Merhaba
arkadaşlarım!
I'm going back to
Turkey this summer for more language training, just after finishing
my undergraduate life forever (shout-out to my fellow NU 2015
grads!). It's a bit strange because I've ended up missing
commencement for orientation, but I think it'll be worth it. It's the
Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) Program to Bursa, which is run by
the US Department of State, so the obvious disclaimer is that these
are my personal views and experiences and don't reflect the United
States government. (PS – Vote for Bernie Sanders and for the best
local city council member, state representatives, and federal
legislators.)
Me and Ashanti, sight-seeing. There is a white building that some people live in behind us. |
For the first leg of
my trip, we were flown to the exotic capital of the United States,
Washington DC. Here we saw all sorts of strange sights, such as
brunches and dual-throated guitars painted with the stars and
stripes. Apparently in this strange land, it's actually summer in
June – the weather was hot and humid, just like home.
In all seriousness
though, DC was pretty cool. I met a couple people from my program on
the plane (and Fabian, who is in a different CLS program that will be
in Vladimir, Russia). We took the DC metro to our hotel (which is in
central DC), where we got to meet a bunch of other people from our
program and from another three programs, which were going to
Vladimir, Beijing, and Gwanjiu, South Korea. The first night we
didn't do much other than get dinner at an American place (which
luckily had vegetarian soup and green beans), but the second day we
had orientation. The biggest highlight was that there was an alumna
from the Turkish program who is also a Northwestern alum! She was
part of the career panel, as she had recently gotten her PhD from
George Washington, and I was able to ask questions about my
interests. The twenty of us going to Bursa also got to meet each
other, and it seems like a solid group. We have a pretty strong
representation of recent graduates and graduate students of various
types, studying everything from neurobiology to ethnomusicology to
the history of Yugoslavia. There's going to be no shortage of cool
perspectives on this trip, I'm sure.
The Mansion on O Street |
On Friday after
orientation, I met up with my high school friend Ashanti, who goes to
Howard University and is interning this summer at the Mansion on O
Street. It's this really cool house that's been repurposed as an art
space, with tons of donated kitsch and rarities and like seventy
secret doorways that are hidden in mirrors and walls. Ashanti is
working with the mansion's music department to do things like
organize jam sessions and sort the record collection. He showed me
around, and there were a lot of really cool historic rooms.
Apparently the place is very historic, and all sorts of heads of
state and famous people have spent time here, from Rosa Parks to the
lead singer of Hootie and the Blowfish.
This room is called the Amnesia room. We visited it first - or was it last? |
This stuff is in the Teddy Roosevelt room. |
We took a bunch of
pictures because it was really cool.
Ashanti in the Log Cabin Room. |
This patriotic instrument was probably played by a famous person. |
After that, we both
headed back to meet up with other people in my program, and we had a
blast until early in the morning. We figured that it'd be easier to
sleep on the flight if we weren't too well-rested. It didn't work for
me, but it worked for a couple other people at least. Now I'm in Frankfurt using the free WiFi (US airports take note!). We were on the same
plane as the Russian program, but we split off now. In
about 10 hours or so, we're going to be in Bursa!
No comments:
Post a Comment