Thursday, May 3, 2007

Adios from Kodai

Hello, folks,

Well, these will likely be the last photos from India on this blog for a while, as I don't think internet cafes will accept the photos from my camcorder. Tasha and I are leaving Kodai on Saturday morning for 2 1/2 weeks of jetting around India on whatever type of moving vehicle we can find.

The first photos are of us looking as Indian as possible while still being white. The garments we are wearing are authentic. We found out later, however, we had put them on somewhat incorrectly.

The final photos are random images that didn't belong to a certain group, but what can I say, they had to see the light of day.


Tasha in a sari, Eric in a skirt (not the official name of the garment).


Eric in a skirt, John in a skirt. Bad look on both counts.


Eric in a skirt, John in a skirt, Caye in a (real) skirt.

Monkey really needed a skirt.


This guy was walking his elephant down the street as we drove to Alleppey. Not something you see every day.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

The Thrissur Pooram

At long last, here are the photos and some information from the Thrissur Pooram, a two-day Hindu festival. The elephants line up in rows of 15, with three riders per elephant. The center elephant in each line represents a different Hindu god. This is apparently the biggest Pooram in Kerala, if not India.




Thrissur Pooram, Pt. 2

These are more pictures from the first day of Thrissur Pooram. The last photo is during the main ceremony, where two lines of elephants, with about 300,000 people between them, face off in front of the Sri Vadakkunathan Temple. The guys on top then switch parasols dozens of times over the course of an hour, with drummers and horn players blasting away the whole time. It is called the Elanjithara Melam.

As you'll notice, the elephant in the first picture has no one riding it. He and another elephant had what a newspaper described as "a tiff," injuring 15 people and sending hundreds running. The elephant's name is either Nayarambalam Rajasekharan or Thiruvambady Unnikrishnan (I can never tell those two apart).




More from Thrissur Pooram

These are from the second day




Saturday, April 28, 2007

The Backwaters

My dad and I spent a day touring the backwaters of Kerala in Alleppey, which are kind of like the everglades in Florida -- a system of channels of fairly calm water surrounding strips of land with coconut palms and Indians of various financial means living on them. The water is quite warm and the scenery is lush.






This was our boat

The Backwaters of Kerala





The Prom

The Kodai kids had their prom tonight, so thought I would post a few pictures before I sift through the stuff from the Kerala trip. It looked very similar to an American prom at the beginning, though the had a rather impressive fireworks display (with fireworks that would be illegal in the states). The dress was a little more casual, though as is typical in India the girls looked much better than the guys. Many of the guys were in a blazer and jeans, while the girls all had evening gowns, very few of which were Indian.

I was amazed to see that, after the dining and fireworks, they broke into two groups to watch a movie. I'm told it's a Kodai tradition, but how silly is that? Someone had a bootleg copy of "300," so most of the kids watched that while some went to the campus theater to watch "You, Me and Dupree." After the movie, they reconvened for about a two-hour canteen very similar to the ones they have every week. It didn't seem like many of the kids were really into the dancing. I stayed for about half, and it was all up-tempo. No slow dancing. It would be hard to call it a romantic evening, though a few couples seemed to have a good time.

Anyway, here are some photos.



Richa

Photos



Kum Seok



Sabrina



Not sure who these two are, but they were dressed really nicely

More prom photos



The one in the middle is Butool. Not sure who the other girl is.



(left to right) Sarah, Trisha and Sangeetha

Friday, April 20, 2007

Kodai art show

Went to a student art show last night for the Kodai School. I must say it was quite impressive. Some of the pictures below are quite beautiful. Given the talent of the students at this school in general, I guess it's not a surprise. For comparison with a photo, Kum Seok (from the previous post) is the model on the right of the first picture.
Due to technical difficulties, I am unable to match up the artist with the work. Don't worry -- it's no one you know.





Kodai School students

Since a few of you have asked, here are some pictures of "my students." These shots actually will appear in the yearbook (we had to have some in action shots).



This is the whole group -- these are the kids you want with you if you're stuck on a desert island and need to figure a way out.



The legendary Kum Seok -- no matter what happens at this school he is involved. Student council president, captain of the soccer team, soundman in the play, plays guitar in a band, and has done most of the design work on the yearbook after teaching himself InDesign.



This is Butool -- absolute sweetheart and a very good photographer.



Bhutanese princess No. 1. I think this is Yiwang (pronounced Yong), who seems to be the quieter, more stoic of the two.



Bhutanese princess No. 2. That would make this one Namzay, who is a little more outgoing than her sister, though both are very easy going.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

More photos from the orphanage

These are mostly views from outside and inside the orphanage. The empty room with the mats is where the kids sleep. The final shot was in a very dark room where they were having "tea."





Scenes from an orphanage

I took a trip with some kids from the Kodai school to an orphanage. The students as part of their social experience grade make several of these trips each year. This time they played with the children, had tea and then tried to work with the orphans in English and Math, with varying degrees of success. The children were very excited to have company, and incredibly eager to have their pictures taken.