Cultural Confusion

June 27, 2010

Last week as the kids and I were driving to base for swim lessons, we had an unsettling cultural experience. As we approached the base, we noticed a lot of cars parked on the side of the road. I thought that was a bit odd, but just kept driving. As we rounded the corner, the kids immediatedly noticed a gelato truck parked on the side of the road. While they were begging to stop for gelato, I noticed a huge mass of people in front of us. They were waving flags and it all seemed so festive...gelato, flags, lots of people. I told the kids it looked some kind of festival. And seconds later I announced that it actually looked like a race. The mass of people waving flags were actually in some sort of formation. But then as I started to realize they weren't in running clothes, I also realized they didn't look too happy. And before I knew it our van was surrounded by people shouting. A small wave of panic start to well up inside my gut, as it began to dawn on me: this was not a celebration. This was a protest. Luckily, the crowd parted and seemed to shrink from around the van as quickly as it had initially swelled (I think the kids and the car seats helped to facilitate this...I can't imagine Italians hurting children, especially in such a public way). We were able to get on to base without any further problems and we learned that the protest was in response to some recent job losses.

The protest incident was upsetting, especially since it truly caught me off guard and had me spinning in multiple directions as I tried to make sense of what we were seeing/experiencing...it never occurred to me that a protest situation could look so festive from a distance (in my defense it really was the gelato truck that threw me off). It also reminded me of a similar moment of cultural confusion that occurred during my first month of living in rural Japan as a young teacher for the JET Program. One afternoon on my bike ride home, I pulled over to watch a series of flowers and large decorations being set up in the yard of a neighboring house. Big, vibrant, and colorful...I assumed they were preparing for some sort of celebration. With very, very limited Japanese, I attempted to ask about the occasion. It wasn't until I got home and looked it up in my dictionary did I understand the festive public display was actually part of a funeral display. Not the celebration that I had mind. Actually, cultural assumptions about death would become the source for further confusion as that year progressed. We had an Australian exchange student in our school who attended the funeral for her host family's grandfather. She came to me in tears the next day because no one had warned her about the Japanese rituals surrounding a death. She was shocked and unprepared when the family (including the student) was escorted into a room, handed chopsticks, and expected to sort through the cremains to remove the bones from the ashes. That's not quite one of those cultural exchange moments that gets highlighted in the glossy pamphlets seeking foreign exchange students, is it?

One of the things I love most about living and traveling overseas are the opportunities for learning about different cultures, but sometimes those learning experiences aren't always enjoyable. Sometimes they are confusing and unsettling. Flags, and gelato don't always mean it is a celebratory occasion and chopsticks are not always used for food.
boatbaby said...

Gelato always means a party to me :)

Emily said...

Oh Lucia, I'm so sorry! I assumed you knew about the protest, otherwise I would've called to warn you. I'm glad you made it through the gate okay. I talked to another friend who said that her bathing-suit clad kids in their car seats did nothing to deter the protestors until the police came and made them move away from her car. They were protesting because recent military budget cuts have led to large numbers of Italians losing their jobs on the base. There was an important admiral on base that day, which is why the protestors were there in such large numbers. (But of course you probably already know all this by now).

I'm glad you guys made it through okay--and at least the kids weren't scared!

morninglight mama said...

Oh my- I would have been completely flustered and messed up by that! Sounds like it was a memorable experience. :)

(Although, I probably would have been upset the longest by the unfulfilled gelato desire!)

Madeline said...

such an interesting story, on so many levels - thanks for sharing. The hardest, most awkward, most confusing or scary moments are often the most interesting culturally aren't they!

Mom2Isabel said...

I think the scariest thing is knowing that you are responsible for the safety of those who are with you in a case like this. Amidst the confusion of the situation is the necessity to (at least) appear in control.

I was in Paris one spring break with a large group of students (~25) and we walked out of the Louvre into a huge protest. (I think it had to do with increased taxes.) It was pretty scary. Experiencing it in a foreign country made it that much more so. Throw in the students (some of whom had never even left Florida) and you have a whole other dimension. Now, with your kids...that a whole OTHER ballgame.

Like Emily, I am glad you made it through safely.

Anonymous said...

YIKES!!!!

Jan

lisa said...

The protests here seem to happen more frequently (especially with everything that is going on with the base relocation and whatnot) and Im never quite sure what the appropriate reaction is. Part of me is like 'hey- this is way above our pay grade--its not like *I* personally make these decisions- leave me alone. The other part of me is like, 'hey, I get it, its your country and we're occupying it.' The thing I really don't understand is how there is so much pressure to get us out of Okinawa, and yet you think about ALL the jobs we give the Japanese and how many $$$$s flow through all the restaurants, local businesses, shops and especially the housing-- just think of all the property that would be VACANT without us here. Its like they want their cake and eat it too. Its a complicated relationship for sure.....

Laurie said...

What a scary experience. I also had a similar one (in Paris, with students, in a SUBWAY station). Truly one of only 2 times traveling with students that I was afraid (the other was during a fire alarm). It's hard to know what to do or how to react, AND it is hard when you know that more than just you depends on you choosing the right response.

likeschocolate said...

Being married to a German, I have had a couple of situation where I have been left to tears because I didn't know something about my husbands culture as was expected to know. Interesting how the gelato truck was there and how shocking that the exchage student was expected to look through the ashes.

LindyLouMac said...

Oh my goodness quite a post, especially the bit about Japan and the bones!! sorry you found yourself in a scary situation but it certainly gave you the opportunity to write an interesting article.

Sue said...

That must have been so upsetting! So glad you made it through quickly and unscathed.

That is really strange about your Australian friend passing the bones with her host family. I can't believe they had her do that with no explanation!

Incidentally, that ritual is the reason it's a big no-no to pass food chopstick to chopstick - too reminiscent of that funeral custom, as the bones are passed around person to person with the chopsticks.

Corinne said...

I would have read that situation completely wrong, too. I'm glad it turned out okay.

Nancy said...

Never a dull moment! I'm sure an experience like that takes on a whole new dimension when you're with your kids. Glad you were safe in the end.

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