Thanks for reading my posts on this voyage. Tonight I go to some jazz places (on Good Friday!!), tomorrow I go to wine country in the morning, then get off the ship (not boat) to check into a hotel. On the 31, I fly out at 8 pm and arrive at DTW slightly after noon on April 1.
If you have the stamina, please read my last post below!
Friday, March 29, 2013
Can you find the fluffy penguins?
They are kids losing their soft blue fluff 'cuz their growing up and getting ready to leave the nest!
My last post!!--March 29
March 28
Next, we went to Boulders Beach—a sheltered cover between Simon's Town and Cape Town where there is a colony of African Black-Footed Penguins. When I saw the Fairy Penguins off the coast of Australia, I remember that they went out to feed during the day and came back to feed the baby chicks at night. We sat in the darkness and waiting until they came trooping past, and we could hear the babies calling for them in hunger. Apparently, the African Penguins do it in more of a cooperative way, in that some leave to feed and some stay to protect the chicks and the eggs.
FYI—Megan will be 43 years old on the 31st. Hey, I thought that was my age....Happy Birthday, Megan! That's the day I fly home!!
And, Happy Easter all!
The good thing about a collapsible cane
is that you can take it with you in case you need it. Today I did
not have to unfold it when I went to the Cape of Good Hope where the
Atlantic Ocean and Indian Ocean meet. I took the funicular up to the
overlook of the Cape Point, and I was happy to pay the extra 50 Rand
(about $5.). We went all the way down to Cape Point—the most
southern tip of the African continent—to have our picture taken as
a group and people from other tour buses were doing the same. If
you've been reading this blog, you know that the ship was rocking
pretty well the last few days before we came into Cape Town—it
seems that CT is the most dangerous port to come into in the world.
Baboons roam throughout this area, and
some houses have security and baboon-proof trash cans to protect
against them as they know how to open doors, clean out cupboards, and
generally make a mess. In addition to them, we saw a “hyrax”
which is a small animal that has to eat all day in other to keep it's
body temperature up. It's so small that eagles can eat them, they
take turns being the guard while others are eating. Here's a
wonderfully weird thing: because the eagles attack them when there
is bright sun, the hyrax developed another eye lid so it can look
into the sun and watch for eagles!! Kind of like built-in permanent
sunglasses to use when they need them!
We went past an ostrich farm which is
apparently good “eating” with practically no fat in the meat.
I'll pass on that. When the road was
close to the sea, giant “kelp” forests were visible which is full
a nursery for small fish. There were also fur seals and, although I
didn't see them, sharks in the water.
By the way, do you know why they think
the whales are getting stranded on the beach? Scientists think they
are becoming deaf from explosions in the water. They have extremely
sensitive hearing because they listen for each other's communication.
Next, we went to Boulders Beach—a sheltered cover between Simon's Town and Cape Town where there is a colony of African Black-Footed Penguins. When I saw the Fairy Penguins off the coast of Australia, I remember that they went out to feed during the day and came back to feed the baby chicks at night. We sat in the darkness and waiting until they came trooping past, and we could hear the babies calling for them in hunger. Apparently, the African Penguins do it in more of a cooperative way, in that some leave to feed and some stay to protect the chicks and the eggs.
Speaking of gasoline prices—the
government raises the price about every month. The announce what the
new gas price will be a week before it goes into effect. How much is
gas, you might wonder. Currently, gas is $1.50 US for one liter of
gas. There are 3.7 liters in one gallon of gas. I think they call
this a word problem, and I'll leave it at that!
FYI—Megan will be 43 years old on the 31st. Hey, I thought that was my age....Happy Birthday, Megan! That's the day I fly home!!
And, Happy Easter all!
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Mandela
Without this man saying "Put away the guns," when he got out of 27 years of prison, there would have been much violence. Mandela is now 94 years old and in the hospital with a lung infection.
Post for March 27
March 27
What's slower than Nana's walk? Nana
walking with a cane!
Today I gave my ticket to a student for
my booked trip to the Amy Biehl Foundation Trust—a peace and
reconcilation effort—went horizontal for a couple of hours, put my
collapsable cane together and took it to the mall on the waterfront
where you see mostly WHITE people shopping and mostly BLACK people
working. They had several Easter egg hunt places, and it looked just
like the US.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Nahti blows the foam off the very freshly made beer
Although brewing and selling beer is illegal, it is permitted anyway. This is because unemployment is so high, and people need a way to make some money. Two women run this beer shed where people sit around the outside walls in rows and tell stories.
Bank of township toilets
There are rows of toilets to be used by residents in the township that were installed by the government. Also, faucets for water to be hauled to the shacks are placed nearby.
Nahti, the guide, and Nana, the "mama"
Nahti is a fabulous guide who grew up in the townships. His story is inspiring, and he provided us the opportunity to go into the shacks and hostels and experience the sense of community present.
The Philani Development Center was established by a Swedish medical doctor and her husband, a South African. A workforce identifies underweight children, provides education for the mothers, and also training for the mothers to be able to make some money for their families. It has seven centers throughout the townships.
The Philani Development Center was established by a Swedish medical doctor and her husband, a South African. A workforce identifies underweight children, provides education for the mothers, and also training for the mothers to be able to make some money for their families. It has seven centers throughout the townships.
March 27 Post
On Tuesday, I participated in something
quite new—poverty tourism. The two words just don't seem to be
quite right, especially since South Africa is the richests country in
Africa. I learned a lot by having the “shacks” and “hostels”
from Nahti, the tour guide, when we visited Khayalitsha, the second
largest township in South Africa where over 500,000 people live.
Nahti is a member of the “first free” generation, and his
generation has a big role to play. The parents of his generation
said, “Liberation first, then education” so much importance is
placed on children attending school.
Nahti grew up in a hostel which is
shared housing by four families. The way it works is that each
family has private bedrooms, but they share the “toilet” and
kitchen. During the 1920s and 1930s, there was a big push by the
government to get blacks closer to towns and out of the country, so
it built many hostels.
Nahti said the families decide what
time the door of the hostel will be locked. If you are not in by
that time, you have to sleep somewhere else. He talked about the
strong sense of community among the population, and that they are
working very hard within the townships to make their situation
better.
Nahti feels a responsibility to his
family—as do most people living in the townships. Because he has
a job now, he is able to help his extended family, but he hopes to
move out of the family home soon. When he marries, he will be
expected to pay a dowry to his future wife's family. For a young
woman with an education, he will need more money.
I walked so much yesterday, I had to give my ticket away for today's excursion. "One speed Nana" walked way too far in the townships.
In addition to the government built
hostels, shacks have been built by people in the townships that are
made of metal and wood. Mostly young people live in these as they
begin to have families and they want more privacy. The government is
going to build five BILLION houses to replace the shacks, and there
is a long waiting list.
As people improve their lives, they
might get a better house, but many feel a responsibility to stay in
the township. Another reason, is “They live here because their
family has always lived here. We work very hard to be happy and
focus on the positive.”
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
March 26 very brief note!
All people are from Africa and migrated in several directions.
First the Dutch came here to put a "watering hole" on the route to India for the spice trade for the Dutch East India Company beginning in 1652. Water flows down in rivers from Table Mountian, so it was a perfect spot. Then, they built the "Castle of Good Hope" in 1666 with rocks--I think it looks more like a fortress. Then, of course, the British thought they needed it. But, when the Brits came they took over the "castle" and built onto it.
Monday, March 25, 2013
March 25 post
Palm Sunday with The Arch
Tonight I went to the Palm Sunday
Service in the “Union” on rocking deck six. All the seats were
full, and since everyone thought The Arch had it under control,
obviously no one from the ship had planned with him. Arch was
holding onto one of the pillars and the curtains behind him swayed
back and forth with a regular rhythem.
When it came time to serve communion to
500 or so people, Arch broke the bread and said, “I need help!”
So mostly young females flocked to the front to pass the chunks of
bread around.
Then, it came to the wine. “Could we
have some glasses?” Arch said to the back of the union where some
of the ship's crew stood. “How many?” one yelled back. “I
don't know, six, seven, eight....”
Soon the Dean came walking fast with
six or seven glasses in his hand and put them on the table where The
Arch was presiding. Then, more followed with the assistant
dean.....Arch started to pour the wine. “Could I have more wine?”
To which the crew replied, “How many bottles?”
All were served with the ship bobbing
up and down, and “left overs” brought down to the front. When
Arch realized that way too much wine had been poured and blessed, he
said, “I need help!” Again, four or five young females came
forth and drank it all up.
It's been great to be in the same space with him since February 20. Arch has more than his share of prizes--Nobel Peace Prize among the many--and he is one of the most joyful people I had ever met.
He and I get off in Cape Town, but he will go to his home immediately, while I will see the sights, then board a plane on March 31 (Megan's birthday!)
Saturday, March 23, 2013
March 24 Post
There is a certain roar on
a ship with
1000 people on it.
Well, it's not a roar at
first
but after two weeks or so
of group conversation
certainly never one-on-one
my ears began to ring.
At lunch, I thought John
said
“Could we have much
depth on the ship?”
“Yes, and more width
too.” I replied.
“No, I meant debt—how
much student debt is on the ship?
You know, to pay for the
tuition.”
I misheard him. That
happens a lot.
Mary Gail sat beside me at
the third party table last night
and slowly, and V-E-R-Y
clearly so all might hear, said
“I think we need to be
mindful
that these birthday cakes
cost $30.
Perhaps we should pitch in
some money toward it.”
I hoped no one else heard her
since she was saying it to
Marla, one of the birthday people.
We usually can't hear each
other,
but just in case Marla might have heard, I covered it
and said, “Oh, they
already have a budget for cakes.”
I didn't kick Mary Gail
under the table.
This morning at breakfast
Yolanda told me
she thought I was lucky
because I'm leaving the ship
as it pulls out of Cape
Town.
One of the reasons she
wants to go home is because of the noise.
I acknowledged it is loud.
“I know it's loud in
here,” (meaning the cafeteria)
“No! It's the toilets!
The toilets!
I can't stand the noise!”
I hadn't thought of that
but she's right.
They're loud.
March 23
Megan* and I first met when we sat next
to each other the evening of my first “excursion” in Burma. It
was a long table located somewhere in a dimly lit garden. This was
after we, along with more on the bus, the Shwedagon Pagoda, and
everyone had dirty feet—a must for walking around from Buddha to
Buddha.
I now know that Megan attends Concordia
University in Wisconsin. That evening, with her splendidly woven,
French-braided hair, she looked fresh from a Norman Rockwell painting
of a girl milking a cow in a spotless barn with a kitten sitting in
the doorway. (To me, Megan was a girl who just came from a pagoda
in Burma.) Alright, I should have picked up enough in my first
sighting of Megan to know that this young woman who had just tiptoed
out of Dodge, was mid-way through this voyage including Japan, China,
Vietnam, Cambodia and Singapore, had not yet pushed beyond the
boundaries of her upbringing. I immediately noticed that she chewed
the inside of her mouth.
Megan is a psychology and
communications major and will graduate next year. She works in the
education abroad office on her campus and saw the SAS brochure, made
a U Tube video appealing for funds to go, and collected enough money
to pay for her trip. Megan told me she was a Christian, and I
rattled on about the Jesus Seminar—theologians, historical Jesus,
etc. etc.. She listened, bit the side of her mouth, and finally
said, “Can I ask you something?” “Sure, what is it?” “Why
would you want to look into that?”
I've been around Megan now in various
contexts as she continues to bite the inside of her mouth. She was
on the cultural tour in Mauritius where we visited two Hindu temples,
Catholic Church, Chinese pagoda, and Muslim mosque. Megan is also
in the religion class I attend, and I was stunned when she asked the
question, “What do Muslims think about the Bible?” This was
after the teacher already talked about Islam considering Jesus to be
one of the prophets (“Peace be upon His name”—which is what
Muslims say following saying the name of Jesus.)
Megan CHOSE to go to a meditation retreat in India to learn how to meditate with others in a monastery. When it came time to meditate, she thought it might be evil, so she started reciting verses of the Bible in her head.
Last night I sat with her at dinner and
she told me that SAS has encouraged her to see people as “more
multi-dimensional than in her small community where everyone is the
same.” “What are you going to do with that when you get home?”
I asked. “I think I might go into Milwaukee.”
I think Megan is a courageous young women who is working to understand a bigger world than that of monochromatic origin. I hope she continues to learn and be open to more ideas and views of others, and I applaud her curiousity.
*Megan is the name!
Friday, March 22, 2013
March 22 post
Today is the day of the sea olympics
(and also a “study day”--but what does that matter?) Various
team are competing and having contests like the limbo, “eastern”
squatting, backward spelling. Adriatic Sea, Mediterranean Sea,
Baltic Sea, etc. etc., and some staff have formed a team called Luna
Sea.
Then there are the young white girls
now brown working on their tans in a competition of their own. Boy,
do I remember those days, although I never looked as good as they do!
I considered pointing to the bruises on my arms from sun damaged
skin thinned from tanning many years. I thought about reviewing the
wrinkles around my mouth and eyes, and lines down my cheeks, so they
could see what will happen to them in 50 years. But, hey, it
wouldn't matter, and plus, we are on higher seas now.
The ship is rocking much more now than
it was, and I realize I should have done those “core exercises” I
was intending to do. We LLL are walking more and more like sailors
who drank too much. So, I feel like I'm in a sea olympics of my own
here just doing what's absolutely necessary, and thinking of all
those adventurers looking for spice routes, new land, freedom, or
just what exactly was over the horizon. How did all those people
sail out quite literally out into the unknown? I'm not talking about
learning about differences here—I'm talking about not knowing what
was next! I have a two person cabin to myself with a toilet, sink,
shower, small fridge, TV, and I can't imagine anyone else in here—let
along sleeping on a wooden plank next to a bunch of smelly people
along with the rats. So making it down the hall to join in the sea
olympics is not on my schedule today.
Also, to do that would mean I'd have to ignore my crowd fatigue. Living on a ship with 999 other people means that you are in groups all the time if you're not in your cabin. Really, staying in your cabin, unless you are absolutely sick with traveler's sickness (code word here), is not why most grown-ups pay money to the Institute of Shipboard Education! However, there comes a time when you just cannot make a decision about where to stand or sit because you're in a crowd. And, when crowd fatigue happens, especially when the ship is rocking, it's best to stay in your cabin. I hope tomorrow the sea is calmer and so am I.
Thursday, March 21, 2013
March 21 last call for comments and questions
We'll be pulling into Cape Town on March 25. If I've missed a question or comments you've made, sorry.....Could you repost it here? Or, if you have been holding back, thinking and not posting, here's your chance. Don't worry about offending me!
LJ & SK--This means both of you too!
LJ & SK--This means both of you too!
March 21 post
The ship will dock in Cape Town, South
Africa, on March 25. There are opportunities to learn about South
Africa's history of apartheid movement when the blacks—the majority
of the population—began to object to the economic and social
oppression of the whites—the minority of the population. One of
the heroes in this effort is Nelson Mandela, a black leader who
helped organize the African National Congress (ANC) to end the
oppression. Blacks had to carry “passbooks” with them, and any
white could ask any black to see the book—the failure to produce
the passbook would led to punishment. So, blacks lived in crowded
townships and were not free to move about as they wanted.
Mandela was sent to a prison Robins
Island to silence him for the work he was doing organizing blacks to
gain their freedom. While he was in jail, his wife, Winnie Mandela,
worked with the ANC to keep his name alive because he was the face of
the struggle for the blacks. The clenched black fist became the
symbol to tell blacks to continue to work together to gain their
freedom. The music of the blacks held their spirits together, and
sometimes there was such a crowd of singers and dancers, the white
police were frightened by loudness of the sea of people demonstrating
before them.
Nelson Mandela was in solitary
confinement much of the time but worked in a quarry digging rock out.
He was allowed to receive only one letter every six months. One of
the techniques of protest Mandela used was to walk more slowly that
the whites wanted as he went to and from the quarry. Years of being
in the glare of the white rock and sun caused damage to his eyesight.
During this time, the ANC became militant, and the white government
realized that they had to talk with Mandela in prison and the ANC to
make a deal about the demands of the blacks in order to avoid a civil
war (LJ & SK—I know you know about the civil war between the
south and north in the US when Abraham Lincoln was president.)
Prior to 1994 and freedome for the blacks, The Arch was Archbishop of Johannesburg, but he had to have a passbook to to travel around. His wife's passbook said it was okay for her to travel since she was married to the Archbishop.
The Arch was very active during this time and meeting with leaders around the world trying to get the governments to take a stand against the South African white government. He said that the student protests in Berkeley demanding that business from US corporations be withdrawn from South Africa was very helpful in encouraging the white government to conclude they had to change their policies toward blacks. During the discussions among the government, Mandela and ANC, it was agreed that there would be an election and that no revenge by either side would take place. Mandela walked out of prison after 27 years. He was elected the first president for the new South Africa. The Arch said that Mandela went to prison an angry man, grew to understand the position of “the other” (someone of a different view), and came out of prison to lead the country saying we must walk the path of forgiveness and not the path of revenge. Mandela still is alive, but we've been told he is not in good health.
As usual, an “interport student”
came on board in Mauritius. You may remember that I've talked about
this before in getting ready for Burma and India. Karey Burns is 18
years old and lives on the outskirts of Cape Town. She will be going
to college next year and grown up in the “new” South Africa.
Since apartheid ended in 1994, Karey has learned about it all her
school life in integrated schools. She's tired of it, ya. (Karey's
speech was dotted with “ya” after a statement but not like the
Canadians and Upers.) As she goes to forward with her education,
she is worried about getting a job after school.
In order to move blacks forward and
upward in society, they are given preference job hiring. The
“levels” of society from top to bottom are: white, Indians (from
India), colored (mixed race), blacks. Since Karey is white, she's
worried that it will be more difficult to get a job, since the other
levels of equate capability and diplomas will be hired before she
would. Due to this, many white are leaving South Africa in order to
get jobs. Karey feels like her generation is being punished for
something they weren't a part of.
Yet, according to Arch, South Africa is
now one of the most unequal countries in the world. Great wealth and
mansions exist alongside patched-together shacks of poverty. Schools
are integrated with children of all colors, yet the schools in
townships where mostly blacks live, are of poor quality without
proper toilet facilities. Arch said, although his country is better
than it was, the inequity of conditions is a huge burden on the
hearts of those who worked for the new South Africa.
When South Africa hosted the Soccer
World Cup in 2010, there was no crime for two months. The Arch
asks, “If we could do that?”...and his voice fades off into a
whisper and his eyes close.
His wife joined him in Mauritius, and they will both get off the ship to go home together. What an honor it has been to have Arch on board.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
March 20 post
I have met some really interesting
travelers—both college kids and adults—and I'm glad I joined this
voyage for awhile. I hadn't traveled outside the US since 2009 when
I went to Malawi and Kenya. I remember I worried then about my gimpy
left foot before the trip, but the injections held me through the
five weeks of travel. I walked much more in Africa than I am able to
now. I was afraid to come on this trip, because I had to cancel the
2012 trip to Liberia for health reasons.
Everyone is on a journey, but maybe
they don't know it until they board the ship. This trip has been
affirmed my ability to travel for at least a few more years. I was afraid it was over, but I jumped to that conclusion too soon.
What I've known for a long time is that
you have to get outside your comfort zone to experience new things.
Or, it's a chicken and egg thing—those who are open to new
experiences will leave the safety of what they know. (LJ & SK, I
am so proud of you for trying new things!!)
An example of this is a woman named
Sherry who told me she was a very shy person when she boarded the
ship in San Diego in January. For the first several weeks she was
sea sick and stayed in her cabin. Once she felt better, Sherry was
determined to get out and experience the journey. If you've been
following this blog, you know that some people on board shaved their
heads if it was the first time they've crossed the equator (Neptune
Day, March 15). Sherry didn't want to shave her head (no
kidding...), but she went to the hair salon and had her hair died
red. I saw her the following day and told her that I loved red
hair, loved having red hair, and loved her red hair. Sherry said she
was confused, because the voyage allowed her to come out of her
cabin, enjoy mixing with others, state her views, reach out, and now
she was a redhead!
There are many couples on the ship—both
LLL and faculty/staff and spouses. Although I've wished that I had a
life partner, I noticed a disadvantage to having one, at least on
this ship. LLL couples seem to be couples all the time—breakfast,
lunch, dinner, happy hour, port excursions, probably even classes,
etc. The same is not true for faulty/staff and spouses, since the
former have responsibilities and the spouses have time to spare. I
know that compromises have to be made in couple hood, but I wonder
how much of the togetherness might really be about staying in the comfort
zone. Your thoughts?
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Yolanda Nash and Nana
Yolanda was born in Guatamala and married a US diplomate, but she now lives in northern California. She is a part time nanny and helps with her "family" on the ship. We enjoy chatting with each other and were happy to be on the same "tour" together.
March 19 Post
Mauritius has a very diverse population
with 70% following the Hindu faith and 20-25% of the Catholic
Christian faith. The Islam tradition is also represented here. The
French brought the Catholic faith, and since the British brought
slaves from India (their colony at the time), the Hindu tradition was
established. Some of the first people to come to Mauritius were
Arabs, and with them came the Islam (Muslim) tradition. There is
intermarriage, and the result is a wonderful milk chocolate skin with
tolerance for differences.
Yesterday I went on a “cultural”
tour with a small group starting off with a stop to an octagonal
Chinese pagoda filled with burning incense. On the way to front
door, we spotted a very old tortoise (well, we assumed he was old).
Mary Gail, from Alaska, wondered how he entered the walled grounds,
and someone said , “Well, we drove in and parked didn't we?”
Read for the other classic Mary Gail comment later. There were
incinerators where evil thoughts were burned as we approached the
front.
Next, we visited (well, I viewed from
the bottom) Marie Reine de la Paix Church on Signal Mountain which
was a place of prayer by a priest during WW2 to spare Mauritius from
the fighting. It was built in 1940 and overlooks the capital, Port
Louis. Only priests can enter the sanctuary and a service is held
every Sunday with the congregation sitting on lawn chairs around the
church. Pope John celebrated mass there, so it was a big deal for
this little island with probably a lot of lawn chairs!
Jummah-Mosque was started by some Arab
Muslim merchants in 1852 and eventually covered an entire square
block. When we entered, we saw the washing stations for feet, hands
and faces used by those entering for prayer, and eventually saw the
washcloths hanging out to dry on the second floor. A 150 year old
almond tree grows on the ground in a central place.
The Hindu Temple was built in 1850 and
had some colorful creatures around but the buildings have mostly a
red and white color theme. The Hindus believe in one god, but many
special god were created for special purposes because the thought is
that humans need to prayer for special needs. I think of it like the
Catholic Church having special saints to pray to for special help,
but these Hindu gods can look pretty weird. My goodness, the
painting and sculpture is very ornate! BTW—a image of a cow is
always somewhere around. (Remember the living white cow beside the
street in my India section?)
An offshoot of Hinduism is Tamil that the gives the son of the main regular Hindu god the top position. These temples are VERY colorful and and ornately decorated. We visited the Tamil Temple Kaylasson that was built in 1854.
We are lunch at the Indian restaurant that was air conditioned. The cool air felt refreshing!
Our last stop on the tour was not a
place of worship but an extraordinary French “chateau” with large
landscapes all around it. It was built by the French governor of
Mauritius in 1850, and eventually privately owned by the same family
for many years. Cyclones occasionally devastate the island and one
year it affected the chateau. Noticing that the place needed serious
care, the remaining family undertook a campaign to restore it to it's
original condition. This is a preservationist's dream, and it is now
a museum.
The funniest thing that happened on this leg of the trip
was that I found a very clean bathroom before we were to get on the
bus. I was so excited about the cleanliness of the place, I was
going to tell everyone about it—except that I couldn't unlock the
stall no matter which way I turned the lock. I heard some voices
outside the building, so I began knocking on the solid, heavy door
and yelling, “Help! I can't unlock the door! Please tell
Jeannette!” (She was our tour liaison, and I didn't want her to
wonder why I wasn't on the bus.) Soon people began talking in
different languages outside the door, then someone in English
telling me to try unlocking again.....Finally, my fellow travelers
were all outside the door saying: “Try again! Get a bigger key!
Someone needs the master key! Hang on, we're looking everywhere!”
Then, Mary Gail suggested I crawl underneath the door—there was
only a quarter of an inch to the floor. She also suggested, they get
a ladder for me to climb up and then they'd lift me down—there was
a maximum of 18 inches from the top of the door to the ceiling!
Finally, after many keys, someone found the right one and the door
flew open to see me using the toilet as a chair and dripping in
sweat. I was freed from my entrapment, and a manger gave me a cold
washcloth for my face. I'm sure the story is being told around the
ship!
Sunday, March 17, 2013
March 17 on the reason you don't want to be a Dodo
Tomorrow we visit Mauritius for a day.
Apparently, SAS used to visit at least one overnight, but some
students made some “bad choices” and so SAS is no longer welcome
that long. Nonetheless, I'm looking forward to it since I think it's
going to be glorious. Mauritius was “discovered” by the
Portuguese in 1507 who found no people there, but it was the ONLY
home of the Dodo bird. Then the Dutch, then the French, and finally
it became a republic within the British Commonwealth in 1992. Over
the years, the natural forest was cut down to plant sugar cane, and
now tourism has become big business. The language spoken is English
and sort of a French kind of language called “Creole.” The Dodo
bird couldn't fly, became very fat—weighing up to 50 pounds—and
were killed by people to eat. In addition to being food for people,
the rats that came on the ships that landed here, ate the eggs of the
bird, so now there are none.
One of the important things the Dodo
did was eat the seeds of a special tree on the islands. After going
through their digestive system, the seeds would drop and take root.
After the Dodos were no longer around, new trees stopped sprouting.
People were worried that the trees would become extinct too.
Somebody figured out the connection between the Dodo birds and the
“preparation” of the seeds for taking root. Now they put the
seeds from the trees into a rock tumbler and new trees are beginning
to take root!
LJ & SK—can you find an image of the Dodo bird? There are only sketches from very old skeletons and what people think they looked like. Some people used to use the phrase, “You're such a Dodo.” That wasn't exactly a compliment!
I am really anxious to go on the “cultural tour” because I think we will see some of the large sugar cane plantation home previously owned by the French and British. Some people I know are going to the beautiful beaches and snorkeling. I remember I did that on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia but that was 13 years ago!
Saturday, March 16, 2013
March 16
Even though I'm able to access my yahoo
email account on the ship, I don't because it counts against my 30
minutes of “free” Internet time. If I use the semesteratsea
address, it's truly free: janet.bernath.sp13@semesteratsea.org
. I use my 30 minutes of Internet time to upload whatever I've
written for the day and some of the pictures I've taken—yes, it
takes about 30 minutes to upload stuff on the ship!
Today I checked my yahoo email because
I have my travel arrangements in my yahoo email folder. I'm
beginning to think about getting off the boat and on to a plane March
31st. I'm not in a hurry to do that, I just wanted to
review the arrangements I made before I left. I have to pat myself
on the back to say that I did a good job in January! Most of the
students are still figuring out what they will do when they disembark
in Barcelona, but they're young and I'm not!
While I was checking my yahoo email, I
learned of the death of a friend of mine, Lynn Meadows. Lynn and I
met on the corner of South Main and South Street in front of the Post
Office standing in protest to the occupation of Iraq. We both had
houses to sell and ushered together at Hill Auditorium (until I
determined my knee could no longer withstand the 45 degree angle of
the aisle), so we had connections on various levels. Lynn had
several of the “corner” people over to her daughter's house in
January for a delicious soup supper while she was “house sitting”
in Chelsea. The week I was leaving for this trip, I heard she was
staying at her daughter's house because she was too sick to live
alone. What a shock that was, and I'm sorry that I only had time to
call her for a chat. I am forgiving myself on this one, because I
could have said, I'll call her when I get back.
This ocean is flat and calm now and
goes on forever, and it reminds me how wide and deep God's love is.
We cannot wait to see the ocean to know that—we must be the ocean
of compassion for each other. This means showing each other hat we
care for one another—not just those who are like us—we must get
out of our comfort zones—reach out to people who live
differently—and dare to love “the other” who is unknown to us.
As The Arch says, “We are all family.”
I'm guessing that those who gaze back
at our earth have an even more profound sense of God or Divine or
Infinite..
Friday, March 15, 2013
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