Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Immersion Trip: Day 6

First, I will start by saying that people who can blog faithfully have my full respect.  It has taken me eight days to get to this next entry, and we've been home for three weeks.  No surprise that I'm behind with my resumés as well ...

Today we went to Durres, the major port city of Albania.  Durres is known for the amphitheater, which was built in the second century B.C.  Amazingly, the site is only now enjoying a belated attempt at historic preservation, and houses had been built up to and into the amphitheater; the arena level is raised four feet from refuse being dumped into it and then overgrown.  In fact, as we walked toward the entrance, we saw a woman throwing empty glass jars from her balcony onto the grounds, where they shattered into pieces.

However, they have protected the mosaics, and I must admit that the ability to explore deep into tunnels (due to the lack of fencing) was pretty neat.  The nearby agora and Roman bath ruins are in better repair: the baths were discovered while grounds were being excavated for a bank, so they are not built over, but they look basically like a ruined Roman bath open to the elements and fenced in beneath a building - no signs, nothing.  The agora is similarly unadorned. However, we did see that people do commemorate the anniversary of the deaths of their loved ones with posters on kiosks.  Memories aren't entirely forgotten in Albania.  After a great seafood lunch, we took the Albanian equivalent of Route 1 back and we saw some fantastic scenery (including the bunkers - see Day 4).

Sunday, May 6, 2007

Immersion Trip: Day 5


Today we started at the Muzeu Kombetar, the National Museum, which has this mosaic above the doorway.  The museum collection spans from ancient Illyria through the current day.  We stopped right after WWII, so we didn't get to the part that shows Hoxha's excesses.  That can wait until we return.

After the Museum visit, I went into a bookstore to purchase an Albanian language dictionary and some other books.  I wanted to see if I could conduct the entire transaction in Albanian, so I carefully explained to the saleswoman that I was an American and that I didn't speak Albanian well, but that I was interested in such-and-such books.  She responded by asking me if I was married.  Apparently, if the wedding ring isn't gold, it's not obviously a wedding ring, so I cleared up the confusion and carried on.

Tirana has a stray dog problem.  There are thousands of strays on the street, many of them ill (but others looking very healthy and adorable).  The Norwegian ambassador's wife is heading a project to develop a shelter and a clinic and some sort of adoption infrastructure.  I'd been tipped off to this by the husband of an FSO (whose blog, http://www.ourmanintirana.blogspot.com, is worth reading), so I arranged to meet with her at the Hotel Rogner.  I came away with an appreciation of how much work the project still needs to accomplish and how expensive coffee in the international hotels is.

Abby and I finished the afternoon by seeing our house (see the previous blog entry for a few photos; at three stories and 6,000 square feet, with three bathrooms and a total of eight rooms off the main living/dining areas, Abby says she cannot describe the house without using the words "f***ing" and "ginormous"). We then went to Tirana's only Indian restaurant for a dinner arranged by the Embassy's Community Liaison Officer.  The restaurant owners are an Indian man and his Albanian wife.  The food is tasty, although not especially spicy - the Albanian palate is on the mild side - and we met more embassy people and other ex-pats.  The conversation was great, and we've found the embassy community to be very welcoming.  We left the evening with high hopes for a great three years.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Immersion Trip: Day 4

For some reason, I was awake at 3:00 AM today and there was no going back to sleep, so I listened to the sounds of the Block waking up: someone in the apartment above us, trucks grinding their gears outside, dogs barking, and a truck picking up the garbage - although it being, Tirana, it's just as likely the sound of a truck dumping garbage on a corner. You never know. This also was the first time I've noticed (and smelled) the fine dust covering everything.

A few things I forgot to put into the description of yesterday. First, I heard from my realtor (via a Vonage telephone number that acts as though you're dialing Maryland instead of Tirana) that she had begun the open house at 1:00 PM and already had three offers. Also, Abby's wallet grew legs after lunch and vanished. Maybe the waiter at our restaurant leaned over and slipped it out of her bag, maybe Abby dropped it in the minimart, or maybe it was lifted as we walked through the outdoor café Parku i Madh. Whatever: Abby began canceling her cards while I retraced our steps. While I was able to ask after the wallet in Albanian, in many cases the answer I got was a shrug and a grimace, which means the same thing in any language. Even though Abby is a Consular Officer and so is used to helping panicked Americans after they've lost their wallets and passports, she was amazingly calm about the whole thing. I'd have been nxjerrë zorrët jashtë në rrugën (throwing up in the street).

Now onto today: we visited Kruja (click on this link for a better history than I'm ever going to write), the mountain castle town where Skenderbeg and then Lek Dukajini defended Albania against the Ottoman invation until 1478. We then went into the "old market," which is full of tourist shops but looks pretty. It began to rain soon thereafter, making the cobblestones incredibly slippery (how did they get up the mountain before there were 4x4s?) and giving us an excuse to leave. Unfortunately, I'm going to have to be parsimonious on the photos because Blogger only gives me 1GB for pictures. When I've set up a separate photo website, I'll let you know.

We also saw our first bunkers. Enver Hoxha, the Communist Dictator from 1944 to 1985, believed that Albania would be attacked by its enemies (especially the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia) and so he caused to be built 600,000 concrete bunkers - some big enough only for a single soldier, others big enough for artillary - and covered the country with them. They lie a few hundred yards from the Adriatic Seashore, on the outskirts of Tirana, in the mountains, in the middle of fields, etc. The words "Enver Hoxha" and "dangerously paranoid" often appear in the same sentence. At the Skenderbeg Museum in Kruja, we saw exhibits showing the people of ancient Illyria and pre-Ottoman Arbenia (as it was known) as a fierce, sophisticated and noble people; you kind of have to wonder what happened that they ended up with Enver Hoxha.