Tuesday, January 29, 2013

We finally reach Dhaka



We finally reached Dhaka on January 29th. We will call this home for the next two years.
We strongly felt we were mentally ready for Bangladesh and for Dhaka after making our best efforts to familiarize ourselves with the language and culture. We talked to Bengalis, read books, ate Bengali food, and studied the language and culture for two months. Still, Dhaka gave us an overwhelmingly eye opening and sense of rattling experience that we could not prepare ourselves for. To quote Cristina: “Landing here feels like somebody hits you in the face with a brick.”
Walking thru the airport was not much different than doing the same at most US airports. We even breezed thru the customs and immigration (thanks to our diplomatic passports). Outside, however the general feeling changed on a dime. There is no sense of organization and/or reason. Waves of people and cars streamed in and out from all directions. There were farm animals alongside pedestrians. Seemed all drivers honked at the same time. The road from the airport was paved, but dusty, filled with papers and was neither controlled nor marked.
Dhaka is a very third world country capital, some would say maybe a fourth world. It is densely populated. And mean I say dense, you can’t really comprehend the word unless you live here. It feels like God played this game where took as many human being as possible and confined them to as small a space as you could find.  If you would like to replicate this in a Western country, maybe what you could do is next time you go into your doctor’s office, try to get into the waiting room with fifty other people, place a bag of fish in every corner, turn the heater to the max and have somebody throw papers and dust around like a maniac. That will come close to experiencing Dhaka, but it would not include the traffic jams or the dirt roads or the animal carcasses or more traffic jams.

Friday, January 25, 2013

I will miss you so much, my great (adoptive) country, USA

I am sitting in bed trying to get some rest and not having much success. Next to me, Cristina has somehow managed to forget about our morning departure to Bangladesh and is sound asleep.

I am begin hit by mixed emotions. 17 years ago, I left my home, wife, friends, family and country and went to an unknown land. It was December 1995 when I landed in New York and made my way to Michigan. The only thing I had going for me was the fact that I was so young.

I always loved America. I loved it even as a child when I had no idea how it looked like. I loved ever since I would hunker down inside of the house with my father listening to the VOA radio station. It was jammed and we could only understand every other word sometime, but yet this was our only window to freedom. I fell in love with the country even more when it welcomed me with open arms, gave me a chance to build a new life. My children were born here, I got my first job here, bought my first car and my first home. I got my second education here and made tons of great friends. I know that it sounds like such a cliché, but this is still the land of opportunities. It is not perfect, but it is still the best place in the world!

I know I will be back and that Bangladesh is going to be only temporary, and yet I still feel sad to leave this country behind.





I will miss you, great country of America!!!!!