Friday, October 23, 2009

Pictures from Ukraine!

As the computer will not allow me to change the order of these pictures - please feel free to start at the bottom and work your way up as the bottom picture is from my arrival and this first picture is the most recent addition to my experiences here in Ukraine!



This church is St. Michaels - It also has a large bell tower just to the left of this picture but I loved all the domes of this church best.
This is St. Andrews- also gorgeous and on top of a hill overlooking a winding street which was covered in little stands selling Ukrainian souvenirs and gifts.
This is the Boguslav group in front of St. Sophia - a beautiful church in Kiev!
This is the other side of Independence Square. The people in white are supporting the prime minister for reelection in January.
In the Center of Kiev is Maiden Square which is also known as Indenpendence Square. This is where the Orange Revolution took place in 2004 in support of the candidate who had not been elected in the elections. The Revolution occured because supporters thought Russia had interfered in the elections to get the other candidate to win. In the end, there was a reelection and the candidate supported by the Revolution won by quite a bit. His name is Yuschenko and he is currently the president but elections are coming up in January so it will be interesting to be here then!

This picture is in front of the monument which was created in 2001 to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Ukraine's independence from the Soviet Union. I'm standing with Kelsey in the picture.
While in Kiev we ate at a traditional cafe with Ukrainian dishes. I got the most traditional items you can think of. The bowl of soup is Borsch which is a Ukrianian staple - it is a soup with boiled cabbage in a meat broth usually with other vegetables and then topped off with sour cream - EVERYTHING here is topped off with sour cream. The plate in my hand had Varenky which are dumplings - mine were filled with potatoes which are another staple here in Ukraine. The water is gas water as I read the label wrong. Quite a meal!
We had a cooking day one day at our language teacher's home to test out our knowledge of cooking words and phrases. The meal included Chicken and pineapple, maccarroni and cheese, boiled cabbage and carrots and Sangria. I made the Sangria.
This is my host mother, Iryna (I will get a family shot up in the next blog!). She was showing off the fish she bought that day at the market. Here fish is often prepared in a salted form which means it is just cut into pieces, salted and then cooked - so the whole head to tail ends up on the plate. It makes me miss Cedar Lake Fish more than I can explain!
The Boguslav Crew - From Left to Right: Me, Kelsey, Matt, Rudy and Whitney. We spend almost every waking moment together here as training is a very long process!
Bogulsav has a bridge that they say looks like the Golden Gate Bridge. It is quite a bit smaller but it still really nice. It is a tradition here in Boguslav for recent brides and grooms to get their pictures taken at the bridge. We actually saw a couple leaving as we approached the bridge.
Peace Corps divides volunteers into clusters of 5 people per cluster for training. Each cluster has a link group that they train with on Saturdays for teaching English. This is a picture of the Boguslav Cluster with our link from Mironivka in my Language Teacher's home where we have class each day.
This is a photo of Boguslav, my town for training. It is very beautiful!! There is a river that divides the town into two parts and it is spectacular here now in the fall!

This is a picture taken outside my apartment building in Boguslav. The first white balcony on the right is my family's apartment.

This picture is taken alongside the river where the retreat was located in Desna. I'm standing with Meaghan, a good friend of mine from Northwestern University - we were very lucky to receive P.C. services in the same country!
Our First Night in Desna we were welcomed with a special Bread Ceremony - I am standing with Pat on the left and Alia on the right - both natives of Minnesota

Monday, October 12, 2009

Hello from Ukraine

Hello Friends and Family from Ukraine! I have now been in country for 2 weeks and I wanted to take a moment to catch you up on the events, which have occurred thus far in my Peace Corps experience! Despite an emotional break down over my suitcases, carryon and items I could not fit in my overweight luggage around midnight the night before my flight to Philadelphia- I was able to make to it all the way to Ukraine safe, sound and lucky to have all my luggage!!

110 Peace Corps “Trainees” (as we will be called until swear in on December 17th when we receive the full title of Volunteer) arrived to Philadelphia on September 25th. As the 110 of us, each with 2 pieces of 50(+) lb suitcases and plenty of carry ons, arrived at the Hampton Inn City Centre, we were asked to register and to begin the ice breakers which would introduce ourselves to the other men and women who would share our experiences for the next 27 months of our lives. It was quite an overwhelming few hours as I felt Freshman Year of College occurring all over again – the need to impress/interest enough people into being your friend so that you would have a support system for the next 27 months brought people talking to as many other trainees as possible. As I have mentioned to a few of you before I left, I have had the wonderful fortune this summer to meet 7 of my co-volunteers through get togethers in both Chicago and Minneapolis, as well as having a close friend from Northwestern also receive an invitation to P.C. Ukraine! This allowed my hesitancy/nerves to subside quite a bit!

US Soil training was primarily an overview of all the paperwork and packets that we were required to read since accepting our invitations – the primary reason for this training is to ensure that all those present have fully contemplated the responsibility which they are taking on and to determine that 27 months of service is a feasible action in ones life. With all of us on board we arrived on Sept. 26th to JFK airport for our flight to Frankfurt, Germany followed by a short flight to Boryspil, Kiev. We arrived and were warmly welcomed by the Peace Corps staff of Ukraine – the only American of the P.C. Staff in Ukraine is the Country Director – all other positions are held by Ukrainians. This is a wonderful aspect of the P.C. because it truly does allow for cultural integration, as the citizens of the country you are attempting to integrate yourself into are the people who are leading you through that integration. The first three days in country is filled with a “Retreat” where all Trainees stay in a city called “Desna” just 2 hours north and slightly east of Kyiv. In Desna we were housed at a place that is called a Retreat but in truth is more a Sanitarium - is a place where people go to relax and recover from an illness. It looked to me like a concrete built summer camp but the fact that it could house all 110 of us and Staff was great! Throughout these three days we worked on Safety lessons, Cultural Differences, the P.C. rules such as the “Delta Award” which are the reasons that P.C. may send you home on the next Delta Flight out of Kyiv (these mainly include breaking P.C. rules set to keep us safe and therefore ones you shouldn’t be breaking). The most exciting part of the retreat for me was when I learned that for the next 12 weeks I would be learning RUSSIAN! P.C. Ukraine teaches volunteers 1 of 2 languages – Ukrainian or Russian. Due to the many years of Russian especially Soviet control over Ukraine – the country is quite divided in its loyalties to Ukraine as an independent nation versus Ukraine as a province of Russia. This has lead to the Ukraine of today being a very bilingual nation with Ukrainian as the official language but Russian as the dominant language – therefore P.C. teaches 60% of the volunteers Ukrainian who will work in on the western side of Ukrainian and 40% of Volunteers Russian who will work on the Eastern half of Ukraine. I am so incredibly excited to be learning Russian as I feel that it is a very interesting language that I have always been interested in learning – throughout my Northwestern life I feel that I had a lot of interaction with the Russian language (Russian Roommate, Russian Friends, Russian Coworkers at the Nail Bar etc.) that I feel very lucky to be able to now learn this language! I also hope that I will be able to visit St. Petersburg and Moscow at one point during this experience and the language will certainly help the trip immensely!

Once the 3 days of Retreat are complete – P.C. trainees travel to their training sites – these are small communities set to accept 5 or 6 trainees where language classes take place, technical training of how to teach English, and a school willing to take in these new teachers of English opens classes for the practice of teaching English to Ukrainian children occurs. My town is named Boguslav – in Cyrillic it’s: Богуслав. Boguslav is located about 2 hours south and slightly east of Kyiv. Here I live with a host family who have been extremely welcoming! I have a host mother, Iryna, a host father Sergey, a 19 year old host sister, Rima and a 9 year old host brother Maxim (Max). The family lives in an apartment building pictured below – it lies on one of the main 3 roads of Boguslav. My walk to school each day is about 20 minutes long as I head to my Language Instructor's home for our daily 4-5 hours of Russian. Beginning this last week my cluster had a visit to the local school where we will be teaching for the next 10weeks. My first day visiting was alongside one of the other trainees, Kesley. She and I visited the 4th form (grade) and were swarmed by the kids pushing and shoving one another to be the first to ask us our names – it was amazing to see their eagerness to speak with us! We will be teaching this class this coming Tuesday (Oct. 13th). I also was able to visit some of the older kids – both 8th and 9th form, these students did not corner us with questions but they did show excitement to our presence in their classroom and upcoming guest teaching. I am coteaching the 8th form on Thurdsday the 14th alongside another trainee, Matt.

In conclusion I just want to say that things are going very well for me so far here in Ukraine! My language is coming along very quickly – I did the math yesterday and realized that I have had to date in 2 weeks more Russian language class hours than an entire quarter at Shattuck or Northwestern which explains how I am already speaking full sentences – describing myself, my likes and dislikes, my hobbies, my family and school etc. I am looking forward to testing out my teaching skills in the next 10 weeks of training and seeing the reactions of the children – I promise to pass along a description of that experience! And so for now I will leave you with a few pictures of Boguslav. Please feel free to email me any questions regarding my town, Peace Corps or anything else you'd like me to address in the next blog post! Also feel free to send me any letters at the following address – I'd love to receive the support!

PCV Megan Trout

C/O Peace Corps Ukraine

111 A Saksahanskoho Street

Kyiv, 01032

Ukraine

До Свидания

Всего Хорошего!

Меган (Megan)


P.S. Photos will come at a later time due to technical difficulties on this computer and its internet. Sorry but I promise they are worth the wait!