- Ate mangoes, saltah (national dish of Yemen, eaten with a condiment made of ground fenugreek), honey, dates, yogurt, cardamom rice, etc.
- Listened to Yemeni music on YouTube
- Watched a movie on Yemen from Amazon and learned about Socotra (like the Galapagos islands as to remoteness and unique flora and fauna, but located in the Indian Sea) from YouTube videos
- Visited a spice store and did a scavenger hunt for spices used in Yemeni cuisine (fenugreek, pepper, coriander, cumin, turmeric, cinnamon, etc.)
- Bought some frankincense incense sticks and burned part of one
- Toasted spices and ground them with a mortar and pestle to make hawaij, a Yemeni spice mixture
- Cooked several dishes using hawaij as the seasoning
- Recited poetry to each other (poetry evenings are a common evening entertainment in Yemen)
- Learned about oil exploration at the Hunt energy exhibit in the Perot Science Museum in Dallas, Texas (petroleum is Yemen's primary export and approximately 25% of its GDP)
- Imitated the Yemeni sport of camel jumping by having my kids and their cousins run and jump over each other's backs
- Learned about social issues such as child brides and the current civil war in Yemen (we visited friends and family for a week, often sleeping on cots or the floor, so we could show the children what life is like for a displaced person fleeing civil war)
- Learned how to say "Good appetite!" in Arabic: bil-hanā' wa ash-shifā'
A personal blog, named in honor of the novel Petticoat Government by a favorite author, Emma Orczy. The novel is about a fictional woman, Lydie d'Aumont, who attempts to inject some fairness and good governance into the court of France's Louis XVth despite the corruption and selfishness there.
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Yemen Fortnight
We are finished with our fortnight of studying Yemen. Among other things, we did the following to learn about life there:
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