Tuesday, November 17, 2009

I'm in Delhi now. There is now officially less than a month until I am home. Up until a few days ago, I had been counting down day by day, but last Wednesday I realized that I finally don't actually feel the need to count down. One month seems like such a short amount of time and, after that, I'll probably never be in India again. I am finally enjoying every minute of my time here. We have finished our Environment and Livelihood course (the one I was least interested in) and will be moving on to our Religion course (the one I am most interested in). We are going to the Taj Mahal in TWO days. There are a few people in our group who I absolutely love spending time with. The rest of our month-long travels will be spent in cities (as opposed to villages...). Life is good.

Right now we have been away from Visthar and Bangalore for two weeks. We have another two weeks left before we return to Visthar. On November 2nd we set out by plane to the central state of Orissa. We spent five days with an NGO called Integrated Rural Development of the Weaker Sections in India (IRDWSI). IRDWSI works with several villages in the Koraput district of Orissa. They have a variety of projects, including solar power projects, hydrodam projects, multi-cropping projects and alternative education projects. During that week we visited a lot of villages to see IRDWSI's work. We even spent one night in a village. It was a neat experience, but I caught a cold that night which I still have today, 12 days later.

After IRDWSI, we spent a day in Hyderabad before heading over to the Medak district of Andhra Pradesh. There we stayed with the Deccan Development Society (DDS) and saw some of their work. Their focus is primarily empowering the people of the local villages who are mostly Dalit (a group of people formerly known as untouchables who are excluded from the Hindu caste system) to use traditional knowledge that already exists in their villages. We saw some village seed savers who are working to preserve crop varieties, village health workers who use traditional herbal medicines, the Green School that teaches traditional skills in addition to the usual education and many other awesome things. The theme of the week was millets. Don't know what millets are? I didn't know either until I came to India. Millets are a type of grain that is more nutritious than rice and wheat and can also grow under more adverse conditions. Millets have disappeared from the fields of many Indian farmers due to the Green Revolution. Haven't heard of that either? Again, don't worry. It's new to me too. The Green Revolution, championed by American scientist Norman Borlaug, brought high yielding varieties of rice and wheat to India as a way to prevent famine in the 1960s. Since the Green Revolution, crop varieties in India have decreased drastically and malnutrion has increased as people are no longer consuming nutritious local crop varieties like millets. Not only are millets nutritious, but they are delicious as well! We ate primarily millet-based foods while we were at DDS.

We left DDS on Friday. We were in Hyderabad again for the weekend, and we flew here to Delhi on Sunday. We will be here until the 26th when we'll hop on a train to Varanasi. We have had yesterday and today to work on our end-of-course papers for the Environment and Livelihood unit. Tomorrow we will present our papers. On Thursday, we will drive four hours to go see the Taj Mahal in Agra. All of the girls are wearing saris. All of the guys are wearing dhotis... It should be a good picture. On Friday, we'll have a city tour of Delhi. We'll have the weekend free before we start our religion course on Monday.

In other news, I have decided not to go to Chicago next semester. I am really excited about the Washington, D.C. semester that I have planned for the fall 2010 semester and I don't want to burn myself out before then. I had been really excited about Chicago, but now I am getting excited about being at Concordia next semester. I will get to play another tennis season. I will get to be in the classroom a bit more (I find that I'm actually missing a classroom). I can get a job. I will be close to my family who I love so much. Chicago would have been great, but I'm happy to be spending another semester at Concordia.

2 comments:

  1. Wow! Amazing experiences! Thanks for teaching us about Dalits, millets, and the green revolution. I had no concepts of these things a lot. I am wondering if Millets are sold in the states. I'd love to taste them.

    I am glad to see you are starting to really enjoy the experience. It is great that you made these valuable friendships.

    I hope you took a picture of the males in Dhotis. You know how I love pictures.

    I am also glad you decided to stay on campus this Spring. I missed you so much. I think I would have quit my job & moved to Chicago with you...I am really glad you will be around for a while beore leaving to Washington.

    Kisses!

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  2. I'm going back and reading posts now, and it's funny that I said that I was least interested in Environment and Livelihood and most interested in Religion because looking back at the four courses, the Environment and Livelihood course had the greatest impact on me and the Religion course had the smallest impact.

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