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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Carnaval in La Vega!!


This past weekend five of us volunteers switched our free day from Friday to Monday in order to aprovechar and go up north to La Vega to see carnaval! It is one of the biggest festivities in the country each year, and it takes place every Sunday in February with the last Sunday of the month (i.e. the Sunday we went) being the biggest day of them all. It is an event I would have gotten to last year when all of the Mages’ were in the country but plans changed a bit, so I was really excited at last to go to La Vega and experience the butt-whacking and craziness my cousin, Terry, had told me all about on the phone before I even came to the DR over a year ago. It was such a cool thing to be a part of!
Here's the crew...me, Milena, Diego, Avriel, and Pili!
We all left Saturday morning (after a surprise bus strike in San Pedro that luckily ended on Friday night) and made it to La Vega in three hours, record time. We checked into our hotel and went out exploring early afternoon. There really weren’t many people out at all, but we saw all of the booths and tents and decorations throughout town where clearly things would be taking place later on. Around 4:00pm, things started up with a desfile nacional or a national parade where groups of people dressed up in carnaval costumes from all over the country strutted their stuff. Some of the costumes were outrageous!! So intricate in their designs and details and I’m pretty sure I’ve never seen so much glitter and sequins in my life (especially on men!) The masks that the participants wear also blew my mind…it’s hot enough out but to wear all of that costume plus a 15-pound head garment and go prancing up and down the streets dancing for hours…I can’t imagine how hot they got! It was mind-blowing… That evening, we found ourselves hanging out in the park nearby our hotel where a huge stage was set up. To our surprise, out came Melymel, El Batallon, and Don Miguelo…some very popular Dominican artists right now. How cool!

Mellas!
Here's the diablo conjuelo!
Made a friend...
Speakers on the back of cars were booming around everywhere...SO loud!
...Not really sure what this is...
The typical cross-dressers of carnaval...
The drummers at the back of every group...
I liked these blue and white costumes...
LOCO!
Each group began with a sign saying where they were from...even Haiti participated...
SO many designs!
I liked the green and pink too!
These are the typical clay beggars of carnaval...
Little boy!
SO many people!
Don't know where this devil is going with Av...
A limousine with speakers...
Pili, me, and Av at the concert!
Melymel!
Sunday was the big day! We got some breakfast, chilled in the hotel for bit, and then out we went. It seemed like there were millions more people than on Saturday and interestingly enough, nearly everyone was Dominican. We saw some tourists, but very few. It must have been middle to upper Dominican society though, because there is no way most Dominicans could afford those costumes or a weekend away like this. Again, there was a parade with all of the colorful costumes and characters…they was literally every color combination imaginable…the main costume we saw is the diablo conjuelo which means “limping devil”. These were the guys that carried the vejigas or these big hard balloons (typically animal bladders) on strings that go around whacking everyone’s butt. And let me tell you, it stings! We also figured out the hard way that your most vulnerable moment is when you are posing next to one of them to get a photo…within seconds, another one comes up to you and whacks you in the behind. OUCH! But that didn’t stop us from getting the photos. We also realized that the kids are the worst with the vejigas…they might not be able to whack as hard, but they get soooo into it that they will whack any part of your body, not just your behind and that hurts even more! That night we were beyond lucky, because we got to go to a free Prince Royce concert, one of my favorite artists here. It was at the Olympic Stadium in La Vega and he did all my favorite songs including Rechazame, El Amor Verdadero Perdona, Incondicional, El Amor Que Perdimos, and Corazon Sin Cara. It was a blast!!! Afterwards, there were fireworks and then we went out dancing!!
The guys selling vejigas...
Pili found one! Hehe!
Just a little scary...
The purple ones...check out the vejigas they are carrying!
SO many colors!
Red ones! Check out the vejigas in their hands again!
Look at those crazy headdresses sticking out above the crowd...
These guys kinda reminded me of the Green Bay Packers...
Halloween?!?!
Again, not really sure what this was...
...Creepy...
People were even sitting on the roof to watch...what a view...
...And these guys reminded me of the Hastings Raiders...
Love these colors!!
More of the crowd!
Standing in front of him in an attempt not to get our behinds whacked...it didn't work...
Again trying to avoid the vejigas...
ROYCE!!!
GREAT concert!
The grand finale!
The girls and Prince Royce!
Overall, it was an amazing weekend! Although it’s not easy leaving the home for a couple days because there’s always so much more on your to-do list than there are hours in the day, it’s worth it to go and see the country and experience the culture every now and then. I’m feeling more and more Dominican by the day!!
OWWWWW!!!

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

The Day of Love and Friendship!

February birthdays...Yudelkis and Cristal!

Yup. This blog is about this past week, specifically this past week’s celebration of the Day of Love and Friendship as it is called in Spanish or Valentine’s Day as we call it in the USA. I think I like the way it’s done much more here though. Honestly, it’s really not celebrated much at all…there’s no commercials or signs or advertisements trying to convince people to buy flowers, chocolate, or jewelry, because again to be honest, very few people can afford anything beyond the absolute necessities. So rather the day must be focused on less material things…at the most, perhaps a handmade card. I was quite thrilled to receive two myself from some of girls, one being the most intricate of creations with all sorts of details from my one of my most troublesome girls….it touched my heart that she could sit still long enough to make such a time-consuming piece of art and that she chose me to give it to. I’ve worked a lot with her on behavior in the last couple months and she’s gotten mad at me more than a few times, so it felt like a thank you in a twisted, I’m-a-troubled-12-year-old-girl kind of way. That and her pounding on my window at 7:00am in the morning to wish me a Happy Day of Love and Friendship and to tell me that she had something to give me later on. Quite the wake-up call! Really, when it comes down to it, ‘Love and Friendship’ it what it’s all about and why I’m here.
This photo really doesn't do Eridania's creation justice, but you get the idea...
 Beyond that, I had a fun weekend with the girls. They spent all Friday afternoon and Saturday morning deep-cleaning the house and extinguishing all those crazy cucarachas (cockroaches). And then all of a sudden, they needed some tissue paper, tape, and glitter and both bedrooms in the house turned into rooms fit for princesses. There are now paper hearts and flowers hanging from the ceiling and walls. There are photos everywhere and each girl has a heart with their name on it placed somewhere in the room! It was fun to see them take a normal, boring project like a deep-clean of the house and go the extra mile. Since there aren’t not too many moments when they’re all so well-behaved and hard-working, Tia Elena and I thought it would be appropriate to award them with some positive reinforcement. So off we went to spend the afternoon in the batey playing basketball, drinking pop, finding sugar cane, and just hanging out. Then in the evening, we had a bit of a party complete with more pop, chips, and a Disney Channel movie (Jump It!) projected onto the wall so it felt like we were at the movies.
Almost looks like a scene from 'Little Mermaid' under the sea...
Each of their areas complete with the new hearts!
I even got a heart!
 Other than getting in a lot of quality time with the girls, we’ve been keeping busy with visitor groups as I mentioned in my last blog. The Canadian group of fathers and daughters left this past Friday after an amazing visit. As it turns out, some awesome connections were made with the kids, because we ended up with 9 new sponsors after the visit…woohoo! The 9 kids were pretty pumped! Now, we have a group from Seattle here picking up on the projects where the Canadians left off. In this group, there are already a couple sponsors, so those kids are so happy to have visitors!
Last Tuesday, the Canadians put on a big BBQ. A lot of the kids performed!
Here are the older girls dancing!
Jesel grilled...
...And everyone ate!
Finally, registration for auditions for the trip to MN that Friends of the Orphans is sponsoring has finished! And guess how many have signed up to try out for the four spots?? 32!! So now the kids are in the process of working on their artistic audition as well as their testimonies in English. I think the kids are really realizing how much work this is, which for some kids means they would rather try the next time around. But for other kids, they’re working on their material everyday and being super focused and determined. It will be interesting to see how things turn out! It’s cool seeing them put all their energy into something they really want! 
Registration in the park!
The last precious moment of this past week was watching one of the little boys, Luisito, learn to ride a bike. We had all of the bikes out on Sunday morning and everyone was telling Luisito that he didn’t know how and that he should just give his turn to someone else. So I asked the older boys in the park if one of them could go teach him. Miguel, a 16-year old boy, volunteers and goes over and tells everyone to knock it off and proceeds to get Luisito on the bike and moving. Before long, he was teaching him how to brake, how to turn, etc. and Luisito was riding around all on his own with minimal wipe-outs I was so proud of the both of them! It’s those little everyday moments that mean the most!