Two Stops Past Siberia
- Projects
- Handicrafts
- Books
- A History of Inner Asia, Svat Soucek
- Beyond the Sky and the Earth, Jamie Zeppa
- Chasing the Sea, Tom Bissell
- Empires of the Silk Road: A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present, Christopher I. Beckwith
- Erica Marat, The Tulip Revolution: One Year After
- High Adventure in Tibet, David V. Plymire
- Setting the East Ablaze, Peter Hopkirk
- Shadow of the Silk Road, Colin Thubron
- The Day Lasts More than a Hundred Years, Chingiz Aitmatov
- The Great Arab Conquests, Hugh Kennedy
- The Lost Heart of Asia, Colin Thubron
- This is Not Civilization, Robert Rosenberg
- Three Cups of Tea, Greg Mortenson & David Oliver Relin
- Informations
Posts Tagged Tamerlane
Tamerlane and a Wave of Dumplings
Posted by KyrgyCarl in Bonus Content! on January 18, 2010
So my old teacher, the saintly, scholarly Tamerlane the Hero King invites me to his home to visit everytime I’m in the vicinity. On this most recent trip, we all sat around the kitchen (a pleasent externality of having a cold house) and cooked together.
On the menu was Kyrgyz duymplings called Monty. They are made of shredded sheep meat and shredded sheep fat with bits of potato and onion. The way they are bound together is very important.
Cold Friends
So I’m heading out to another Peace Corps Acronym this week, hailed by volunteers as the most valuable of these things, we’re gearing up to be taught Project Design and Management at PDM. This conference will be once again held at the Hot Lake of Dreams, the perpetually unfrozen Lake Issyk Kul. That means travel, and travel on the Peace Corps penny means an excuse to see the country, and visit friends.
This has been my first time out of Sunny Naryn since the winter began, and in the rest of the country, its, different. The main road out of Naryn goes over the Dolan Pass into a region centered around the city of Kochkor (or, Ram). Kochkor is a windy place, and this combined with the surrounding mountains means Kochkor, very much unlike Naryn, was almost barren of snow.
The next stop on the route away from home is Balykchy (Fisherman). Balykchy is a dried up, formerly industrial Soviet city on the south west corner of the Lake. Once prosperous, like an American Rust Belt city, Balykchy has fallen on hard times. Its factories are largely closed, yet it still acts as a transportation hub. Maligned by travelers frequently mistreated by taxi drivers who know their customers have no choice but to come through, and no reason to stay, it exhibits a characteristic particularly reminiscent of home. Balykchy, not cold as Naryn, is nonetheless as windy as Chicago. Biting cold, but nostalgic nonetheless.
My next destination was at the fabled home of my old teacher, Tamerlane, the Hero King. The snow had recently fallen here. Upon arrival, there was no need to call my friend because, as a teacher in town, there isn’t a soul who doesn’t seem to know him, or know where he lives.
I found him hiding in his kitchen, cooking with his wife, watching the two six year olds cavort around like elephants, and his 2 year old take short, choppy steps. Over the next couple of days, we hid inside from the cold, eating, watching nature movies, and talking with his family. Dinner our first night was Kyrgyz dumplings, called monty, made of mutton, fat, onions and potatoes, with a side of pickled garlic and tomatoes. His mother, bedridden, always with something interesting and specific to tell me, was feeling passionate about how Hitler and WWII were terrible, and it was good that we live in peaceful times. Sometimes we’d do chores together, like chopping wood, or stoking his furnace.
And it was one ironic image that I thought would stick with me. My teacher, starting a coal fire, with the torn pages of a book entitled simply “Leninism.” But instead, it was the freshly fallen snow on the road out of town. Thick and unplowed, cars, vans and trucks competing with cows, sheep, and horse drawn wagons for space on the road.
From there, it was off to the Karakol volunteers, and their world of consumer goods, Russian influence, and skiing. Volunteers here do much of what we do in Naryn, though their material life a bit more advanced.
There seems to be nothing happier than visiting good people on cold nights. I wish you all, my friends, this same success.
Originally written Januay 11th, 2010
The Sweet Sorrow of Moving On
It’s official now, tomorrow I will leave my family here in Ivanovka and move on to new things. There are many things I will miss from this place.
I will miss my Kyrgyz teacher, Tamerlane Hero-King, or the anti-Borat. He is sweet, and wholesome, and likes to make jokes and play “gotcha” games, like charades where the guessers are instructed to guess anything but what the mime is trying to imitate. I will also miss having class with 6 guys 6 days a week, 5 hours each day. I won’t, however, miss the odor that our classroom inevitably had, or the perpetual talk of bowel movements that inevitably exists in large groups of boys no matter where you live in the world.
I will definitely miss my Kyrgyz family. I will miss my parents here who call me lazy in the morning, but then make me dinner with a smile at night. I will miss my brother Meder who wakes me up by sneaking onto my bed in the morning, assuring me that he will be the first thing I see everyday.
Now, I might not miss the Kamikaze rooster in the back yard who charges my shins whenever I go to the outhouse. And I might not miss pooping only at night, only once the many flies who reside in that outhouse have gone to sleep. But I will surely miss the current tribe of 300 chicks who peck around the compound daily, and guessing which of them would love to similarly charge my ankles, if only given the chance.
I’m definitely going to miss watching the field in back turn from just one solid patch of fallow weeds, slowly into a neatly segregated patchwork of potatoes, tomatoes, onions and cucumbers. I will miss watching them grow. I may or may not miss hauling buckets of water up from the well using only a hoe. Though I will surely miss watching Meder drop down to his skivvies to retrieve the buckets we’ve dropped from the bottom.
It’s been a beautiful spring here in this small town. I’ve seen so many Kyrgyz family events, I’ve seen crops grow, and I’ve eaten berries from our fruit trees; I’ve also been greeted by most everyone that I pass on the street. What is Kyrgyz here? What is human? What is just simple and wonderful?
It’s not for me to say really. My role here has been to just watch and to learn; to try and figure out how to help people be happier, however they define it. To improve lives simply by my presence, and hopefully by the memory of our time together once I have left.
But isn’t that the goal of all of our lives? To be happy in the present, and happy in the lives of the people around us? I am technically here as a “development worker,” but as far as I’m concerned, there can be no greater development in a person’s life, no matter where in the world they live, than simply more happiness.
But that’s KyrgyCarl again, running his mouth. Thank you for reading folks, and thanks again for all your wonderful responses. It’s just a pleasure having you all along for the ride.
Originally Written June 6th, 2009



