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PS: Sorry I have not posted since before Italy, was going to do a write-up for that trip but never got around to it and didn’t want to post something else before that got up. There have been some photojournal posts, tho.
Img: Joseph Wright
Tag Archives: portici
España
¡Ola a todos!
Jan 14 1998
Last day here in Casa Materna. While moving things from the office to a storage room I found about ninety pairs of furry boots. Strange… I found out that they were donated by the police after being confiscated. Mal intentions with furry boots. What is the world coming to? After receiving a warm farewell we spend an hour packing, lots of fun.
Jan 15-16
Portici to Naples to Rome in train, then spend the day in Rome. One of the strangest situations happened as we were sitting in the “American Bar” eating our last Italian Pizzas surrounded by Japanese Tourists. Our “couchette” in the train was tight to say the least. I remember sleeping in a train on as a child and loving it. What was I thinking? In France I feel the urge to learn some French, but seeing as we will only be here for a couple hours I push that out of my head. Spain, along with that old familiar Spanish of mine, here I come!…
Barcelona
…or so I thought. Northern Spain is completely bilingual between Castellano and Spanish, but the street language is Castellano (NOT a dialect). Some words I picked up: ciutat (city), estació (station), bitllet (ticket), pa (bread), vi (wine), xocolate (chocolate). As if there is not enough confusion for me already, pronunciation of regular Spanish is different, with Ss, soft Cs, and Zs either left out, or pronounced th or s (recepción becomes rethepthión, and ¿Cómo estás? becomes ¿Cómo e’tá’?).
The street outside of our hotel is always alive, especially at night. A huge pedestrian walkway attracts tourists, who therefore attract street performers. The performances range from statues, who just stood there, to the outrageous, like Spiderman or the orange faced guy, who jumped around and made as much noise as possible. An incredibly complicated frog mannequin who played the piano inspired dreams of puppetry arts for me… anything is possible.
Valencia
The most fun that Claire an I had in Valencia was the Gulliver children’s park. Children (including me) have lots of fun running all over a huge cement and fiberglass Gulliver. This is one of the many things that would not be allowed in the USA, somebody would sue when their child hurt themselves.
Seville
Here we are in Sevilla, our new home for the next month. We spend three nights in a hostel getting to know the downtown area and finding a language school for my mother and I. We finally choose CLIC and move into an apartment where we cook our own food for the first time in four months. Language school is fun, there are 12 people in my class now, and we have class for three hours per day. I’m currently tackling the subjunctive, but most of you don’t want to hear about that. Claire got a pair of rollerblades, while I’ve got Spanish and Trigonometry to keep me occupied. The whole family went on a school sponsored trip to an olive oil factory, with the BBC tagging along filming for one of their travel shows. When you are involved in something like that you realize how fake everything on TV is. “No, wait, can I ask you guys to walk back through that door again?… One more time…” But it was fun anyways.
write me-
peace on earth-
Forrest
PS: I’ve got access to e-mail 3 times a week for the next 2 weeks, so write!
PSS: Current plans have us coming home directly after spring break.
Casa Materna
Lets see… I last wrote to you in Florence…this is going to be a long letter.
After Florence we went to Orvieto, a tiny town perched on a mesa accessible only by the Funiculare, a combination trolley/ski lift (use your imagination). We settled into a hotel for 300K Lira for two nights, and later found a convent (nunnery) that was willing to take guests for two nights. Later on, when we got the bill, we realized that this place was a little bit more expensive, 350K. I thought it was pretty cool to find on their movie shelf “Sister Act” along with the assortment of religious films. In the market we found a woman selling pomegranates for 5000 Lira, but I was able to talk her down to 1000.
After Orvieto we slowly made our way south towards Portici. We never had the need to jump onto any moving trains, but we did get to jump off of one!
Oct. 30. A couple trains and cab and here we are in the Casa Materna Orphanage. Founded in 1905 by Ricardo Santi when he brought two children home who were selling matches and living on the street. It was a spur of the moment thing for him, little did he know what Casa Materna would eventually grow to become. At it’s height there were one-hundred children living here and around three-hundred bussed in for schooling. There are now around twenty living here, none of them official orphans, and 240 students are bussed in to school here. Most residents are placed here by the state from what we would call broken homes, but some are just from poor families. Most of the children that come to school here come from the poorest parts of Naples and Portici, and do not have to pay. However, the children’s parents that can pay gladly do because it is one of the best schools in the area. There is also a public language high school on campus, whose students have fun trying to communicate with me. I’ve already been invited to a party, and have no idea what to expect…
The resident children all have astonishing stories, I am sure that a book could be written on each one, but I have only scratched the surface of a few of the stories.
Breakfast, at 0800, consists of bread and orso or hot tea. Lunch, at 1400, has a first course of pasta or rice and a varied second. Supper, at 1900 is about the same as lunch. Lunch and supper are both always followed by an apple or pear. Every mid-day meal is an adventure. They file hundreds of children into the lunchroom, then silence is called for. Three or four minutes later, when it is finally quiet one selected child pipes out:
Padre Santo, Padre Buono
(PAH-dre SAHN-toh, PAH-dre BWOH-noh)
Questo Cibo
(QWES-toh CHEE-boh)
È il tuo dono
(EH eel TU-oh DOH-noh)
Danne andre ai poverelli
(DAH-nay AHN-dre eye PO-ver-EL-ee)
Perche siamo tutti fratelli
(PER-kay SEE-ah-mo TU-tee FRA-tel-ee)
Followed everyone saying AMEN, and then the chaos resumes. The prayer is the same one that has been said at the midday meal for the ninety-two years of Casa Materna’s existence. In Italian it rhymes, but here is the English translation:
Holy Father, Good Father
This food
Is Your gift
Give it also to the poor ones
Because we are all brothers
The other night I went with a group of Casa Materna residents my age to the movies and saw “Secrets and Lies” dubbed in Italian. Every single second here is an Italian lesson, una lezione d’Italiano, and by now I figured out that Spanish with an Italian accent just wont do. I wonder if I’ll still be able to speak Spanish after all this is over, or if my brain can only hold two languages, if any unused ones will be pushed out. Throughout this trip I have seriously considered becoming a linguist as my life work, leaning all languages possible. I already know how to count to ten and say yes and no in five languages, and I will probably know more by the end of this trip.
Naples, along with most of southern Italy, is a sad situation. ‘Official’ estimates guess 27% unemployment, but local people say 40%. This, along with a measly 60% attendance rate of school aged children, does not point in the direction of a brighter future. Crime, petty and organized, does not exactly help things. I have heard plenty of stories of specific crimes, but I want to have something to talk about when I get back.
I was amazed to find that everybody in Naples speaks Neapolitan, while only the educated older people and most of the younger people know Italian. The difference is not like two dialects of the same language, they are almost two entirely different languages. Non parli napolitano per favore… Italiano!!!
Forrest
PS Thanks for the personal E-mails… some day I’ll be able to reply… If I ever find some time…
PPS Snail mail takes minimum four days, maximum three weeks to get here, if it does at all.