Friday, November 30, 2012

Goodbye to Tibetan Bir & the Monks

Gift to the Monks

Before we said farewell to Bir, we left a gift to the monks. Dine and I bought paints to decorate their classroom, which was in desperate need of some TLC. We asked the help of other volunteers, who were teaching in other monasteries to do the job. After two days, their smelly and damp classroom was transformed into a very pleasant space to learn.
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Classroom before Painting
The monks were very excited watching us and the other volunteers painting and they wanted to help too! They helped us moving all the furniture out of the classroom and bring them back a couple of days later.  
Painting Squad I: Chris, Josh, Clau, Luke & Dawa
Painting Squad II: Dine, Raji and Monks Dorjee & Passang
The monks also helped us painting, but they were making a big mess and wasting a lot of paint, so we send them off the room back to their outdoor English class. They were not happy, but we had the last word. J

Outdoor Class with Volunteers Paula & Maili (Mother & Daughter)
The monks were very kind and brought chai (Indian tea) to all volunteers.  It was a lovely surprise, which brought a smile to our faces!

Phurba serving te to our Volunteer Coordinator Dawa
It was great to see their classroom freshly painted. Although it wasn’t a job meticulously done, all the volunteers felt happy with the final results. The list of happy people included the monks, the monastery runners, our Project Coordinator Dawa and our host-sister Yeshi, who loves this monastery!

Classrom after Painting
GOODBYE TO TIBETAN BIR

Sadly, our time in Tibetan Bir came to an end. Our four weeks in this tiny village went so fast! We really enjoyed spending time with the Tibetan people and learning about their culture. It was also a great experience teaching English to the young monks in the Buddhist monastery.

Tibetan Women dressed in Traditonal Outfit
We say goodbye to this wonderful Tibetan community, whom brought so much warmth to our hearts, especially our great monk students!

Goodbye to our Playful Monk Students
Our next stop is the holy city of Varanasi. After that we will head to our final destination in Cochin, Kerala state. There we will stay in an ashram immersing ourselves into the world of yoga and meditation.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Trekking in Dharamsala

Having the weekends free to ourselves, Dine and I, together with our dear South African friend and volunteer Chris, headed to Dharamsala again to hike up one of its most popular mountains - Triund. Dine and I were thrilled to climb a mountain which is part of the Middle Himalayan Mountain Range.

Dine and I with Trekking Guide Sonu
According to our trekking guide Sonu, it’s a distance of about 9 Kilometers to reach the top of this mountain, taking approximately 8 hours depending on one’s fitness. Triund is 2.875 meters above sea level. The hike is not very steep and there are plenty of shacks along the way, where hikers can buy food and drinks to refresh themselves. We paid 300 rupees each to Sonu for a group of 3 people. His mobile 9816 136 355 / 9736 542 849. He was a great company and very knowledgeable.

Stopping for a chai at 'The Best View Cafe'
During our trekking we saw a variety of animals, which couldn’t really be classified as ‘wildlife’. We met plenty of friendly homeless dogs along the way. We also passed through a caravan of donkeys carrying supplies to the tea shops spread throughout the mountains. It was a sad sight watching these animals carrying such heavy loads on their backs up and down the mountain. I couldn’t help feeling sorry for them, but as I often heard Indian people say ‘we all have our duties in life’. Some just seem to have it a lot harder than others.

Donkeys carrying supplies to the Mountain shops

After 4 hours walking, with many stops along the way to appreciate the scenery and take some photos, we reached the top. The view was stunning (even the cold weather did not spoil it one bit!).

Dine & I reached Triund's Summit

For our friend Chris it was a time to meditate.

Meditating in the Himalayas

As for me, I couldn’t stand still for very long due to the freezing temperature up on the mountain, but I did sit quietly for a moment to greet the huge Himalayan Mountains in front of me. I also thought about my journey, trotting around Africa and India for the past 5 months, and how grateful I was to have a chance to embark on this trip.

Quite time enjoying the stunning view
 
Some people cannot understand why trekkers go through so much effort hiking up mountains. Dine and I left Triund in such high spirits! That’s why we go trekking!

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Volunteer Work in Tibetan Bir

Bir is our last stop volunteering in India. This small town is located in Himachal Pradesh State and is about two hours on road from Dharamsala. There are four villages in Bir: Upper Bir, Bir-Billing, Tibetan Bir and Bir Road. My sister and I are staying in Tibetan Bir, which is mostly populated by Tibetan refugees, like Dharamsala.  Here we will teach English for four weeks to young monks in a Buddhist Monastery.

Chokling Monastery

Chokling Temple
According to Dawa, our Volunteer Project Coordinator, the Chokling Monastery was built about 30 years ago. He said that most of the young monks living in this monastery are orphans and were brought to Chokling by their family members. Others were brought by poor parents, who had no means of supporting them and thought that life in a monastery would give their children a better start in life, with food, education and a decent roof over their heads. I felt to me that the monastery is pretty much like an orphanage, with the difference that here the kids wear red robes and follow a different religion.

Young Monks outside the School Building 

Although the Monastery and the Temple look beautifully decorated on the outside, with vibrant colours and drawings, it’s a different story inside the classroom. As soon as we open the door there is an awful smell of damp  and the walls look very dirty. It’s in desperate need of some TLC! Dawa explained to us that the school has no existing sponsorship. He said that the money people donate to the temple has to be spent on the temple and not in the school.

Classroom

Dine and I are teaching English to an average of 25 students, between the ages of 6 and 16 years old. The young monks have a great sense of humor. Just like the children in Kenya, here they go nuts to have star stickers stamped on their notebooks, after copying the lessons from the blackboard. On our first day, we joined Grace, a volunteer from Australia, who brought her laptop to the classroom  to play the ‘Monsters INC’ cartoon to the monks. Most of the monks, small and big, couldn’t take their eyes of the small screen. J

Monks watching cartoon 'Monsters INC'

On Grace’s last day in the monastery, a week after we had arrived, she organized a farewell party with the monks in the football field. When we arrived, the party was well under way, with the monks enjoying themselves playing a football match. This was the first time we saw them without their red robes.

Football Match

Some others, like young Tenzin, 6 y.o., preferred to play with their mobile phone! On the photo below Tenzin was showing me a video of a football match with Ronaldo, a famous Brazilian football player. He also showed me his favourite music video clip of Justin Bieber and took a photo of me. He could use his mobile better than I do with mine!

Tenzin and I watching Justin Bieber video clip

TIBETAN HOST FAMILY HOUSE

Our new home in Bir is a huge three story house. We are staying with Dawa’s family (our project coordinator and now host-brother!).  His elderly father and elderly brother don’t speak much English, so we get to interact very little with them. Yeshi, his older sister, can manage some English, which is very handy since she helps out the volunteers when Dawa is not around. She is very caring and cooks delicious meals! Currently, we are in 8 volunteers in the house, from Brazil, Australia, South Africa, England and Canada.

Host Family House in Bir 
TIBETAN FLAGS

The Tibetan flags can be seen everywhere in Dharamsala and Bir. The great shot below was taken by Dine from the rooftop in our new home in Bir. According to our host brother Dawa, these flags bring good luck to the Tibetan families.

Tibetan Flags on the Rooftop

PARAGLIDING IN BIR-BILLING

During our first days in Bir we found the town packed with foreigners. We were told by another volunteer that apparently Bir is one of the best places in the world to go paraglinding. Who would have thought, in such a small town in the middle of nowhere! We met some nice paragliders, who are renting out some rooms in the house, to join in a paragliding competition happening in Bir at the moment. One of them, to our surprise, could speak very good Portuguese! These paragliders are most welcome by the Bir residents, as they bring a good income to this small town every year.

Paraglader in Bir-Billing

One afternoon, Dine and I went to the Paragliders Landing Site, which was a 10 minutes’ walk from our house. It was so peaceful watching them landing. They all looked like they knew what they were doing. Although we heard from other volunteers that some paragliders have a very rough landing and have to cope with the embarrassment of everyone laughing around them. J They also seemed to be very fit to be able to carry their huge backpacks with their paragliding gear inside them. 

Paragliding Landing Site in Bir-Billing