Arriving at Dhaka we had no problems getting through customs and we were met by the fabulous Sandra, DP of the Junior school Brian is teaching at. Another couple from Canberra who we have now befriended also arrived on our plane and we were taken to our apartment in Baridhara, which is in the embassy enclave. Our new home is a three bedroom apartment in a five storey apartment with three apartments on each floor, all tenanted by staff from International School Dhaka where Brian is teaching. There is a guard at the door to let you in but it is very relaxed and he is often asleep so we sneak out so as not to wake him. The whole area is quite secluded and contains a number of embassies and their staff, it is not gated, but there are guards at the roads going in and the rest of the area is surrounded by walls or the lake in the picture below, very pretty but I think I might be able to walk on water, it is so polluted. Not sure who the guards stop as the rickshaws are freely available in here.
The streets are not paved, but they are kept clean and they are very leafy. A rickshaw driver will take you into Gulshan 2 (the local shopping centre) for about $1. It is about a 20 minute walk. The picture on the right is taken by me on the back of a rickshaw going home. This same street two days later was a foot deep in water after one of the monsoon rains, but it quickly cleared.
The school provided an amazing induction, including a cultural show (see the dancer on the right) with every night for a week out at a different place for dinner and two days for me with the teachers finding out how things work, or don't work... We have already made friends, everyone is so friendly. The good restaurants are really good, Indian, Thai, Bangladeshi, pizza, you name it, and a main costs around 400 taka or about $5. Unfortunately no wine!!! However the embassy clubs are extremely civilised (the British Club is below) and you can swim, play tennis and drink if you are a member or can get signed in. We don't have a club to join as NZers but may be able to get into one of the clubs eventually. We have been signed into clubs though already about four times.
What have we learnt? So many things! You should get a maid and a driver to give people work, we thought we wouldn't have a driver but as our apartment is a bit secluded from the action we have now gone into a partnership with another couple to share a driver, it costs about $100 per month. One good thing about a driver is they will take you to the 'medicine' shop where you can get a limited range of alcohol, but you feel like it is very illicit, hidden away behind locked metal gates with guards.
We have yet to get a maid as I am home, but the floors need sweeping and washing every couple of days (tiles) as they get really gritty so will move on that one soon. The apartment is quite nice, but very dark and we had lots of trouble initially with mosquitoes which is a real problem as dengue fever is really common here, so an important lesson was to use the local cream 'perfume' Odomos all the time to keep mosquitoes at bay, spray, use coils and my new favorite toy - the mossie zapper, an electric zapper that I now wave around the house regularly instead of playing tennis and we have got on top of the mossie issue I think now.
Brian has done one week teaching and is loving it. He leaves for work about 6.45 and gets home around 4 pm. Kids are very polite and work quite hard. They come from wealthy Bangladeshi families in the main. There are mega wealthy here with ayahs, maids and drivers and all the usual mod cons you see in the west.
My day starts with a wake up call from the local mosque at 4.45 am, but I go back to sleep until about 7.15, Brian is gone by then but leaves me a cup of tea (cold but I heat it up in the microwave). I usually get up and clean the floors etc and then go for a long walk. Of course we have quickly found the best coffee shop in Dhaka which is about a 30 minute walk from home. One of the issues with coffee is that almost all milk is UHT and so tastes a bit odd to us, but this shop imports 'real' milk.
After my coffee, which is in very civilised air conditioned room, I then go walking for several kilometres to explore the sights and get some exercise. The people stare at me because I am unusual to them, but they are so friendly and polite and so I don't mind. Even the beggars don't really give you a hard time, they are hard to ignore, especially the women with babies, but we have been warned that to give them money you then get inundated. Apparently most are part of a professional begging group and so they don't even get much of the money they do get. Better to donate in different ways. For instance many of the teachers have helped our driver out as his wife has stomach cancer (perhaps from the formalin they put on the plants) and he couldn't afford the treatment so they raised money for that for him and they have a social program at the school to support other local schools develop.
Once you leave Baridhara you are really in Dhaka and it is incredibly interesting with such a mix of people, buildings, vehicles of all sorts, animals...... Poverty, rubbish and humidity are the downside, but the upside is great vibrancy, excitement, noise, colour, so many things to see...
The women wear the most beautiful, colorful outfits and even the really poor are generally spotlessly clean. The men wear super white clothes to the Mosques on Fridays, it is hard to imagine how they manage to do this in the dust and mud that is everywhere, but they do.Have cooked a few meals but you have to be careful where you buy your veges as there has been a problem with spraying with formalin to keep them fresh while they get to the markets in the heat and humidity.
A couple of days ago we met a Bangladeshi man who was from Sylhet area, here to sit his IELTs exam to hopefully go to Australia with his family. We showed him how to get to the local centre and he talked to us on the way for about 10 minutes. He then gave us his card and invited us to his home to stay for a couple of days, so friendly and genuine. I hope he passed his exams and does get to Australia!
Well a real adventure so far and lots to learn. Have given myself time to settle in before I start to look for volunteer work, am keeping busy and am happy to be here, I feel very privileged and I am.
Enough from me for today. All the best from Dhaka
Great post... keep it coming...
ReplyDeleteSounds like everything is going well for you guys. Enjoyed reading about it all and loved the photos xx
ReplyDeleteHere is a link to Brian''s Blog: http://kiwiteacherabroad.blogspot.com/
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