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June 19, 2006

Rowland Establishes Routine, Negotiates Culture In Vietnam

Posted by: Norwich Student Group 2006 It's been almost two weeks since we departed from Northfield for the long flights to Vietnam, and it seems to me like the trip has broken down into two phases, each lasting a week. The first week consisted of asking all kinds of questions in order to become adjusted to radically new surroundings. Some questions were pretty straightforward, such as the locations of the ATM machine, cafes, and work sites. More complicated queries involved navigating cultural divides, such as what kind of interactions would we have with the diverse array of Vietnamese partners and how we would bond internally as a team.

This second week has been one of establishing routines. For me, it involves rising at 5:30am, going for a 5-mile run by the Perfume River, reading while having breakfast, and then leaving for our morning service project. After lunch at noon and a team meeting immediately following, we visit an afternoon work site and usually have an hour or 90 minutes to relax before dinner. After dinner is free time to walk around the city, go swimming at several hotel pools, or reading.

Two events stand out for me on this trip in terms of particularly meaningful interactions with the Vietnamese people. The planting of trees at the home of Pham Boi Choi, a Vietnamese revolutionary nationalist in the early 20th century, signified to me our recognition of the proud, long, and continuous desire that Vietnamese had for the same value that gave birth to our own nation: self-determination and independence from foreign rule. The second event was an impromptu soccer game with a team of street children who were prepared, with uniforms and a referee, from an earlier match. We played seven on seven on a small field for about 30 minutes. They rose to the challenge and beat us 3 to 1, our only goal coming on a breakaway with Matt Corson essentially scaring the 12-year-old goalie who thought Matt was about to barrel over him!

We're off to the Hope Shop for the afternoon and all day tomorrow, our last full day in Hue. Happy end of spring at home...it's hard to think of such things when it's been 95 to 100 degrees, sunny, and humid every day here!

Rowly Brucken Associate Professor of History Norwich University Posted by norwich at June 19, 2006 06:15 AM
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