25 noviembre 2005

Mis Amigos Chilenos

So, I've met a good group of Chileans here in La Serena. They're all university students in the Philosophy/Spanish carrera, and mostly 3rd and 4th years. Basically, the way the Chilean higher educational system works is that before entering universidad, students have to take a horrendous exam that determines which carreras (majors) they can enter. It seems like a terrible system to me, but in an educational system that is 100% focused on producing qualified working people, i guess it's the way to go. Anyway, they're all in the filosofia/castallano carrera, which means they didn't score all that well on the exam & they didn't want to study English. Also, they hardly ever have homework, but spend a ton of time in class (pretty much 9-7:00 every day) & almost all of their grades are based on exams.



These are some of my amigos here in Chile. The guy in the middle signaling '2 x peace' is Guille. This pic was taken in his house.

Anyway, I hang out with them at least a couple times a week, usually to either watch futbol, party at Guille's house, or hit up the local bar scene (which isn't much). And, since they study philosophy, it's usually pretty fun to talk to them about astronomy & related topics. The school year ends in late December (it should have ended in a couple weeks, but there was a month-long student strike in august), but most of them are hanging around La Serena for the summer.



Felipe, from Santiago and Michem, from Illepel, are two of my best friends here in Chile. They, along with the rest of my Chilean friends consider cheap wine mixed with cola their beverage of choice.

A couple weekends ago, I went with my friends to an day-long open-air concert here in town. The headline band was Los Jaivas, a very famous group here in Chile that was huge in the anti-Pinochet movement in the late 70s and 80s (they lived in Paris at the time). They play a very distinctive mix of traditional Andean & modern electric music, and are awesome! Check out their music if you can, especially the album 'Alturas de Machu Picchu' that was based on text of Pablo Neruda and is amazingly good.



Even today, more than a decade after Pinochet, people go nuts for Los Jaivas & their anti-dictatorship messages. They play a really broad range of instruments, from Andean flutes, to giant horns, to electric guitars.

4 Comments:

At 11:13 p. m., Blogger Alex said...

Right on. I'm a friend of Ted's (hence the random visit to your excellent blog), Chilean and currently living in Japan. It's nice to see you're enjoying the place - I guess it's always interesting to read travellers' comments about "home" (if that's the correct word for it, anyway). Like they'd say in Japlish: "Please let's enjoying."

 
At 11:13 p. m., Blogger Alex said...

Este blog ha sido eliminado por un administrador de blog.

 
At 12:22 p. m., Blogger Pete said...

Yo dawg. hizzeldy-pizzeldy. I haven't heard much from you in a while, so its good to check out your blog. I'm heading to Africa in a couple days and I'm not really ready, but what are you going to do? Well, I'll send you an e-mail, but here I can advertise my new blog. http://peteinnamibia.blogspot.com/

 
At 2:48 p. m., Blogger adam said...

hizzeldy-pizzeldy-bizzeldy
Ted-Shmed-Ned
Joey, you seen any globular clusters? They have any nougat in the middle? Hope you're having fun with your dad!

 

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