch them, you aren't suppose to talk to them you can talk to them only if they talk to you. In Laos they are viewed as Gods to the people and even themselves say they are not man they are better than man. If on the bus you must sit behind them, the only jobs monks can have are a teacher, they cannot where undergarments and have hair because it is seen as putting more sin on themselves.
-For Lao people food is an important aspect of family. All meals are eaten with family and never alone. Most meals are eaten on the floor. They have small tables or they use newspaper and mats. Communal eating is what I would describe as their style of eating. Everyone sits around the food, you grab a handful of sticky rice, then rolling a small you use your index finger and you're thumb with the rice on your thumb you take a little bit of the food and eat. My favorite Lao food is fried morning glory which is eaten with sticky rice. Lao people like spicy, the most spicy thing I have had is payapa salad which you think would be a fruit salad but it is more like a salty and spicy treat. The first time I had papaya salad I cried a little. Some interesting things Lao  people like to eat: Dog, crickets, cow intestine, congealed blood ( they put in soup), baby egg, frog, grilled rat, fomented fish sauce, grilled baby bird, guinea pig, chicken heart and butt, bat and snake. Here are some pictures:

                                                         Baby egg

                                                        Grilled Rat


                                                        Grilled Bird
                                                       Snake

                                                          Grilled Frog

                                 
                                                         Dog
                                                         Cricket
-Lao language is a tonal language and uses a sanscript writing. Well learning Lao has been fun, in all reality it is hard. With 26 constants, 56 vowels and 5 tones it has been a lot to learn. I feel like I know little but I mean it's only been two months. By the end of the year I hope to be able to speak fluently but who knows. Here is my Lao name Sengmany in Lao Script: ແສງມັະນີ
-Transportation is Laos is rapidly getting better. Japan donated buses to  Laos that work very well. They are very big and green, have air condition and mostly go everywhere, they are very inexpensive most cost only 3,000 Kip which is about 30 cents. The only downside is they are sometimes unreliable. On many occasions I have waited for the bus and the bus has never come. But not to worry because Laos also had tuk-tuks they are motorcycle taxis that can take you anywhere you want! Not only tuk-tuks Laos has jumbos which are smaller buses or trucks with a oning on the back. Jumbos have routes they follow. I mostly take jumbos to school each day for they are much more reliable. In Laos motorbikes are mostly used but there are many cars as well. One day eventually I will get a motorbike license be able to ride a motorbike to school instead of going by bus.
-Beauty is of importance for Lao people. Though much differently viewed then North Americans, beauty here is the opposite from many things we call beautiful. Lao people love white skin, they use lotions and body washes that have whitener in them, but in America we love to be tan. In Laos they like hair and think arm hair is beautiful as in America we shave everything. In Laos it is okay if you don't match where as in America you are expected to match. Lao people as well like to wear socks with sandals which I don't understand in this climate why you would want to wear socks. It is best to wear the least clothing possible. Laotians like to also where dust covers because the dust here makes it hard to breathe. When we first came I asked, " Do they wear those for fashion or for dust?" So not to worry, it is for the dust. Another common fashion choice is long finger nails. They sometimes grow them all out or they have just one finger they keep long. Once on the bus a women had her index fingernail about two inches long! The most important thing of beauty in Laos is the sihn. The sihn is very tradition clothing  worn by all women. They are skirts that are tailored to you and normally go to from your waist to your mid-calf. "You are beautiful in regular skirts, but you are even more beautiful when you wear a sihn," says Patti to me one day. Women notice when you wear a sihn and they tell you. "Ngam, ngam" which means beautiful is all you hear. Lao women also are not afraid to touch. When on buses, on the walk home, at church everywhere, will pet your sihn and your arm and tell you how beautiful you are. I have collected about 7 sihn's which is very much.
A tradition Lao outfit. 

Hope that gives a little insight on Laos and life here!

Monday, October 1, 2012

Aajaan Sengmany

Today was the first day of school!
I got prepared last night coming up with games and getting my clothes laid out for the morning and went to bed at 9:30 which is quite early then most nights. I woke promptly at 5:45 to my alarm as well as my kitty that doesn't like sleeping ever. I took a shower. Got dressed. Had some papaya and coffee. Woke my sister up and we drove to the bus stop. I first go on a bus that goes to Talaad Sao bus station and Talaad Sao (talaad means market and sao means morning) is a large shopping mall and the nicest one in Vientiane it even has air condition and sometimes when me and Patty go we just stand in front of the vents. After I arrive at Talaad Sao I pay the bus driver 3,000 Kip, in dollars that is about 40 cents. From Talaad Sao I catch a bus to Thong Pong the village my school is in. In the morning there is a lot of traffic so I arrive at my school at about 7:50 from leaving my house at 6:30. On Monday's the children do a flag raising where they sing the Lao National anthem and the school song. School starts at 8 and my first class was at 9. Students shouted Welcome Aajaan Sengmany and then I began. (Aajaan means teacher and Sengmany is my Lao name) I had high hopes of observing the first day but we say here in Lao "baw pen nyang" which means no problem. I just jumped in. My first students we're very fun and even though I made mistakes and probably made them confused they we're ever so gracious and nice to me. Knowing a little Lao is helpful because I was able to give directions a lot more effectively. I have 13 classes total and many many students. The school has a restaurant which is very inexpensive. I had regular rice with a fried egg and some green vegetables with soy sauce. After lunch I had two more classes which we're with the older kids. They made me laugh. I had them go up to the board and draw pictures of the vocabulary and they all laughed when I asked a boy to draw a farmer and he drew a cow. In the last class of the day I asked the kids where they we're from, what was their name, which village they lived in and how old they we're. Which when I asked how old they we're it became trouble for me. For some of the students I am only one year older then them and if they were to know my age I wouldn't be respected as much and discipline would be harder. I told the students "kam lap" which means it's a secret in Lao. Then after that they just began guessing. " 100" "25" "38" "19". When they said 100 I laughed so hard, I after that just said it's a secret whenever they asked about my age. Since being in Lao I have really been enjoying meeting youth and working with adults but children are my heart and so it was so nice to start working with them. I left school at four and arrived at home at about 5:30. When I got home I cried. Not because I was sad or I had a bad day but because this was God's plan and I just felt like I was doing what I was suppose to. This summer I read this book called Kisses from Katie. A book about a girl that moves to Uganda and teaches as well as start a program called Amazima which helps students get food and be able to go to school. In the book she says "I want to at the end of each day be so tired because then I will know that I worked hard and served the Lord well." That is what I want to. I want to finish my day so tired because I served the Lord in everything I did. I want to go to sleep in bliss knowing that I am doing what I am meant to, knowing that I am following God and loving like he loved." Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid  because of them, for the Lord your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.” This is my favorite bible verse, Deuteronomy 31:6. Which has been a truth and each day especially today I tell my self that God goes before me, he takes care of me and uses me. It is a blessing to be given the opportunity to live for God and let him use me.