Tuesday, September 14, 2010

On Gratitude

“I hate these seats. They f—in’ suck. Now everyone is going to be staring at us the whole time.”

“Mom, did you really think I wouldn’t go shopping? Did you really think I wouldn’t travel? I’m spending MY money and budgeting. Why do you have to be so difficult?”

These are quotes from the only two times I’ve been disgusted since coming to Prague. I’ve been disturbed many times reading history texts and watching films…but I’ve been disgusted by the lack of gratitude boasted by some of my peers. And boasted loudly.

The first quote is from the student who sat behind me at the philharmonic. The school got us tickets to see the closing concert of the season (which was wonderful and which I’ll write about elsewhere) so we got to go for free. Our seats were behind the orchestra, so the view wasn’t the best if you wanted to see the musicians’ faces, but it was wonderful if you wanted to see the conductor’s face (which I did because I have never been in an orchestra and so never been in such a position before). Also, the music was wonderful no matter where you were sitting, and I feel like that is the reason one goes to an orchestra performance, after all. To be blunt, I couldn’t believe this individual was complaining about free tickets to a good performance…If she wanted better seats she should have bought her own ticket. On a side note, how arrogant do you have to be to think that everyone in the concert hall is going to be staring at you just because you’re behind the musicians? Ridiculous.

The second quote comes from a screaming match that a fellow student had with her mom over the phone. She was in another room, but we could hear her loud and clear. She’d gone on a shopping spree—using her mom’s credit card—and then booked her fall break trip—on her mom’s credit card—and now couldn’t understand why her mother was upset and calling her. She spent the summer traveling around Europe instead of working, is now studying in Prague, was entrusted with her mom’s credit card to use for necessary purchases… and couldn’t have called to say ‘Hey, thanks for sending me to Prague and letting me travel all summer. I’m planning a trip that will cost xxx dollars and was thinking of putting it on the card. Would that be ok?” How hard would that have been? Really? I know what it’s like to disagree with a parent, but no one deserves that much disrespect. It should be less ok to scream at someone who’s a family member, not more ok just because they’re stuck with you. If you’re going to be financially irresponsibly, then do it with your own money. And really your own money, not just the money you think is yours.

How could anyone in this program be anything but grateful? Grateful to have the opportunity to be here, grateful to their peers for their (English-speaking) company, grateful to their teachers for their time, grateful to their parents (or other family members) for supporting their choice to come…I’m grateful for my family, friends, and education. Sure there are times when life doesn’t go quite as planned, but what good does whining ever do? And honestly, I hope this is the only post in which I’ll have something to whine about.

First week of classes

Here's the rundown of my classes:
-Introduction to German Language
-Literature and Place of Central Europe
-History of Czech Architecture
-European Union and Central Europe in Transition
-The Art of Travel

The last one is my blogging class, so it doesn't have a meeting day. Which is really nice. My German language class is going to be interesting, and I really hope that it helps me prepare for Berlin. The Literature and Place class is absolutely amazing. My professor is amazing and I've been really enjoying the readings so far. My History of Architecture professor tends to jog around the city while lecturing so I have to run and listen very closely to keep up. But he knows everything. And my European Union and Central Europe class is an international relations class...I know nothing about anything related to it, but that's all the more reason to take it. Again, my professor is as knowledgeable as he is friendly. It's intense, and I'm grateful.

Of course, since we're still new to the city we're exploring. The school organized a Jam Session on Wednesday since all the music students are in the same dorm and there are many of them. I met up with friends there and got to hear Vladimir sing. An eerie thought: we were a room of Czech and American students singing Beatles music in a painted basement. 20 years ago, we could have all been arrested.

After the Jam Session we went to a music bar called Cross Club to admire their industrial-style decorations. Light fixtures made out of strawberry pots? I approve. Then Friday we found a place that made and served blueberry beer. We wandered all around Minor Town exploring and decided to come back the next day.

So we did. Saturday we visited the monastic library in Charles Castle. I paid the extra $2 for photo permission and the pictures are here. We also explored some gardens, found wild lavender, ate yummy Asian food... Then we wandered back to Old Town. Sam had been away on a trip so we met up with him at Aloha for dancing and catching up. Meeting in one place was actually somewhat difficult because there was a huge race going on and many of the streets had been closed to pedestrian traffic as a result. We did finally get together though.

After the bar, we went home but weren't sleepy yet so Sam and I decided to watch a movie. We watched "The Firemen's Ball."To be honest, we watched it twice through. It's a great example of how dark Czech satire can be. That isn't to say that it wasn't funny. It was really funny. It was just very dark.

And of course I got up early the next morning. Byron had suggested going to Sunday mass at St.Vitus...so we did. The service was half in Latin and half in Czech. I didn't understand a word. I'm so glad we went though. Knowing that the cathedral is still in use and hearing the organ music echo made me smile. Beautiful buildings are beautiful, of course, but it's always better to be in them when they come alive.

After mass, we went back to the monastery that had the library. They were having a bonsai exhibit that we had been interested in the day before but hadn't gone to because we were in a big group and people had wanted to do other things. I actually learned a lot. Thanks to Waterloo, I could identify most of the smaller plants and some of the trees, but I really don't know much about bonsai. Byron explained some of the techniques that bonsai artists use. The whole experience made me miss having plants around. Maybe I'll start a bonsai when I get home. Dave had suggested a ficus or rosemary to start...

From there we met up with Brianna for vegetarian food at Gopal, a Hare Krishna restaurant where they have an all-you-can-eat option. And then I went back to the dorm to do some homework. Even my homework is interesting at this point. As I hoped it would be.

Weekend

Whenever I start to feel too much at home in Prague, I go grocery shopping. Nothing reminds me of my linguistic incompetence like trying to differentiate types of flour, trying to order sliced cheese, or trying to find vanilla extract in Tesco. That said, the grocery store is also a great place to meet other temporary-East-Central-Europeans. Ex-pats and students from other study abroad programs hear English and come over right away, eager to say hello and have someone to communicate with. It's a wonderful and strange thing. The desire to communicate is so strong that people leap at the opportunity to be near someone who understands their language.

For the first weeks here, NYU gave out tickets to culture events in the city. My ticket originally was for the opera, but they had extras for the Czech Philharmonic, so I got to go to that. The seats were behind the stage, and some people complained but I personally really liked the seats. I have more to say on that, but I'll do so in a separate post. I have the program from the concert somewhere, but can't find it at the moment.

After the concert, I went out with some friends. Our group of five dwindled down to just two of us...but we had a great time. We discovered a bar run by some Australians where they play beer pong. Totally not my scene, but it's funny to discover that such a place exists in Prague's Old Town. We didn't stay long though. We actually went to a Hawaiian bar called Aloha because we were craving Brazilian caipirinhas and 90s music. As ridiculous as a Hawaiian bar in the Czech Republic may sound, the music and atmosphere were really refreshing. The place was really chill and shockingly was quiet enough to converse in...a plus when trying to get to know new friends.

After that we went to the 5 story club under the Charles bridge. It couldn't have been more different from Aloha, but I had just as much fun. Each floor had a different style of music so we just headed for the stairs whenever we needed a break. I never went clubbing in New York because a)the clubs are very expensive and b)the boys are too pushy. This was fun because it was $6 (expensive for Prague but cheap compared to New York) and very 'no pressure.' Maybe because it's in Prague. Maybe because I was there with a guy. Who knows. But it was really nice to just enjoy the music, the lights, and the people. People watching might be my favorite past-time ever.

Sunday the school had organized a boat cruise on the Vltava. I was expecting something corny and awkward, but was pleasantly surprised. There was a jazz band on board playing really good music. The lunch they provided was delicious (and vegetarian friendly). The weather was cooperating. The views were lovely. And most importantly, I realized that I've met some really wonderful people. I'm looking forward to getting to know them better and just have a feeling that I'm going to leave here having made some great friends.

Later that night I ended the weekend with the opera that Mozart wrote for Prague: Don Giovanni. The inside of the opera house was as beautiful as the outside. I probably should have looked up the storyline before going to the show, but I was able to follow along pretty well. The lyrics were in Italian, and there were subtitles in English and Czech. You can read about the plot here. All I'll say is that the statue outside the opera house makes much more sense having seen the show.

Soon the school year starts for real... I can't wait.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Art of Travel assignment

I was assigned, for my blogging class, to read this article and be inspired by it in telling a travel story. That's my next writing piece, but first I want to share some thoughts on the article itself:

Why we travel

It whirls you around, turns you upside down and stands everything you took for granted on its head.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Later that day...

So the 2nd was a Thursday. I had my second-to-last day of Czech class, went to a meeting about school-sponsored trips, and attempted to go to an internship meeting. Unfortunately, I had only blocked a half hour of time for that one. I arrived early, but they started late and even once they started they had the new student council get up to speak about sports days and clubbing events before they got down to business. I only got to see two presentations as a result. Oh well.

I did enjoy the rest of my day though. At this point, I still hadn't walked across the Charles bridge, so I met up with Sam and we set off to Minor Town (Mala Strana). The Charles bridge is beautiful, and I'm looking forward to going back sometime when there are fewer tourists so I can really look at the statues. We turned off the bridge before passing under the tower at the other end, and he led us through a few winding back roads. First we arrived at the fence of lover's locks:
and the Lenin wall (which I'm going to paint on before we leave):


Afterwords, we met up with Becca at the Cubist Cafe for some delicious lunch before heading back to the dorm.

The school organized a bowling event for tonight. A bunch of people ended up not going because they went to a bar instead, but my friends all went and we had a blast. We discovered that Czech ketchup is sweeter than American ketchup, that Byron and Brianna have great bowling form (see pictures!), that I can't bowl for beans, that Vladimir likes to dance, and that sometimes Becherovka comes in light-up glasses.

After bowling, we went to the bar everyone else was at, hoping to meet up and go dancing. It was a strange place. I'm going to say that the decor involved eyes popping out of the wall and just leave it at that. So we headed home. Of course, by that time the public transportation (which is wonderful and simple and efficient and just better than in NYC) had switched to it's "night mode" so we had to navigate the night trams. The first of many times, I'm sure. It really wasn't difficult though. The night tram numbers all start with a 5 (mine is 56) and they meet up in one spot in Old Town, so you can take any tram to that spot and then wait for the one that will get you home. Easy.


Friday was an early morning. We had to be at school to sign up for the sponsored trips fairly early. As in before 8. I won't tell you what trips I'm on just yet, but you'll hear all about them as they come up. I'm never sure whether NYU is highly efficient or just barely organized enough to get by. The sign-ups were crazy. There were two long lines leading into rooms with the day-trip and overnight-trip sign up sheets on tables. Once one got to the table at the front of the line, though, good luck. It was chaotic...with the result that I didn't get to sign up for as many wait lists as I had wanted. I went to the office later in the day to tack my name on to a few, but they were mostly full by then. Not sure if I'll have any luck.

Then came the last day of Czech class. Oh, Czech language. How I wish I could study you further this semester, but I don't think I can handle you and German at the same time. Bohužel.

Busybusybusy. After class I went on the Vysehrad tour. It turns out that the Vysehrad (a park site with some of the old walls used to fortify the city, a vineyard, a church, and a beautiful graveyard) is in my neighborhood, Nusle. As part of the tour, we got to go inside part of the wall and into a long dark tunnel. At the end was a big chamber in which are stored some of the statues that have been taken off Charles bridge to be preserved (the ones on the bridge are replicas). My pictures of that part didn't come out very well, but it was really cool to be in that space. Once outside the tunnel again, we walked through the graveyard for a bit, strolled through a really cool-looking interactive camp for kids (there was a big jungle-gym type structure with objects hanging from it and the kids were running around inside hitting the objects with spoons to make noise!), and parted from the group. We climbed onto a ledge overlooking the river and listened to the music from a concert that was drifting our direction on the wind. Admittedly, we also speculated about the physics of jumping off the ledge and into the river because our guide had told us a legend about a knight who had done just that and survived. Supposedly.

After that, we went home and strolled around for a bit. Went out for dinner wandered around. On a whim, Sam and I decided to take the tram up to the observation tower on Petrin hill. We had a great adventure. Some small Czech children played hide-and-seek with us on the tram, and then we got off a stop too early and walked the last bit of the way up the hill. We climbed all the stairs, and got to see:
On the way down, we were talking with a woman who was visiting from Turkey. She was by herself and came up to us as soon as she heard us speaking English. Which, by the way, happens a lot here. Especially in grocery stores. Anyway, I asked her about Orhan Pamuk and about Istanbul and about Turkey in general. Sam asked about her trip to Prague. And then we parted ways at the bottom of the hill.

I wonder if we'll keep having these adventures once classes officially start...










Friday, September 3, 2010

To continue that thought...

So I was talking about Jan Urban's speech when last I wrote. Admittedly, I dropped my International Relations class to enroll in his Modern Dissent class...but then changed back because I really should learn something about politics before I study political dissent. And because the IR class takes field trips to government buildings where I know I will never get to go again.

He started his presentation talking about what it is like to live with the 'burden of history' in a country where history is constantly rewritten. Contextually, he was saying that the American students are lucky because we don't have to live with such a long history as the Europeans. He said we're the lucky ones whose grandparents and great-grandparents were able to start fresh, abandoning their homelands and going to the new world. That put me off a tad bit. For most of my immigrant relatives, the move was not easy. In some cases it wasn't a choice. And I wonder sometimes if the reason Americans respond with their historical heritage when asked "What are you?" is because (my generation especially) we are clinging to that distant history until our own country has enough of a history to give us an identity.

He continued by explaining how for some time Europe tried to define its boundaries based on where groups of people shared languages. This didn't work so well for central and eastern Europe. He said that the mixing of languages and the fact that from 1918 to 1989 the government of the current Czech Republic has changed 6 times has left the people of the region trying to define themselves. In the space of one generation, the reality of the country morphed so many times that it has become unreliable. He defined their crisis like this: "If you base your identity on a non-existent reality, who the hell are you?" He said that for his generation, "We don't lie facts, we lie dreams. Because it allows us to reinvent public memory." This next generation--my generation--now has the task of establishing continuity. They are very special for the Czech Republic because the country's future direction is hinged on how they handle the democracy that was won for them.

There's a local election coming up, and I was talking to some of my RA's about it. Hopefully there will be more of those discussions as the election draws closer. I'm curious to learn what the young people have to say about themselves now that I've heard a bit about how the older generation feels toward them.

Many of Jan Urban's sentiments were echoed in the documentary that we watched called "The Power of the Powerless." Some of the thoughts in the documentary (and follow-up presentation) were:
-Kids don't learn modern history in school because teachers don't want to teach it
-Teachers/Parents don't want to talk about modern history because they aren't comfortable admitting to how they lived
-Living through the revolution in the Czech Republic enables those who know their history to empathize with freedom fighters in other parts of the world, such as Iran (Ref. to Persepolis)
-People knew more about resistance attempts such as Charter 77 in other parts of the world than they did in the Czech Republic
-"Doubts are healthy. Never be sure of anything."
-Some of the same people who put Havel in power were then unhappy with how he let those who had been involved with the Soviet government stay

The day after seeing that film, I went to another documentary event at the National Film Archives here. The professor who put the films together described film as the "historical memory" of a place. The pieces we watched were from the 1930s on. We started with a tire commercial called "The Highway Sings". We looked at the mood of the music and the values expressed in the commercial. Also, it turns out that the shoe company Bat'a used to make tires and this was one of their older commercials.

From the western pop and feel-good vibes of that commercial, we moved to a documentary piece called "The Last Summer of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk." It was a wordless piece about...well...the last summer in the life of the first Czech president.

The darkness at the end of the piece foreshadowed the mood for the rest of the pieces we watched:
~"Monument to Love and Friendship" was a Soviet propaganda film about the building of the monstrous monument to Stalin in Prague.
~"City of Mud" was made during the Prague spring so it was a bit satirical (the filmmaker had some freedom). Apparently, the government moved people into new housing complexes before construction finished. I don't remember where specifically this was, but the film shows parents carrying children, women digging heels out of the mud, everyone buying rubber boots, dust clinging to everything, and kids making mud pies.
~I don't think this next one had a name. It was an illegal documentary made about Jan Palach's
funeral. Scenes of his body in the hospital were cut in with scenes of his grave being prepared and his mother crying at the funeral. I really wish I could find a copy to share with you. It was a very moving and appropriately disturbing piece.
~This next one was made by the professor who put these together for us. It's a music video that stitches together clips showing the members of the band "Plastic People of the Universe." They were arrested by the Soviets and became important cultural symbols in the Czech Republic.
~"The Death of Stalinism in Bohemia" was the last film we watched and the only one I could find online to share. It's animated stop-motion, created in 1990, with a touch of hope and a lot of cynicism. You should watch it. It speaks for itself.

Aside from the films, I went on a few trips. The pictures, however, are on my laptop. Which I'm not on. I'll write about those once I convince my internet to work on that silly machine.

-

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Leaving on a jet plane.

That's the view from Prague Castle.
I don't even know how I got here. It's unreal.

This time last week I was spending time with Cass, going for walks, and trying to pack. I had a last dinner with my family after having enjoyed the company of my grandparents, godmother, and wonderful friends earlier in the week. Friday I went into West Chester for an early bagel breakfast and very shortly after found myself on a plane. Na shledanou!

On the plane, I read, slept, made friends...and said good-bye to summer with a g&t once we were out of American air space. The school provided buses from the airport to the dorms, and soon I was in Nusle. In the Czech Republic.

Since then I've figured out the tram and metro systems. I got my transport pass. Enjoyed some Czech beer. Got lost in Old Town. Got lost in Minor Town. Got lost in Nusle. Grocery shopped (in Czech!). We've been taking Czech classes all week, which has been helpful because I'm learning the language and because I'm meeting the other people in my program. I've also been attending meetings and tours left and right. My legs are going to fall off if I keep running around like this (on the wet cobblestone no less), but I can't think of a better way to live.

Before I fill you in on my event notes, let me link to the blog I'll be using for one of my classes. The posts are responses to prompts, the pictures are my own, and hopefully there will soon be links up to other student blogs from that class so you can get another perspective on the study abroad experience: Click here for the "Art of Travel" Blog website! (And check out Brianna and Leilah's blogs while you're there!)

At our first day presentation, we had a couple of speakers address us about things like safety, cultural differences, program rules, and available resources. Most of the information was, as expected, common sense stuff. But there were a few moments that caught my attention. This was the first of many times since that I was reminded by speakers that this country had their revolution the year before I was born. They have a history of being invaded repeatedly. That means having to rewrite their history multiple times within a generation so that the sensitivities of different governments are satisfied. That means having to learn new rules, new languages, and new loyalties just to survive.

We were counseled to "forget about yourselves" and "be uncomfortable" in order to really experience the country and get the most out of our time here. Let me tell you, being lost in a place where you don't speak the language and are surrounded by buildings that are older than your home country is certainly uncomfortable. There are times when I almost forget that I have a voice at all because I wander around and for all intents and purposes might as well be deaf and dumb. Yesterday I leafed through Czech children's books and wondered what the stories were. Today I stumbled into a store playing American music and found that the experience was startling. Hopefully I'll pick up a bit more Czech as time goes on. That requires learning how to roll my 'r's though.

Did I mention that 19 kc are worth about 1$ right now? And that my 30 kc beer really is cheaper an ordering tap water? It's a little different from life in Manhattan.

One of the first speakers we had was Jan Urban. He's teaching a class called Modern Dissent this semester but not too long ago he was one of the revolutionaries involved in the Velvet Revolution. Going into the presentation, I was excited because I had heard what a great speaker he is. I didn't really think that his presentation would speak so much to me.

I actually have to go change for bowling now, but I'll explain that last thought more tonight.

Ne shledanou! Dekuji!