Two months in Yogya
By Saarah Jappie, s21
University of New South Wales
As weird as it is, we've been away from home for over two months
now. On the one hand I can believe it because this journey I'm on
here has taken me to so many places and put me in so many situations
it feels like I've been here for ages, but on the other hand it
all seems to have gone rather quickly. Sydney seems ridiculously
far away, which it is I guess.
I'm almost on mid-semester break here, just one more inculs exam
to go. Uni is going okay and I've finally gotten used to the randomness
of it all. Lecturers don't turn up, classes are cut short and they
spring exams on you when you least expect it, just how the others
warned it would be. I found it quite frustrating at first but am
kind of immune to it now. I really appreciate the orderliness of
uni back home now.
It's
almost the end of Ramadan and I've had an awesome time experiencing
this holy month here. I can't begin to explain how awesome it is
to be in an Islamic environment where everyone is fasting and in
the spirit of things and practices that I would have to explain
to people over and over again back home are commonplace and carried
out by everyone, even your friends. I've found fasting to be easier
here for the simple fact that everyone else is doing it and therefore
life caters to it, unlike at home where everything is as fast-paced
as usual.
I'm also beginning my lifetime goal of becoming an Indonesian celebrity.
I was interviewed on the radio about my experiences growing up as
a Muslim in Australia. I kind of wish I hadn't done this interview
as I had some really curly questions thrown at me that I wasn't
prepared for, and because my spoken Indonesian isn't fluent, I couldn't
explain or defend myself or Australians in general. It appears people
think we're morally corrupt and drink, have free sex and wear in
appropriate clothes as a general rule. I found that really frustrating,
but what was more frustrating was that I couldn't really do much
to defend myself. Argh! I'm working on it though.
I've also been on TV. Reality TV to be exact! There's this Hypnotist'
show with Romy Rafael (sleazy Indo star) and the situation was I
went to dinner with Indonesian friends, one of whom was hypnotised'
and I didn't know. In the middle of the establishment he stood up
and starts imitating a goat every time my other friend said ahem'.
I was SO confused and freaked out and generally uncomfortable (read:
squirming) and THEN these TV cameras come from nowhere and…well,
so there you go. Hopefully next I'll get a small role in a cheap
sinetron. Hahaha.
I went to Solo last weekend to visit family friends and will spend
Lebaran there too. I leave on Tuesday and will be back by Sunday
or Monday. I plan on going somewhere else the following week, maybe
Dieng or somewhere else nice. As for the inhabitants, I've met so
many people that are just gems. I've also met a lot of weirdos.
I've been learning a LOT about myself as well, like how I deal
with foreign situations and how I handle not being comfortable and
being with people I don't necessarily get along with. I've been
getting to know myself a lot more and have found that I don't necessarily
LIKE myself sometimes. I annoy myself at times. And I'm seeing traits
in myself that I see in my parents and my sisters….. it's so weird!
The weirdest thing of ALL is that I find that when I'm in a situation
where I'm unsure of what to do, however big or small the dilemma,
I often find myself thinking 'what would mum say?' or 'what would
mum do?'. Now that's odd.
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