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From June to August in 2009, I and 12 other Community and Organizational Development volunteers lived and studied in the
Vasieni is a medium sized village by Moldovan standards. It has a listed population of 4,000 (although it is rule of thumb to reduce that number by at least ¼, and up to 1/3, due to emigration and registered residents working overseas), and is stretched out along a single, long paved road. Located in the Raion center of Ialoveni, it was the furthest training village from Chisinau, and probably the most rural.
Vasieni had been host to another training group something like 7 years ahead of us, and we gather that the previous group had not been very well received. We heard stories of discontent, and an unwillingness to accept Moldovan culture. Luckily, however, the evident failure of the previous group didn’t have much of an impact on our reception. While it was immediately evident that the locals had seen very few Americans in their lifetimes, the majority of us were received warmly into incredibly hospitable Moldovan homes. My gratefulness for this shouldn’t be understated; our first few weeks were pretty rough. If my host family hadn’t been so patient, curious and eager to make me feel at home, I am pretty sure I’d have been on a plane back to the
Also living in the village, with other host families, were our three wonderful Romanian instructors. Their official title, Language and Cross-Cultural Facilitators, encapsulated very little of what they did for us (everything, for the most part). Fluent in English, they were our window’s into this strange new world. Had to wash our clothes, but forgot the words? Call up Adriana. Had to set up a meeting with the Mayor for a community development project? Ask Diana. Wanted a private routierra to take us into Chisinau? Rodica is there to help. Whatever Peace Corps was paying them, I’m quite sure it wasn’t enough (Disclaimer: This was a joke. I am not criticizing Peace Corps or their salaries. In fact I have no knowledge of them. I am sure they are quite generous. Please don’t kick me out).
Yet, strangely, against all odds, it turned out that our instructors actually liked us. I’m happy to say that after three months of training, they became my first Moldovan friends, and good ones at that. While that doesn’t mean class was made easier (or homework, ahem), the fact that we were able to have candid discussions about language, culture and life not only made my life easier, but brought us all as a group closer together. For this I am thankful.
While this has turned out to be a very “thankful” entry thus far, it bears reason to take a moment to say why. In short, PST was no cakewalk, and we managed to turn it into a pretty good time. It’s an achievement worth noting.
June 2009
We landed in the
Phone: check.
Ipod: check.
Passport: had to dig around a bit, but check.
Wallet: …God. Damnit.
A frantic moment of searching ensued. My wallet was missing. Of course this would happen. After spending several arduous moments processing the last time I had seen my wallet, I came to the conclusion that I must have left it on the plane.
Fucking predictable. Fucking convenient. Fucking miserable.
The last thing I needed was to lose the only money I had brought with me to
Making my way back outside, I looked over at the plane, and felt the blood rush to my head. It was beginning to roll away, to who knows where. Adrenaline and panic pushed away any thoughts of my hangover, and another volunteer and I ran to speak with one of the runway operators. Here, I would exchange my first words with a Moldovan.
Now, as conversations go, I’ve had more successful. In fact, I’ll go out on a limb and say that every previous conversation in my life has been more successful. Even the disaster that was the first time I seriously asked out a girl (the rejection wasn’t all that bad, but how was I to know that we were standing in a patch of poison ivy?). Suffice to say, this moment would become my primary motivation to study nightly during language training.
“Ce?” he asked as we came back out of the terminal.
Not having any idea what “ce” meant, and frankly not caring all that much, I blurted out a string of panicked words, probably along the lines of “stop that #$%#! plane! I need my #@$! wallet off that plane!”
Blank stare.
Right, this was
“LEFT WALLET ON PLANE. PLEASE STOP PLANE.”
The Moldovan lazily watched my wild gesticulations. With painful slowness, he looked from me, this wild-eyed maniac standing before him, to the plane, and then ever so slowly back to me.
Blanker stare.
Suddenly Peace Corps had become very, very real. “You have got to be kidding me,” I thought. In my heightened state of panic it seemed ridiculous to me that Peace Corps was actually serious about most Moldovans not speaking English. I began to think some very un-Peace Corps-like thoughts. Seeing as I didn’t speak Romanian, we had an obvious dilemma.
“This, he forgot this.”
A calm voice. A straightforward voice. Was that a hint of amusement? I turned and saw Ryne, the other volunteer who had come outside with me, pointing to his wallet and making motions as if dropping it.
Right. Smart.
The man, of course, immediately understood. As my chin dropped shamefully to my chest, he began hailing the pilots on his walky talky. The plane stopped, and the man started explaining (at least I think) the situation to the pilot. As we had some time to wait, I decided to calmly check my backpack pockets one last time.
You can probably guess what happened next. I’m not sure who designs these hiking backpacks, but for whatever reason they love putting pockets in the most absurd of places. There it lay, my prankster of a wallet, in an unchecked sidepocket, next my sunglasses. I slowly lifted it out of my pack and stared at it. The runway operator, still talking on the walky talky, stopped mid-sentence. The look on his face needed no translation.
“Sorry,” I shrugged.
The tension was broken by a loud burst of laughter. I turned. Ryne, of course. Ashamedly giving another shrug to my new Moldovan friend, I felt a sudden rush of relief, and turned around to head back into the airport.
“Great,” I recall thinking, as I joined the line of waiting volunteers “and I’m supposed to be here to help these people?”