Saturday, July 2, 2011

hospitality

i sat in my office chair with a delightful middle-aged bhutanese man sitting across from me. no matter how hard i tried, i could not say no. "please. please ma'am. please come over to my house for dinner and to visit with my family," he said again and again. "i don't know, i just, i feel so happy when i come to see you," he continued, "you are like my daughter." i finally caved and agreed to stop by to visit him, his wife, and his three daughters the next day. but we agreed that i could only stay half an hour. as he got up to leave he pulled some asian candies out of his pocket and handed them to me: "this is our way. this is our culture. we give treats and kind things to others," he said. . .

. . .today i arrived at their home at 6pm, the agreed upon time. i heard nepali music playing as i walked up the stairs to their apartment. when i knocked on their door, his youngest daughter (grade 10) answered the door. she was the only one of her family home, along with a friend of hers. she explained that her sisters and mother had just left to go to the indian market. 'so much for just half an hour' i thought. i made myself comfortable, despite the ridiculous heat and the little roaches crawling along the walls (and at times my legs?). these i have become accustomed to, as i find that they greet me at just about every client's home that i visit.

soon after, the father returned home. i explained that i had to leave to be back by seven. "you americans. always just little bit of time to share. in my culture, if you ask me to your house, i stay for long time. that is the most important." yikes. true story, no?

his wife and two other daughters (mid-20s) return home from market, and the one daughter and i briefly discuss "work" matters - she needs direction/help to request financial assistance from the hospital for a recent ER visit that she cannot pay for. soon, however, she has pulled up her facebook page and is showing me all kinds of pictures. some of her job (she and her sister have been employed at the hyatt hotel as housekeepers for one full year now. others of her modeling her traditional nepali clothes ("we will dress you up in a sari! we will take your picture!" she says. maybe not.) others of her family and friends in the u.s., nepal, and bhutan. one picture is of her father hugging another of our bhutanese refugee clients. he asks "why in america is this not okay? man to hug man." "i don't know," i respond. another inexplicable cultural taboo. his daughter leaves to go help her sister and mother in the kitchen.

i ask her father about his two brothers who are still in bhutan. "why are they still there and you are here?" i ask. he proceeds to tell me his story... he worked as a postman in central bhutan. the government ordered him to move to the border and set up new offices there. when he and his family arrived, there were signs hanging there saying 'if you set up new offices, we will cut off your head.' and they would, he tells me. he knows of several people who experienced such a fate. he tells me about other friends who were imprisoned and tortured, in the case of one friend of his, to death. "on the one hand," he says," you have government telling you to set up office. and on the other hand, you have others saying don't do it. they will cut off my head. what am i to do? i think better to leave." he tells me about how he and his wife and then small four daughters fled the country to live in india with relatives for a short while. they then moved to nepal, where their ancestors were originally from before they moved to bhutan. he explains that upon moving to nepal, he went to look at the refugee camps there - "they were full of very very sick people. i thought, i do not want my family to live here. so we didn't." and for awhile the nepali government was okay with that. but a year later, they were forced to live in the refugee camps. "i live there for 18 years," he says. i cannot even begin to imagine.

as he finishes his story, i begin to smell delightful aromas coming from the kitchen. i ask if i can go see what they are cooking, and he eagerly leads me to the kitchen. his wife and three daughters are all hard at work. they insist that i sit. i ask what they are making, and i then get my first, brief, nepali cooking lesson. a blend of mixed cabbage, onion, and garlic is placed inside little circular noodle-type sheets which are then folded in half to make little dumplings. "it's called momo," they tell me. to us - dumplings. that delicious delicacy from the restaurants is apparently so easy to make! although i am extremely intrigued to learn more about cooking, they insist that i go back into the other room where the window ac unit is working extremely hard to try to make it cooler. "kitchen is too hot. please ma'am, please come in here."

soon after, a huge plate of dumplings, sauce, soup, and water are brought in and set right in front me. "eat! eat!" they all say, as they place a kleenex box next to me. i anticipate spicy. i ask if they will join me. they say this is all for me. soon after another course comes out. "it's good meat. good meat!" i choose to move past the fact that i don't really eat meat anymore, and i try it. it is good. it's not until much later that i make the realization that they are saying "it's goat meat," not "it's good meat." ah well. not my first experience with the chewy goat flesh (mexican weekend goat barbeque anyone?). they tell me it's called "mutton" in nepali and show me the box of masala that they use to make the delicious yellow sauce it's bathed in. we eat while watching nepali comedian videos on youtube.

after having eaten much more than i planned to, but still with over half the food they had given me still sitting on the plates in front of me, i tell them that i need to get going. "wait! wait!" they say, as they explain that another item is still being prepared. there's more? yikes. i suddenly feel like a customer in a restaurant as they take the food i did not eat and box it up for me to take with me. "share with your housemates," they say. "and if you and your housemates ever want good indian or nepali food - do not go to restaurant. call us! we make better." i will be sure to keep that in mind, i tell them. they box up my food, and toss in a huge portion of piaji (fried clumps of cabbage, onion, garlic, flour) on top. "breakfast tomorrow" they say.

i thank them for their hospitality and the delicious food. "perhaps you should open a restaurant!" i suggest. they laugh. "dhanyabaad" (DHAN-naii-bat) i say over and over to the family as i leave. "thank you, thank you." what a lovely saturday evening.

the leftovers i got to eat the next day .... yum!

Sunday, June 26, 2011

New Roots for Refugees


Perhaps many of you recognize these pictures - perhaps you have recently seen them in a common Mennonite publication. Mennonite Mission Network's magazine "Beyond Ourselves" did a cover story on the New Roots for Refugees program - a program run partly by Catholic Charities of NE Kansas, where I work. My housemate, John, volunteers at the farm where the refugees spend their days toiling over their gardens, getting ready for selling at markets. This program is awesome, but I won't bore you with my version of it. I encourage you to check out the following links that have great information about this program:

Article in MMN's magaine "Beyond Ourselves"

New Roots for Refugees (Catholic Charities website)

New Roots Blog (Click on the tab "About Us" for a general info)


Thursday, June 16, 2011

world refugee day!

This past Sunday Catholic Charities celebrated World Refugee Day with a little shindig. After spending the morning on an adventure to pick up an entire palette of watermelons from Price Chopper that Rainbow Mennonite donated to the cause, I headed to the office where a big fiesta was set up. I worked a booth with two Karenni women and one Chin woman who were selling AMAZING things they had made - scarves and bags woven on an awesome loom and adorable baby clothes hand-knitted to perfection. There were also great activities for kids, and ethnic cultural performances put on by the refugees in our community. The news even came to cover the event, and I briefly made my moment of fame on NBC (although where you see me in the shot it's me trying to get out of the picture so one of the refugee women who made the items could get in the shot!) Ah well. Check it out:



Click here for the article by NBC.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

visit from the parental units

this past weekend i was blessed to host my parents at my house in kansas city. the troopers that they are, they spent 12 hours in a car (or should i say "the ugly") to get here. but i think it was worth the drive!

we of course spent a large portion of our time together eating at various restaurants - getting lots of ideas of what to do, and sometimes what not to do, at schmucker's. i started the weekend by writing down each thing we all ordered, but soon forgot as we were eating such delicious food! i of course made them return to my two favorites: Blanc Burgers & Bottles as well as Oklahoma Joe's for classic kansas city barbeque. but i have to say my bestest culinary adventure that weekend was eating CHOCOLATE PEANUT BUTTER PIE from the one and only Schmucker's! dad brought out the deliciousness and it was by far the best thing i have eaten in months. definitely beats the typical beans and rice i eat on a daily basis! in the words of my aunt cynthia... "YUMMY!"

we also spent a fair amount of time working outside around the house. we drove about a half hour southeast of the city to pick up a rain barrel from some old warehouse.... 250 gallon bucket for $30! sign me up! but then we had to clean it and dad spent a long time hooking it up right to the gutter and getting a good valve for the end of it so we can water our GARDEN! yay! we also put up a fence around the garden to keep out the stray dogs that have been making their way into our beds of vegetables on an all-too-regular basis these days. and of course mom made two beautiful planters of flowers for our front stoop like she always does for my house! i am so grateful for all the help my parents lent this past weekend to beautify/mejorar my home :)






it was a lovely weekend that went all too fast (although i am grateful to be back sleeping in my own bed again...) my parents all the bestest ever. maybe someday soon i will live somewhere where they can visit me more than once or twice a year! here's hoping ...

Friday, April 22, 2011

the planting has begun!

The planting has begun...

My housemate john planted 72 tomato plants (yikes!) along with a select few other veggies to be transplanted later...


Our land is FULL of rocks. Everywhere. Pieces of foundation. Its ridiculous. So needless to say, using a tiller is out of the question. So we just use our brute strength, a hoe, and the garden weasel to make our raised beds by hand!

Here is the status of the herb garden. I transplanted some garlic chives from over in the other garden, and I also planted parsley and cilantro.

Here is the rest of the land we have to work with. Still lots to be done, lots of beds to be raised, lots of fun to be had!

The garden with the VS house in the background. Looking good!

snakes.

a few weeks ago john and i trompsed out into the plot across the street to get started on clearing out what will become our garden. we spent hours raking out brush, bushes, trash, etc. from the land. as i was raking out a big section of hay, our neighbors came running as they heard me let out a big scream. there was a (in my opinion) HUGE snake writhing around in what we quickly named "the snake pit." john took the snake across the street to an empty piece of land. and i kept raking. until i found another one. and another. and another. we ended up removing 6 snakes from the pit and i'm pretty sure i heard others rustling about in there. oh the adventures of starting up this garden....
















Saturday, March 26, 2011

spring is here.... ?

After several lovely days of 70+ degree weather these past few weeks, today it snowed.

but that did not deter me and my housemate john for getting an official start on our garden! now, i have never really gardened before, but luckily john's job, and his knowledge, is all about gardening. so my, our, garden will be in good hands!

this morning we started by planning what things we would like to grow in our garden, then dividing them into families, and trying to map out what our garden will look like...


across the street from us there is an empty plot of land. it appears as if someone used to garden on it, but has been somewhat abandoned lately...

(here is a look at the plot across the street)
lucky for us, RDA (Rosedale Development Association...[Rosedale is the neighborhood i live in]) officially "purchased" this land, and has given the MVS house permission to use it for gardening. it looks like it's going to be a lot of work, but i'm super pumped about giving it a shot!

(here my housemate john scopes out the scene)
(here is a view of the plot with the VS house in the background)

in addition to the numerous vegetables and other fun items we hope to grow across the street, we have a little slice of land next to our house that has been used by past VSers as a garden of sorts. we have decided this year to make it our herb garden full of basil, parsley, cilantro, and other goodies. today, despite the snow and sub-freezing temperatures, john and i trompsed out to get started on our herb garden.

(here is a look at the "garden" before we got started)

after a couple of hours of work, this small piece of land was transformed and is ready for some herbs to planted!

mmm pretty soil!

stay tuned for future updates on my gardening adventures this spring/summer!