Friday, June 10, 2011

Uzbek Immersion

June 10, 2011

 

Bet you didn't expect to see that blog title, huh? Probably thinking, "Wait, I thought Anne was in Kazakhstan?!?!"  Well, you are right, I'm still here. But in the summer, if you're an education volunteer, you pretty much scatter to the four winds to lead summer camps.  This week I landed in a town in South Kazakhstan with a huge Uzbek population.  Seriously, I feel like I left the country!

 

Uzbek and Kazakh culture are closely related, but there are obviously gonna be some differences.  Uzbek houses are kinda like Spanish haciendas:  The house is divided into several compounds and they all open into one main courtyard.  In the courtyard there is an elevated platform with a roof… maybe like a simplified gazebo, except not at all.  Anyways, people eat and sleep on the platform in the summer when it's too hot to be inside.  I love that!

 

Just like Kazakhs, Uzbek people are enormously hospitable.  Even though I'm not from this neck of the woods, I managed to get an invite to an Uzbek wedding.  The party started with an open house at the groom's house. Many times, the whole ceremony is at the house and people congregate in the courtyard. But for this wedding, we went to a reception hall after the house party.  When the bride and groom arrived, four men blew ten-foot trumpets with some choreographed movement.  There was a microphone to amplify the noise, but I have no idea why they did that.  I'm pretty sure I'm gonna be deaf for the rest of the day. 

 

After the bridal party entered, the wedding was pretty standard: Eat, dance, eat, eat, dance, give a toast, dance, eat.  There were fewer toasts than I've seen at my Kazakh parties (as in, I didn't have to give one.  Bummer J), and the music was definitely not Kazakh.  It would probably take a few months for me to master Uzbek wedding dancing if that's the music they play every time!  But it was an awesome experience.

 

Southern Kazakhstan has a lot of Kazakh pride, but if you move around a bit, you manage to find little pockets of diversity that you would never expect.

1 comment:

  1. Hola: Soy docente en Colombia y comparto experiencias con miembros de los Cuerpos de Paz que se encuentran en el país. Admiro la labor que Uds realizan con las personas necesitadas en muchos lugares del mundo. Felicitaciones por su labor.

    Hi, I have been visiting your blog. ¡Congratulations for your work! I invite you to visit my blog about literature, philosophy and films:
    http://alvarogomezcastro.over-blog.es

    Greetings from Santa Marta, Colombia

    ReplyDelete