Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Kerisimasi

Manuia le Kerisimasi ma le Tausaga Fou! Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from Samoa. This is my first blog post as an official Peace Corps Volunteer!
Your newest 21 Peace Corps Samoa Volunteers!
For the remainder of my time in Sa’anapu, I grew to love my second family. Saying goodbye was very tough! As our training came to a close, the village had many events for us to attend. The women’s committee had a ceremony for us, the church had a ceremony for us, and we also performed for the youth group. I’ve probably never danced this much in my life, but it’s a huge part of Samoan culture and I love it (despite my lack of any rhythm whatsoever).
My host mom made my sister and I matching outfits.
On December 11, 2015, Group 87 said our oath and swore in as volunteers here in Samoa. It was a very exciting day! We were invited to dinner with the U.S. Ambassador the night before, which was surreal. We then all went our separate ways. Each one of us is in our own village, ranging between the two main islands of Samoa. I got very used to living in a village with the other volunteers. We got to spend Thanksgiving together at a resort, which definitely helped being away from home! I’m sure we will get to explore together and reunite as our time continues, but now we’re each on our own journey.
Group 86, Group 87, and Peace Corps Staff with the Ambassador.
Ever since swearing in, I’ve been living in Sili, my permanent village for the next two years. My family is incredible and I cannot wait to get to know them better (aka learn their names). My host parents have 12 children and most of them are married with kids of their own. We all live on the same family compound, so I have lots and lots of siblings, nieces, nephews, etc. I think I’m becoming Samoan because I just call everyone my sister or brother.
My cute pink house in Sili!
Sili is beautiful! It’s on Savai’i, which is the bigger, less populated island. It’s also inland, so it’s isolated from cars and other villages. We have a huge river running through the village, which is gorgeous. Unfortunately, people who live on the other side of the river have to walk across it just to get to school, church, or the rest of the village. Walking across the river comes naturally to people in my village, but it’s quite the challenge for me! I’m picturing the day when I get washed down stream. I’ve only crossed the river twice thus far and my brothers had to save me when I got swept away the second time (smooth, Sarah). Having a river is quite the blessing, though. Running water is a somewhat rare occurrence in my house, so I’m able to go to the river to rinse off or do my laundry. My host siblings and I also play volleyball in the river, which is hilarious!
Someone walking across Sili's gorgeous river.
School doesn’t start until the end of January, so my real “job” hasn’t begun, but I’ve jumped straight into integration here. I can’t communicate very well with people, but I joined my church’s youth group and choir for our Christmas performance. We performed about 10 different dances on Christmas Eve in the pouring rain. We then walked the village at midnight singing songs. It was one of the most loving Christmases I’ve ever witnessed. Santa and presents don’t exist here, so it really is all about family and community. I also joined our women’s committee and got to go throughout the village inspecting everyone’s houses. The women of my village are quite funny people, as they set me up with the Mormon missionary who is placed in Sili. This is how proposal numero 2 happened. No pigs were offered this time, so naturally I declined.
One of my many Samoan dance outfits.
We are currently welcoming in 2016 with Cyclone Ula tonight, so wish me luck. Happy New Year!!

Friday, November 20, 2015

Paradise

Where do I even begin? Hello computer, hello internet! I have officially been in Samoa for seven weeks, although it feels like seven months. I decided to make a goal to post one blog per month. So, I left the States in September and it is now November, meaning it’s time for post number 3! There’s no actual way to describe what life is like here, but I’ll do my best.

I’m currently living in Sa’anapu and over halfway through training. I got placed with a very sweet host family. It was just my host mom, Sose, host dad, Paradise, three host brothers, Hitler, Paradise Junior, and Steve, and myself. I say “just” because this is probably the smallest family in our village. Samoan families are huge! My host father was an ali’i, which, according to the Matai system, is a high chief. He was in charge of lots of rules for the village and also blowing the conch shell at 7:15 every night for curfew.
PJ, Steve, and Sose ready for White Sunday at church! 
I’m beginning to understand Samoan culture more and more. It’s very different, but I’ve really enjoyed learning about it and integrating into this village. Even though I’ve only lived here for seven weeks, I’ve had a surprisingly large amount of cultural events to go to. My host cousin got married, so I got to experience a Samoan wedding. I may or may not have talked to him for an hour before the wedding not knowing he was the groom until he was at the alter (oops). Also, our village opened a new church, which is a huge event in Samoa. The commotion for this church lasted about two weeks. Because my host dad was an ali’i, I went to about twelve different ceremonies for the church (and my family doesn’t even attend that church). The opening of a new church involves lots of money, food, and fine mats. When I say food, I mean animals. For example, while eating breakfast one morning, a pig was being hacked into pieces with a machete about 5 feet away from me. I think blood got on me. So, culture shock is real, but nature therapy is even more real. Sa’anapu got hit by a tsunami a few years back, so everything near the ocean is abandoned, including a resort! Samoans stay away from the water, but of course we volunteers love going to the beach!
At the beach in my culturally appropriate swimwear.
Training has been a whirlwind of language class, student teaching, and cultural lessons. One person from our group decided to leave, so we’re down to 21, but hopefully in two years time we’ll still have 21! We’ve also gotten to know the two other groups that are here, which has been nice. I actually got to go to Savai’i, which is the other main island of Samoa, and visit a current volunteer! Savai’i is bigger than Upolu (the island I’m on now), but also much less populated. She lives in the village Gataivai, which is stunning. She took us to a huge waterfall called Afu Aau and I was in heaven!
The definition of heaven.
So, this post could be named Paradise because of the beautiful country I’m living in. Unfortunately, it is named Paradise in dedication to my host father. Mulitalo Faumuina Lauvi Parataiso A’aitui passed away on November 10, 2015. He was known as Parataiso (Paradise). He was a very healthy man, so the death came as quite a surprise. Since I was living here with essentially no phone or internet, my dad and I would spend at least a couple hours every night talking. It was devastating when he passed away, but the funeral taught me a ton about Samoan culture. With the passing of my host father, I moved in with a different host family. They’re very nice as well, but much bigger! I have 8 host brothers and 3 host sisters (although they’re really cousins, aunts, nephews, etc., but I can’t keep track).
Iosia and Malaki, two of my new host brothers.
We only have 3 more weeks of training left and then we swear in as official volunteers! I found out that I am placed in the village of Sili, Savai’i! A volunteer from Group 85 is currently working in that village, but she leaves right before I move in. I have huge shoes to fill, but I’m incredibly excited!
Group 87 all spread out in our placements!
Sa’anapu has been great, but I’m ready for my new adventure. Tofa soifua, Sa’anapu… Mālō Sili!

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

The proposal

Tālofa, ‘o lo’u igoa o Sala (Hello, my name is Sarah)! The past week has been a whirlwind that this blog cannot possibly capture, so I apologize for the summarizing that is about to occur. Also, I’m realizing this blog is probably going to be everything I didn’t want it to be. I hate blogs that are too long for a Math major to read, but this post fits into that category (and most posts will). Oh well. First, and most importantly, I am safely in Samoa!

Staging in Hawaii was incredible solely in the sense that I got to meet my other Peace Corps Volunteers! We are the 87th group that has gone to Samoa and there are 22 of us. There were originally 23, but someone dropped out before Staging, so that doesn’t really count. The other 22 of us are going to make it through all 27 months, I’m insistent upon that fact! Groups 85 and 86 are both still in Samoa, but there are only 14 volunteers left combined, so all of our group really needs to stay! Among the 22 people in my group, there are 8 males and 14 females. I am the youngest person!!! It’s one thing to be the youngest in your group of friends by only a couple months. However, this is being the youngest in a group of 22 and being one of the only ones who just graduated college. I am here among a PhD, a published author, AmeriCorps alums, Teach for America alums, people who have taught abroad for years, an aerospace engineer, a mother, etc. The list goes on and on. As intimidating as that is, it also just makes me appreciate this opportunity so much more. We were told that over 2,000 people applied for this specific Samoa program. I feel so incredibly lucky to be working besides these amazing people and to be one of the 23 accepted. Also, as the baby of the group, I have 21 protective older siblings who will always look out for me (35, including all Peace Corps Volunteers in Samoa).
What a perfect looking group of people!
So, Hawaii was great. Our flight to Samoa was at 2am on Friday and we arrived at 7am on Saturday (professional time travelers). Most of Group 87 was sitting next to each other; however, my seat was next to a Tongan man. This was a great first interaction to begin my Samoan experience. After some talking with this Tongan man, he decided that I should be his wife. I told him I was young and in no rush to get married, so he offered me a pig that he would roast for me (he brought out pictures and everything). It was quite the strategy to get a wife, I might add. I politely declined, saying that I needed to be in Samoa for 2 years, so it wasn’t good timing. He upped the offer a little bit and decided to build my parents a brick wall around our house if I would bring him back to America with me (I got some nice brick wall pictures also). Again, I politely declined, but I got to learn so much about Tonga and it really opened my eyes to the experience I’m about to have. He was completely serious, which just goes to show that living in America is a fantasy for people in these cultures. Anywho, I survived the flight and came off the plane not married, so that was a success. We walked down the stairs of the plane to a huge welcoming committee with banners and leis. It was awesome (but it was also 7am after no sleep).
The view over Hawaii.
We went straight from the plane to the Ministry of Education for our Ava Ceremony. I can’t even begin to describe this ceremony. It was honestly the coolest experience of my life thus far. It was probably half an hour of this man talking Samoan (some yelling and singing also). He would then take a hay whip and whip his own back and then the floor over and over again. After having no clue what was being said (or done), it was time for us to drink the Ava. However, before we drank it, we had to speak a line of Samoan. I had practiced for a while on the plane, but was still so nervous! Anyways, I survived and drank the Ava (which, by the way, is a hallucinogen, no big deal). It tasted like dirt water. No matter how many times someone tells you it tastes like dirt, you never quite understand that until tasting dirt. So, essentially, it was delicious.
My new lava lava (skirt) for the Ava Ceremony.
We’ve been in the capital, Apia, all week, getting settled into Samoan culture. I’ve already learned quite a lot of Samoan; our language class is intense! We start every day with a Samoan song and prayer (sometimes even a dance). We had a day of water safety training, aka go to the other side of the island to a gorgeous resort, go on a boat and swim in the warm ocean. So, that day of training was super tough. The other days have been filled with information, language, cultural scenarios, and immunization shots. Nights are filled with games, family dinners, and group runs, so we’re getting pretty close as a group. It already feels like we’re a family and I left Maryland less than one week ago!
Life's not too shabby.
Anyways, week one in the capitol is over and we are off to village life! Ten weeks in Sa’anapu, here I come. In Apia, we were able to purchase internet access (hence me posting this). However, for the next ten weeks, we are officially off the grid. Wish me luck; I’m very excited to meet my host family and begin integration into Samoan culture!

Peace out, Apia... Tālofa Sa’anapu!

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Here goes nothing...

Well, it looks like it's about that time to start a blog! For those of you who know me, you might've read "Sarah Goes Australian," documenting my time spent studying abroad. This felt like the perfect opportunity for a sequel! However, keep in mind that I was a math major in college and blogging is not my calling in life. This blog is also quite different because it is likely that future Peace Corps Volunteers will read it as they prepare for their journey. So, hello strangers and thanks for following along!

Anyways, I leave tomorrow morning to begin 27 months (yes, over two years!) as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Samoa. I will be serving as a "Primary School English Literacy Resource Teacher," which is just a fancy way of saying I will be teaching English in a village in Samoa. Now you all are thinking to yourselves, "Where is Samoa?!" Samoa (not to be confused with American Samoa) is a tiny little group of islands located essentially in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
Good thing I like the ocean, I guess!
There are two main islands of Samoa: Savai'i and Upolu. The first three months of my time will be spent training and learning the Samoan language and I'll be on Upolu for that. Those of you who know me just laughed out loud because I am horrendous with languages, so that'll be quite interesting. The Peace Corps has sent me some language material and the best thing I've learned so far is "'Ou te le malamalama," which means "I don't understand." I have a feeling I will be saying this a lot, which works out well because I love the word "malamalama."
The two main islands of Samoa.
So, how does one exactly get to the middle of the Pacific Ocean? Well, it's quite the process, let me tell you. I leave tomorrow morning (September 30th, 2015) and fly from DC to Chicago to Honolulu, Hawaii. We have orientation in Honolulu (casual, I know). Then, all Peace Corps Samoa Volunteers fly together to Apia, which is the capital. We're there for about a week and then we move to Sa'anapu, which is a village on the Southwestern side of Upolu. I'm in that village for the three months of training.
How to get to the opposite side of the world!
Well, now you have somewhat of an idea where I will be and what I'll be doing. I'm beyond grateful for the opportunity and can't wait to see what Samoa has to offer! My access to internet will not be constant, so updates to this blog are going to be very intermittent, but stay tuned. I won't have my American phone number, so I would love to receive letters and have many pen pals! My address for at least training is:
Sarah Brown, PCV
Peace Corps
Private Mail Bag
Apia, (Western) Samoa
South Pacific

Peace out, America... Sarah is going Samoan!