Friday, July 16, 2010

Greetings from Perú



Greetings from Perú. It hasn’t been easy getting situated especially as regards the internet so that’s why it’s taken so long to post this first entry. Peace Corps hasn’t made any arrangements for us to have internet access during our training so the best I’ve been able to do so far has been to go to a locutorio (a business that sells internet time and phonecalls) and shoot a few e-mails to Judith. However, wireless exists even in Yanacoto, Perú, and this morning I found that if I stand on a chair and set my laptop on top of the armario (tall cabinet for hanging garments) I can get one bar of reception at pepe2yanacoto. So thanks, Pepe.

Training has been brutal. It’s like going back to college. We have Spanish classes, business classes (I’ll be working in Small Business Development) and classes on the culture and history and geography of Perú from 8.00 to 5.00 daily. We also have presentations to deliver in schools and at businesses and to each other (for practice) every week, all In Spanish of course. So I’m keeping busy to say the least. You haven’t lived until you’ve delivered a two-hour presentation on accounting principles and market feasibility in Spanish.

One big surprise has been how well I’ve been accepted by a group of volunteers whose average age is half my own. I needn’t have worried about that. I’m living with a host family in Yanacoto, a 10-minute combi ride from the training center and my “host mom” Benedicta owns a restaurant. So I’m eating well and volunteers stop by every night to gossip and eat alitas, fried chicken wings, and papas fritas and to drink a couple of Inca Kolas. I think the economic collapse in the U.S. resulted in a better than average group of trainees. They didn’t have a lot of job opportunities in investment banking. They’re a pretty sharp bunch. It’s been fun for me. Like getting to go back to high school and this time doing everything right that you screwed up when you were an awkward, anxious, hormone-drunk adolescent.

I made it into the advanced Spanish class so I’m finding it challenging. It’s me and six mejicanos, all native speakers, and one gringo whose father is Bolivian. The only other gringa in our class dropped out after the first week and asked to be moved to intermediate. Wish me luck.

I live with a Peruvian family in the dusty, hilly town of Yanacoto about 30 minutes north of Lima, the capital. It’s generally sunny here because the entire coast of Perú is desert (the Humboldt Current flowing up from Anarctica keeps the breezes offshore and so it rarely rains. There’s not much vegetation or scenery. Even less greenery than in Arizona, though nowhere near as hot.

Living with my host family has been a great experience. My host father Doroteo is a teacher and was mayor of the town up until a few years ago. My host brother Carlos is also a teacher and my other brother Hernán drives a mototaxi, a tiny 3-wheeled vehicle about the size of a golf cart except with a fully enclosed cab. They’re capable of carrying two passengers but always carrying three. Two sobrinas (nieces) also live here while they’re going to school in nearby Chosica. Yanina is studying to be a nurse and Ana María a teacher. Other reatives sleep here from time to time as well. We’ve been as many as 10 on a few nights. It’s cozy. However, I have my own room (though I feel guilty about it on nights when there are 9 other people in the hose) and the Ronseros have made sure it’s the best room in the house.

In Yanacoto since my arrival there has been an attempted assault on the current mayor—a mob broke into his office and tried to pummel him. He’s accused of embezzling funds from the community coffers. And my sobrina Anita was robbed in Chosica—they took her money, took her schoolbooks and even took her shoes. It’s the wild west here. Lima is even worse. When I go to Lima I empty my pockets entirely except for my insulin, a syringe and a folded-up 10-soles note.

The food in Perú is carbs and more carbs. Potatoes and white rice pretty much every meal along with a small amount of meat, a soup, and ají, a terrifically potent hot sauce a bit like habanero salsa. There are some tasty garlic and peanut sauces with which to smother the rice and potatoes. We also eat cuy here. Guinea pig. The guinea pig has been raised as a food source since Inca times. It’s an important food item but also has a place in the folklore. Curanderos y brujeros will cut open a guinea pig for you and will claim to be able to read your future in the entrails. When you’re sick, someone might pásate el huevo—crack an egg into a cup and pass it over you in order to draw the ailment from your body.

I’ll be posted to my permanent site about five weeks from now—the place where I’ll serve for the next two years. It will likely be on the coast but in an area perhaps slightly less austere and barren than Yanacoto. At least that’s what my guinea-pig guts are telling me.

I’ll try to keep you better informed from now on. However, a lot of that depends on Pepe and whether or not I keep getting that one bar of signal. I’m passing the huevo over my keyboard as we speak.

4 comments:

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  2. LOL - love to hear about your adventures. You have a great attitude. Stay well.
    -Shana

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  3. Ola' Chuck,

    Great to hear you've transitioned fully into the Peace Corps and are settled in Peru. Your host family sounds great! You are no stranger to studying. Glad to hear you're finding an affinity Small Business Development. You were an entrepreneur and no stranger to hard work or studying. I'm sure you'll be great! I remember you slaving over your letters to friends in Spanish at the Coffee Shop most mornings.

    I'm settling into my new life, too. I got hired as Southampton's Energy & Sustainability Coordinator. I'm in charge of lowering CO2 emissions in Town and helping them green up their act. I started in June and contracted Lyme's Disease a few weeks back and it really leveled me. Luckily, I've got a classic case and am optimistic I'll make a full recovery. Look forward to hearing more about your Peruvian adventure.
    Adios, Amigo

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  4. Gracias Pepe y buena suerte Carlos - sounds like an amazing adventure and I look forward to many more tales from the front line. I have to say I am really enjoying my return to Mexican spanish and the food that comes along with it!

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