Meeting Gulzhahan

 

For the next few weeks (or months) I’ll be popping in on Fridays with a Deleted Scene from my memoir, At Home on the Kazakh Steppe. Let’s call them the “lost deleted scenes.” As I put together my new ebook of Deleted Scenes from my blog, I’m finding ones that never got blogged.  So, Fridays will fix that.

 

Here’s one from our initial train trip, August 2004, that speaks to the beginning of friendship, my current theme on my Wednesday blog. There won’t be a question prompt at the end, but please feel free to share, comment, or Like as you wish. See you next Wednesday.  This weekend Woody and I are off for an anniversary weekend and I’m leaving much of social media behind for three days.

 

 

The window in our little koopay won’t stay up. I move to the aisle, looking for a window I can open.

 

The steppe that I see through the dirty windows that line this side of the car is flat, barren, and seemingly endless. I find it remarkable that this land supported a large and active nomadic culture only a little more than 200 years ago.

 

 

Photo 86
Even in the midst of the empty steppe, electricity runs from pole to pole.

 

 

Inside the train, the curtain rod falls down when I bump it, but the café curtains I now hold in my hands have been ironed; maybe not this week, but they’ve been ironed and I’m impressed.

 

I can’t get the curtain rod to stay up when I try to replace it and, as the late August heat leaves a film of sweat over my entire body, I can’t even get the window to open.

 

“Gulzhahan,” I call toward the koopay next to ours. “How do I get the window open?”

 

Gulzhahan is my counterpart, an odd word but one I’ve gotten used to in the week since I met her. Next to her, I’m tall at 5’4” — the first time I’ve ever felt tall. Her shiny, short, black hair fits her round, slightly dark face closely, a good cut for her. The women in this country have the most beautiful hair: straight, dark, shiny, and thick. They could make Breck shampoo ads back home, if there still were Breck shampoo ads. She’s quite western in her dress and mannerisms. Except for her British accented English, she could pass for an American.

 

“I’ll get the conductor,” she answers and goes off to find the one assigned to our car.

 

Among the many superstitions here, many consider it dangerous to open a window in hot weather. Not Gulzhahan. I’m eager for a breeze and grateful she sets superstition aside.

 

She is a Kazakh woman of twenty-nine and I felt comfortable with her the first time I met her, just the week before.

 

Peace Corps creates pageantry whenever it can, I’d noticed, and the moment we Peace Corps Trainees met our counterparts was such an opportunity. Peace Corps staff had herded all 42 trainees (we wouldn’t become volunteers until our official swearing-in at week’s end) into the courtyard of the hub site where we waited.

 

Soon enough, the doors of the nearby gymnasium flew open and out poured a second mob of 42, waving photos of their volunteer wildly over their heads. These yelling, screaming, newly initiated Kazakhstani English-teacher counterparts played their role well.

 

I had no idea what my counterpart looked like, but I quickly saw a little dynamo heading my way laughing and jumping and waving my photo in the air.  My passport photo!  She found me and we hugged and jumped up and down together giggling as though we had known each other all our lives. Up until then, I couldn’t remember the last time I had giggled.

 

Gulzhahan_edited
                     Gulzhahan, in 2004
         

 

 

Peace Corps paid for “luxury” koopays private rooms for four with a lockable door — the highest of three levels of seating, though far from what most Americans would call luxury.

 

They paid for six seats on this train: two for us, two for our counterparts, and two for our luggage. Woody and I share one koopay with our luggage. Our two counterparts plus three other people with luggage ride in the one next to us.

 

our counterparts and seat mates

 

 

Following our supper inside our koopay, I drop in on our colleagues next door. They invite me in for a friendly chat: five adults packed into the space we take for two and not in the least resentful. I’m embarrassed but I say nothing. I’m an American.

 

 

9 Responses

  1. Kathleen Pooler
    | Reply

    Janet , these delated scenes are treasures…such a rich glimpse into your Peace Corps world and the people you met. Thank you and Happy Anniversary!

    • Janet
      | Reply

      Thanks Kathy. I think you’ll enjoy my soon to be published ebook collection of them. Soon, soon, …

  2. Joan Z. Rough
    | Reply

    I agree with Kathy. These scenes are wonderful and I look forward to more. Oh, and Happy Anniversary!!

    • Janet
      | Reply

      Hi Joan. Thanks for the good wishes. It was a fun filled weekend AND we are glad to be home. Always a good combination. I’m glad you like these little “darlings.” Did you have to kill many of yours?

  3. Merril Smith
    | Reply

    Very interesting “deleted” scene.
    Hope you are enjoying your anniversary trip!

    • Janet
      | Reply

      Thank you Merril. We did indeed. And, as I told Joan, we’re very glad to be home.

  4. Gulzhahan
    | Reply

    Friendship does not choose age, nationality, even destination. I thank Janet for being a great friend.

    • Janet Givens
      | Reply

      Hey, Gulzhahan. Thanks for stopping here to read the post. You know I always appreciate knowing your reaction. We have a saying here, “It takes one to know one.” Do you know it? In this case it means, “It takes a friend to know another one.” Thank you for being that friend.

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