Tuesday, August 30, 2011

My first few weeks in site and Jopara explained (according to me)

Hello everyone,

I apologize for the infrequency of my blog posts. The slowness of the internet connection here is painful, and, for that, I often avoid doing too many ambitious things online since it can take sometimes minutes to open an email or sometimes just doesn't work altogether. Nevertheless, I am finally sitting down and writing tonight.

Tomorrow, I will have been in site for three weeks. I'm not sure if I feel that time has gone by fast or slow. I think more fast because I've been busy. Also, I feel very welcomed, comfortable, and happy here. This town is a good fit for me. It's small, tight-knit, but it has enough resources to work with as well. I've met a bunch of great people here as well, including several very impressive, inspiring students that are very dedicated to their studies and the progress of their town. I'm not saying that there aren't many obstacles for me and the people here to overcome, but I have a good support group here starting with the wonderful family with whom I'm staying first and foremost. I'm living close to the center of town in the house of a couple that has one daughter, who stays and studies in a bigger city a few hours away, and one pair of parents. They own a little convenience store out of their home like most store owners here in rural Paraguay. They are all very warm and welcoming and make me feel like family. The grandmother and mother cook very well, and the husband makes a great Brazilian dish of beans and some vegetables with rice called feixão.

I have collaborated often in these past few weeks with a student here. He worked and studied English with two former volunteers that were assigned here. He speaks English quite well (though still he has much to learn just as I have much to learn of Guarani), is a great student and community leader, and has a great spirit and character in general. We are already becoming good friends. He went to the United States through a program of the United States Embassy in Paraguay that provides leadership opportunities for deserved and underprivileged Paraguayan youth. He visited and stayed with a family in Montana for a few weeks, and, now that he is back in Paraguay, he is required to do community projects in his town, projects that he would be involved in whether or not he did this program with the U.S. Embassy.

I have gotten to explore the community a lot as well in the past few weeks. There are quite a few places to play soccer and volleyball in the town, which is quite nice. I've gotten to play with some of the youth here. They're probably surprised that an american can play soccer well. haha. I get along with them. I see some of myself in them, and I think they feel comfortable with me because they feel they can relate to me as I am not yet so old!

In terms of my activities since having moved here, I have been mostly meeting a lot of people, exploring the community by foot, visiting the schools here, working with a youth group focused on environmental issues and youth development, and assisting my friend, and sometimes filling in, with English classes here in the town's small community center. We are doing our first fundraising event this weekend, which will be a movie showing in the community center for the youth in the community. I'll let you all know how it goes. I might also be spearing a pig tomorrow as a past volunteer who lived in a community outside of town has come to visit and, for that reason, they're killing a pig for a nice dinner. I'm not sure why he wants me to do it, but we'll see if it actually happens. other than all this, I have been learning more Guarani, learning more about my community, and planning for projects and possible work for the project. I also went to the high school's olympic day inauguration of sorts. It was an event during which all the classes parade around and present their queens among which one is picked to be the queen of the school. Also recognition is given to outstanding athletes or students. It was an interesting experience to say the least, but I want cry if I don't get to see one for a while. Anyway, to be honest, I've been quite busy. I cannot complain about being bored as of right now because here's always something productive that I can be doing since there is so much to learn, figure out, and plan for. I feel like by the time I leave here, I will still be learning so much about the culture, people, language, and way of life here.

That brings me to my next point: Jopara. What is it? Well, that's exactly the issue on which I wish to expound based on my experiences thus far here in Paraguay. Firstly, Paraguay is a very unique country. It is the only Latin American country, as far as I know, where practically all its citizens speak, or at least understand well, the indigenous language that prevailed in the country before the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors. There is a great sense of solidarity among the Paraguayan people in this respect, and they pride themselves on conserving the Guarani language and culture which I believe is quite a feat given that Native American culture in the United States is more or less unheard of in popular American culture. However, inevitably things change over time. Countries feel forced to move ahead. With the arrival of the Spanish language and new and "advanced" things, There came a necessity to use Spanish to be able to express such things since the indigenous language didn't have use for outside terms until outsiders came in to the picture.

Jopara means "mix" in Guarani. One can say that most people speak Jopara in Paraguay, which is a mix of Spanish and Guarani. I understand it best as Guarani that borrows Spanish words, terms, and expressions to explain things for which there are no equivalents in Guarani, whether it concerns technology, modern day issues, or simply foreign ideas or objects brought here. The amount of Spanish mixed in the Guarani, for me, depends on how much someone grows learning the language and also where they live and their ancestry. I would say that people living in more rural areas, though most of Paraguay is comprised of rural zones, and those that have more pure Guarani lineage, tend to speak more Guarani and mix less with Spanish. I'm told there are still many areas where indigenous peoples still have, and that the people utilize little if any Spanish. However, if one is living in a bigger town or city, it is more likely that they speak a Jopara with a lot of Spanish and Guarani mixed together in, what seems to me at least, a random way that is not really formalized nor abounds of grammar  rules or structure on how the two languages are mixed together, if any at all.

Say what you want, but I think it's pretty impressive that the people are 1) arguably fluent in 2 languages and 2) conscious of the value in conserving the language of the indigenous population to which Paraguay owes so much of its culture. Some Latin Americans scoff at the Spanish that Paraguayans speak claiming that is impure and ugly. While many speak an impure form of Spanish since it is mixed with Guarani, they still speak Spanish well while also knowing another language as well. I think it's ridiculous and shameful that people would speak badly of and minimize a nation's ability to conserve its roots while also adapting to the world that continues to race forward. Pheww. Hope that didn't sound too much like a formal discourse, but I wanted to share with you all that very important aspect of life here. I think I've written enough for now!

Love and, until next time, Peace!

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Aikota Yhúme!

I got my site placement! ...well, quite a bit ago, but I have been bad at blogging and updating you all regularly. The internet here is at times painfully slow, and, thus, I avoid getting in front of the computer. I'll be living in a little town called Yhú! In guarani, it means "black water." Don't ask me why quite yet, but I'm sure I'll muster up the courage to ask a local why it was given such a name in the next 2 years. It is one of the shortest, strangest, and most difficult names to pronounce of the sites that were given to the other volunteers in my group! I'm still questioning how exactly one is supposed to say it after being corrected by several people, but I'll have some time to practice the pronunciation!

We got our site placements not this past Wednesday but the Wednesday before. We volunteers are all spread out around the southern half of Paraguay or, rather, the part of the country that is not the wilderness known as the Chaco. Some volunteers will be located closer to each other than others, though no volunteers are typically placed in the same town as an other. The state, or departamento as they call it here, is called Caaguazu. My town is located 50 km from Route 2 which connects the largest two cities of Paraguay, Asuncion and Ciudad del Este, together. The two cities are on opposite sides of the country, and I'm going to be living in a little town in the middle of the country. On my bus ride back to my training community I was able to see out the window of the gorgeous views since there is very little for miles between my site and the city of Caaguazu apart from a lot of fields and forests. The town has the basics and I like that, but once you step out of town you feel in the middle of nowhere so it is a bit isolated, which probably makes it hard for producers and business people to transport and sell their products elsewhere. The earth there, in Caaguazu in general, is even more red than the typical reddish soil/sand that is found throughout most parts of Paraguay. It is a beautiful and tranquil place that I will call home for the next 2 years!

My main programs in the community will be focused on youth groups and the schools, although I'll also be able to work with the municipality. Although it is quite small, I hope to collaborate with the municipality's public servants as well, notably the mayor, who seems quite nice, rather young, and still idealistic, which makes me hopeful. I met a ton of people during my first visit. First, I met many of the youth that form part of an environmental youth group, and I also met students of an English class, and I presented myself to the high school's students and walked around to the classrooms of the elementary school to meet all the little ones. The director, teachers, and students were all very welcoming. In general, all the people that I've met so far have been very friendly. The town's people seem to have a solidarity all their own since it is a more isolated community. It seems like a very laid back, slow paced town in which life is pretty damn simple so I want to embrace that while also being very proactive in bringing out the initiative of the people to improve the community and, specifically, provide an outlet for activities and personal and professional development for the town's youth.

I promise I will post some pictures once I go back for good. Nobody really has internet in the site so we'll see how easy or difficult it will be to get internet access. Since I've been back, we've had training and Guarani classes as usual, and I've had some time to spend some good times with my host family here and with my fellow volunteers whether it's learning the Paraguayan polka with my mom, hearing and, subsequently, learning all the funny vulgar language in Guarani, laughing how funny some things are here, and also being laughed at for how funny we Americans sometimes seem to Paraguayans. It is all in good fun!

Also, before I sign off, I just want to inform everyone that my group and I will be swearing in this Friday, August 5th! Then, we have to be in our sites by August 9th, so I will be staying in Asuncion for a day or so for swear in then I will return to spend the last day and a half with my extremely loving host family. I will miss them much! And since I have not outright publicized such a sentiment, I will take this opportunity to say how much I miss and love all of you, my family and friends, that mean everything to me. I love you all more than I'm able to express!