Sunday, 22 October 2006
...a piece of wisdom
"Lord grant me the serenity to accept the things I
cannot change, the courage to change the things I
can, and the wisdom to know the difference."
- Frans av Asissi
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Friday, 28 July 2006
Good times?
"Adventurous times" it says in the finance newspaper "Finansavisen" this morning. Nearly every kind of business is successful these days, appearently. We dont know what to do with the billions we earn because of the sky rocketing oil prices. The director of the company I am working in told me contently that were already 2 millions above budgeted income this month. From a norwegian perspective life couldnt be more prosperous and perfect, with the visions of a even better future. Economically.
Because if you look around a little, it seems the economical good times do not make sure everything else is fine as well. In the Middle East people keep killing each other, in a conflict that can not be solved with money. The terrorism is arising, and the US is trying to stop it in every possible way, and their business around the world is every day more successful, but it doesnt seem to help.
It seems to me that people in general gets more lonely, and more easily isolated from the ones around them. Elderly dont get visited by their children, they can sit indoors by themselves for a week without seeing anyone else than the lady on the TV screen. People doesnt know their neighbours, and they dont care. All their material things can help them, and they dont lift their eyes tolook around. The indifference is rising, and the commercials say its all fine to think about yourself all the time. Because you deserve it.
I think the world today needs to hear the revolutionary gospel of Jesus, and the way he cares about every single person, and that we also should follow his example. We were not created to live for ourselves, but to serve others. I pray that I will more and more "see the world through his (Jesus´) eyes". It´s clear to me that the world needs more love. If you look at the way Jesus lived, you see that to him it didnt matter how people were defined in other people´s eyes. He lived to serve the people around him, set their needs higher than his own. After all, doing this is what makes ME happy. And its delightful to think that getting a good job, earn a bunch of money and have a big house, doesnt really matter. Because it doesnt make you happy. I have seen it in Peru, and I think the same goes for Norway.
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Friday, 21 July 2006
Summer in the city
Summer in Oslo is great - the sun is shining almost every day and we are about to reach 30 centigrades!! The only tricky thing is that I am sitting indoors, answering phones at the central of a steel company named Ruukki at Furuset. It´s an ok job, and nowadays it´s really quiet since a lot of mechanical workshops and fabrics are closed.
Besides working- I spend a lot of time hanging out in the parks of Oslo making barbeques, taking a bath in the ocean, eating strawberries, and enjoying life with friends and family. This weekend Amund, Tore, Marit and me are going canooing in Lørenskog- what a blast! We will spend the nights in a tent, or maybe there will be no tent, who knows. Depends on the mosquitoes!
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Tuesday, 09 May 2006
Home, sweet home
I have arrived Norway and I am now in Hald International Center (school) in Mandal, until June 16th. Its been a bit weird to get back to the Norwegian reality and get to know the culture over again. But I really enjoy staying with family, boyfriend and friends. I still have my old phone number so you are welcome to say hi! See you around, friends! Its been a while.
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Saturday, 29 April 2006
I Lima
Jeg er kommet trygt til Lima! Er hos Vanessa naa- alt vel.
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Monday, 24 April 2006
Time is running out (and the bugs as well)
These days are filled with farewells and awkward feelings. Yesterday my dance group (traditional dance) arranged a lunch for me, they had brought wine and we enjoyed the typical french fries, rice and steak. They told me they had appreciated having me in their group and gave me some local art from the Andes. Bien bonito! As time is running out, I have started to have some intensive English classes for a group of 10 year old girls. We meet almost every day, they are very eager to learn so its fun to teach them.
Friday I will leave Chota and maybe never come back. This reality has become common to me, and it will be strange to regress to a western world, where people are more closed and occupied, and where materialism is stronger. I have seen the tremendous contrasts of this world from the other point of view- which has left me with different attitudes than before. But how long will it take before a will act and think like any other European?
Last week and this week we go to primary school in the countryside to take away the bugs (lus) from the heads of the children… Last Wednesday Mary and me were shampooing all the girls´ hair of the schools called Ojos Corral and Tranca de Pujupe. I guess every sixth girl had white eggs and black little creatures crawling around in their poor heads. The bugs won’t let them be - they keep scratching their heads until crazy, keeping them from being able to concentrate in class and in their school work. Pobrecitas!!
After some days in Lima, I will take off from Peru and reach Oslo the night of Wednesday May 3rd. I will spend some days in Oslo before going to Hald at May 8th. I look forward to see you all!!
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Tuesday, 18 April 2006
Semana Santa spent in Trujillo
Easter was spent by this girl in Trujillo, a beautiful city along the coast of Peru. A friend invited me to spend some days with her family, so I got to know some Peruvians from the coast and see how they live. I have to say the coast and the highlands seem like two worlds apart, on the coast they are more up to date, have more knowledge and they are also more wealthy. Well, Patricia showed me the Huacas de la Luna- which is a monument/building of barren (leire) which was built by the Moches, a culture that existed before the Incas. Very impressive- they made a lot of nice ceramics, I will try and bring one object to Norway. We took advantage of the sun and went to Huanchaco afterwards, which is the tourist beach of Trujillo, where there are a lot of “gringos” and they sell a lot of tempting art- bracelets, necklaces and earrings made of sea shells, beads and other things from the nature. And I got to try the “caballitos totoras”, which are fishing boats made from straw! What a pity I cant put out more pictures… The other day she took me to another city- Chiclayo- where we visited the royal tombs of Señor Sipan, who was the leader of another culture called the Chimus. So now I have gotten to know various of the Peruvian ancestors :)
As Peru is very catholic, there was arranged various masses during Easter. Patricia and I went to an unforgettable one at Easter Eve, 9 o’clock in the evening. The people met outside the church, and we turned off all the lights around us, meditating over the fact that Jesus was dead. The ambient was pretty pessimistic. But all of a sudden the bishop lit his big candle, and started to light the candles of the persons around him. After a while all the congregation had their candles lit, and we went into the church together, singing. Jesus had finally risen, and brought life to the people living in shadow. It was a lovely mass, and the church was filled to the very final seat.
I am left with 10 more days in Chota, and it’s a strange feeling. A part of me cant wait to go back to Norway, but at the same time I feel like a part of me is Peruvian by now. For instance, its awkward to think about Peru soon getting a new leader (after the re-elections in the beginning of June), and I wont be a part of it. My heart hopes that their future will be a bright and better one, because they deserve it so much, all the Peruvians I have gotten to know. May 2nd I will take off from Lima, letting go of this country that has become a “partesito” of me. ¡Què extraño serà!
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Sunday, 09 April 2006
The peruvian lection - friendship and family
I have been staying in Peru for quite a time now, and its strange to recall what Norway is like. The people here are very poor compared to the ones over there, but I have been used to it and don’t think much about it anymore. What matters is what the people mean to you, the friendship you have, the good conversations. I have gotten “amigos” here that I will never forget. The Peruvians are so open, easy to get to know, its amazing. They give you everything as soon as you reach them your hand to greet them. We have been discussing with some friends; what things could the Peruvians improve, and in what aspects could WE learn from them. In the latter, there are various things. The western world is very stressful, there is a lack of time. Here you could pop in to visit a friend, and he always has time for a conversation, a cup of tee. (The negative side is that they never fulfill their appointments on time…) We have experienced that its possible to have a lot of fun with a person that you recently met. Its such a blessing for us, who don’t know a lot of people and are not going to stay here forever. In Norway it takes so much longer to build a good and close friendship. I have been thinking about how much harder it is to be a foreigner in my country. We have so much to learn from the Peruvians.
The people over here appreciate their relations a whole lot, that is their families and their friends. They are shocked as I tell them how we in Norway put the elderlies in appropriate homes, and keep living our lives separate from our parents. In Norway the focus is on effectivity, and to fulfill your own dreams, realize your self, without having in mind your family and the people around you. Here the children are fighting to have their parents to live in their house, as they get old. Can you imagine?
It seems that, when you are short of material things, you value more the ones that actually matter- your family and friends. And after all, they are so right. My friend Elizabeth told me this afternoon, that she early realized that money doesn’t make her happy. Her family hardly have money to live for, and if something should happen, like illness or accidents, they are in serious problems, as there is no “safety system”. But what they do is trust in God, who always has provided for them. Besides God, Elizabeth enjoys hanging out with her friends, who make her life worth living.
I wish you all will have a blessed Easter!
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Tuesday, 28 March 2006
Delivering school material
Today the trip goes to Chalamarca, and a whole lot of other schools. I am sitting here waiting in the office, my colleagues were supposed to show up half an hour ago, 6:30am. Why couldn’t I just sleep a little more? Lately we have really experienced how the Peruvian time concept is completely different from the Norwegian… People show up 1 hour late, and no pasa nada- no bad feelings or angry expressions. Being Norwegian I am always the one having to wait, because a deal is a deal, isn`t it? Please tell the others, will you…
Another great (?) event is what happened on thursday – the president candidate Ollanta Humala came to visit tiny Chota! If you ask me, I think he might get to win the eleccions. The people were going crazy with their flags and banners, shouting slogans to the former military leader. They like how he “favors the farmers”. For example, the other candidate Alan Garcìa arrived on sunday, but he arrived in helicoptre, while Humala arrived by car. The latter is more down to earth!
The friday coming up Inger Marie and I will travel to Trujillo, a city on the coast, and stay there until tuesday night. We have some friends studying there, and hope to meet with them and also go to the beach to have some sun.
Have a nice week my friends!
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Monday, 20 March 2006
Peru againts a new chapter?
In Tacabamba CODE arranged training for teachers, of the primary schools with which we have cooperacion. Every fourth year the educational plans, and thereby the curriculum, changes with every new government. Recently Peru was on the last place in a research based on the countries` educational systems in South America. Until now, the peruvian teacher has dictated and told the children what to learn and what to think. The government has been contemplating, and has mailed the teachers a new kind of curriculum, implying that the teaching should make the child take a bigger and active part in their education. Peru needs children that have self esteem, that think themselves, and are aware of their own reality, so that they are able to improve their life conditions, and develop Peru as a country. Since the government doesn’t take their responsibility to implement all the plans they are collaborating, non-governmental institutions like CODE will have to step in and fill “the big holes” that the state leaves when it comes to education. A lot of the teachers don`t care about changing their strategy of teaching, that’s why CODE wants to motivate them, and suggest to them how they should organize their work.
The elections for a new president are coming up- April 9th. The two most popular candidates are Lourdes
Flores (a woman!) and Ollanta Humala. Even though most Peruvians have given up hope when it comes to presidents not keeping their promises, a lot of people put their last piece of hope on Lourdes. They think that maybe a woman will be more honest and trustworthy. Humala is a good friend of the radical Bolivian new president, and will probably go for a military dictatorship if he gets to power in Peru. He is travelling to the highlands and to the hidden small communities of the jungle to gain support among the poor farmers and other people without education. He is a candidate very different from the others, and promises to take away all the corruption in brutal way, and he has many strange ideas such as to give every child in primary school a bread made from coca every day. It will make them grow (most Peruvians are very low in height) and solve the problem of bad nutrition.Ojalà (=lets hope) the new president will invest more resources on education. As of today, Peru spends 3,6 % of their income on education, while Norway spends like 6-7%. About 20 % of the national income is used to pay back external debt. It’s a crazy world. In my opinion boosting the expenses on education would be a main factor for Peru`s progress. But most important of all: it would make the everyday for the Peruvian much better.
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