Thursday, November 25, 2004
Monday, November 22, 2004
Women in Black
Since my teaching job seemed to be going nowhere, I decided to find somewhere to volunteer. A few years back I met a girl who had worked at Women in Black Belgrade for a while, and I decided to give them a try. I found their address from the web site and tracked down the office. The door wasn't difficult to locate-- completely plastered with colorful stickers for various causes. By the end of the day I was translating some material for the 2005 agenda.
Wednesday, November 10, 2004
Zabljak, Crna Gora
By the beginning of November I was expecting the weather to start turning cold in Belgrade, but it was still t-shirt weather. So I took advantage of the opportunity to visit Durmitor National Park in Crna Gora. I went with my Serbian professor Natacha, who is friends with a guy that used to be the head forester at the park.
The first day we hiked around Crno Jezero, and were lucky enough to still have sunny weather. The second day we went on a more ambitious hike, but had so much fog that we never actually saw the lake we were hiking to. On the way back we met a shepherd who told us that it sounded like we’d made it all the way to the lake. Amusingly enough, while we were talking to him, his cell phone rang. Even toothless old shepherds in Serbia have cell phones.
That night we got half a meter of snow, and it kept on falling for the next 48 hours. I walked back to Crna Jezera to see it in the snow. Unfortunately there’s no skiing there until New Years, but it was at least breathtakingly beautiful.
On Wednesday I got to experience village life in the raw when Misa killed a pig. The next day was devoted to processing pig parts in the kitchen—mostly rendering fat. During breakfast I tried to distract myself from the smell by pretending I was in anatomy class (hmm... those look like kidneys)... At that point I decided it was time to go back to civilization.
The first day we hiked around Crno Jezero, and were lucky enough to still have sunny weather. The second day we went on a more ambitious hike, but had so much fog that we never actually saw the lake we were hiking to. On the way back we met a shepherd who told us that it sounded like we’d made it all the way to the lake. Amusingly enough, while we were talking to him, his cell phone rang. Even toothless old shepherds in Serbia have cell phones.
That night we got half a meter of snow, and it kept on falling for the next 48 hours. I walked back to Crna Jezera to see it in the snow. Unfortunately there’s no skiing there until New Years, but it was at least breathtakingly beautiful.
On Wednesday I got to experience village life in the raw when Misa killed a pig. The next day was devoted to processing pig parts in the kitchen—mostly rendering fat. During breakfast I tried to distract myself from the smell by pretending I was in anatomy class (hmm... those look like kidneys)... At that point I decided it was time to go back to civilization.
Monday, November 08, 2004
Thursday, November 04, 2004
US Elections
If I had a palecinka for every time a Serb told me to vote for Bush... then... I'd be pretty darn fat. As CNN said of the elections, "all the world watched". And all the world had an opinion. Especially the Serbs. People had no qualms aobut coming right out and asking me, "so who did you vote for?" Then they would lecture me about the wrongs done to Serbia by the Democratic party. Invariably, they would also throw in a conspiracy theory or two about why they thought America hates Serbs. No. 1: Madeline Albright, of course, who lived in Serbia as a child when her father was a diplomat (I'm still not clear on why that would make her hate Serbs). Then there's the fact that Kerry dated a Serbian princess (chick from Dynasty). When she broke up with him he apparently held a grudge against the whole country. No one seems to think that Bush will necessarily be pro-Serbia, especially in terms of the Kosovo situation. People tell me they think he will be less harmful than Kerry and the Democrats.
On election night, Jessica and I went to a party sponsored by the US embassy, which went from 10 pm to 7 am. Mostly obnoxious businessmen and bureaucrats, so we left around 11, after having our fair share of drinks and kiflice.
On election night, Jessica and I went to a party sponsored by the US embassy, which went from 10 pm to 7 am. Mostly obnoxious businessmen and bureaucrats, so we left around 11, after having our fair share of drinks and kiflice.





