Sunday, January 27, 2013

I Am an Artist

Taking a class called "Thai Cultural Arts" while here in Chiang Mai, i have found a new fondness for artists. I have always loved art. My sister is an artist - a really good one (http://seakettlediaries.blogspot.com/). The things she creates blow me away all the time. However, like my professor and philosopher, Michael Pucci, explains, she doesn't just poop in a can and call it art. She creates beauty out of the limits she has within her realm of creation. She takes the smallest canvas - a one - inch pendant (such a limited amount of space!) and paints a masterpiece on it. That is real art, and that is real beauty.

But i am an artist too - maybe not the same kind of artist as my sister. I cannot paint even one six hundredth as well as she can - but i create out of what is around me. We are all artists because we all create - whether it's a farm, a spreadsheet, or an essay. This is how, i believe, we know we are created in the image of God. Not necessarily in the physical sense, but because He created - and still creates; and from this, we create. Still, creation requires care. As we create, we care for those things we create because creation takes time, and particularity. For me, social justice and community development is one of the most important forms of caring for creation - being an artist in my own sense. Simply knowing the facts and having knowledge won't guarantee a beautiful life. It is not just simply thinking about and analyzing the world, but living in it, touching it, seeing it - being an artist. I feel like we are reduced as people because we don't know the rest of the world - not understanding God's creation in it's fullest form. We end up objectifying other cultures, making them something that fits into our small box-of-a worldview. I am not abroad 'to help' or 'to do good', as if i have the means and the superiority over others to help them, as if they are helpless. I am simply here to learn and to be. Understanding cannot be done when you have a schedule and a task. I am not a 'good person' for coming here. I am just an observer, a learner, a minority, and a respecter.

The other day we were able to witness an elder lady in the Lahu community we live in who weaves the old fashion way. Her name is Namipan. She is like the mother of this community. She cooks for everyone, she weaves to make a living, and she takes care of the children while their parents are in class. She is the glue to this small community of the Lahu hill tribe. As apart of our class, we watched her create a masterpiece out of the resources around her. She is a true artist. She started with four short sticks she pounded with a rock into the ground. She then took yarn and weaved it, in a very complex pattern between the sticks. This process only sets up the mechanism for the actual weaving. Because she weaves by hand, without a loom, she becomes the loom. She then takes the sticks/yarn mechanism and attaches it to a window. She rolls out the yarn and sits on the ground, literally strapped into the weaver. Finally, she begins the actual weaving process, using wooden sticks to make the patterns - in this case a poinsettia-looking flower. She told us weaving one piece of fabric can take all day, sometimes two.

 It is amazing to me that many people who don't see this process of hand weaving, don't understand the skills, the time and the patience it really takes. The creation, the actual incarnation, of the product is just as important as the final product itself. I would probably pay twice as much for Namipan's weavings than i normally would for something at the local market simply because i witnessed the time, effort and skill that went into her work. It is amazing, in our materialistic and consumeristic world, how much we don't think about where our products are coming from, who is making them and the quality of work put in. The price Namipan sells her products for definitely doesn't do her beautiful work justice. Maybe we should be more conscious of the things we consume every day, and maybe this will allow us to be artists in our own forms, for the things we care about the most.








 We will be putting Namipan's hand-woven products on Etsy.com soon! They are beautiful, look out!

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Here

After a fourteen hour plane ride to Korea from Dulles, and a six hour plane ride from Korea to Chiang Mai, we finally made it here at the GoED house. The house is on a Lahu hill tribe bible school campus, and the campus itself is on a collection of rice fields. The rice fields are amazingly beautiful, especially in the mornings when the sun rises over them. The Lahu are a marginalized people group here in Northern Thailand. Since they migrated from Burma, live in the mountains, and speak Lahu instead of Thai, they do not have the same cultural expectations that the Thai people do, and therefore are seen as lowly and of a low status in society. This bible school is preparing them to be pastors for their various hill tribes. For some of them, this is their first academic experience at all.

View from our room on the fourth floor 

the house 
our room 


The past few days have been filled with numerous activities and adventures. We have been to the Lahu church, the local coffee shop, the Sunday Night Market, the Queen's botanical garden, an elephant farm, a hike to a beautiful waterfall, a Thai umbrella factory, a pottery place, a wood carving factory, and had tons of wonderful wonderful authentic Thai food. YUM.




This is considered 'the dish of the north', Khao Sawy. It is delicious beyond compare. It is a red coconut curry with egg noodles, cilantro, spices, sausage and pork with a crunchy noodle on top. I could have this every day if i could along with drinking out of a coconut. 





Thursday, January 10, 2013

Adventures in Chiang Mai, Thailand

I'm baaack!

Some of you might know, this is my second study-abroad blog. As a Sociology-Anthropology major at Messiah College, I am fortunate enough to be able to study abroad twice! Last year at this very time i was headed off to the beautiful country of Rwanda -- a country in central Africa you can barely see on the map. This country taught me a lot about forgiveness, poverty, development, hatred, love...the list could go on. It was an awesome experience i have such fond memories of. But we're not here to talk about Rwanda are we! you can read about that trip here: http//:www.rwanderingkimmie.blogspot.com

In eight days, i will be traveling back to Thailand... a place i also once called home. My mom, sister, Katie, and I lived in Bangkok, Thailand when i was in middle school as my mom worked at an international school called ICS - both Katie and I attended. Again, i have such fond memories of Thailand; and since we left that June in 2004, i vowed i would go back one day. That day is here! I just wish i could take them back with me because i know they would die to go back. However, this time i won't be in Bangkok. I will be in the northern region of Thailand called the Mekong Region (Mekong is a river that flows into China, Laos, Burma, Vietnam, and Cambodia as well). I will be in a city called Chang Mai. A little more rural and less crowded, loud and polluted than Bangkok (praise the Lord!)


My sister, Katie and I in Bangkok at a local temple c.2003


A little about my four months in Thailand:
I am going to Thailand with the same program i went to Rwanda with; a program called GoED (short for go education). This program specifically delves into certain issues in each country (Rwanda - poverty/reconciliation, Thailand - human trafficking). We learn specifically about international development, culture, religion, art, literature, etc. GoED focuses on applied learning and is a little bit more field-work based than other study abroad programs. The students going with me will all live in a house together, eat together, take trips together, meet the local community, etc.

The first month we will be taking two classes: Exclusion and Exploitation: The Marginalized People of the Mekong, and Social Context for Community Development. The second month we will be placed at an internship site. I won't know my practicum until that second month; so, more on that later! Lastly, our third month in Chang Mai, we will be taking two more classes: History, Religion, and Society in the Mekong, and Thai Cultural Arts -- i'm so excited for this one. I remember making baskets and flowers out of Thai fruits YUM.

So that's just a snippet of what i will be doing this semester abroad.
Thanks for taking the time to read this blog while i'm away -- or even just check in once in a while. I hope you will find it interesting/entertaining as i unpack what i will be learning and doing while i'm there. If you want to learn more about the GoED program, you can go to this website: http://go-ed.org/Mekong.html#



My next post will most likely be when i'm in Thailand so -- see you on the other side!

Kimmie