Monday 30 November 2015

All about the Romanian cultural evening

On 18th November I had the pleasure of hosting the Romanian cultural evening where, using the tools provided I managed to offer the people participating in the event a bit of insight into Romania’s landscapes, culture and traditions along with few of the many Romanian’s that had a big impact in the whole world. 



The audience was invited to use their creativity by participating in a special contest “If I were a book, my tittle would be “, which had 4 prizes for the most creative titles.



Here a few examples:

-An endless quest towards a balanced life (even when Peter Pan is around) -By Wendy-
-MagDyver: how to survive making something out of nothing.
-303 questions with no answers.
-Green being: think more, live more. Extincted ideas press.
-"Maybe I'm fat, but still very interesting!" said the book.
-Smiles in the air: joggint through life's adventures.
-Forever young: creative survival among volunteers.



At the end of the power point presentation, everyone enjoyed a few Romanian traditional songs performed by a local artist, Ana M. Popapa and her musician friend. 



Overall the evening went out very good but it was not just because of the presentation made in a good amount of time (aprox. 1 hour ) nor was it good because of the way it was presented, BUT rather because of the audience which due to their interest in getting more information about Romania, managed to motivate me to do a better job than I usually do, and it is thanks to everyone inside Lokietka and Semper Avanti that everything went out so smoothly. I am grateful for their appreciation and support.




Buza Alex

Saturday 28 November 2015

Two Normal, Not-So-Normal Days in the MLC


 WEDNESDAY

At the beginning of the week, I - Wendy - already knew Wednesday was going to be crazy.

In the morning, I went to a gimnazjum to give cultural presentations. On Tuesday, I was informed that the starting time changed from 10:40 to 08:00 – “a little bit earlier”, according to one of the coordinators. So on Wednesday I woke up at 06:30 and I felt “a little bit” sleepy when I arrived at Zespołu Szkół numer 23, together with my colleague Umut.

Presenting my country to gimnazjum classes, boys and girls in their puberty, is one of the most challenging and interesting parts of my job here. The only thing teenagers seem to know about my country, is the fact that smoking weed is not entirely illegal. And – apart from that story – it is quite hard to get their attention, let alone to keep it. Sometimes their hormones just take over and all they want to do is to sleep, or to annoy others. Yet somehow I like it. This feeling when you manage to hold their attention for a while, or when you make them laugh, or when you ask a question and someone shouts out the correct answer... That’s pure gold. Rewarding and exhausting at the same time.

In the afternoon I had Polish classes, first in the office from 14:00 until 15:30, and later on at the University of Wrocław, from 17:00 until 18:30. In between the lessons I had to work on my presentations for the next day. A lot of brain work, and by the time it was half past six, I was “a little bit” very tired but the day still wasn’t over.

At seven I had to be at the Opera, together with some of my colleagues, because we found some super cheap tickets. A great opportunity to – finally – see the beautiful opera building from the inside! The opera itself was a bit of a letdown, but I also have to admit that my expectations had fairytale-like dimensions. Somehow I was thinking that, upon entering the opera, my daily clothes would transform into a beautiful dress. A handsome dandy would take my hand and guide me to my seat, which would offer an amazing view, and together we would watch the opera, front row, while he would explain the story and offer me his opera glasses every now and then... Of course, none of that happened. It even wasn’t - as we thought before - an opera called 'Giacomo Orefice' by the famous Polish composer Fryderyk Chopin. No. Chopin never wrote an opera. What we watched, was an opera by this not-so-famous Giacomo Orefice about Chopin... What a blamage.


But then, when I came home, I found an Italian guy in our kitchen who was baking pizzas for my flatmates and me. Sometimes life can be a fairytale. So around 22:30, instead of going to bed like usual, I had my first bite of a delicious pizza and it was way after midnight when my head finally hit my pillow.

THURSDAY

On Thursday I had to wake up early, again. But this time I went to the train station, in order to take a train to Żmigród. The train ride itself was very memorable, because – surrounded by Jose, Michael and Özgür – I got some interesting insights into the male brain. In fact, the discussion was so entertaining that we almost forgot to get out of the train on time.

Shortly after our arrival in Żmigród, Michał and Paulina took us to a kindergarden. There we had to present our countries in a simple and playful way, with some games in between to keep the attention of the children. Personally I find this kind of presentations less rewarding, but I had a good time. There are definitely worse things in life than entertaining kids. Plus, we got a certificate and a box of chocolates afterwards. :)

Then, after a short pit stop in the supermarket, the group split into two smaller groups. Paulina took Michael and Özgür with her, and Michał went to his home town together with Jose and me. In that small town there is a church and a school, and in this school Jose and I had to - guess what? - present our countries. But the environment was different (for example: this time we could use a smartboard ánd a blackboard) and the age of the audience was different, so it didn’t feel like I was doing the same thing over and over again. Also, when the intervals between presentations are short, the act of presenting becomes more natural to me. It gets easier to try out new things and to experiment with the way I deliver the information - which strengthens my presentation skills ánd the presentation itself.


After a presentation about Spain and one about the Netherlands, it was time to go home. But first Michał invited us to his parents’ place, where we had a tasty lunch. Of course this took longer than expected, so in the end we had to rush to the train station, full speed. Fortunately we met the others on the platform and soon after four EVS volunteers jumped on the train back to Wrocław.

Back there, I went to the office as fast as I could, because on Thursdays I teach Dutch. Thanks to my busy schedule, I still had a lot of work to do: I had to arrange a projector, find out if (and how) it worked, print some exercises, finish the lesson plan, prepare the training room... By the time the first student arrived, I still wasn’t ready. Another blamage, unfortunately. I put a lot of effort in the language course and I like to teach, so being late (even though it was not entirely my fault) made me feel unprofessional. Still, the lesson went fine - at least I tried my best and the students seemed interested. In the first half I introduced a difficult grammatical rule, which really puzzled the students. So I think they were glad it was the third lesson: 'CULTURE' time! Once in every three weeks half of the lesson is reserved for cultural information. This time, I guided the students through the history of the Netherlands. Which was also complicated at times, but not as complicated as grammar. ;)

And after the Dutch lesson, around seven o'clock, I went home. This time there was no Italian guy, so I had to make my own food, and after dinner, a talk with my mother (on Skype) and a talk with my roommate (in our room) I fell asleep, happy and tired as EVS-usual.

Monday 23 November 2015

THE CHRONICLES OF LEO: The Conquest of Kamienna Góra

Enchanted places have always exercised fascination over the mankind. Poets and writers poured streams of ink over the fabulous Avalon or Atlantis, as well as hundreds of adventurers left family and house, gambling on the existence of the overwhelming treasures of El Dorado. Centuries ago, at the down of the age of science and technology, some brave people, eager of becoming ridiculously rich and famous discovering a new world for taking the Truth of Semper Avanti, decided to leave for an epic journey. Destination: the legendary land of Kamienna Góra. This is their story, based on some memories we have obtained.   

Along with the supreme admiral Michal, Martyna (vice admiral and in charge of security), Paulina (commodore, in charge of logistics), Özgür (fearless ottoman sailor, veteran of Lepanto battle) and Leonardo (chronicler, cabin boy, jester and scapegoat). The latter wrote: “There is an undeniable advantage of leaving for a legendary place in our times in comparison with centuries ago: ancient adventurers had just their faith in God to trust in, they have Google. And our God is much more powerful than their one. Full of hope and self-confidence, we left Wroclaw early on the morning. Holy year 2015, 16 November.”

The travel was quite long and full of risks. After crossing forests, mountains and deserts, facing dragons, trolls and highway patrols, the Big Five, exhausted but glad, finally saw the marvellous walls of the kingdom of Kamienna Góra. As soon as the indigenous saw them, their car, their appearance (“especially the ginger chronicler, handsome according to the most” but the reliability of this sentence is highly disputed), they thought they were the gods their legends talk about. Michal confirmed so and told them they were there for the gold for spreading the Word of Semper Avanti. In the blink of an eye, the authorities received them.

As far as we know, the magnificence of the royal palace of Kamienna Góra was astounding: “..everywhere on the wall you could see golden inserts, the floor was as neat as crystal do and all the girls were awesome..”. Besides, Leonardo was struck by “..water, an ocean of water in bottles, with gas, even the one without gas, had gas..”.

In front of a huge audience, Leonardo and Ozgur, the most expendable ones, tried to persuade kamiennans of the Truth: what is the EVS and the importance of attending it for reaching a superior state of mind, free of prejudices and stereotypes about people, mainly foreigners. They showed pictures and quoted some episodes of their own experiences to get more persuasive. Yet, maybe because of the linguistic barrier or the young age, the natives didn’t show enough excitement about it. As you can easily imagine, the crew kept on with the mission anyway.  

The chronicler states that they came back little after, bringing away just some hundreds bottles of water. Nevertheless, again, the reliability of him is more than questionable. As far as we know, from other sources, due to their superior means, the fistful of pioneers easily took the control of Kamienna Góra, showing astonishing cruelty against the inhabitants. The treasures of Kamienna were looted and people enslaved and deported to Wroclaw for building new furniture. Kamienna Góra became the cornerstone of what we know today as “Semper Avanti Empire”.

~ The End ~

 
    


Friday 13 November 2015

Wendy's mid-term meeting

Time flies when you are an EVS volunteer. I can't believe that my project started half a year ago, in May. I had my on-arrival training the end of June, and although my EVS life already was a roller-coaster at that point, after that the ride just kept speeding up. Many things to do, people to meet, places to explore... So when I got the invitation for my mid-term meeting, I felt happy and sad at the same time.

I can't get enough of travelling, so of course I couldn't wait to visit a new place (Toruń) and meet with other EVS volunteers. Some of them I knew already, some faces were completely new, but soon the whole group turned out to be a big bunch of awesome people. Together we explored Toruń, in our free time but also during some of the workshops. The old medieval city centre is small but beautiful and full of atmosphere, in a fairytale, 'Grimm-esque' way. It might not be as interesting or appealing as Kraków, Wrocław and Gdańsk, but it's definitely worth a visit. And for the foodies among us: try Toruń's famous gingerbread, in one of its traditional cookie forms (pierniki), or combined with another Polish pride: beer! Maybe gingerbread and beer doesn't sound like a match made in heaven, but piernikowe piwo is definitely worth a try, or two...

Besides these tourist-style explorations, we also explored our EVS projects and our lives. What did we learn in Poland? How did EVS change ourselves? And what do we want to do next? Thinking about the future might be scary, but when you talk about it with other people, it becomes less vague, less threatening. Therefore I'm glad that EVS offered me this opportunity, the mid-term meeting, to get to know myself better - and my goals after EVS.


Unfortunately, thinking and talking about the future also made me realise once more that my EVS in Wrocław isn't going to last forever. My project ends within 3 months - and when time flies, 3 months are over too soon... Which doesn't mean that I don't want to start something new and that EVS life is absolutely perfect. Don't get me wrong. I can't wait to move to a place that is closer to my family, for example, and to an apartment with more personal space (and a kitchen table). But even if I manage to find an amazing apartment, close to my relatives and Dutch friends, I am going to miss this part of my life, forever and ever. Especially some people I met here, even though I'll keep in touch with them. Oczywiście.


At the beginning of my project, before I went to Warsaw for the on-arrival training, at least two ex-volunteers told me that this training was the best week of their project. Fortunately I can say that, although my on-arrival training was an unforgettable experience, maybe it was not the best week for me: the mid-term meeting, and some weeks in between, were at least as superb.

Do widzenia bardzo!


Thursday 12 November 2015

Czech Cultural Evening

27.10. 15, Tuesday evening and Multicultural Language Cafe had a monthly activity called Cultural evening. It was time for the Czech Republic´s inhabitant Michael to present his home country.

And he presented. Participants could try ´´Chlebíčky´´ (one of the Czech traditional foods - breads with a rich garnish). We focused on three main categories during the presentation.

It was Prague, Czechoslovakia and beer. While we were getting through a big information part of the presentation, participants were getting tired and more tired. However, in the second amusing part we had a chance to see a Czech republic´s typical humour made by performer Michael, got to know interesting facts about the Czech people and country, to hear Czech pronunciation and much more.

We are waiting for another cultural evening - the Romanian one, on the 18th of November!

Monday 2 November 2015

Free Dutch Course!

For those in Wrocław who would like to learn the basics of the Dutch language and culture, we have amazing news. Wendy, our volunteer from the Netherlands, is going to teach it!

The first lesson takes place on Thursday the 12th of November and the tenth and final lesson on the 28th of January. There's place for maximum 15 students, so you might want to decide fast. ;)

For more information and to enroll: click here!


See you! / Tot ziens! / Do zobaczenia!