{"id":1284,"date":"2011-11-30T10:42:23","date_gmt":"2011-11-30T14:42:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/crosscultural\/?p=1284"},"modified":"2011-11-30T10:46:25","modified_gmt":"2011-11-30T14:46:25","slug":"1284","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/intercultural\/2011\/11\/30\/1284\/","title":{"rendered":"Sharing Thanksgiving"},"content":{"rendered":"
Thanksgiving is a well known, important holiday in America. Who would have thought families in Cape Town, South Africa would want to experience it with us.\u00a0 I live with Justin Hershey, two retired parents and an older brother.\u00a0 The first day we arrived in our home-stay we were showered with love and questions about Thanksgiving.\u00a0 Soon week two rolled around, and we were asked to make pumpkin pie and mashed potatoes because that is American. Thanksgiving Day was soon upon us and we came home to a hustling, bustling mother.\u00a0 She didn\u2019t do anything without a smile. We made the potatoes along side of her in the open door, 27 degree Celsius weather.\u00a0 It was the warmest Thanksgiving ever!<\/p>\n
Soon family members began to arrive. We added chairs and tables to include ten people.\u00a0 At first it was quiet, but eventually the table erupted with sounds of laughter and stories.\u00a0 I felt at home in South Africa on the day set apart to be thankful for your home.\u00a0 A love for this new family enclosed me. I am so thankful for the opportunity to have had Thanksgiving in South Africa.<\/p>\n
-Kiera Stenson<\/p>\n
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Cape Town is an important economic, political, and cultural center in South Africa, as well as the origin of western influence in the region. It differs greatly from other places we have visited on this cross-cultural in that we are again surrounded by the establishments and ideologies of western society that were far distant for the majority of the trip. Seeing and being immersed in modern technology, media, consumerism, and a “comfortable” lifestyle has been enjoyable, but I don’t feel the same care or urgency to build relationships that I felt in Lesotho or Soweto. Here, life is full of material things and entertainment, eliminating the need for much human interaction while leaving many satisfied and happy, just like in America.<\/p>\n