Monday, May 4, 2009

Yesterday, Drumming for Hope

Another busy weekend of various AYO-related outings.

Saturday - Potluck and Yesterday

Marilee (one of my Ingwavuma teammates) hosted a party Saturday night. It was partly to help her raise money for AYO; she had items for sale and some people donated money. The party was potluck, which works so well when you have that many adults--I am deficient in both ingredients, cookware, and knowledge to make real food for occasions like that.

We also watched a movie called Yesterday, which is about a woman (named Yesterday because her father thought that "things were always better yesterday") who finds out that she has HIV. She helps take care of her similarly sick husband (even though at first he doesn't believe her and even beats her for trying to warn him about the disease) and she also makes a goal not to die before her daughter attends her first day of school. It was an absolutely heartbreaking film and it was in Zulu (with English subtitles), which made it even more of a valuable learning experience. Unfortunately, but it kind of brought home how hard it will be to try to use the limited Zulu that I know.


Sunday - Drumming For Hope

AYO's fourth annual Drumming For Hope is also over. Marilee and I showed up at about 1:30 and stayed until nearly 8:30; from setting up to packing up. I also helped cover admission and later helped Marilee with selling craft items. We had the same items from Green Expo, along with some fantastic beaded jewelry and other things.

I also took a few minutes off from helping to participate in the drum circle, which was pretty neat. I don't have a terribly great sense of rhythm, but I tried to not seem too awkward. I also checked out the penguin we had visiting from Vilas Zoo, which is the closest I've ever come to a penguin. I bit on some of the silent auction items and got two gift certificates. After the drum circle there were some performances from different African drum and dance groups, which I caught some of and loved. All in all it was a pretty fun event and I had a great time helping out (even if I should've been doing homework)


Today - Even more Zulu!

Not much to say about my Zulu lesson today. We learned a few key phrases, such as please (either uxolo or ngicela) and spent a lot of time on trying to pin down proper phrasing. The use of plurals versus singular questions is confusing and I'd prefer not to offend anyone by using the wrong one. We also learned a lot of ways to refer to people. Boys under 7? Baba. Boys 7-15? Mfana. Boys over that age and I'll probably use Bhuti. Same with girls... Intombi and sisi. I also got a bit of practice in making some of the click consonants that they have, which they represent by x, q, or c. The x is a lateral click (using the side of your mouth), q is alveolar (like a clock ticking... tongue to the roof of your mouth, behind your teeth) and c is a dental click ("tsk-tsk", like when people disapprove of something). The clicks aren't terribly hard, but using them in the middle of a word takes some practice.