Friday, November 21, 2008

A village adventure






Our entire team was invited by a friend to spend a day and night in his village called "Red Garden". The village is only 30 minutes from our city but it might as well be hours away. It was very primitive and remote, as if we were in another world. We sat around the walls of a large room on the carpet, drinking numerous cups of sweet tea, one ear on the TV that was playing in the room and the other trying to catch a few Kurdish words that I knew. We had several miscommunications throughout our time there, some of them embarrassing. Oh the joys of being in the language-learning mode again after 25 years! After sitting on the floor for what seemed like an eternity, we all went on a beautiful hike through the village and surrounding areas. Our shoes were caked with an inch of mud & leaves but it was so nice to be out in nature, soaking in the smell of wet leaves and freshly cut wood. It reminded us of what Fall smells like in America. The village is surrounded by springs of water and many beautiful trees. Soon after arriving back at the house, we were served a lovely meal of rice and beans and chicken (on the floor, of course). I'm telling you, it's hard sitting cross-legged on the floor for hours. My back was not enjoying that! After dinner we sat for another several hours on the floor, talking, drinking more tea, watching Prison Break on TV. At one point they brought out bowls of nuts and seeds and put a plastic cloth down in the middle of the floor. Everyone cracked their nuts and seeds and spit the shells in the middle of the floor on the plastic. It was a funny sound to hear 25 people all eating seeds & spitting shells. Bedtime brought its own challenges as we spread our thin mattresses & blankets and bundled up in warm clothes to survive the village night. With 3-inch gaps around the windows and doors, it was pretty cold. Just as well though as the fumes from the kerosene heater would have killed us otherwise. The family divided us up into 2 rooms and we later found out that they all slept on the kitchen floor! How sad. We awoke at 7AM to the sounds of loud talking (well, the LOUD call to prayer woke most much earlier) and decided we'd better get up since we were sleeping on the living room floor. Shortly after we were served a delicious breakfast of freshly baked mountain bread with cream and honey. The honey was from their own bees in the village. The women had been up early baking the bread on a wood fire. And of course more tea! We said our good-byes and were on our way home by 8AM. What a wonderful, generous family they were and how they honored us with what they had. Yes, it was primitive and uncomfortable at times but still an honor to be in the "Red Garden" and perhaps shed a little light there in that dark place.

4 comments:

johndarleneletexier said...

Wow, what an immersion experience; thanks for sharing this trip with us all...

Kathleen said...

Thanks for sharing a great adventure with us...although I would liked to have heard some of the embarrassing moments of miscommunciation! :-) What strikes me is the contrast between the primitive nature of this village...and watching "Prison Break" in the midst of it all! Glad you survived all the floor time, the kerosene fumes, and the cold.

dclouser said...

That bread looks great. At least you don't eat "to" when you go to the village! The cold would have been hard to take, but the rest of it sounded fun.

Anonymous said...

I would love to go on a hike in that part of the world! I bet it is much different from the hikes I go on in the Northwest! Would love to see some photos from the hike!