Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Cultural Day, Safari Weekend



One of the most anticipated days of the year at Meru Junior is Cultural Day. The kids have been practicing for it since I’ve gotten here and they put all their heart and soul into learning various tribes’ traditional songs and dances. There was some poetry, skits, a fashion show, and an eating contest thrown in there just for fun. Even I got a little dressed up for the occasion. I didn’t exactly blend in, but they did applaud my efforts- and adjusted my head scarf thingy about a million different times in a million different ways. Below you will see me dressed in my kitanga gear.

So rhythm, moves, sometimes some harmony- they had it all. Most of the songs were from the KiMeru tribe, which makes sense as most of the school population is Meru. They extended their scope beyond, however, and learned some pieces from the other tribes as well. Currently in Kenya, there are 42 definitive tribes. This sense of “tribal identity” or how that contributes to one’s personal identity is something I’m still trying to get a grip on. My education started on this day, in an atmosphere where there was the freedom to express the pride of varying heritages. Hopefuly, I’ll have some video soon.



The next day, I left with the Scouts to Meru National Game Park, a couple hours from school. I thought our fun was going to be spoiled when we reached our destination late and they had no room for us (I suppose reservations for the fieldtrip of 32 kids would have been a good idea, but just saying…). Thankfully, the workers were good sports about it and let us bunk together. Wonderful accommodations minus the scorpions (thank god not in my room). I had a single track mind on our first game drive: lions and hippos. First, buffalo- impressive the first time around, but boring the 100th time you see them. But second…buffalo, no wait, that’s lions eating buffalo! I was so lucky. A lot of driving later we came upon some streams. The first stream stop no hippos, but the second- a mother and her baby. Perfect. I felt ready to go home after that, but the kids had not gotten their fill. Eventually, we saw the other “usuals”- the giraffe, the warthogs, an elephant, and a rhino. When we returned, we did the usual campy stuff. You know, studied for exams, threw some rocks at baboons, watched the crocodiles swim around while we ate lunch… Ok, well we did do those things AND had a bonfire with songs and stories. I really need to teach them the glory of s’mores.

A little less than two weeks of school left. Now, we’re gearing up for “Prayer Day,” which is appropriately the day before the big final exams. I decided to spice things up this week by bringing in a guitar and teaching them some songs to be performed. We’ll see how that goes. Right now, my out of shape guitar fingers really hurt.

1 comment:

Emily said...

Lions, hippos, and baboons...oh my!

You look cute in your head scarf thingy. ;)