Friday, October 21, 2011

Maestra de Español

...This is a picture of my Spanish teacher, Marta Lidia, and me. I learn so much from her; my Spanish speaking and writing have improved tremendously! She is a sassy little lady.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Trip to Comalapa, classes ending, more fun events

     Last Friday as a group we went to a town an hour and a half away from Antigua called Comalapa for a cultural excursion. There we visited a Maya priest and participated in a Maya ritual ceremony. In the ceremony each of us lit candles and offered them to our ancestors in front of an altar in the priest's house. The ceremony was very interesting and had a profound effect on some people in the group. One guy was singled out because the candles he lit produced an unusual amount of wax which dripped to the floor; the priest interpreted this to be a sign that his ancestors were not pleased with him. The wax dripping down represented the "lagrimas," or tears of his ancestors.     
     In Comalapa, there are many murals painted along the walls of the main street that depict historical events of Guatemala. As many other visual mediums are here, some of the murals are very graphic but accurately represent the tragic events that have taken place. The mural's depictions begin with the Maya people before the conquest of the Spanish and continue until present day.

A portion of the mural representing pre-conquest Maya cosmovision and practice



Atrocities of the military during the Guatemalan civil war




     I really ejoyed our trip to Comalapa, minus the ride there and back. We rode in small (bouncy) vans, the driver wasn't the best at manual shifting, and the winding roads there all contributed to my motion sickness that lasted the rest of the day.
    
     This past week, our Religion in and History of Guatemala classes ended. Goodbye, Dr. Burnett! She was a very good professor who knows absolutely everything about Guatemala. Tomorrow will begin Archaeology of Mesoamerica and Maya Writing and Hieroglyphs taught be the Dr. David Stuart. I'm looking forward to the change! Yesterday was also the halfway point of our study abroad program; we have seven more weeks to live it up in Antigua or seven weeks to count down until we return home. I will be doing both.

     This past Sunday I went to another soccer game with my family and a couple girls who live in the dorm my host parents own. It was another exciting game, and it was fun to get to know the girls and what they're doing in Antigua.


Back: Me, Flor, and Mette (who lives in the same house as me, from Washington state). Front: Molly (from Wisconsin), then Marian (from England)


Saturday, October 8, 2011

Projects Due!

In addition to all the excursions we have been taking, we also have been working hard on final projects for our History of Guatemala and Religion in Guatemala classes. It's hard to believe, but these classes are ending next week!

My map project entitled "Crops Historically Grown in Guatemala"
That knife is a machete.

The most beautiful lake

Last weekend, everyone in our group went to Lake Atitlan for a couple days. I had heard that it was an amazing place, and I confirmed this for myself while I was there. We went on a tour of 3 of the 12 (or more) towns surrounding the lake and also were able to spend a little time in the town we stayed in, Panajachel. The pictures speak for themselves.

This is one of the 3 volcanoes surrounding the lake
The lake is the result of a large crater between the volcanoes. The land steeply rises from the water on all sides.


Sunday morning I woke up around 6 am and swam in the lake; the waters were so calm and fresh. This experience has been my favorite one so far! Would anyone like to return to Lake Atitlan with me in the future?