Sunday, March 31, 2013

Letter to a New Friend

Dear South Africa,

I feel like we have become so close in our short time together, I couldn't leave without writing you a letter. An interesting friend, you have been gracious yet challenging. You are amazing, beautiful, and heartbreaking all at once, and I will think of you very fondly until we meet again.

Your clean, modern waterfront led us on the first day to a ferry ride to rugged and windswept Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela, Robert Sobukwe, and the gentleman who showed us the former maximum security prison were political prisoners for so many years before the end of Apartheid in 1994. While Jr, Grandpa, and I walked through dark hallways and past windswept rocky beaches on Robben Island, Sr was spending the day on a field lab for his Biomedical Ethics class in one of the black townships. He and his classmates served food in a soup kitchen and visited a school. The contrasts were just beginning to become clear to us this first day.

On our second day, you sent us off to the Eastern Cape town of Port Elizabeth by plane along with 26 other students, faculty, and lifelong learners from the ship. On the way to the airport, we saw golf courses on one side, neighborhoods of shacks made from corrugated metal on the other. After landing in Port Elizabeth, we drove 90 minutes to the small town of Kenton-on-Sea, then to the Kariega game reserve for a two and a half day safari. The facilities, guides, and animals were world-class. I'm pretty sure the chalet Sr, Jr, Grandpa, and I stayed in was bigger than our house in the US, plus it had a tiny swimming pool. It was easy to forget about the rest of the world while on safari, with days full of animal sightings and wonderful meals of mostly European style food. I will write a separate post about the safari, otherwise this letter will never get finished.

As we were leaving the game reserve on the fourth day to travel back through Port Elizabeth to Cape Town, you reminded us that we were still in a country with many infrastructure problems. For reasons that were never explained, 5 of our group were able to fly back on our originally scheduled flight to Cape Town, but the other 25 of us were bumped to a later flight. We Semester at Sea folks are nothing if not flexible, and we had lots of help from the local tour company agent to find a few things to do in Port Elizabeth during the hours before our rescheduled flight. Thanks to my colleague who volunteered to be the faculty member in charge of the small group who went back at the originally scheduled time. We weren't worried when it came to be our turn to arrive at the airport. When we checked in and found one student's ticket had not been rebooked on the later plane, South Africa, you put my trip leader skills to the test. After several calls back to the ship from the airport, we came up with the plan to swap the bumped female student with one of the adults on the trip. Sr volunteered to swap with her, so became the hero of the day. He also became the hero of the next day since that was when he finally was able to fly back to Cape Town. The student who did not have a seat on the flight was calm and collected the whole time, but extremely relieved when I came back to the ticket counter to swap her for Sr. Grandpa, Jr, I, and the remaining 21 people on the trip flew back to Cape Town and the ship that night. The tour company was a huge help once they knew of the situation, sending the guide who had already left the airport back to Port Elizabeth to help Sr work out the ticketing and waiting. In the end, Sr ended up in a hotel for the night in Port Elizabeth (with a nice dinner and breakfast), then on the morning flight. To make up for the mess-up, the tour company sent a car and driver to retrieve Sr from the airport and also take us around Cape Town the rest of the day. John was our friendly guide and he took us to several places, including the cute town of Stellenbosch, the botanical gardens at Kirstenbosch, and even the Two Oceans 8k race Sr was registered for around University of Cape Town. It turned out John's son and daughter were running in the same event's 5k, so he was able to see them start and finish while Sr was running. What started out as a scary situation the night before with a student stranded in the airport turned into a remarkable next day. 

On the evening of that same day, Grandpa and I had tickets on a SAS "Jazz Safari" evening outing. 15 of us were transported by minivan to the home of professional jazz musician Blackie Tembe (sp?) who lives in the Guguleto township, about 20 minutes drive from the ship. His family hosted us for dinner in his home while a trio of trumpet, piano, and bass played jazz written by South African artists (including pieces Blackie had written). They were very good, and Sr especially enjoyed it. Blackie's niece, who lives next door and is a professional singer, also came in at one point and sang the famous Miriam Makeba "Click Song" which I really liked. Blackie's home was quite nice, his family was very welcoming, and he invited the students with musical abilities to join in. One of our students is quite a good musician, and played jazz piano with Blackie and his bass player for a few songs. The combined jam was a special few minutes. Next we were supposed to go to a jazz club in a different area, but when we got there, our seats had been given away. It was quite late, so most of us headed back to the ship with one of the evening's two guides. Grandpa and a few of the other people were able to find seats and stayed with the other guide for another hour. He said he enjoyed the contemporary jazz they heard in the club. South Africa, you showed your magical and generous side early that evening, and your growing pains at the end.

Do countries get moody? If so, then I think you were feeling that way yesterday. The huge winds started early yesterday morning and kept up all day, scuttling many plans for outdoor activities, including ours to visit the Simonstown area where there is a large colony of penguins. The tour company graciously recommended we cancel and promised a full refund. You showed us who was boss when Jr nearly got blown over on our walk back the ship. We stuck close to the ship all day, but we did see penguins at the very nice Two Oceans Aquarium, a short walk away at the Victoria and Alfred Waterfront. Apparently winds like those are a hallmark of the later fall and winter season in Cape Town, though fall is just beginning here in the Southern Hemisphere. We had lunch at an excellent Belgian restaurant on the waterfront. Helen, if you reading, I thought of you when I had my first Kwak since the one I had with you all those years ago. Yes, they held onto my left shoe. After a quick trip to a grocery store, it was back to the ship.

I'm not sure I have explained all of your South African contrasts in a way that makes sense, probably because I cannot make sense of them myself. While we were in port, several people from the ship had valuables and money stolen by thieves who approached them directly. No one was hurt that we know of. At the same time, nearly everyone I have heard talking about their experiences here have said they are already planning to return. As we traveled around the city and country, we saw spectacular luxury alongside absolute squalor. I think the contrast between have- and have-not is more pronounced here than even in India, perhaps because the promise of equality, freedom, and political reform is so strong. In the 18 years since the end of Apartheid, you have seen many changes, but I worry for you, my new friend, that you will continue to grow and change in the right direction. So goodbye for now to you, South Africa, the most enjoyable yet dangerous, orderly yet disorganized, developed yet struggling, port so far.


Monday, March 25, 2013

Heavy Sea Olympics

When there is a long stretch at sea, there are special events planned to break up the routine of going to class every day. It was 12 days ago that we sailed from India, so in that time we have:

- had Neptune Day as we crossed the equator (remember the silly fish picture)
- stopped in Mauritius to refuel. We went snorkeling for most of the 8 hours we were there, but I forgot the camera so no pics.
- had Sea Olympics while we sailed in some bouncy waves two days ago.

Sea Olympics are a day-long competition with lots of silly events. The students are organized in "seas" (Carribean, Mediterranean, Baltic, etc) based on which deck and side they live on, much like residence halls. There is also one sea for all of the faculty, staff (except resident directors who lead their seas), dependent family members, and various others like the folks in the Unreasonable at Sea program. We got to pick our own sea name, so we were "Luna-Sea" and our team color was gray.

A good effort was made to include the dependent children in as many events as possible, though the boys were all quite disappointed they were excluded from the very rough dodgeball tournament. We held our own in quite a few events, including "Ship, Wave, Captain" which is played like "Rock, Paper, Scissors." Jr was the champion from our team for that game! There was an exciting game of Ninja, a very long relay race involving carrying pingpong balls on spoons to various events (I did it twice, not easy with the ship rolling), and a trivia competition. Sr was supposed to be in a wet-suit relay, but high seas made all the water slosh out of the pool so it got scrapped. The highlight of the Sea Olympics is usually the performances, both in synchronized swimming and lip-syncing. We were not disappointed, even though the synchronized swimming ended up being done in the Union. Teams were highly creative in how they conveyed the feel of the being fish out of water. The winning Carribean Sea team had sleek black swimsuits and a seriously synchronized performance, one of our library students starred in that show. Our team was made up of four of the fathers sporting three-year-old Sydney's pink shorts on their heads. We didn't win that one. This is a family-friendly blog, so no bathing suit shots here ;-)

We land in Cape Town tomorrow. We will explore the city a bit the first day, then head out to a safari for a few days before coming back to Cape Town for two more days. The weather is in the 70s here, which is hard to get used to after the high temperatures of South and Southeast Asia. Not that I am complaining about sweatshirt weather and nice breezes just yet.

Heavy Sea Olympics

When there is a long stretch at sea, there are special events planned to break up the routine of going to class every day. It was 12 days ago that we sailed from India, so in that time we have:

- had Neptune Day as we crossed the equator (remember the silly fish picture)
- stopped in Mauritius to refuel. We went snorkeling for most of the 8 hours we were there, but I forgot the camera so no pics.
- had Sea Olympics while we sailed in some bouncy waves two days ago.

Sea Olympics are a day-long competition with lots of silly events. The students are organized in "seas" (Carribean, Mediterranean, Baltic, etc) based on which deck and side they live on, much like residence halls. There is also one sea for all of the faculty, staff (except resident directors who lead their seas), dependent family members, and various others like the folks in the Unreasonable at Sea program. We got to pick our own sea name, so we were "Luna-Sea" and our team color was gray.

A good effort was made to include the dependent children in as many events as possible, though the boys were all quite disappointed they were excluded from the very rough dodgeball tournament. We held our own in quite a few events, including "Ship, Wave, Captain" which is played like "Rock, Paper, Scissors." Jr was the champion from our team for that game! There was an exciting game of Ninja, a very long relay race involving carrying pingpong balls on spoons to various events (I did it twice, not easy with the ship rolling), and a trivia competition. Sr was supposed to be in a wet-suit relay, but high seas made all the water slosh out of the pool so it got scrapped. The highlight of the Sea Olympics is usually the performances, both in synchronized swimming and lip-syncing. We were not disappointed, even though the synchronized swimming ended up being done in the Union. Teams were highly creative in how they conveyed the feel of the being fish out of water. The winning Carribean Sea team had sleek black swimsuits and a seriously synchronized performance, one of our library students starred in that show. Our team was made up of four of the fathers sporting three-year-old Sydney's pink shorts on their heads. We didn't win that one. This is a family-friendly blog, so no bathing suit shots here ;-)

We land in Cape Town tomorrow. We will explore the city a bit the first day, then head out to a safari for a few days before coming back to Cape Town for two more days. The weather is in the 70s here, which is hard to get used to after the high temperatures of South and Southeast Asia. Not that I am complaining about sweatshirt weather and nice breezes just yet.

Heavy Sea Olympics

When there is a long stretch at sea, there are special events planned to break up the routine of going to class every day. It was 12 days ago that we sailed from India, so in that time we have:

- had Neptune Day as we crossed the equator (remember the silly fish picture)
- stopped in Mauritius to refuel. We went snorkeling for most of the 8 hours we were there, but I forgot the camera so no pics.
- had Sea Olympics while we sailed in some bouncy waves two days ago.

Sea Olympics are a day-long competition with lots of silly events. The students are organized in "seas" (Carribean, Mediterranean, Baltic, etc) based on which deck and side they live on, much like residence halls. There is also one sea for all of the faculty, staff (except resident directors who lead their seas), dependent family members, and various others like the folks in the Unreasonable at Sea program. We got to pick our own sea name, so we were "Luna-Sea" and our team color was gray.

A good effort was made to include the dependent children in as many events as possible, though the boys were all quite disappointed they were excluded from the very rough dodgeball tournament. We held our own in quite a few events, including "Ship, Wave, Captain" which is played like "Rock, Paper, Scissors." Jr was the champion from our team for that game! There was an exciting game of Ninja, a very long relay race involving carrying pingpong balls on spoons to various events (I did it twice, not easy with the ship rolling), and a trivia competition. Sr was supposed to be in a wet-suit relay, but high seas made all the water slosh out of the pool so it got scrapped. The highlight of the Sea Olympics is usually the performances, both in synchronized swimming and lip-syncing. We were not disappointed, even though the synchronized swimming ended up being done in the Union. Teams were highly creative in how they conveyed the feel of the being fish out of water. The winning Carribean Sea team had sleek black swimsuits and a seriously synchronized performance, one of our library students starred in that show. Our team was made up of four of the fathers sporting three-year-old Sydney's pink shorts on their heads. We didn't win that one. This is a family-friendly blog, so no bathing suit shots here ;-)

We land in Cape Town tomorrow. We will explore the city a bit the first day, then head out to a safari for a few days before coming back to Cape Town for two more days. The weather is in the 70s here, which is hard to get used to after the high temperatures of South and Southeast Asia. Not that I am complaining about sweatshirt weather and nice breezes just yet.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Farewell, Arch

You've seen references to him in the blog, but I am going to devote this whole post to Archbishop Desmond Tutu, with whom we have had the great privilege of sharing our Semester at Sea voyage. If you don't know his importance to the end of Apartheid in South Africa, I encourage you to spend 5 minutes doing a bit of research.

"Arch" gave his farewell speech to the shipboard community since he will be leaving the ship for his home in South Africa in two days. At 81, he has been remarkably present and energetic since the day he boarded.

He graciously thanked individuals and groups this evening, taking special time to recognize the young and young-at-heart: the students, the dependent children, and life-long learners.

In his last formal remarks to the shipboard community this voyage, he talked to us about inequalities that existed before 1994 in South Africa, and those that we can expect to see when we arrive later this week. South Africa is a beautiful country with great potential, but its growth is slowed by corruption, croneyism, and continuing economic disparities. Formerly whites-only schools are integrated, but in most of what are still black areas, the schools are ruins lacking sanitation and proper facilities. He described the "burden on our hearts" he and other former leaders feel when they see the state of education and poverty that remains in so much of South Africa, contrasted with the conspicuous affluence we will see in gentrified central Cape Town.

My family has had some very memorable interactions with this charismatic and gentle man. Early in the voyage, he asked me why the You Are Here computer wasn't showing our location. I told him I was waiting for him to fix it for me. A student who has since become quite close to Jr took the photo below of Arch and me in front of the YAH computer. I have spoken to Arch several times on the voyage since then, usually just a joke or two is traded, but it always makes my day.

On Jr's birthday, Arch decided to sing "Happy Birthday" to him. It was the day we had arrived in India, and I mentioned to Arch that it was Jr's 10th birthday when we saw him on the stairs into the lounge where the immigration officials awaited us. Jr said the best part of the song was the trademark "Arch giggle" at the end. You have never heard someone with as infectious a laugh as Archbishop Tutu's.

Grandpa had the opportunity for a few serious questions to Arch during a presentation he made to the life-long learners. You'll have to ask him for Arch's answers to people's questions about poverty, inequality, and forgiveness.

Sr and Jr had the photo below taken on a day Arch had set aside for the shipboard community to have photos taken with him. He did this twice during his voyage, spending hours interacting with students and others who waited patiently for their turn. He has stopped by the dependent children's program more than once, and even sang onstage with them during the Sea Olympics yesterday.

Farewell, Arch, it has been a privilege to share the voyage with you.





Friday, March 15, 2013

Neptune Day

Today was Neptune Day. For you uninitiated folks, crossing the equator on a ship requires paying homage to the sea god, Neptune. Semester at Sea does this with style on Neptune Day. Since today is a study day, even though we crossed the equator two days ago, we had our rite of passage from pollywogs to shellbacks today. We got splashed with some kind of fishy slime, jumped in the pool, kissed a fish and King Neptune (Captain Jeremy)'s ring, and some people shaved their heads. Of course there are tons of ridiculous pictures. 



Ship Days

We have had a few busy days on the ship as we settle in for the long segment between India and South Africa. Our 12 days at sea will be broken up only by a single day on the island of Mauritius, where we will refuel and spend a day exploring beach, mountain, or town.

Yesterday I had a bridge tour. Most people like sitting in the captain's chair best, but I thought standing out on the moveable wing the captain uses for docking was the coolest moment. You can see all the way down the ship in both directions, kind of like being a human rear-view mirror.

Tonight the crew put on their once-a-voyage talent show. Folks we usually see in uniform throughout the ship wore civilian clothes (and even sunglasses) while performing dance, song, and poetry.

Tomorrow at 7am is Neptune Day, when we mark the ship's crossing of the equator. Look for another post soon about kissing fish, getting slimed, and going bald.

In the library, we have started the inventory of the entire collection, which is done on each spring voyage. We have a great library, but without doors and in the very middle of the ship, so keeping items from wandering isn't really possible. With calm seas and many days at sea, we should finish inventorying all of the physical collection by the time we reach South Africa.

Ship Days

We have had a few busy days on the ship as we settle in for the long segment between India and South Africa. Our 12 days at sea will be broken up only by a single day on the island of Mauritius, where we will refuel and spend a day exploring beach, mountain, or town.

Yesterday I had a bridge tour. Most people like sitting in the captain's chair best, but I thought standing out on the moveable wing the captain uses for docking was the coolest moment. You can see all the way down the ship in both directions, kind of like being a human rear-view mirror.

Tonight the crew put on their once-a-voyage talent show. Folks we usually see in uniform throughout the ship wore civilian clothes (and even sunglasses) while performing dance, song, and poetry.

Tomorrow at 7am is Neptune Day, when we mark the ship's crossing of the equator. Look for another post soon about kissing fish, getting slimed, and going bald.

In the library, we have started the inventory of the entire collection, which is done on each spring voyage. We have a great library, but without doors and in the very middle of the ship, so keeping items from wandering isn't really possible.  With calm seas and many days at sea, we should finish inventorying all of the physical collection by the time we reach South Africa.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Camping in India

The first few days in Kerala state were not what I imagined India would be like. As our fantastic interport students told us, India is an enormous country with many languages, cultures, traditions, and geographies. Kochi is the city in Kerala state, on the southwestern coast of India, where the MV Explorer is currently docked. I wrote most of this post on Friday when we had been in India since Wednesday. On Wednesday, Jr and I went on a day trip to the Alleppy Backwaters. Sr had a field lab for the course he is auditing on women writers around the world, and Grandpa left as soon as the ship cleared immigration for a three day trip to the Taj Mahal and northern India. Jr and I had a very relaxing day with about 10 other SAS folks on a little houseboat that toured the canals of the Alleppy area. It was hot, but the boat was shaded and the scenery was very pretty.

I wrote some of this post from inside my tent on the side of a mountain above the town of Munnar. Jr, Sr, and I came on an overnight SAS trip to Hike and camp in the tea plantation area. We knew it was the right choice when we saw the weather forecast for Kochi (100 degrees) then the forecast for Munnar (85 degrees). I took the opportunity to blog while it was pouring rain and we were all huddled in tents.

The trip to Munnar was amazing. There were 33 adventurous students, along with the two teaching assistants from the ship. Somehow I got nominated to be the trip leader, which I thought would be pretty much making sure we come back with the same number of people we left with. It was been that, but I also had some interesting cultural experiences as the liaison with the local guides. Somehow I thought in the land of Indira and Sonia Gandhi that a female trip leader with accompanying son and husband would not be an oddity, but I was incorrect. It was been fun to talk with the guides and the students about cultural differences and expectations.

Below are pictures of our trek through the tea plantations. We hiked for about 6 hours and got up to an altitude of maybe 6000 feet. The campsite is was at about 4000 feet. All of us were delighted to find a beautiful, sparsely populated destination for a few days in India. After Munnar, we headed back to Kochi, where we explored for a couple of days from the ship before departing on Monday. I definitely preferred our time in the mountains to the time in the city, though I think that would be true for our family no matter where we were. Kochi was a lot more of what I expected India to be like, with traffic, pollution, chaos, heat, and interesting sites and people. 

Today is Sr's and my anniversary. We didn't get each other anything except a trip around the world, so we borrowed one of the student's signs when we were in Munnar. There is a SAS meme of students taking pictures of themselves in spectacular locations and posting the photos for their parents, so we jumped in on the fun.



Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Birthdayship

Today was the day we celebrated Jr's 10th birthday on the ship. His actual birthday is tomorrow, but since the ship will land early in the morning and we'll all depart into India, we had apple pie and ice cream during the afternoon children's program (following some Bollywood dancing lessons in preparation for India). The girls in his morning school made him birthday banners. Happy Birthday, Jr, from your embarrassing parents. 


Saturday, March 2, 2013

Myanburmar

The country we just visited is a combination of so many things. Even the name is complicated. The official name of the country has been Myanmar since 1989, however, it was called Burma for hundreds of years before that and is still referred to as Burma by much of the rest of the world. We spent one afternoon and evening in Yangon (formerly Rangoon), which is the largest city and near where the ship docked. Early the next morning, we left for a three-night trip to the Ngwe Saung area (prounounced "Wee Song"), which is right on the ocean on the western side of the country. 

Contrasts I noticed:

  • Spectacular pagodas covered in real gold gilding, alongside tiny wooden homes with no electricity or plumbing
  • Friendly, open, welcoming people who live in a tightly controlled country
  • Beautiful, healthy children attending schools without walls
  • Many western tourists visiting a country which has been closed to much of the world until very recently. Transportation of any kind, whether on tour busses, airplanes, or local bus/train was challenging, slow, and sometimes very exciting. On the last day, we had a police escort for the tour busses coming back from the beach to make it to the ship on time. 
  • "Our" Nobel laureate, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who now has the freedom to travel the world on the Semester at Sea ship, met with Aung San Suu Kyi, the Burmese Nobel laureate, who was under house arrest in Burma for 17 years. See http://www.timeslive.co.za/thetimes/2013/02/27/tutu-meets-love-of-his-life-suu-kyi-in-burma and http://www.semesteratsea.org/news-from-the-helm/

Things we did:
  • Visited the Shwedagon Pagoda (see picture of gold spires called "stupa" below).
  • Rode elephants! (2nd pic)
  • Visited several schools, including one where we were representatives for a monetary donation from Semester at Sea to a 600-student elementary-middle-high school in Ngwe Saung.
  • Assisted an SAS student who is donating 500 soccer balls during the voyage donate several to the schools visited. Jr especially liked assisting with those gifts.
  • Followed the recommendations of our hilarious and warm guide named MoeMoe to visit a lava island, great local restaurant, bonfire with locals, and taste all kinds of UEO's (UEO=Unidentifiable Edible Object).
  • Purchased Burmese-style attire in the market on the way to Ngwe Saung. Wait until you see Sr's longyi. It looks just like the one the fellow on the bike is wearing below (2rd pic). Yes, he wore it every day at the beach and you will see it at bike races this summer.
  • Swam in pristine, warm water on a white sand beach.
  • Learned that body surfing is best done with the chest, not the face (Dave T, you would be proud of Sr's face at the moment).
  • Said "Mingala-ba" to everyone we met in response to their friendly greetings of same. It means "auspiciousness be upon you" and is pretty much the Burmese equivalent of "Aloha."