Tuesday, November 07, 2006

a few pictures in padova









Hello all, these are some pics of it all...

the girl I'm living with, Rebecca, being swallowed by pizzer, the piazza dell erbe where the spritz invasion and the markets happen, the second hugest square in the universe, flattering one of me and a wise goat on halloween, and some from the botanical gardens which are the oldest in the entire universe they say. and full of useful herbs...

X

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Dottore, dottore! And fish with lights inside them


Dottore, dottore! And fish with lights inside them

Awright everyone! Everyone who is reading this anyway… Come andate? Va bene?! let’s resume the adventures. Spaniard of Serampore, I am glad to see you are being as conscientious and regular with your blog as we were in India and Africa haha… hey is Fluff with you now?!

I am in Italy now! Padua to be exact in the Veneto region in the north-east, Venice is close by on the train and lots of other towns like Verona and Treviso and Vicenza. There’s some little mountains nearby and the countryside I’ve seen from the train is green-ish and flat and foresty with a few vineyards and cottages but it seems pretty industrial. But the towns are full of peeling yellow and pink sumptuous old buildings and piazzas and churches all gorgeous and decorated and ancient.
Padua or Padova as they call it is almost too romantic in spots, we are living in an apartment facing on to the river crossed by iron bridges and lined with autumn trees and golden leaves scattered along the banks. It’s close to 3 huge piazze, ‘dei Signori’, ‘della Frutta’ and ‘dell’ Erbe’, I have bought a 2nd-hand bicycle and ride to work along knobbly cobbly streets and past enormous markets of fruit and clothes, and old columns and painted arches and balconies and men standing around smoky hot chestnut braziers (sorry, it just isn’t cold enough for that yet though. They are getting far too excited). Everyone has old clanking bicycles with huge handlebars like in a story.

Since we got here it has been real warm and lovely and we spent lots of gorgeous afternoons in the ‘Parc dell Arena’ lounging on grass and eating in the sunshine and also at this MASSIVE square, well it’s more like an oval, the Prato della Valle which is apparently the second largest square in Europe. I don’t know what the biggest is. But it’s amazing for riding your bike round, it’s so smooth and wide. And it’s got a little canal going round the centre. Everyone was hanging out there in the sunshine last week. Today it got grey and rainy at last.

On Wednesday evenings everyone (that is, the 12 million students there seem to be in Padova) gather in our Piazza dell Erbe (a huge square with an old palace on one side with posh meat and cheese shops underneath it, I think I saw a horsemeat stall there the other day). They set up a little soundsystem and there’s drumming and all the people bring their wine and sit on the cobbles or at a bar and drink ‘spritz’ which is this weird aperitif the colour of Irn-Bru with campari and gin and wine and something awful bitter in it, it’s a bit wrong but they all like it… so we bin drinking it too. It seems like you have to, there isn’t anything else…


The first 2 weeks I was going to ‘Eurotraining’, the organisation who organised everything, there are 11 of us on the programme who came to Padova. We went to their language school to learn Italian in the mornings, which was great fun and very helpful and I think we needed more, on Monday we all started our work placements in various locations, including a maskmaking workshop in Venice and one girl making handbags… Rebecca who I’m living with is working for a fashion-type design company who make knitted things… I am in the English International School of Padova, a huge place of 700 students where I’m in the classroom helping teachers with Reception (4 years old) and Year 2 (7) children. They are bananas. Lovable though. But very strange. They ask really good questions like, but Miss Gillian but but why does the fish have a light inside it? And how can the sun be the biggest star when it is so small (holding thumb and forefinger up close together and squinting with one eye). Yesterday I made a puppet theatre with the reception ones and today they were going to do a puppet show but they just ended up bashing each other’s puppets to death and then knocking the theatre over. Hurrah!

Also I have seen more types of pasta in the supermarket than I ever thought was possible. I specially like the ones that are like little ears. The ice cream really is damn good too (and I don’t even have a sweet tooth)… and the conkers are HUGE.

Lizzy and Hannah, would you mind sending some of those orange German teabags of Carolin’s to me? Address is

Riviera San Benedetto 60
35139 Padova

Regular ones too if you can spare any… pleeese…?!?!?! dying for tea.

I hope everyone is well, lots of love from me. And how’s the new Broadway?!?!?!

Xxx

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Summeringland



Thoughts weave gently round my head (I think my mind is quite lazy at the best of times so in this druggish, heat-hazed atmosphere of homecoming, things are striking me in a slow-paced, sleepy-bee way. At least that is my excuse). African time, hey!

One thread that keeps coming up is people saying, “oh it must be such a culture shock to return innit, coming back ere to this miserable lot… it must be so unfriendly/cold/reserved here after all those places… people aren’t so open and friendly here are they compared with abroad… yeah these grunting English…” and all that kind of thing.

It is true people are ridiculously friendly in most places we went on our double-continent spree. And it IS different to here. And it is so easy to complain about how we don’t greet each other in the street in this country, that people don’t stand around and have time for conversations, how nobody smiles. But I do now begin to think those are clichéd and maybe not such true observations and in fact most of the people I know are extremely friendly, starting with just a few egs... my sister who constantly makes friends with the general population of London as well as the flies buzzing round her face (okay, she does have too much free time), that man in green on Carlton Road from the council who always shouted MORNING DUCK to me on my way to work and Dave Bowley who never does stop talking but hey nobody would want him to anyway… when you say hello people usually say it back with warmth and everyone generally seems to love a good chat.

People in England are friendly, they just maybe aren’t so curious about funny-looking foreigners (unless they are that way themselves), or they are so polite that they won’t make a fuss, they’d rather pretend everything was normal and nice, whereas in Tanzania or in Serampore they will damn well stop you in the street and find out everything about you cos you are a freak and they need to know. That way of being I do find more normal and honest and real I suppose, plus it leads to much more hilarity and interesting conversations. The more freakishness you interact with, the better and funnier and spot-on’ner the world becomes and the sunnier your outlook. I reckon.

What I propose is international exchanges for all from the age of 5, and you have to do it, just for a month or something. Every half a year or so.

But going back to the dour and frigid populace of old England, there is the other way of looking at it, which is maybe that we don’t have to be jolly and hugging each other all the time… there are obviously people who like to have private time, it’s just that in the context of being in India for example, it doesn’t work so well. People don’t understand the concept of alone, there, generally. And imagine if in Dar es Salaam any of us had got fed up with constantly talking to people and just didn’t feel like saying hello and excitedly explaining our origins every single time – what do you do then? And I can truthfully say I had moments when I just didn’t want to respond, or felt like making it up completely (as Ana did advise me to do after incredulously observing the barrage of questions rattled off at me on every train journey in India and as a result memorizing my life story by heart herself). There were moments when one of us might be hard-pushed not to snap at a persistent seller of something. Sometimes that can be irritating when people won’t leave you alone. But then that would be rude and there's no need and I guess the better thing is not to give in to impatience and… just give in and sit down and let it all flow. It depends on your mood, and luckily the 3 of us were pretty easygoing in that way, most of the time. And you can't really get mad with crowds of people who are just lovely and welcoming and whose intentions seem nothin but good-hearted! That really is a main difference between here and African places we visited - the feeling of the streets. I felt much safer and encompassed by warmth there than some places here...

So what can you say? Different cultures. Different ways of being. Different ways of groping each others’ tentacles… Lately I’ve come across various mentions of the ‘European’ habit of having less personal space. Why is that so important in some places and not even an issue in others?

My mum reckons in India they still haven’t lost the habit of living in herds like animals. That’s why it’s unusual to be a loner. Or at least you don’t often find people living without at least 7 other people around them. But surely everyone needs to breathe on their own sometimes. But then if you have grown up that way and that’s what you know, you think it’s all fine and normal… look at arranged marriages, eunuchs, the chronic infidelity of many men we encountered in Africa, willy-spearing and all those things that guy Bruce does in ‘Tribe’.

Many weirdnesses, I can tell you.

Anyway, yes, it is different in England but I didn’t find it a huge shock coming back, praps cos I hadn’t been away long enough to forget what it’s like and praps cos experiences like the ones we had recede quickly although they are still intense and memorable, just stored away for future perusal because now it’s a point where you have to think about what’s happening right now. Images keep flashing into my mind of places we were in, of conversations we had and feelings and funny people and beautiful sights and freedom and all the brilliant STUFF – but it’s also intense coming home after 5 months and seeing all the people you haven’t seen in ages and feeling the feelings of this time and being joyful in friends and family and SUMMMMERRRRRRRRR!!! As Ana says, it’s not better or worse, just different. We were trepidatious about coming back to routine and monotony and not getting up everyday to new adventures and possibilities. But I decided that in that case I would just have to keep doing that wherever, whatever. Woohoo!

Now that’s enough gayness from me.

x

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Phewwwwww. hot.



We are back!! Haven't done a post for ages but thought we would continue putting on tales of adventure as now have decided to just carry on being excited wherever we are. Yayyy! We were quite spectacularly lame at carrying on with the blog tales, everything just got too frenetic and madder things kept happening than we could keep up with.

But the African journey was awesome and quite massive - we went a long way on inter-city buses and little chapas and took a 2-day train journey through Zambia and Tanzania, with zebras and Zambian business ladies and beef stew along the way. It was fabulous. The whole route, after Mozambique, went:

Johannesburg - Gaborone (Botswana) - LIvingstone and Victoria Falls (Zambia) - Lusaka + Kapiri Mposhi (Zambia) - Dar es Salaam and Stonetown, Zanzibar (Tanzania) - Mombasa - Nairobi - Kisumu on the shores of Lake Victoria (Kenya) - Kampala, Uganda. Woohoo!!! hahaa funny times. Kenya is beautiful, with green mountains and tea gardens as well as bushland. We spent a night camping on the Ssese Islands in the middle of Lake Victoria in Uganda (and having midnight swims hehe) with my sister's friends Paul and Ivan... went to a sleazy-ass club called BOTTOMS UP and saw hippos bathing in the lake at Kisumu... met a guy who was apparently Idi Amin's son in a club in Kampala. Ate a LOT of barbecue chicken. Danced to Shakira a fair amount and generally shook the skeletons to the booming speakers everywhere in the streets. In Stonetown in Zanzibar everyone gathers at the seafood market on the seafront in the evening and drinks spiced tea for hours. In Dar es Salaam people constantly shout JAMBO! and CARIBOU! (hello! welcome!) at you as you walk round the markets (BRRRilliant markets everywhere) and also MZUNGU!!! which means 'oi! white person!!!'

People were gorgeous the whole way and it was really the friendliest experience. Thankyou to all the dear folks who befriended and took care of us!!!

Back in Nottingham now after being in London and Leeds and Norwich and it's a bit hot and breathless. In fact quite a lot hotter than most places we went in Africa...
It has been ace seeing everyone again and so glad it's summmmerrrrrr!!! I just wish there was an outdoor pool here. I am parching!!!! need... cool... splashing... water. Pleeeese can we go to a waterpark, or Ilkley Outdoor Pool, soon...

Have put on a picture of Skipton Market for y'all to enjoy. Markets of the world you see. Plus here's a few of the last weeks of our African adventures...

lotsolove!
rasheeqa
x























Friday, May 12, 2006

Tud' Bennnnnnn



Cor we really do get attached to places round this world... Can't seem to leave Mocambique at all... what a grand time. Maputo has been a bit like Nottingham with people to meet all over the place and mad things happening right along. The folks are the friendliest and keep making us stay and go to parties and eat food and join them in their lives. Like India... hmmm...
Went to a great drumming party and to visit the children at an orphanage place with the rastaman Founder and his musical friends... roamed around this amazing Xipamanine market, the little 'chapas' (minibuses) all pound out music all day long. Found a Broadway-type place, the Mocambique Centro Culturale Franco with lovely gardens and FREE cinema!... went to the famous Africa Bar on Thursday night for live Mozambiquan music and LOTS of Bob Marley... and we know Maputo streets pretty well now.

Friday, May 05, 2006

Some more pikchers





Mozambique! a beautiful land

Some pictures... Maputo from across the bay - Ana's antennas say hello - dhows like one we sailed on from Vilanculos to Benguerra Island! - Barra beach, a totally + utterly secluded place where there was just the 3 of us and our hut aaaaah - and Ana carrying on the world tour of the pi pi pi song with children of Mozambique heheee....