Saturday, January 31, 2009

they make tissue paper flowers in south africa too

The new school year begins in January here, so while we're here for our 2nd semester, it's the first semester here. There's a tradition at Stellenbosch called Jool/RAG Week, that is seriously the most bizarre thing I've ever witnessed so I'm going to attempt to explain it:

RAG is like...SMC orientation on steroids. It's supposed to welcome the first-year students, and it's kind of like a welcome/initiation. The 6,000 first-years all live in different residence halls (they call them rezes), and it's kind of like living in a frat. All the RAG events are like a competition between the different rezes. Their Acas (like RAs/orientation leaders) are basically drill seargents through the whole thing. They wake up all the kids at like 6AM (trust me, we have heard it every morning) by driving around honking their horns and blaring techno music and screaming into megaphones. The kids are basically forced to participate in all the events, but one of our AIFS program coordinators explained that it's a rite of passage and the first-years, for the most part, enjoy it? He said there's a strong social heirarchy and because many of the students come from private schools, they're used to it.

The first event was a trolley race, where the different rezes raced shopping carts down one of the main streets in town. While only a couple kids were actually in the race, the rest of their rezes were lined up in cheering sections along the street. They have theme colors/shirts, and are all about body painting/wearing absurd costumes. It was like being at a college football game but far stranger.


The event the next night was the weirdest--it was called fensters, which means windows in Afrikaans I think? It went from 7pm-11pm, and each rez perfromed a short skit with music and dancing and costumes...like, really intense music and dancing and costumes. And legit theater lighting. They performed the plays every 15 minutes for the 4 hours, while spectators walked around the campus to each one. It was like being in Boston on the 4th of July it was so crowded. It was a very carnival like atmosphere, except that instead of rides, you were watching freshmen (even the guys) prance around on stage.

Then yesterday, Sunday, there was a parade. Lunenburg homecoming style with tissue paper flower floats. Except again, on steroids. There were 18 floats and they all were huge and had mechanical moving parts and the students marched behind them and collected change as a fundraiser for the class.

The most impressive and insane part of the whole thing was that they basically accomplished all this in a week. Because it's ALL they did. From 7AM to god knows how late, the kids were outside working on their chants/dances/making their float. They weren't allowed to drink either, really the only way I can imagine SMC kids (especially guys) doing any of this stuff. My building is part of Academia, one of the first-year rezes, so we got to watch the whole thing unfold over the week. Unfortunately, our Academia kids were really bad at everything and had the worst play and float.

The entire town really gets into this week. Their were families and people of all ages at the fensters and parade, and all the events are sponsored by big businesses in the area. Some students in my program who go to schools with frats or sororities said it vaguley reminded them of rush/pledge week, or other Greek life events, but everyone agreed it was the strangest thing they've ever seen at a college. I really didn't do the whole week justice in this post--this is a video of the trolley race and parade to maybe give you a better idea.


So yeah, being around for RAG week was definitely an experience, but I'm kind of glad it's over. No more early wake up calls and the same 4 songs playing over and over while the Academia kiddos perfected their dance moves and essentially got hazed for a week.

1 comment:

  1. Wow what a strange thing to read about. The video didn't work but I'll try again at home. I really wanted to see the floats. It's great you get to experience new cultures and customs. Talk to you soon.

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