Thursday, 24 May 2007

Good times in India


The team that i worked with from 2005 - 2006. . .that picture is taken on some grounds in front of the Taj Mahal - India, we were dripping sweat - it was so hot that you needed a litre of water every hour. That is where International Congress 2005 was held.
We landed in Bombay - i think 2 weeks after those heavy storms they experienced, took a 30 hrs train ride heading to Agra where the conference was held and boy did we have a cultural experience on that train - we had Indian tea (called chai), learned some words and interacted with the 2 guys we where sharing the compartment with.
The country was totally green and amazing, but you could see the poverty that had sheltered it, i mean people slept on the hard concrete floor at train stations with no blankets - but i guess with that heat you don't really need it!

We got to the hotel early hours of the morning, having not bathed for those many hours and we had to wait to be checked in first which happened 5 hours later - so i was not that thrilled to give people hugs:)


Anyway, i liked India - the culture is rich and still preserved, i hope to make it there again.

Tuesday, 22 May 2007

Germany


When what seems impossible becomes possible, you step up to another level in life of wanting to achieve more . . . 5 months later I sailed out (not literally though) to Germany – my first international conference and it was amazing. So many people, so many cultures, the awesome hotel, it all sinked in slowly during the course of the 12 days in Hannover. The connection and network became bigger – the world suddenly opened up right in front of me and said: grab me!!

This photo was taken at Global village (me & Ellinoora Vesala – VP PD/F 0405), I didn’t know that 2 years later it would be one of the most used photos in the network – kinda cool being famous and all, just kidding!!

Don't mind the outfit, not specific to any culture in SA really - i just grabbed something that looked African and it seems to have worked out fine.

Monday, 21 May 2007

My first time. . .Switzerland

I was chatting the other day with Igor from Brazil – he spent four months with us as a CEEDer, he had just read the first posting on my blog. Told me to write more about my adventures and philosophy, etc… I was having difficulty in what the next article/edition is going to focus on – after 23 hours of thinking I found a starting pointJ.

Six years it has been in this organisation (…well for us South Africans – our year is Jan – Dec so we always have 6 months of nothingness before you get into office, so if we were going according to the international academic year cycle you would remove 1.5 years from that 6 years!), as I am to exit as the Member Committee President of AIESEC South Africa, I look back at some moments in my AIESEC Experience that were a memorable for me (there are so many so I’ll tell you those I can remember), I have extracted the following writings from my journal written in march 2004 , the 1st time I went abroad – on a CEED to Switzerland:

Switzerland is a first world country, I always had the impression that it has everything, well according to me it does and some even surprised me. The first thing that shocked me was the public phone in the airport, I stepped in the telephone both (Swisscom) and realized that I could send an sms, an email and phone - all on a public phone, even when I was sitting in the airport I had this sense and smell of wealth about the country, I then knew I was far from home.

One has to remember I come from a developing country that has both the features of a first world and a third world, landing in a place where poverty doesn’t seem likely – and poverty I heard of in comparison to South Africa sounded like the basic standard of living which is experienced mostly by immigrants.

Life in the country is good, expensive with an extreme low crime rate. The trainees I met from different countries made me realize that in Switzerland one earns according to the standard of living despite the high taxes.

The transport system is very developed – the train (which is for longer distances) connects to almost every city, town, and village in the country. The buses are used pretty much for within a town or city and buses going on long distances were usually on special hire, the alternative for a bus within a town would be a tram i.e. a smaller cable train.

Communication is very much advanced too, every train, bus, tram has intercom and I also realized almost every household has a computer with Internet and those who can afford would buy a laptop – which is mostly everyone J. In a public phone I already explained my amazement and now that I am back home I see the vast difference between the two countries in just these two aspects.’

…I spent two months there and they were & still are the most memorable times of my life. . .will tell you more about my adventures next time, thanks for reading - grazie mille (thanks a million in Swiss Italian).

Tuesday, 15 May 2007

Genesis


Most people I know, of which I have met through AIESEC have blogs, and I never really understood why – my thinking was why would someone talk about their inner thoughts online. Well after one year I realize it is more than that – it’s about interacting with people all over the world, letting them know what you are upto and giving a visual insight of where you are as well.

I always preach; ‘we live in a global village’. . .so let me bring an interactive, insightful time from Fourways, Johannesburg, South Africa to this global village.


I’ll be waiting for your feedbackJ