Gamarjobat (HELLO!),
To my friends near and far.
As you may or may not know, I am currently living and teaching in Georgia (as
in the country bordered by Russia to the North and Turkey to the South). I moved to my new home of Batumi on the Black Sea coast one month ago and I’m
settling into a life that involves a language with lots of strange guttural
throat noises, a landscape that rises from luscious citrus filled river deltas
to impossibly high jagged summits, and a culture that welcomes guests with open
arms and then forces them to drink ungodly quantities of flammable strength liquor at a rapid
pace. My host family is full of love and my students are full of the best kind
of youthful energy.
Instead of a true narrative
I’m going to tell my story in photos, with some extended captions to fill in
the details.
Sakartvelo, A Photo Essay
Layover: 12 Hours in
Warsaw
The most striking thing about my short time in Warsaw, Poland was the quality of the light. From an Indian summer in Portland, climbing just a few degrees in latitude was like leaping 2 months further into fall. The stone of this square caught that low stark light and the whole year felt older and slower.
Orientation: One Week in
T’bilisi
I spent much of my first
week in Georgia cooped up in the smoky and fluorescently lit halls of the
Bazaleti Palace Hotel. When I was able to escape from the information sessions
and Georgian language classes I was delighted to begin absorbing all the sights
and smells and sounds of my new home. Beyond me is the cityscape of the
capitol, Tbilisi.
Climbing the walls of an old
fortress with some new friends.
Me and my roommate Emmitt with that apprehensive look of two boys who know approximately a dozen words in Georgian and are about to be adopted by new families. As a side note: Emmitt is from Emporia, Virginia, he studied textiles and color theory (which I point out mostly because we ended up wearing the same color pants on this day, which means my clothing choice has been vindicated by an expert) and he tells the most ridiculous stories. His mother’s mother has 82 grandchildren and they all gather for a family reunion every year. He invited me to join him this year and I said yes please!
The chaos of the hotel lobby
where host mothers and fathers and brothers and sisters stood on one side and
the TLG (Teach and Learn Georgia) volunteers waited on the other like we were
being picked by team captains in a playground flag football game. The
introductions happened one by one with much applause and many an awkward moment
when both went in for the (Italian style) kiss on the same side. My host father
seemed insistent on simply shaking my hand so I had no such trouble.
In Transit
I just like this picture. It
was a 9 hour car ride to my new home in Batumi with many many stops for every
kind of treat that was sold by the roadside. This photo shows the main highway
at its best, it slowly deteriorated to a winding pot-holed affair with
harrowing passes between gargantuan soviet-era trucks.
The Many Faces of Batumi,
My New Home on the Black Sea:
Batumi the Las Vegas of
Georgia:
This skyscraper (still under
construction) comes with a Ferris wheel built into its upper stories.
Batumi the boom town of
foreign investment:
Although the trump tower
site is currently inhabited only by these wonderful ivy covered stumps.
Batumi the odd
sponge of western culture:
These avatar characters
guard a kids playground filled with other movie characters, which is set
against a palm-tree lined boulevard with French/Italian/Greek
fountains/facades/gazebos.
Batumi the beach:
The locals are adamant that
October is too cold for swimming in the Black Sea but most of my days so far
have seen temperatures in the low 70’s with water that is bathtub warm compared
to my home Pacific waters. Afternoon swims have been a regular staple of my
routine thus far!
Batumi the market town:
Beyond the new construction
is a thriving hub of more typically Georgian-style commerce where every block
is lined with street vendors sharing the regions bounty of fruits and
vegetables and counting their sums with an abacus, like this man.
Batumi the confusing
marketing pitch:
I love this picture because
there are these weird installations that are each supposed to give a different
spin on the cities slogan, “Batumi, the city that loves you”. However, the
symbolism here is very unclear. The figure is carrying a heart in some kind of
cart, but whose heart is it and is that a shopping cart? If the heart belongs
to the person pushing the cart, how did their heart leave their body, and if
not, then who’s heart is it and why is it in a shopping cart? Will I lose my
own heart from shopping or gambling too much in Batumi? If I do in fact lose my
heart here can I then can I just buy a new one? Your guess is as good as mine!
Batumi all in one photo:
This is my attempt to convey
all these different themes in one picture. You are looking through the window
of an abandoned commercial space where mold grows on the walls. In the first
layer of the reflection are passersby (tourists and locals) crossing the
square. Beyond that there is the European style of architecture from Batumi’s
previous building boom about 100 years ago, and next to it is a new building
which will affect the same style as its neighbor on the outside, but with the
cheap and quickly built innards that you see now. And finally in the background
is that new skyscraper with its Ferris wheel looming over the city.
Life at Home
You can see our second floor
apartment windows from the base where I often sit with some of our neighbors
and chat. By chat I mean test out my small repertoire of questions and phrases
which is growing at a rate of approximately ½ per day.
Sunday Laundry
This is a pretty bad picture
but it captures the ambience pretty well. From left to right we have: my host
mother Gulico, my host brother Ramazi, Guilco’s nephew Achiko, and my host
sister Naira.
Dinner this night included
fish from the river near our house, homemade bread and several sauces to
accompany it all including a hot pepper spread and a sweet and sour sauce made
with the dregs of the grapes in the wine-making process.
Let’s be honest, home life
includes plenty of free time, which I’m oh so happy to fill with: creative
endeavors like reading and writing, less creative endeavors like the limited
number of games that my Georgian cell phone has to offer (“bounce” is my
personal favorite so far) and, last but not least the most creative
photography that can be achieved without moving from a prone position. If I get bored enough self
portraits do happen.
Village Life:
On a mission to tend the wine, we headed out of the city and into the steep hills where a different pace of life abounds. Due to the significant language barrier I never really know where I’m going when my host father waves me to “modi modi” (come come). On this day I was happy to find that the road took us to a beautiful mountainous village where he spent his childhood summers with relatives.
Ramazi stirs the 120 liter
barrel of fermenting wine. From what I can tell, the wine they drink here is
closer to 25% alcohol and rather than sip it, you drink the equivalent of about 1/3 of a glass with each toast.
At a typical supra (feast), there seem to be between 8 and 20 toasts…as a
skinny, normally casual drinker, the math is not in my favor.
At this point the wine was
relatively tame, sweet and delicious!
These structures on stilts,
as far as I can tell, are for storing and drying food stuffs.
All those tired crops after
a long summer’s work.
Of course the neighbors
invited us over for cha cha, a clear moonshine tequila/vodka of sorts that is
distilled from the remains of the wine making process…it’s very dangerous!
Ramazi claimed this was the
highest waterfall in the Soviet Union. Measuring 50 meters,it was impressive
and beautiful but that claim seems a bit large to me.
Ucha on the left, Ramazi on
the right, look at that wink and that shirt with colors perfectly suited to a
day of wine tending.
Portrait of a Supra
A supra is a feast held for a special occasion or in someone's honor or just because it's the Sunday night before Sam's first day of teaching. That was a rough first day!
Acharistkali:
Acharistkali is the name of the town where my school is. It's a 20 minute commute by bus. Some days I have long breaks
between classes when I can go explore the area. It’s only 10 kilometers South
to the Turkish border along this branch of the river. This is a view back
toward the town.
The break room where many an
aging teacher has been known to fall asleep with their noses buried in a
textbook. The last two on the right are my co-teachers Shorena and Natia.
P.E. class consists of the
teacher putting the soccer ball in this caged sort of field and then sitting
off to the side to smoke a pack of cigarettes while the kids go nuts.
It’s fitting that my 1’st
graders couldn’t even sit still for the 1/200th of a second that it
took for this picture because that’s what class is like. This boy in the middle
(still working on the names) usually has a big loaf of bread in his backpack,
which he steals bites of throughout class…pretty good system if you ask me.
My 5th graders
ready to get down to some serious preposition business.
The extracurricular class
that I lead after school is a mash up of games, some of which have significant
English learning value and many that just involve lots of running and laughter.
I’m extremely thankful for Teona, a strong 12th grade student who
translates many of the things I say (including all the rules to the games) into
Georgian. Without her it would be chaos.
For all you Camp Orkila
readers out there, this is a game of “Where’s my…”
“Dog!”
A Collection of Landscapes
Looking up the Chorokhi river valley from the vantage of a cell tower I found on the top of the hill near my house.
The view North along the Black Sea coast from the slopes of the Batumi Botanical Garden.
The Chorokhi river
On a break from class
Batumi beach at sunset
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