Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Our Top Ten Countdown: Part IV

Today, our Group Study Exchange officially ends. Before we go off on our next adventures to Melaka and Kota Kinabalu, here's a recap of the Top Ten Things We Appreciate About Our GSE Experience in Malaysia:

10. The Tropical Beauty
9. The Wildlife
8. The Thunderstorms
7. Navigating the Roads
6. The Family-Oriented Culture
5. Multiculturalism
4. The Food!
3. Learning it's a Small World
2. The Generosity of Rotarians


And the number one thing we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience is...


"Lah!"
We love this little word that peppers the conversations in Malaysia. It can be used to drive a point home, or to maintain the levity in a discussion. You can also think of it as the equivalent of the way we use "you know?" at the end of American sentences. We prefer "lah," though, and may even have to bring it with us to the United States!

We felt that the durian deserves an honorable mention here. After much build-up, we all sank our teeth into a big squishy fruit (or tasted the equally pungent ice cream version) and survived. Long live the King of Fruits!

Our Top Ten Countdown: Part III

"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #4: The Food!"


Malaysians have a burning question for our GSE team, and the answer to that question is: "Ya, says suka makanan pedal!" (Yes, I like spicy food!) Whether our utensils are forks, spoons, chopsticks, or our own fingers, we marvel at being in a country where people can have nasi lemak for breakfast, curry mee for lunch, and tandoori for dinner...or second dinner...or third dinner! Rotarians have introduced us to many of the Malaysian delicacies, such as bak kuh teh, durian (king of fruits), laksa, steamboat, and of course, the unofficial national dish....


"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #3: Learning it's a Small World"


Despite being thousands of kilometers away from home, Oregon has managed to find us all the way here in Malaysia. During a layover in Hong Kong, we struck up a conversation with a Malaysian-born, American-adopted student who attends Oregon State University, while at the Batu Caves, we spotted European tourists sporting an Oregon t-shirt.


During one vocational visit, our GSE coordinator arranged to have us visit the Damai Center for people with physical disabilities. The organization was founded by an activist with a disability who had traveled to Oregon about 20 years ago to participate in an exchange program through Mobility International USA, my employer! It truly is a small world.

"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #2: The Generosity of Rotarians"


From Penang to Taiping, from Ipoh to Klang to Temerloh, from Seremban to KL, Rotarians have opened their hearts and homes to the GSE team. The host clubs and host families went above and beyond to make us feel welcome and we appreciate all of the time, money, coordination, and care that our hosts expended to ensure that our stay would be enriching and enjoyable. They went to great lengths to arrange meaningful vocational visits so that we may further our professional development and they showed us sites that have cultural and historical significance to give our trip context. Some of our hosts even saw parts of their own city for the first time! They challenged us to try new flavors, dance moves, and points of view. They also succeeded in proving that Rotarians in Malaysia know how to have fun!

Up until this point, we've covered the top nine things we appreciate most about our GSE experience in Malaysia. That only leaves number one, lah! Any guesses as to what it could be? You'll have to wait until tomorrow, lah!

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Our Top 10 Countdown: Part II

"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #7: Navigating the Roads"


Honestly, the traffic here scares us a bit. Nonetheless, we can appreciate how skillful one must be to stop within a few centimeters of one another's bumpers after speeding along while motorbikes weave through the labrynth of vehicles. We appreciate a trick that our friend "Moots" taught us when attempting to cross a busy street (a task that strikes fear into the hearts of American jaywalkers from pedestrian-friendly cities): Signal to oncoming cars and motorbikes that you don't wish to be flattened by making a "talk to the hand" gesture. This is the Power of the Palm.

Above all, we appreciate that we're not the ones driving!

"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #6: The Family-Oriented Culture"


Thanks to the homestay aspect of the GSE program, we have learned so much about the different family structures here, and how family-oriented Malaysians tend to be. While a 20-something in the U.S. who still lives with her parents might be considered a deadbeat, young adults in Malaysia may live with their parents and other relatives well beyond high school graduation. Families in Malaysia can be big or small, and they pray, play, and stay together. In some households, as many as four generations may live under the same roof!

"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #5: Multiculturalism"


Only in Malaysia will you be invited to a Tamil wedding at a Halal Chinese restaurant! Only here will you spot both headscarves and saris billowing behind women on motorbikes as they whiz by the mosques, temples, and churches which line the roads.


Here, Malaysians switch fluidly between Tamil, Malay, or a Chinese dialect if they don't want their American visitors to follow the conversation...and most of the time, we don't! Here, everyone knows at least three languages, but the universal phrase is almost always Yaaaaaaam SANG!" (Cheers!!!)

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Greetings from the Rotary International District 3300 Conference in Seremban!

Following a weekend of fellowship with Rotarians coming from all over District 3300, dressing as cowgirls for Western Night, and dining among Malaysian royalty, the GSE team presented a summary of its reflections on its Malaysian GSE experience thus far to an audience of over one hundred faces, some familiar, some new. We used a David Letterman-style "Top 10 Countdown" format to organize those aspects of our trip that have had the greatest impact on our understanding of Malaysia and on Rotary. Those Rotarians who made it to our presentation (i.e. didn't party as hard as the others still in their hotel rooms!) really enjoyed learning what their American visitors found most compelling about their country.

"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #10: The Tropical Beauty"

 


We admire the tropical climate, tropical fruit, and the tropical colors of Malaysia. When Dorothy visits the Emerald City in the Wizard of Oz, she dons a pair of green-tinted glasses that transform the world around her to various shades of green. Dorothy might have wandered into verdant Oregon, where even the trunks of trees are covered in kelly green moss. Malaysia, on the other hand, is a kaleidoscope of color, from juicy sun-colored papaya and mango to a shimmering palette of punjabi suits in Little India, to the splashes of color on Buddhist and Hindu temples, to fiery hibiscus and the threatening neon of toxic butterflies Even coffee comes in an unexpected color - white!

"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #9: The Wildlife"


The tropical landscape and diversity of vegetation formed a basis for the wildlife in Malaysia. Some of us enjoyed riding the elephants at the elephant sanctuary, while others of us enjoyed being chased around by herds of monkeys, who conspired to steal our purses and glasses. Pam especially appreciated spotting a pair of hornbills through her binoculars during one of her birding outings.

"What we appreciate about our Malaysian GSE Experience #8: The Thunderstorms"


In Oregon, some of us live in areas with consistent light showers, and few of us knew what to expect when we were told we'd be traveling during monsoon season, which turned out to be characterised by clear skies punctuated by fleeting moments of torrential downpours. We tried to play it cool as lightning and thunder set a dramatic stage for our GSE presentation at the Rotary Club of Klang, but even the Rotarians had to laugh when the booming thunder shook our projector!

Check back tomorrow for more Malaysian phenomena that we have come to appreciate!

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Tamil Wedding!


Greetings from Temerloh!

We've moved away from the more developed western side of peninsular Malaysia. Here, the roads are dark corridors at night. Temerloh is the town of the Patin fish, an icon that decorates the town infrastructure. We ate Patin fish upon arrival, steamed and doused in a light, sweet sauce. It was very good.

We presented at the Rotary Club of Temerloh meeting on the first evening here, and it almost turned out to be the "obligatory" GSE-presentation-without-PowerPoint. Then at the last minute, success. The computer connected, and we shared our slides about Oregon and ourselves.

Somehow like the calm that Malaysian drivers seem to possess on the busy streets where motorbikes race by and cars turn into traffic, I felt unconcerned about doing a presentation without a projector. After all, our Temerloh hosts said, "You give us your best tonight at our Rotary meetings, and we give you the best of Temerloh on your itinerary." We have yet to see our hosts flustered either behind the driver's wheel or guiding us through planned and unplanned events on our schedule. I hope I am absorbing some of the Malaysian calm demeanor.

Yesterday we had a boat ride on the Pahang River and visited Kuala Gandah Elephant Sanctuary, where we got to feed and ride elephants. We were all heartbroken about the conflicts and severe habitat loss facing Malaysian elephants, but also glad to see conservation efforts. Riding an elephant bareback was fun and prickly!

Today I go to visit a mountain cave. Temerloh is a very short paragraph in Lonely Planet, and this particular cave area isn't even mentioned. All the more reason to appreciate our GSE experiences here, which we would never have discovered without our hosts and home-stays.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Greetings from Klang!

Since Klang is not so far from Kuala Lumpur (KL), we arrived by train from Ipoh to KL and were met at the station by Rotarian Aaron Samuel, our coordinator while in Klang. He described Klang as a cowboy town of 1 million. In spite of its population it retains many frontier and port city aspects. On the way to my homestay we encountered cattle grazing and crossing the street amidst housing developments and businesses.

We experienced a terrific downpour and thunderstorm while we presented to the Rotary Club of Klang yesterday evening. Every time there was thunder our projector screen shook just a little.

Our cultural visit (and for me, vocational visit) earlier yesterday was an outing to Batu Caves and Dark Cave. We had been warned about the aggressive macaques, and everything we had been told was true. They snatched any plastic bag or drink that they could from the hands of tourists, and generally made a mess. But of course there was some appeal to seeing them up close, including the babies. We snapped lots of photos.


The cave itself was filled with shrines and lit with impossibly high skylights. Though a tourist attraction, many devout Hindus were there to perform religious functions, including old men and women carrying babies up the 272 stairs to the cave. The huge Murugan Statue was surrounded by scaffolding as it was being cleaned.

Dark Cave, adjacent to Batu Caves, was an entirely different experience. Not lit except for skylights and the flashlights we carried, we had a 45-minute tour with an emphasis on ecology and conservation. Our guide carried a notebook with photo prints of cave life, including flatworms, trapdoor spiders, and millipedes. Overhead the fruit bats chirped and chattered, and far above we could see them coming and going from a misty skylight. The cave was rich with guano and cockroaches, and home to a timid dog. A massively tall flowstone formation featured films of cascading water, the best visual depiction I've ever seen of how flowstone forms.

Globalisation has certainly reduced degrees of separation. Not only all this time have we not been far from American pop radio stations, but often at food areas there is at least one "Western" hawker stall that offers food like french fries and pizza. Over and over we meet Malaysians who speak sophisticated, British English as fluently as the languages spoken in their homes. At Batu Cave I encountered a tourist wearing an Oregon t-shirt. And then last night after the Rotary meeting, Ashley learned that her host has a cousin who is an alumni of MIUSA, the organization where she works. She will meet him in the next few days.

Planned for the duration of our stay in Klang: vocational visits, a cultural tour of Klang, and a Tamil wedding dinner!